“For decades, a national anti-cruelty law was a dream for animal protectionists. Today, it is a reality.”
- All 50 states and local governments have animal cruelty laws, but before this week it was only a federal crime to torture animals in conjunction with so-called “animal crushing” videos.
- Now, the act of animal torture itself is a federal crime punishable by up to seven years in prison.
- The bill passed unanimously in the House and the Senate.
The Preventing Animal Cruelty and Torture Act (the PACT Act) expands a 2010 bill signed by former President Barack Obama that made the creation and distribution of so-called “animal crushing” videos a federal crime, including content that showed animals being crushed, burned, drowned, suffocated, impaled or tortured. However, the Animal Crush Video Prohibition Act of 2010 only criminalized animal cruelty on the federal level if it was connected to an animal crushing video.
Now, that type of extreme animal cruelty is a federal crime, whether or not for a video.
“This common sense legislation restricts the creation and distribution of videos or images of animal torture,” Trump said Monday at the bill signing. “It is important that we combat these heinous and sadistic acts of cruelty, which are totally unacceptable in a civilized society.”
The PACT Act earned bipartisan support and passed unanimously in both the House and the Senate.
“Special thank you to all the animal lovers everywhere who know this is simply the right thing to do,” said Florida Representative Ted Deutch, a Democrat who introduced the bill this year in the House alongside Representative Vern Buchanan, a Republican. “This is a major step to end animal abuse.”
All 50 states enforce some version of animal welfare laws. But it’s sometimes difficult to prosecute animal abuse cases that involve the crossing of state lines. The PACT Act should help to close that gap. It could also help law enforcement better identify people who might also be violent to humans, according to the National Sheriff’s Association, which supported the bill.
“Our research has shown if somebody is harming an animal, there is a good chance they also are hurting or will hurt a human. If we can see patterns of animal abuse, the odds are that something else is going on,” said John Thompson, Deputy Executive Director of the National Sheriffs’ Association.
Under the PACT Act, people who torture animals can spend up to seven years in prison, if charged by federal prosecutors.
“The approval of this measure by the Congress and the president marks a new era in the codification of kindness to animals within federal law,” said Kitty Block, president and chief executive of the Humane Society of the United States. “For decades, a national anti-cruelty law was a dream for animal protectionists. Today, it is a reality.”
(For the source of this, and many other equally interesting articles, please visit: https://bigthink.com/politics-current-affairs/animal-cruelty-laws/)