SAVE #99

  • by: Tess M.
  • recipient: Andrew C. von Eschenbach, M.D., FDA
He didn’t even have a name. Instead, he was identified by the last two digits of the I.D. number tattooed across his chest.
#99 was one of hundreds of monkeys who were abducted from their homes in the wild, only to be used to test a mysterious experimental substance in a laboratory in Vienna, Virginia.
He didn’t even have a name. Instead, he was identified by the last two digits of the I.D. number tattooed across his chest.
#99 was one of hundreds of monkeys who were abducted from their homes in the wild, only to be used to test a mysterious experimental substance in a laboratory in Vienna, Virginia.
#99 was the smallest and sickliest monkey in the experiment: too pale, too thin, nearly bald, and his skin yellow and flaking off at the slightest touch. After the experiments he was put through, his tail was swollen, red, and oozing pus, and he had trouble breathing because of huge scabs in his nostrils. Every day, technicians would force a tube up #99’s nose, down his throat, and into his stomach, where an experimental substance was then pumped. This procedure caused open wounds in #99’s throat, making him choke, gag, and vomit.

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