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Today in Canada > Tech > A monkey that escaped from an overturned truck has been fatally shot by Mississippi mom
Tech

A monkey that escaped from an overturned truck has been fatally shot by Mississippi mom

Press Room
Last updated: 2025/11/03 at 8:54 AM
Press Room Published November 3, 2025
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One of the monkeys that escaped last week after a truck overturned on a Mississippi roadway was shot and killed early Sunday by a homeowner who says she feared for the safety of her children.

Jessica Bond Ferguson said she was alerted early Sunday by her 16-year-old son who said he thought he had seen a monkey running in the yard outside their home near Heidelberg, Miss. She got out of bed, grabbed her firearm and her cellphone, and stepped outside where she saw the monkey about 18 metres away.

Bond said she and other residents had been warned about the diseases that the escaped monkeys carried so she fired her gun.

“I did what any other mother would do to protect her children,” Bond, who has five children ranging in age from four to 16, told The Associated Press. “I shot at it and it just stood there, and I shot again, and he backed up and that’s when he fell.”

The Jasper County Sheriff’s Office confirmed in a social media post that a homeowner had found one of the monkeys on their property Sunday morning but said the office didn’t have any details. The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks took possession of the monkey, the sheriff’s office said.

A truck that was transporting monkeys is seen overturned in Heidelberg on Tuesday. (Scotty Ray Boyd/The Associated Press)

Mississippi authorities have not disclosed the company involved in transporting the monkeys, where the monkeys were headed or who owns them.

The Rhesus monkeys had been housed at the Tulane University National Biomedical Research Center in New Orleans, which routinely provides primates to scientific research organizations, according to the university. In a statement, Tulane University said the monkeys do not belong to the university, and they were not being transported by the university.

The truck carrying the monkeys overturned Tuesday on Interstate 59 north of Heidelberg. Authorities have said most of the 21 monkeys were killed. The sheriff’s department said animal experts from Tulane examined the trailer and had determined three monkeys had escaped.

The Mississippi Highway Patrol has said it was investigating the cause of the crash, which occurred about 160 kilometres from the state capital, Jackson.

Monkeys need to be ‘neutralized,’ sheriff says

Rhesus monkeys typically weigh about seven kilograms and are among the most medically studied animals on the planet. Video recorded after the crash showed monkeys crawling through tall grass beside the interstate, where wooden crates labeled “live animals” were crumpled and strewn about.

Jasper County Sheriff Randy Johnson had said Tulane officials reported the monkeys were not infectious, despite initial reports by the truck’s occupants warning that the monkeys were dangerous and harboring various diseases. Nonetheless, Johnson said the monkeys still needed to be “neutralized” because of their aggressive nature.

The monkeys had recently received checkups confirming they were pathogen-free, Tulane said in a statement Wednesday.

A monkey climbs a tree.
A Rhesus macaques monkey is seen in Silver Springs, Fla., in November 2017. (John Raoux/The Associated Press)

About 10 years ago, three Rhesus macaques in the breeding colony of what was then known as the Tulane National Primate Research Center were euthanized after a “biosecurity breach,” federal inspectors wrote in a 2015 report. The breach involved at least one staff member failing to adhere to biosafety and infection control procedures, it said.

The facility made changes in its procedures and retrained staff after that happened, according to the report from the U.S. Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.

Rhesus macaques “are known to be aggressive,” according to the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks. It said the agency’s conservation workers were working with sheriff’s officials in the search for the animals.

The search comes about one year after 43 Rhesus macaques escaped from a South Carolina compound that breeds them for medical research because an employee didn’t fully lock an enclosure. Employees from the Alpha Genesis facility in Yemassee, S.C., had set up traps to capture them.

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