Committee advances bill raising aggravated animal-cruelty from class E to class D
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SB 14-75, sponsored by Senator Taylor, would increase the felony class for aggravated animal cruelty and add that offense to blended-sentencing considerations for juveniles; the committee advanced the bill to finance after debate on juvenile services.
Senator Taylor described SB 14-75 as an upgrade to aggravated cruelty to animals — moving the offense from a class E felony to a class D felony — and said the bill also adds aggravated animal cruelty to the list of charges that can trigger blended sentencing for juveniles.
"It will also add to the list of charges to which a juvenile is qualified as a serious useful offender under our blended sentencing statute," Taylor said, arguing the change is intended to intervene early and prevent escalation into more serious adult crime.
Senator Kyle asked whether elevating the penalty risks incarcerating youth who may need mental-health services rather than treatment. "These youth... they're probably just to be locked up. They're not getting the mental health services they need," Kyle said. Taylor responded that the blended-sentencing framework gives juvenile judges discretion to order services and that the adult sentence would be suspended until age 24 if the court so directs.
The committee recorded a roll-call vote with eight ayes and one no; Chairman announced the motion carried and SB 14-75 is headed to Senate Finance for consideration of the fiscal note.
The bill would change statutory sentencing ranges and incorporate aggravated-animal-cruelty offenses into juvenile sentencing procedures; finance will evaluate the fiscal and operational implications before further floor action.
