http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-animals21feb21,1,1909762.story
From the Los Angeles Times
UCLA to seek court protection for animal researchers
The
university said it will ask a Superior Court judge in Santa Monica to
limit the activities of animal rights groups and activists, including
websites.
By Richard C. Paddock
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
February 21, 2008
Seeking to protect scientists who conduct experiments using animals,
UCLA will go to court today to request a temporary restraining order
against animal rights groups and activists accused of harassing
university researchers.
The
university said it would ask a Superior Court judge in Santa Monica to
limit the activities of five individuals and three organizations that
maintain websites, including one that identifies researchers and lists
their home addresses.
"We are hoping to send an important
message that violence and harassment of our faculty is absolutely
outrageous and totally inappropriate," said UCLA Chancellor Gene D.
Block. "We really want to act before someone gets hurt."
UCLA
researchers have been the target of several attacks in recent months.
Two weeks ago, someone left an incendiary device at the home of
professor Edythe London, who uses vervet monkeys in nicotine-addiction
research funded by tobacco giant Philip Morris. The device charred her
front door before going out.
Earlier, animal activists claimed
credit for breaking a window in London's house and using a garden hose
to flood the ground floor, causing more than $20,000 in damage.
Attacks
on other researchers have included two incendiary devices that didn't
go off, one beneath a researcher's car and another that was apparently
placed by mistake at the home of a neighbor.
In statements on
their websites, activists said the attacks are warranted because
scientists who conduct such experiments are torturing the animals.
They oppose all use of animals in research.
The
university said it would seek a temporary restraining order and
permanent injunction against the websites of the Animal Liberation
Front and the Animal Liberation Brigade, which have allegedly claimed
responsibility for unlawful activities against UCLA staff and their
homes.
Also to be named in the court action is the UCLA Primate
Freedom Project, which is not affiliated with the university and whose
website displays the photographs, home addresses and phone numbers of
researchers under the heading "Targets."
Christine Garcia, an
attorney who has represented animal activists in the past, said UCLA's
plan to obtain a court order appeared to be part of a continuing
attempt by the university to curb legal protests, such as residential
picketing, by opponents of animal research.
richard.paddock@
latimes.com