Panel Votes to Outlaw Human-Animal Hybrids

Posted: May 12, 2009

KEVIN McGILL
Associated Press Writer

BATON ROUGE, La.—Combining human and animal cells to create what are sometimes called "human-animal hybrids" would be a crime in Louisiana, punishable by up to 10 years in prison, under legislation approved Tuesday by a state Senate panel.

Scientific researchers in some areas have tried to create human embryonic stem cells, which scientists say could be used to develop treatment for a variety of human ailments, by placing human DNA into animal cells. But such practices are controversial for a number of reasons.

Sen. Danny Martiny's bill, approved without objection by members of the Senate Judiciary Committee, was designed to outlaw such practices. It defines and criminalizes various ways of making human-animal hybrids, including combining human sperm and an animal egg, combining animal sperm with a human egg, and the use of human brain tissue or neural tissue to develop a human brain in an animal.

The bill by Martiny, R-Kenner, goes next to the full Senate.

Attorney Dorinda Bordlee, an anti-abortion activist and an opponent of human embryonic stem cell research, said the bill would not stop common medical practices such as the use of pig valves in human heart surgery; nor would it prohibit research in which human brain cells are grown in mouse brains. The growth of a few thousand cells in a mouse brain would not violate the bill's prohibition of a "non-human life form engineered such that it contains a human brain or a brain derived wholly or predominantly from human neural tissues," Bordlee said.

The idea of using animal-human "hybrid" embryos drew fire last year in Britain as authorities pondered whether to let scientists try it. Opponents objected to mixing human and animal material and worried that such research could lead to genetically modified babies.

Another element of the argument: Regardless of whether animal cells are used, the creation of embryonic stem cells for research is opposed by some because it destroys the embryo, considered by some to be a human life.

A report earlier this year by researchers with Advanced Cell Technology in Worcester, Mass., cast doubt on the effectiveness of using human DNA in animal eggs to make hybrid cloned embryos. The animal eggs don't reprogram human DNA in the right way to generate stem cells, researchers reported.

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SB115 can be viewed at www.legis.state.la.us

it's already too late

They can outlaw human-animal hybrids in LA., but no state in the

U.S. can stop them from being developed in some third world country half way around the world. Suppose hybrids with almost human intelligence are successfully born into this world in some remote country someday...then a hybrid/chimera rights activist group becomes established some day...and that activist group stands firm that,"Hybrids and chimeras are part human and have human rights like the rest of us". The lobbyists of...oh,say... Hybrid Chimera Rights International(HCRI) successfully get legislation passed that a hybrid or chimera above a determined level of intelligence cannot be prohibited entry into the U.S. if they choose to imigrate. If events run that course, hybrids and chimeras could be residing among us one day...Inspite of our efforts to outlaw them.

Harry of AR @ Oct 09, 2009 14:06:11 PM

swine flu

new diseases between animal and human have existed before but changing as we continue our human animal integration into the scientic world of the unknown. Disease will change and jump from one species too another and new disease will continue too develop which will be unknown too man.

cyndi warren of SC @ Aug 18, 2009 04:59:42 AM

swine flu

could the influenza have jumped from one species too another by integrating the two together as they have done already for testing purposes. For example, by planting human embryo in pigs for research.

cyndi warren of SC @ Aug 18, 2009 04:49:56 AM

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