When does animal cruelty become “aggravated” in Colorado?
In Colorado, animal crueltyis prosecuted as “aggravated” when you either
knowingly torture an animal or
needlessly mutilate or kill an animal.
Forgetting to feed an animal for one day – or kicking an animal out of aggravation once – would qualify as regular animal cruelty, not aggravated.1
Examples
Scenarios that would qualify as aggravated animal cruelty in Colorado include:
purposely starving a house pet
strangling a dog
maiming a cat with a knife
repeatedly punching or kicking a rabbit
dropping a hamster out of the window
putting a kitten in a pen with a pit bull that attacks it
stabbing a horse
feeding livestock hay laced with broken glass and nails
shooting a puppy
stoning a gerbil to death
suffocating a bird
In short, any knowing act of torture or mutilation is aggravated animal cruelty.
Aggravated animal cruelty is always a felony in Colorado.
Penalties
Aggravated animal cruelty is a Colorado felony carrying $1,000 to $100,000 in fines and/or a Colorado State Prison term. The length of the prison sentence depends on whether you have prior aggravated animal cruelty convictions.
A first-time offense is a class 6 felony, carrying a potential prison term of one to 1 ½ years (with one year of mandatory parole). Meanwhile, a second or successive offense is a class 5 felony, with a potential prison term of one to three years in prison (with two years of mandatory parole).
Additional Penalties
If you are convicted of aggravated animal cruelty in Colorado, you are required to complete anger management treatment (or similar treatment programs). In addition, you are barred by court order from having pets for three to five years.
Note that if the animal was a certified police working dog or service animal, you will also be ordered to pay restitution for:
veterinary bills,
replacement costs,
training, and/or
certification costs
Penalties for Non-Aggravated Animal Cruelty
Non-aggravated animal cruelty is a class 1 misdemeanor for a first offense. The penalties include up to 364 days in jail and/or $500 to $1,000 in fines, and the judge has discretion to order anger management treatment.
A subsequent offense of non-aggravated animal cruelty is prosecuted the same as a first-offense of aggravated animal cruelty, except the court may impose probation instead of prison. However, probation would need to include at least 90 days in jail or home detention.2A first offense of aggravated animal cruelty under CRS 18-9-202 is a class 6 felony.
Defenses
Here at Colorado Legal Defense Group, I have represented countless people wrongfully charged with animal cruelty. In my experience, five potential defenses that could get an aggravated animal abuse charge dismissed in Colorado include:
The animal attacked, and you acted in reasonable self-defense or defense of others;
The incident was an accident, and you did not knowingly hurt the animal;
You were falsely accused by someone else, or you were a victim of mistaken identity;
The animal hurt themself by accident, and you had nothing to do with it;
Michael Becker has over a quarter-century's worth of experience as an attorney and more than 100 trials under his belt. He is a sought-after legal commentator and is licensed to practice law in Colorado, Nevada, California, and Florida.
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