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View Full Version : Teenagers Who Set Puppy on Fire Face Minimal Prison Time



Teh One Who Knocks
12-31-2012, 02:01 PM
Take Part


New York State Assemblyman Sean M. Ryan announced this week that he’s proposing tougher animal abuse penalties. The legislation, which is being called, “Phoenix’s Law,” is named for a Jack Russell Terrier who was burned alive by two teenagers in October. “Phoenix” lived through the ordeal, but is still in a Buffalo animal hospital recovering from burns and broken bones.

According to a police investigation, on Oct. 29, two teenagers who had spent the previous weeks torturing a neighbor’s puppy, finally doused it in lighter fluid and set it on fire. Diondre L. Brown, 17, and his uncle, Adell Zeigler, 19, have both been indicted on felony charges, but under current law, neither can receive more than two years in prison for the felony attack.

WIVB reports that Assemblyman Ryan’s proposed increases would mean that those convicted of felony aggravated animal cruelty would receive up to four years in jail instead of two, and pay a fine of up to $10,000.

“We’re hoping that, just as Phoenix rises from the ashes, we can have something positive that can come out of this heinous act,” Ryan said in his interview with the The Buffalo News.

Details of how Phoenix was rescued are unclear, but he sustained severe burns to more than 50 percent of his body. Over the last two months, Phoenix has undergone multiple skin grafts, had his ears amputated and one of his legs is still in a cast.

According to the Animal Legal Defense Fund, New York's current animal abuse laws are fairly lenient in their punishments. The Empire State currently ranks in 38th place for animal protections. While New York carries a two-year maximum sentence, most states carry four-year sentences. But many are even more strict than that. In Idaho, felony animal abuse can send you away for 15 years, while a felony conviction in Colorado will earn you six years in prison, and a half-a-million dollar fine. The most lax states are North and South Dakota where animal abuse doesn’t even rank as a felony.

Perhaps most frightening of all is the lack of remorse shown by the defendants, each of whom blames the other for setting Phoenix on fire. TakePart has previously reported on the well-documented patterns of animal abusers; they are as much a danger to other people as they are to pets. And when we treat their violence towards animals as somehow “less than,” we ignore crucial warning signs to our own safety.

As Phoenix continues to heal, The Buffalo Small Animal Hospital reports to local newspapers that it’s been flooded with offers of donations and adoptions for the invincible little dog.

deebakes
12-31-2012, 03:48 PM
:x

minz
12-31-2012, 05:13 PM
Sick bastards, I hope the poor puppy recovers ok. :(

Iffy
12-31-2012, 05:53 PM
2 questions

#1 How fucked up do you have to be to set a puppy on fire?

#2 Why did they go to the expense of all these medical procedures instead of euthanasia?

We euthanize animals for being old ffs or for having too many around that can't be adopted but extreme burns is where we draw the line? Goddamn we are getting dumber as a species

Godfather
12-31-2012, 11:19 PM
Pretty strong indicator of psychopathy, you have to have a very reduced ability to feel emotion to do this.... Unfortunately you just cannot treat psychopaths. Many of them live normally amongst us... some become CEO's because frankly it fits their bill. Some become serial killers, most of whom began killing animals.

Scary to think of losing track of them...

deebakes
01-01-2013, 12:33 AM
:oops:

DemonGeminiX
01-01-2013, 01:01 AM
If I came upon anybody doing anything like that to a puppy and I was armed, they would be dead.

Lambchop
01-01-2013, 02:37 AM
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