It was meant to be just another shipment, a truck rumbling down Interstate 59 with lab monkeys headed to a future full of medical tests, needles and white coats. But fate had other ideas. A sudden crash flipped the truck on its side, doors flew open, and the once-caged primates suddenly found themselves staring at the greatest opportunity of their furry lives. What began as a tragic highway accident became, for a handful of escape artists, a jailbreak dream come true. While officers panicked and residents locked their doors, the monkeys saw only one thing: freedom, as reported by the Mississippi Free Press.
Residents who passed by the overturned truck witnessed scenes normally reserved for comedy films or escape-the-zoo memes. Monkeys leapt from the trailer, darting toward the woods with the kind of excitement that only comes from illegally skipping medical research duty. Officials urged everyone to stay far away, while the monkeys clearly preferred to play far away.
Law enforcement vs. banana bandits
Soon the highway became a primate-tracking battleground. Sheriff’s deputies, wildlife officers and highway patrol agents fanned out, radios crackling as they attempted to locate “five missing monkeys”. The fugitives were small, speedy and absolutely uninterested in human authority. Meanwhile, memes were already being drafted.
Rumours spread that the monkeys were infectious with all sorts of terrifying diseases. Tulane University quickly stepped in to say: absolutely not. No viruses. No zombie outbreak. No Planet of the Apes Part One. Just regular lab monkeys who got a little too curious about roadside adventure.
While the monkeys imagined a new start in the Mississippi wilderness, reality eventually caught up. Professional animal handlers arrived, armed not with fear but with food. The dramatic standoff ended, free-range monkey life lasted only hours, and the fugitives returned to captivity with incredible stories to tell their cage-mates.
In the end, no humans were harmed and no contagious chaos broke out. But locals may be checking the trees for weeks, just in case another tiny escape artist decides to test their luck.
Residents who passed by the overturned truck witnessed scenes normally reserved for comedy films or escape-the-zoo memes. Monkeys leapt from the trailer, darting toward the woods with the kind of excitement that only comes from illegally skipping medical research duty. Officials urged everyone to stay far away, while the monkeys clearly preferred to play far away.
Law enforcement vs. banana bandits
Soon the highway became a primate-tracking battleground. Sheriff’s deputies, wildlife officers and highway patrol agents fanned out, radios crackling as they attempted to locate “five missing monkeys”. The fugitives were small, speedy and absolutely uninterested in human authority. Meanwhile, memes were already being drafted.
Rumours spread that the monkeys were infectious with all sorts of terrifying diseases. Tulane University quickly stepped in to say: absolutely not. No viruses. No zombie outbreak. No Planet of the Apes Part One. Just regular lab monkeys who got a little too curious about roadside adventure.
While the monkeys imagined a new start in the Mississippi wilderness, reality eventually caught up. Professional animal handlers arrived, armed not with fear but with food. The dramatic standoff ended, free-range monkey life lasted only hours, and the fugitives returned to captivity with incredible stories to tell their cage-mates.
In the end, no humans were harmed and no contagious chaos broke out. But locals may be checking the trees for weeks, just in case another tiny escape artist decides to test their luck.
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