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Charles River Laboratories

 
Wikipedia: Charles River Laboratories
Charles River Laboratories, Inc.
Type Public (NYSECRL)
Founded 1947
Headquarters Wilmington, Massachusetts
Key people James C. Foster, CEO
Industry Pharmaceutical/Medical devices
Employees 8,500
Website Charles Rivers Laboratories

Charles River Laboratories, Inc. (NYSECRL) is an American corporation specializing in a broad spectrum of pre-clinical and clinical laboratory services for the pharmaceutical, medical device and biotechnology industries. It is the world's largest supplier of animals for laboratory experimentation, and has been described as the "General Motors of the laboratory animal industry.[1] It also supplies a range of biomedical products and research and development outsourcing services for use in the pharmaceutical industry. According to its website, its customers include every major pharmaceutical and biotechnology company in the world, leading academic institutions, and government research centers.[2]

The company was founded in 1947 and is headquartered at 251 Ballardvale Street, Wilmington, Massachusetts, in the Boston metropolitan area. The chief executive officer is James C. Foster.

With over 8,500 employees, the company has facilities in Canada, Belgium, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Ireland, China, Japan, the Netherlands, Spain, and the United Kingdom.

Contents

Controversy

The company has been the target of animal rights activists in the UK. It ran Shamrock Farm in West Sussex, which closed in 2000 following a 15-month campaign by animal rights campaigners. It also has a large site at Manston Road, Margate, Kent, where it breeds mice and rats.

On 29 June 2008 in Saint Germain sur l'Arbresle (Rhone - France) an alleged case of arson may have occurred, although the perpetrators have never been identified nor has any group claimed credit.[citation needed]

In May 2008, 32 Cynomolgus primates, also known as crab-eating Macaques, died of overheating at the Charles Rivers Laboratory in Sparks, Nevada after a climate system failure. Based on a whistleblower complaint, animal rights group PETA filed a complaint with the USDA who are investigating the incident. [3]

August 2008, the Associate Press reported, "A former scientist at an animal testing facility in Nevada where 32 research monkeys were accidentally killed in May claims in a federal lawsuit he was fired partly because he opposed "cruel and inhumane mistreatment" of animals there." [4]

Mergers

In October 2003, Charles River Laboratories merged with Inveresk, a UK owned Research Company. The Company was then known as Charles River Laboratories. Inveresk specialised in Clinical and Pre-clinical testing, and their main facilities are in Edinburgh, Scotland. The Pre-clinical division known as Charles River Laboratories, Preclinical Services Edinburgh Ltd, and the Clinical Division, is known as Charles River Clinical Services.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Christensen, Carl Roland. Business Policy: Text and Cases. R.D. Irwin, 1982, p. 54.
  2. ^ "About Charles River", Charles River Laboratories.
  3. ^ "Sparks lab makes changes after 32 monkeys die in heat"
  4. ^ "Fired researcher claims animal cruelty at NV lab"

Further reading


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