Michigan Bill Would Ban Painful Dog Experiments at Public Universities
Lawmakers Clash Over Whether Research at Wayne State Is Humane or Cruel
Michigan lawmakers are weighing legislation that would end painful experiments on dogs at public universities, following emotional testimony from animal welfare advocates, scientists, and university officials.
House Bill 4254, known as “Queenie’s Law,” would prohibit state-funded institutions from conducting research that causes pain or distress to dogs. Supporters say the bill is long overdue and would end what they describe as decades of unnecessary suffering at Wayne State University. Opponents warn it could cripple important medical research.
Supporters Call Research “Cruel and Fruitless”
Dr. Sally Christopher, a former laboratory veterinarian and biotechnology executive, testified that she was “shocked” by veterinary records of beagles subjected to invasive surgeries at Wayne State. She described “Dog 3003,” a beagle who lived in a windowless cage for months, underwent multiple heart surgeries, and cried in pain before being euthanized. “The pain and suffering by dogs at Wayne State is plain to see in the university’s own records,” Christopher said.
Wayne State social work student Jackie Myers said she was “horrified” to learn her university had conducted such tests since before she was born. “More than 30 years of these experiments have produced no advances for human heart health,” she said, urging lawmakers to redirect taxpayer funds toward research that directly helps patients.
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Dr. Paul Locke of Johns Hopkins University testified that the bill represents “an incremental but important step” toward replacing animal research with modern methods such as artificial intelligence and organ-on-a-chip technology
Wayne State Defends Its Research
Wayne State’s senior director of laboratory animal resources, Dr. Michael Bradley, testified against the bill, insisting the university’s work is “heavily regulated and humane.” He said the research has been continuously funded by the National Institutes of Health for more than 30 years and has produced “meaningful peer-reviewed results” on cardiovascular health
“Our studies have helped illuminate how the nervous and cardiovascular systems behave during heart failure,” Bradley said. “This work has led to medical device development and treatment strategies that help people live longer, fuller lives.”
Bradley also pushed back on claims of cruelty. “We use positive reinforcement,” he said, adding that some dogs “enjoy running on the treadmill” and that none are forced to participate. “I’m a dog lover myself,” he said. “I don’t see why we’d want to ban research that could also benefit dogs.”
Lawmakers Divided Over Oversight and Ethics
Committee members pressed Bradley about how much NIH funding Wayne State receives and questioned whether such research justifies the suffering described in records. One legislator asked bluntly if he was “comfortable with the level of pain these dogs have to endure.”
The hearing drew a flood of written support from across Michigan, with advocates holding up signs featuring images of rescued research dogs. Chair Rep. Regina Weiss (D-Oak Park) said the committee received “a giant stack of support for this bill from all across the state.”
What’s Next
HB 4254 is now under consideration by the House Committee on Regulatory Reform. If passed, Michigan would join a small number of states banning or limiting painful experiments on dogs. The bill does not restrict medical training or veterinary procedures, only research that intentionally inflicts pain on the animals.
As the debate continues, the divide remains clear: advocates argue for compassion and modernization in science, while opponents warn that ending canine research could slow progress in heart disease treatment.


I have heart disease. I don't want a dog maimed or put through painful procedures just to try to find a way to make me live longer. I'll take the hours left in my hour glass of life and find a way to make myself heathier rather than see a dog in pain.