Community Corner
Animal Cruelty In Missouri May Become Federal Felony
Federal lawmakers last week reintroduced the Preventing Animal Cruelty and Torture Act. Here's what that means.

MISSOURI β Federal lawmakers from Florida have revived a bill that would allow federal felony charges to be brought against people who brutally kill, mutilate and torture small animals, including those in Missouri. The legislation stems from the creation of so-called βcrush videos,β in which people record themselves abusing animals and then share the videos over the internet.
These are generally crimes at the state level and are prosecuted as such. But itβs often unclear where the specific incidents of animal cruelty actually happened, and that makes it harder for prosecutors to bring a case
Nine years ago, President Barack Obama signed into law the βAnimal Crush Video Prohibition Act,β which banned the creation and distribution of such videos. But the underlying acts of animal cruelty remain legal under federal law. So last week, lawmakers reintroduced the Preventing Animal Cruelty and Torture Act, known as the PACT Act, to close that loophole and criminalize the act itself, even when no video is made.
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βAnimal crushingβ would be redefined to refer to conduct in which an animal is βintentionally crushed, burned, drowned, suffocated, impaled, or otherwise subjected to serious bodily injury.β The act would be banned if it relates to interstate commerce and federal authorities could act if states are unable. Charges could be brought, for example, against a puppy mill operator who drowns unwanted dogs if that individual was engaged in βinterstate activity.β
Notably, violators could face felony charges, fines and up to seven years in prison.
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Sara Amundson, president of the Humane Society Legislative Fund, said in a release that her organization was grateful to the lawmakers for reviving the bill.
βThe torture of innocent animals is abhorrent and should be punished to the fullest extent of the law,β Republican U.S. Rep. Vern Buchanan, who chairs the Animal Protection Caucus in Congress, said in a release.
Democratic U.S. Rep. Ted Deutch of West Boca, Florida, said itβs time to do more.
βWe've acted in the past to stop the horrific trend of animal abuse videos. Now it's time to make the underlying acts of cruelty a crime as well," said Deutch.
The bill contains exemptions for veterinarians, hunting and conduct necessary to protect life or property from a threatening animal.
Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.
Photo by DβAnn Lawrence White/Patch
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