The new Monkey Trial: N.Y. court to decide if chimps should have human rights

spaminator

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The new Monkey Trial: N.Y. court to decide if chimps should have human rights
Daniel Wiessner, Reuters
First posted: Tuesday, October 07, 2014 03:47 PM EDT | Updated: Tuesday, October 07, 2014 04:00 PM EDT
ALBANY, N.Y. – A New York appeals court will consider this week whether chimpanzees are entitled to "legal personhood" in what experts say is the first case of its kind.
For Steven Wise, the lawyer behind the case involving a chimp named Tommy, it is the culmination of three decades of seeking to extend rights historically reserved for humans to other intelligent animals.
On Wednesday, a mid-level state appeals court in Albany will hear the case of the 26-year-old Tommy, who is owned by a human and lives alone in what Wise describes as a "dark, dank shed" in upstate New York.
Wise is seeking a ruling that Tommy has been unlawfully imprisoned and should be released to a chimp sanctuary in Florida.
A victory in the case could lead to a further expansion of rights for chimps and other higher-order animals, including elephants, dolphins, orcas and other non-human primates, Wise said.
"The next argument could be that Tommy ... also has the right to bodily integrity, so he couldn't be used in biomedical research," the Boston attorney said.
Tommy's owner, Patrick Lavery, has made the rare move of waiving his right to make an argument in the case. Lavery did not return a request for comment last week, but said when the lawsuit was filed last year that Tommy's "shed" was a state-of-the-art $150,000 facility, and that the chimp had been on a waiting list for a primate sanctuary for three years.
An appeals court in Rochester in December will hear a similar case from Wise involving a chimp named Kiko. State judges dismissed both cases but allowed Wise to create the record necessary for an appeal.
Wise is using a legal mechanism traditionally filed on behalf of people, usually prison inmates, who claim they have been unlawfully imprisoned.
Although there are hundreds of captive chimps in the United States, Wise said he thought Tommy and Kiko would make compelling subjects because they lived alone in conditions he said were clearly unfit for a chimp.
The bid to secure legal rights for animals has been criticized by some prominent legal experts, including U.S. Circuit Judge Richard Posner and New York University law professor Richard Epstein.
If animals gain rights once reserved for humans, courts would be inundated with tricky legal questions that could spawn a series of novel and potentially contradictory rulings, they say.
A chimpanzee enjoys the sun at Gut Aiderbichl's Sanctuary for Traumatized Chimpanzees and other Primates in Gaenserndorf, 50 kms (31 miles) northeast of Vienna, September 14, 2011. (REUTERS/Herwig Prammer)

The new Monkey Trial: N.Y. court to decide if chimps should have human rights |
the court needs to stop monkeying around. ;)
 

Twila

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Mar 26, 2003
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I think Tommy's "owners" should spend a year in Tommy's containment area. Then, if they feel it's adequate they can live the rest of their lives there while Tommy has the benefit of being with his own kind in a sanctuary.

Cruelty to animals is one of the most abhorrent act a person can do, in my eyes. To keep a social animal confined and alone is beyond cruel.
 

Blackleaf

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Chimpanzees are our closest relatives. I think human rights may just about stretch to them and one or two of our other fellow primates (like our other cousin, the gorilla), but no other animal though. I don't like animal cruelty, but human rights, by their nature, cannot be given to a dog or to the tongue-eating louse.