For Immediate Release:
February 6, 2026
Miami – PETA is calling on a slew of national and state authorities to investigate after receiving a whistleblower report that an Immokalee-based monkey importer and laboratory supplier BC US LLC tossed a wooden crate containing a live monkey into a biohazard waste dumpster, which was then trucked across the state—and no one at BC US noticed the primate, who should immediately have been placed in quarantine, fed, and watered, was missing until he was found alive in Miami five days later.
PETA wants to know how a newly imported macaque — who is required to be placed immediately into CDC-mandated quarantine —reportedly ended up loose inside a biomedical waste processing facility miles away in Miami, and today filed complaints with the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission, Florida public health officials, and the Association for Assessment and Accreditation of Laboratory Animal Care (AAALAC). PETA calls on the agencies to immediately investigate what appear to be profound failures in basic inventory controls, containment practices, the safeguards often falsely touted by the primate importation industry, and depriving a monkey of care and nourishment after a grueling overseas flight.
The monkey was one of hundreds of long-tailed macaques who were packed into wooden crates and endured a 28-hour flight aboard a charter plane flown by Poland-based SkyTaxi from Mauritius to Miami International Airport...
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