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Idaho Animal Cruelty Law Passes State Legislature

Posted: 03/29/2012 4:53 pm

BOISE, Idaho (AP) — Mistreating pets and livestock could result in a felony conviction for the first time in Idaho after the Senate on Thursday approved a measure that would get the state off a very short list of others that don't impose tough penalties for animal cruelty.

If Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter signs the bill next week it would end an annual legislative battle in Idaho and leave the Dakotas as the lone states lacking such provision. The Republican governor has not indicated whether he supports the measure.

Historically averse to animal protection legislation, Senate lawmakers voted 24-11 Thursday to approve the plan, which makes a third animal cruelty conviction in 15 years a felony. It also makes it a felony to organize cockfighting events accompanied by drugs and gambling.

The state House backed the proposal earlier this week.

Animal rights groups, who have threatened to put much stiffer cruelty penalties before voters, lauded lawmakers for passing the bill.

"We couldn't be happier, because it's a tremendous step forward for the state," said Ann Church, vice president of state affairs for the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. "We hope what happens in Idaho will now happen in North and South Dakota."

Animal rights groups in Idaho are in the process of collecting nearly 50,000 signatures to put an initiative in front of voters in November asking for even tougher penalties, including first-offense felonies in some instances.

The effort spurred Idaho lawmakers to action, but it appears unlikely to secure enough signatures to trigger a ballot initiative, and some groups have ditched it to support the legislative remedy.

It comes partly in response to instances where some animal owners facing financial difficulties failed to feed or properly care for livestock, including a high-profile case in 2011 involving dozens of starved and neglected sheep, goats, pigs, llamas and horses.

Sen. Bert Brackett, R-Rogerson, backed the plan on the Senate floor, saying it protects the state's vital animal production industry by exempting normal practices, such as branding, castration and dehorning.

That compromise earned the plan approval from the livestock industry.

Sen. Jeff Siddoway, a Republican sheep rancher from eastern Idaho, led opposition against the plan, arguing it would only encourage animal rights activists to seek further protections that imperil the animal production industry.

"As soon as they get done with this, I'm just sure they're going to be after the standard animal operating practices," Siddoway said. "These are animal rights extremists that think that animals have the same rights as human beings."

Brackett said the Senate's action may not quell all calls for tougher penalties from animal rights activists, but it will provide a shield against future criticisms.

"We will be better able to defend the food industry against those attacks," Brackett said.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
04:49 PM on 04/05/2012
Huff Po!!! Why are you not posting the horrible nightmare in which the Sumatran Orangutans are being wiped out!

Please, please carry that story. The courts have failed to stop the fires, and the indonesians are chasing the orangs into the fire!!!
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amaboss52
Jesus died for your sins...get your moneys worth!
12:42 PM on 04/05/2012
What took them so long, this should have been a law a long time ago. The only people who are against these laws are corporations that profit from treating animals as commodoties and not flesh and blood beings.
09:37 AM on 04/02/2012
It's about time!
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RJII
Self Sustainability is the Future
09:24 AM on 04/02/2012
Hope this legislation passes. Govenor of MD recently helped pass legislation that gives animals legal rights beyond that of personal property.

I h8 animal abuse
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oldwolf49
Religion is a tool of the evil.
07:53 PM on 03/31/2012
I'm sorry, did I miss something?? Why was this not a law already??
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
john649
09:12 PM on 03/31/2012
Corporate profits have trumped humane animal treatment for years...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
oldwolf49
Religion is a tool of the evil.
09:37 PM on 03/31/2012
That is not an excuse.
06:17 PM on 03/31/2012
Great news!
05:33 PM on 03/31/2012
A good step, but the comments by Sen. Jeff Siddoway show the mindset of those who regard animals as nothing but machines and products. He's a disgrace, of course, and a simpleton - but fully represents the attitudes of those who protect the barbaric practices of factory farming.
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john649
09:12 PM on 03/31/2012
yea, what a nightmare of a human.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
11:06 AM on 03/31/2012
throw animal abusers in jail, for a very long time
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Judith Jaehn
Animal Activist!
03:38 PM on 03/31/2012
I agree sis!!!! It's about time this state finally showed a little compassion!!!!!!
xxx
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
03:49 PM on 03/31/2012
yep!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
patianneb
toothed night fury
03:32 PM on 03/30/2012
What really imperils the "animal production industry" is the realization by more and more people that to one degree or another they imperil THEMSELVES by eating the "produce" of factory farm operations.
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
03:22 PM on 03/30/2012
"Sen. Jeff Siddoway, a Republican sheep rancher from eastern Idaho, led opposition against the plan, arguing it would only encourage animal rights activists to seek further protections that imperil the animal production industry."

The same mentality that produces the slippery slope argument against everything: You give rights to gay people, and next thing you know, they're marrying dogs and horses. You send a man to jail for beating and dismembering a dog, next thing you know, they won't let you raise beef cattle. Why are these people all Republicans?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kahunacook
Takin' my time, choosin' my lines
03:34 PM on 03/30/2012
Seems to me it's pretty much bipartisan. Just earlier this month the following was reported. "Iowa became the first state to make it a crime to surreptitiously get into a farming operation to record video of animal abuse. Sen. Joe Seng, a Davenport Democrat and veterinarian sponsored the bill."
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Debbie338
What we manifest is before us
09:25 AM on 03/31/2012
Interesting. Thanks.
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john649
09:13 PM on 03/31/2012
don't worry that won't last long....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kahunacook
Takin' my time, choosin' my lines
01:38 PM on 03/30/2012
From the story, "It also makes it a felony to organize cockfighting events accompanied by drugs and gambling."

So does that mean that organizing a cockfight without drugs or gambling is not illegal or is it a simple misdemeanor? I would think this type of cruel activity would always be a felony, even without gambling, drugs, etc involved.

That being said, thank you Idaho for finally taking steps to protect our non human friends.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Kim0330
Purr, and the world purrs with you...
01:37 PM on 03/30/2012
Go Idaho! Hopefully the Dakotas will soon follow suit.
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Artemesian
Spiritual Messenger of the Earth
11:37 AM on 03/30/2012
Credit where credit is due, this is good news. Go Idaho!
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olitenup
11:24 AM on 03/30/2012
Bravo Idaho!!! But does that include wolves that are steel trapped?