The LAPD can't afford to protect animals because the Mayor cut this line item out of their budget!

Eighteen years ago, the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) joined with the L.A. City Attorney, District Attorney, and Animal Services department to create a remarkable new program: the L.A. Animal Cruelty Task Force, the first such task force in the entire country. The need was urgent: despite city laws against animal cruelty, few perpetrators of such abuse were being investigated or prosecuted.

In other words, there was virtually no enforcement of these laws. Many times, police merely doled out verbal warnings, given that they had little training and few resources available with which to do more.

The Animal Cruelty Task Force helped change all that. For nearly two decades, detectives, attorneys, and staff worked to reduce animal abuse in L.A. by investigating and prosecuting culprits, overseeing hundreds of graphic cases. It was such a success that cities around the U.S. started forming their own task forces based on this model.

Then in January 2021, Los Angelos Mayor Eric Garcetti, chose to put countless animals at risk for horrific abuse. Without consulting any of the other departments involved, he single-handedly disbanded the Animal Cruelty Task Force.

Sign the petition to demand that Mayor Garcetti immediately reinstate the L.A. Animal Cruelty Task Force!

Garcetti is pretending this has something to do with budgeting concerns, but the truth is that this task force had very few employees and required very little by way of funding. Meanwhile, the LAPD has a mind-explodingly gargantuan budget of $1.189 billion every single year. Yet apparently it can't even spare a small amount to keep animals safe.

Let's be clear: the people who beat, torture, and murder animals are dangerous, violent criminals. Keeping track of who these people are is important for both animals' welfare, and for humans. Research has shown time and time again that people who abuse and torment animals often go on to commit heinous crimes against other humans later. This includes child abuse, spousal abuse, and even mass shootings. Nearly half of school shooters started their violence by abusing screaming, innocent animals.

If the LA really cared about stopping violent offenders before their crimes escalate, they would surely start by focusing on people who commit acts of animal cruelty. Yet they're not. So what is all that budget being used for? Policing non-violent people of color? Antagonizing those already facing harsh situations, such as poverty? Peaceful protesters?

It's disturbing to discover that LA's Mayor apparently doesn't care about torture and massacre of pets and other animals. We must pressure him to reverse his inexcusable decision. Help us put the pressure on Mayor Garcetti to demand that he reinstate the L.A. Animal Cruelty Task Force!

*A previous version of this petition targeted the police chief, but it turns out it was actually the Mayor who made the decision to end the task force and the target has been updated accordingly*

--------
My name is Melya Kaplan. I am the founder and executive director of Voice For The Animals.

The following is the mission statement of the Animal Cruelty Task Force written by the LAPD in 2007:

"The mission of the ACTF is to break the connection between animal abuse and human violence. It is also to educate the community about the significance of animal abuse. It is imperative that the City pursues an aggressive effort to prevent, reduce and prosecute animal abuse in Los Angeles."

From 2005 to 2007, the ACTF was fully funded and made 45 arrests, 31 were felonies and 14 misdemeanors. That is the number of arrests made by the ACTF. What we don't know is the number of lives that were saved because of their intervention.

While I understand that today the city lacks the funds, I wanted to take this opportunity to discuss the importance of a fully funded and functioning ACTF. The ACTF saves lives.

The link between animal abuse and school shooters, mass shooters and domestic violence is well documented. I have sent an email to each of you with documentation on the cycle violence that begins with animal abuse.

Many of these acts of violence can be prevented. The ACTF has done it before. But it will take a fully funded ACTF to respond to the amount of requests for help.160,000 people worldwide signed a petition in support of the ACTF. We are asking you to understand the importance of fully funded and functioning ACTF. To make Los Angeles a safer and more compassionate city, we must make this a priority.

-----------

May 11, 2021

 

Re LAPD Animal Cruelty Unit 

Dear Councilmembers, Krekorian, Blumenfield, Rodriguez, Price and de Leon:

I am one of the co-founders of the LAPD Animal Cruelty, co-founder of the L.A. Animal Cruelty Task Force and founder of the L.A. City Attorney Animal Protection Unit.  I am writing to strongly urge you to restore funding for a fully staffed LAPD Animal Cruelty Unit.

Before the Animal Cruelty Unit had been formed, there were few, if any, prosecutions of animal abuse in Los Angeles.  The dog that starved to death, the cat that died a slow death for lack of veterinary care, the owner who beat his dog to death, the neighborhood cats being poisoned…all went uninvestigated…or if the offender was caught, they were given only a verbal warning. Most shocking of all, both LAPD and Animal Services both claimed the other was responsible for blood sports and other violent acts against animals, in effect legalizing animal cruelty…and it was reflected in the number of cockfights, dog fights and incidents of brutal crimes against dogs and cats (and even wildlife) occurring weekly throughout Los Angeles!

When I successfully lobbied the City Attorney in 2002 to be the first full-time animal cruelty prosecutor in the nation, I was a prosecutor without cases!  That's because there was no one to turn to in law enforcement to investigate these crimes. LAPD said it was the responsibility of Animal Services. Animal Services, quite properly said, dealing with violent individuals, often with outstanding warrants and being in possession of drugs and weapons, was a police matter.

