Thank you for signing!
Make Animal Abusers Pay For The Animals They Hurt
Final signature count: 171
171 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Animals seized from cruelty should not suffer in shelters while taxpayers and rescuers pay the abuser’s bills.
When animals are seized from alleged cruelty, neglect, hoarding, puppy mill, or fighting cases, rescue is only the first step. In many states, those animals may still legally belong to the person accused of harming them until a court resolves the case.1
That can leave dogs, cats, horses, rabbits, and other animals stuck in shelters for months or even years. They need food, housing, veterinary care, behavior support, and daily attention while the case moves forward.2
Shelters And Taxpayers Should Not Pay The Abuser’s Bill
Without strong cost-of-care laws, local shelters, rescues, animal control agencies, and taxpayers often bear the cost. Large cruelty cases can involve dozens or hundreds of animals, and the bills can quickly overwhelm already strained animal welfare systems.2
In Kentucky, more than 40 horses were seized in one cruelty investigation, and a separate alleged puppy mill case left 42 dogs in county care for 18 months, with expenses reported at more than $100,000.3
Strong Laws Protect Animals And Due Process
Cost-of-care laws create a court process after animals are seized. A judge can require the owner or custodian to pay reasonable care costs or relinquish the animals so they can be placed in new homes. These laws can also give defendants notice, a hearing, and the right to challenge the evidence and requested costs.1
Maryland’s law shows how this process can work: courts review whether a seizure was warranted, whether continued possession is warranted, and who must pay reasonable care costs. The law also allows forfeiture if ordered payments are not made.4
State Lawmakers Must Act
Animal cruelty enforcement depends on resources. When shelters cannot afford long-term care, animals may stay in unsafe conditions because there is nowhere for them to go. Strong cost-of-care laws help remove that barrier and protect animals already hurt by abuse.2
Sign the petition to demand state lawmakers pass cost-of-care laws so animal abusers pay for the animals they hurt.
The Petition
Recent Signatures
- Danielle Williams Bacon
- Karen Guasp
- Isabelle Chaminade
- Sophie Nixon
- Sophie Nixon
- Michelle Krueger
- Joanna Mechlinski
- Anonymous
- Daniela Renni
- HELENA frocht
- Ritva Janhonen
- Dolores Fifer
- Josephine handley
- Debra Martin
- Gayle Wells
- Nicole Friebolin
- Laurie Carpenter
- Julie OConnor
- Joan Jackson
- Judith Hansell
- Anonymous
- Barney McComas
- lin castagna
- Greg Okun
- linda castagna
- Amy Pierce
- Edwin Daniel Jr
- SUSAN DANIEL
- Emily Dickinson-Adams
- Judith Von
- elisabeth moncomble
- Ingrid Frassl
- Barbara Tait
- Rhonda Bradley
- Thomas Moore
- Cindy Vanderbur
- Dolores Dupont
- Scaramella Valeria
- Maureen Pisani
- Linda Savage
- Regina Roman
- Joe Scriff
- Christine Hesselbarth
- Lydia Verardo
- Stacy Foley
- Sandra Goodwin
- Lia Schiltmans
- Christine Stewart
- Monika Maciejewski
- Davinia Bleijenberg
- Jacqueline Andrews Calhoun
- Therese Barlow-Dennis
- Kara Wendholt
- Alex Stavis
- Lilia Casarez
- Tolga Süslü
- Sabine Godart
- Jan Wisniewski
- gwen leach
- Elizabeth Root
- Crystal Wolf
- Hollie Hollon
- Dena Durand
- Siegrid Berman
- Lynn M. Larsen
- Ann-Louise Truschel
- Cindy Higgins
- MICHELLE DOBRANSKY
- Hollie Hollon
- Lynn Wells
- Zoe Kane
- Anonymous
- Anonymous
- Anonymous
- Carol Owler
- Robert Nowak
- Anonymous
- Barbara Anderson
- Anonymous
- Agnès NIVET
- Alain NIVET
- Maryse KERT
- Trudi Selner
- Anonymous
- HELENA DREZNER
- Judith Zwarun
- Stacey Bostaph
- Laura Webb
- Justine Lakin
- Anonymous
- Sotiria Peterson
- Ann Reed
- Carol Wong
- Michael Crowden
- Kay Chamberlain
- Linda Pawloski
- Amy Homicz
- Sandra Kopp
- Melissa Pearson
- william Tait
