From Sara Amundson <[email protected]>
Subject Stop Repeat Offenders from Abusing Animals (Take Action)
Date July 31, 2023 6:03 PM
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Tell your legislators to support the Better CARE for Animals Act! ([link removed])
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ADD YOUR VOICE: Help Stop Serial Animal Abusers! ([link removed])
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Friend,

New legislation was just introduced in Congress that will make it easier to prosecute animal abusers! Your voice is needed right now to help the Better Collaboration, Accountability, and Regulatory Enforcement (CARE) for Animals Act become law. ([link removed])

The Animal Welfare Act is meant to protect animals in facilities regulated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture like puppy mills, roadside zoos, or laboratories. Yet repeat offenders who continue to violate basic standards of animal care in these facilities face little to no consequences. As a result, countless animals are suffering. Many violations are egregious—including denying veterinary care to animals who are emaciated, sick, injured, or unable to walk.

Animals deserve better, and anyone who abuses an animal must be held accountable. Tell your legislators to support the Better CARE for Animals Act! ([link removed])

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The Better CARE for Animals Act is brand new legislation that will strengthen enforcement of the Animal Welfare Act by enabling the Department of Justice to collaborate more effectively with the USDA to hold accountable animal businesses that violate the most basic rules of humane care. It also allows the DOJ to seek stronger penalties for repeat offenders, including license revocations, civil penalties, and the use of seizure and forfeiture of animals experiencing harmful treatment.

This change is long overdue. Consider that in May of 2022, the DOJ filed a lawsuit documenting dozens of animal welfare violations at a breeding facility for animals used in research. Among the many violations noted, beagles were being killed instead of given veterinary care for easily treatable conditions, and, over an eight-week period, 25 beagle puppies died from cold exposure. The company that owned the facility eventually entered a settlement agreement leading to the transfer of roughly 4,000 dogs to animal adoption organizations, but it should never have taken so long to save these dogs since USDA inspectors had documented dozens of violations at the facility in 2021 and 2022. If the DOJ had better tools to punish chronic violators, like this facility, it’s possible some of these animals could have been saved.

The Better CARE for Animals Act will give DOJ better tools to enforce the Animal Welfare Act, prosecute repeat offenders, and help save suffering animals before it’s too late. Please urge your members of Congress to support this critical bill today! ([link removed])

Thank you,

Sara Amundson Signature

Sara Amundson
President
Humane Society Legislative Fund
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