Detroit Lions Players Call for End to Painful Dog Experiments in Michigan Labs
A growing coalition of advocates, including Detroit Lions players and several high-profile Michigan natives, is urging the state's lawmakers to pass legislation that would ban painful experiments on dogs at taxpayer-funded institutions.
The push comes as Michigan taxpayers are helping bankroll cruel and invasive canine experiments, critics argue. In April, a billboard campaign in Lansing and Detroit drew attention to the issue, featuring a beagle and the message " $15 Million Wasted on Wayne State's Dog Experiments? ENOUGH. Pass Queenie's Law!"
The legislation, known as Queenie's Law, would prohibit public bodies from conducting research or training on dogs "in a manner that causes pain or distress." The House version of the bill has already cleared one hurdle in the House Regulatory Reform Committee.
Supporters argue that the science is moving away from dog experiments. In May 2025, the NIH closed its last in-house beagle lab, and in June, the U.S. Navy announced it would stop using dogs and cats in research. The bills also cite alternatives already producing better results for patients, including clinical trials, population studies, 3D organoids, and research using donated human organs.
Critics, however, warn that the legislation could hinder biomedical research and harm Michigan's competitiveness. Opponents argue that restrictions on animal studies could slow progress in treating serious diseases.
The bills have already drawn support from high-profile Michigan natives, including Detroit Lions tight end Brock Wright and his fiancΓ©e Carley Johnston, director and actor Alison Eastwood, and several other prominent Michiganders.
"We're not the only members of the Lions family who support this important legislation," Wright and Johnston wrote in their letter to Senate Majority Leader Winnie Brinks and House Speaker Matt Hall. "Anyone who has a dog at home would be shocked to learn of the deadly experiments occurring inside public labsβand what's equally shocking is how unnecessary those experiments are."
The coalition behind Queenie's Law emphasizes that it is a common-sense, bipartisan effort aimed at protecting Michigan taxpayers from supporting cruel and unnecessary experiments on dogs.
As Wright and Johnston so aptly put it: "Cutting edge, human-relevant research means there is no reason to harm and kill dogs to improve public health."
A growing coalition of advocates, including Detroit Lions players and several high-profile Michigan natives, is urging the state's lawmakers to pass legislation that would ban painful experiments on dogs at taxpayer-funded institutions.
The push comes as Michigan taxpayers are helping bankroll cruel and invasive canine experiments, critics argue. In April, a billboard campaign in Lansing and Detroit drew attention to the issue, featuring a beagle and the message " $15 Million Wasted on Wayne State's Dog Experiments? ENOUGH. Pass Queenie's Law!"
The legislation, known as Queenie's Law, would prohibit public bodies from conducting research or training on dogs "in a manner that causes pain or distress." The House version of the bill has already cleared one hurdle in the House Regulatory Reform Committee.
Supporters argue that the science is moving away from dog experiments. In May 2025, the NIH closed its last in-house beagle lab, and in June, the U.S. Navy announced it would stop using dogs and cats in research. The bills also cite alternatives already producing better results for patients, including clinical trials, population studies, 3D organoids, and research using donated human organs.
Critics, however, warn that the legislation could hinder biomedical research and harm Michigan's competitiveness. Opponents argue that restrictions on animal studies could slow progress in treating serious diseases.
The bills have already drawn support from high-profile Michigan natives, including Detroit Lions tight end Brock Wright and his fiancΓ©e Carley Johnston, director and actor Alison Eastwood, and several other prominent Michiganders.
"We're not the only members of the Lions family who support this important legislation," Wright and Johnston wrote in their letter to Senate Majority Leader Winnie Brinks and House Speaker Matt Hall. "Anyone who has a dog at home would be shocked to learn of the deadly experiments occurring inside public labsβand what's equally shocking is how unnecessary those experiments are."
The coalition behind Queenie's Law emphasizes that it is a common-sense, bipartisan effort aimed at protecting Michigan taxpayers from supporting cruel and unnecessary experiments on dogs.
As Wright and Johnston so aptly put it: "Cutting edge, human-relevant research means there is no reason to harm and kill dogs to improve public health."