Responding to this, a coalition from the Mayor's Office, LAPD, City Attorney, and community activists lobbied the City Council to fund an LAPD Animal Cruelty Unit. Initially, the Council expressed little interest in even a single cop... budgetary reasons.  But after viewing graphic images of maimed and tortured, pictures of family pets stolen to be torn apart to "train" fighting dogs, testimonials from police officers and residents about inner-city children witnessing, first-hand, animals bleeding to death in the streets while police cars drove by, the City Council quickly funded two detectives.  That made possible the formation of the nationally-recognized LA City Animal Cruelty Task Force. Each participating agency agreed to designate special investigators and prosecutors whose sole responsibility was the investigation and, when appropriate, prosecution of animal abusers. Soon Chief Bratton realized that two officers was clearly insufficient to handle the volume and complexity of complains and expanded it.  I, and other prosecutors, soon had our hands full with prosecutions and convictions, not only sending a strong message to potential abusers but also making sure convicted abusers were on probation and could no longer even be near another animal. And the celebrated LAPD Animal Cruelty Unit was a respected entity admired by all those who cared about animals and people.

Over the years, the Unit investigated and prosecuted hundreds of cases of animal abuse, both felony and misdemeanors, that otherwise would have been ignored. Although judges initially resisted, saying they had more important cases involving human victims, the link between animal abuse and violence against people persuaded judges to take these cases seriously. Worth noting, the commitment by LAPD was a key factor in influencing judges to take animal abuse seriously, as a crime against society, not just an animal-lovers issue.

And thanks to the commitment by each participating agency, particularly LAPD, cities around the country began modeling our Task Force and police departments nationwide began to recognize animal abuse as a police matter, thanks to our efforts. Los Angeles had become a national model for combating animal abuse and neglect.  No matter what the economic situation, no matter what budget cuts there were, no matter what other crimes needed attention, the "untouchable" Animal Cruelty Task Force ensured that those who hurt animals would be held accountable.

 So, I was understandably shocked and dismayed when I learned that the Unit, which already had been stripped of most of its staff in recent years and could barely respond to the countless complaints of cruelty and neglect, now was completely disbanded late last year.

What the Council MUST understand is that specialized units like the LAPD Cruelty Unit are necessary because there will always be efforts to pull these resources away for other tasks. There will always be budget cuts, always efforts to move resources away from those who are protecting the victims who can least protect themselves.  Only a specialized team of officers and detectives, specially trained and insulated from any other responsibilities, can ensure that these voiceless victims are protected, and the abusers held accountable.  Instead of disbanding the Unit during these tough economic times, the City should be reasserting its commitment to animal and human welfare and crime reduction and fund an effective, fully staffed Unit. 

I know more than most what works and what doesn't work. I've been in the trenches from the beginning.  I worked with so many others to propel Los Angeles from a City that cared little for victims of animal cruelty, to a City that became the model for cities and even other countries. It makes me sick to watch us move from being a model for the nation to what can only be labeled a local disgrace.

 Even if any one of you don't particularly care for animals or their welfare (which I know is not true!), a fully staffed and effective Animal Cruelty Unit is essential considering the well-documented link between animal abuse and violence against people. People who hurt animals also hurt people!!!  By protecting animals and holding abusers accountable, you are protecting people and effectively preventing future acts of violence. I know you all know this.

So how can you possible expect to reduce crime and make LA neighborhoods safer when animal cruelty occurs with little or no consequences???

And with a force of almost 10,000 police officers, the amount saved by disbanding this already pitifully small unit is infinitesimal and will do nothing to repair the City budget. Instead, it sends a dangerous message that violence in Los Angeles against those least able to defend themselves, whether animals, children or the elderly, will continue without consequences. Some may suggest regular officers can still handle animal cruelty calls, but experience has proven this dead wrong!  Only a dedicated, specially trained and fully staffed Unit can do the job

 LA's previously strong commitment to combat animal cruelty and violence in our communities has now been shamefully undone. Now special victims like animals no longer "deserve" police protection. Now when you call LAPD to report dogs fighting in front of neighborhood children, birds tearing themselves apart in a backyard cockfight or an abandoned building with families looking on, family cats being poisoned and neighborhood dogs being beaten to death…LAPD and the City's response is now "Sorry, we don't do that anymore." 

 I appeal to your stated commitments to your constituency to reduce crime in their communities and protect the voiceless and I implore you to fund a fully staffed LAPD Animal Cruelty Unit of five LAPD officers and detectives. Then, when people in Los Angeles see a dog being violently beaten, an alley full of poisoned cats or a dog fight in progress, the response from the LAPD "animal cops" will be "we're on our way"!  

Robert Ferber, Esq 

(Deputy City Attorney, Retired)

Founder and former Supervisor of LA City Attorney Animal Protection Unit

Co-Founder LA Animal Cruelty Task Force

Co-Founder LAPD Animal Cruelty Unit

Update #12 jaar geleden
ACTION NEEDED: Voice For the Animals let us know that the LA Budget and Finance Committee is currently considering whether to reinstate the Animal Cruelty Task Force right now and they need to hear from you! You can send an email to the following email addresses (committee members) explaining why you think this task force is so important. Matt.Hale@lacity.org, Jeff.Jacobberger@lacity.org, Lex.Olbrei@lacity.org, Marisa.Alcaraz@lacity.org, Daniel.Reeves@lacity.org.
petitie tekenen
petitie tekenen
Je hebt JavaScript uitgeschakeld. Hierdoor werkt onze website misschien niet goed.

privacybeleid

Door te tekenen accepteer je de servicevoorwaarden van Care2
U kunt uw e-mail abonnementen op elk gewenst moment beheren.

Lukt het niet om dit te tekenen? Laat het ons weten..