70°F
weather icon Clear

Critics say animal cruelty law inadvertently keeps cases secret

CARSON CITY -- The sponsor of a new law intended to toughen penalties against severe animal cruelty said Monday the purpose of a late-session amendment to the measure was to allow people to report cases anonymously -- not to keep abusers and cases confidential.

But some animal rights activists say the good intentions may have backfired.

The Reno Gazette-Journal reported Sunday that the new law makes animal abuse cases confidential and gives criminal penalties to officials who release reports or talk about cases. State Sen. Mark Manendo, D-Las Vegas, an animal lover and prime sponsor of the bill, was surprised to learn of problems with the amendment's language. The intent was to allow people to report crimes without fear of retaliation, not to "stifle public knowledge of events," he said.

The measure, SB233, took effect Oct. 1. Known as Cooney's Law, it was named after a dog that died after being gutted by its owner. SB233 makes it a felony to maliciously torture, maim, mutilate or kill a companion animal.

The questionable language is: "Any person, law enforcement agency, society for the prevention of cruelty to animals or animal control agency that willfully releases data or information concerning the reports, except for the purposes of a criminal investigation, is guilty of a misdemeanor."

MOST READ
Don't miss the big stories. Like us on Facebook.
THE LATEST
White House demolition begins for Trump’s ballroom

Dramatic photos of the White House construction work showed a backhoe tearing into the East Wing façade and windows and other building parts in tatters on the ground.

AG Ford sues feds over $150M in low-income solar funds

“President Trump has tried to illegally claw back funds from Nevada after hardworking residents of our state have put in the work to address our energy needs,” Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford said in a statement.

MORE STORIES