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On March 11, 1999 the New Mexico Supreme Court
handed down a decision regarding New Mexico's animal cruelty law.
Those of us involved in trying to pass the felony animal cruelty
bill were unaware that a decision involving wildlife and the animal
cruelty statute was imminent in the Supreme Court. The Court overturned
a lower appeals court ruling on a case involving cruelty against
wildlife (specifically deer).
The case involved a Charles Cleve who snared deer
on his Chaves County property and was charged with several things,
cruelty to animals being one of them. The local District Attorneys
office prosecuted the original case and won. The case was appealed,
and in September 1997 the appeals court upheld the ruling against
Cleve. Finally, the case was appealed to the New Mexico Supreme
Court, and the Supreme Court overturned the ruling on the
cruelty charges, saying that New Mexico's game laws supersede the
animal cruelty law with respect to cruelty against wildlife.
The bottom line is, the court ruled that the current
(old) animal cruelty law, which gets repealed in July, does not
apply to wildlife (unless the wildlife are captive).
How does this affect the prosecution of animal
cruelty, now that we have a new law which will take effect
in July? No one is certain until a case of wildlife cruelty is actually
heard in court under the new law.
But in the meantime, our position is that this
Supreme Court ruling (case law) may apply to the OLD law, but not
to the NEW law Governor Johnson just signed. In addition, the new
law specifically exempts "insects and reptiles", so one may argue
that the legislative intent is to have the law apply to all other
kinds of species, wild and domestic.
APNM will continue to advise people in New Mexico
to document and report animal cruelty, regardless of who the victim
is (wild or domestic). APNM agrees with the lower court ruling which
stated that the general animal cruelty law was "intended to control
human conduct with respect to how animals are treated." We are hopeful
that if and when a case of wildlife cruelty is heard in court under
the new animal cruelty law, the court will determine that the new
law applies to both wild and domestic animals. In our opinion, to
rule otherwise is to ignore the legislative intent and the actual
language of the law.
So, please tell people to continue to document
cruelty to wildlife AND domestic animals, and to get these cases
to their local District Attorney.
THE DOCKET NUMBER OF THE SUPREME COURT CASE IS
24,734
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