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Animal abuse registry in works

Database would be first in U.S. to track those convicted of animal cruelty.

February 27, 2010|By Melanie Hicken

GLENDALE — Local animal shelter officials said they support a potential state law that would create an online registry of animal abusers.

While local cases of extreme animal cruelty are rare, they are not unheard of. A former employee of the Glendale Humane Society in 2002 was ordered to serve three years’ probation after pleading no contest to felony animal cruelty charges. Police said they discovered about 200 animals at his home, several of them dead.

In 2004, a Burbank woman was ordered to serve probation after a court found her guilty of animal cruelty for keeping 230 Chihuahuas and 60 birds in her home.

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Under the bill introduced last week by California Senate Majority Leader Dean Florez (D-Shafter), anyone convicted of felony animal abuse would have to register with local law enforcement and provide personal information, including a picture and home address, to be listed on a website, similar to the registries for sex offenders. If approved, the database would become the first of its kind nationwide.

Burbank Police Capt. Janice Lowers, who oversees the Burbank Animal Shelter, said that while local cases of animal cruelty were fairly isolated, she endorsed the creation of an online registry as one more way for officials to ensure they are releasing their animals to safe environments.

“We like to think they are going to the best possible homes, but we really don’t have any way of knowing that, in all honesty,” she said.

Supporters say the registry would help prevent repeat incidents of the worst animal cruelty, including torture, mutilation and killings.

“We think this is just the next step in making sure California is at the forefront of animal protection,” Florez said in a news conference announcing the bill.

He was joined by representatives from the Animal Legal Defense Fund, a California-based animal rights organization.

Ricky Whitman, a spokeswoman for the Pasadena Humane Society, said abuse in the shelter’s service area has decreased in response to more investigations and better public reporting. A public database could help continue that downward trend, she said.


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