Bill

Bill > S1230


NJ S1230

NJ S1230
Establishes an animal abuser registry.


summary

Introduced
01/25/2018
In Committee
01/25/2018
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/08/2020

Introduced Session

2018-2019 Regular Session

Bill Summary

This bill directs the Department of Health (DOH) to establish an animal abuser registry, provides a process by which persons who have previously been convicted and persons who are newly convicted of a criminal animal cruelty violation are to be included on the animal abuser registry, and updates current law concerning persons ineligible to be an animal control officer due to a conviction for an animal cruelty violation. The bill would take effect on January 1 next following enactment. Under the bill, the DOH is required to establish the animal abuser registry and publish the registry on its website. The bill requires the registry to include the full legal name of any person who has been convicted of a criminal animal cruelty violation, any photographs obtained during the criminal booking process, and other pertinent information that the DOH determines will properly identify the animal abuser. The bill prohibits the registry from including the Social Security number, driver's license number, or any other state or federal identification number of any person. For the purpose of establishing the animal abuser registry, the bill requires the Administrative Office of the Courts, the Department of Law and Public Safety, and any other governmental or other official administrative entity maintaining records of criminal animal cruelty convictions to provide notice to the Commissioner of Health of any person the Administrative Office of the Courts, the Department of Law and Public Safety, or other entity is aware of who has been convicted in the last 10 years of a criminal animal cruelty violation. The bill requires this notice to be provided to the commissioner electronically or in writing, within 90 days after the effective date of the bill. For the purpose of maintaining the animal abuser registry, the bill requires a court adjudging the guilt for a criminal animal cruelty violation to charge the prosecutor or other appropriate person, with the responsibility to notify the Commissioner of Health with the full name of the person convicted of the criminal animal cruelty violation and the criminal animal cruelty violation for which or of which that person was found guilty. The bill requires the person charged with the responsibility to provide such notice to the commissioner within 30 days. Finally, the bill expands the criminal violations related to animal abuse that disqualify an individual from serving as a certified animal control officer, and permits the Commissioner of Health to use the animal abuser registry to maintain a list of persons ineligible to be animal control officers due to a conviction for animal cruelty.

AI Summary

This bill directs the Department of Health to establish an animal abuser registry, which would include the full legal names, photographs, and other identifying information (excluding personal identification numbers) of individuals convicted of criminal animal cruelty violations in the past 10 years. The bill requires various government entities to provide the Department of Health with information about these convicted individuals to populate the registry. The bill also expands the types of animal cruelty convictions that disqualify an individual from serving as a certified animal control officer, and allows the Department of Health to use the registry to maintain a list of ineligible individuals. The bill would take effect on January 1 following its enactment.

Committee Categories

Business and Industry

Sponsors (4)

Last Action

Combined with S381 (SCS) (on 05/31/2018)

bill text


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