California lawmakers are considering legislation that would establish a publicly accessible online database of adults convicted of felony animal abuse, modeled after the state’s Megan’s Law registry for sex offenders.
The proposed Animal Abuse Registry would require offenders to register for 10 years and list their names, photos and conviction details, providing shelters, rescues and individuals with a screening tool before placing animals in their care.
Democratic Assembly Member Matt Haney introduced the bill, AB 2344, which the California Department of Justice would operate.
“I was shocked to find out that when someone goes to a shelter, when they go to a pet store, when they go and find an animal on-line, that there’s no way to know whether that person is a convicted felony animal abuser,” Haney told CBS 8.
The registry fills a significant gap in animal protection efforts. “These animals are vulnerable. They are completely reliant on us for protection,” said Haney.
The proposal enables adoptive pet owners to quickly search for potential adopters’ names in the database.
“It’s important that the public have access to this database, so that if someone comes and says, I’ll taken these couple kittens, I’ll adopt this dog, you can just easily search for this person’s name and see if they’ve been convicted of felony animal abuse before you hand over this vulnerable animal,” he added.
Michael Makie from Helen Woodward Animal Center, a local rescue organization, stressed the importance of such a registry.
“It is important to have something like this,” Makie said.
The organization has documented a disturbing rise in animal abuse cases in recent years, including cases involving zip-tied kittens and dogs rescued from fighting rings.
A statewide registry enables coordination across county and city lines.
“If you go to a different part of the state, the city, the county, there’s sometimes not that overlap of information with anything, so sometimes people can fall through the cracks. If you create a registry like this, no matter where you go in the state, that is signaled in your record,” Makie told CBS 8.
Makie believes the registry could prevent future abuse. “If you have a registry of people who do those sorts of actions, another animal can’t have that happen to them,” he said.
The bill would also establish an Animal Protection Fund to support the registry’s operation and maintenance, as well as local spay-and-neuter programs.
If the Assembly and Senate pass the legislation and the governor signs it into law, the registry would become operational by January 2028.
Haney is hoping for bipartisan support for the legislation.
“All of our fur babies all over the state are relying on us to get this done so that they are protected,” he said.
Two other states have already launched similar registries. Tennessee started theirs a decade ago, while Florida launched their registry earlier this year.