Effective immediately, SB 2658 makes acts of aggravated cruelty — such as the burning, mutilation or intentional torture of a dog or cat — felonies rather than misdemeanors, and each act of abuse against more than one animal will be a separate offense.
In a welcomed win for animal rights, Mississippi Gov. Tate Reeves has
signed into law a new bill increasing penalties for abuse against dogs and
cats.
Effective immediately, SB 2658 makes acts of aggravated cruelty — such as
the burning, mutilation or intentional torture of a dog or cat — felonies
rather than misdemeanors, and each act of abuse against more than one animal
will be a separate offense.
The new law has also doubled the fines for each act of cruelty up to $5,000,
added prison time for animal abuse, and introduced mandatory psychological
counseling for perpetrators, who will also be placed on an FBI watch list.
Those convicted of aggravated cruelty will be banned from caring for or
living in a home with a dog or cat for five years, with a $1,000 fine per
animal if they don’t comply.
“For too long, criminals have been getting away with a slap on the wrist for
some of the most heinous acts of cruelty imaginable,” said In Defense of
Animals’ Justice for Animals Campaign Director Doll Stanley. “Now,
Mississippi finally has an animal cruelty law with teeth that gives law
enforcement, prosecutors, and judges the authority to hold animal abusers
accountable for their unspeakable acts of cruelty.
Lady Freethinker applauds Mississippi’s government and all of the activists
who fought tirelessly to turn this bill into a reality, making companion
animals much safer throughout the state.
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