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Report Internet Animal Abuse
Tips for Reporting Internet Animal Abuse
The
Internet can be a powerful medium for connecting us to information to
combat animal cruelty, but it also can be a haven for animal abusers
who celebrate and actively advertise their shocking crimes. The best
way to stop this type of abuse is to immediately report it to the
proper authorities
and to refrain from contacting, visiting or forwarding links to the
offending sites.
Why is it important to report suspected
Internet animal cruelty?
Reporting any type of suspected animal cruelty
may save animals’ lives as well as people’s lives. When animals are
abused, people are also
at risk. The Link® between animal abuse and other forms of societal
violence is well-documented. That is why it is critical to immediately
report conduct on the Internet that you suspect may be — or that you
know is — animal abuse.
- If I see animal cruelty on the Internet,
what should I do?
Immediately contact the Internet Crime Complaint
Center (IC3), a partnership between the FBI and the National White
Collar Crime Center,
at http://www.ic3.gov/.
The website will direct you to the page where you can file your
complaint. At first glance, it may appear that the website will only
consider complaints of Internet monetary fraud. However, IC3 is the
proper venue for all Internet crimes, including animal abuse.
- IC3 can best process your complaint if the
information you provide is as detailed and complete as possible. This
includes providing the complete URL (website address) for the website
that displayed the suspected animal cruelty.
- Even if you are located outside the United
States, IC3 will review your report as long as the suspected abuser is
located in the United States.
- What happens after I file a report
with the IC3?
- IC3 will email your report ID and password to
you, along with a link to an area on the IC3 website where you can view
your report and enter
any additional information.
- Upon receipt of your report, IC3 will carefully
evaluate it and refer it to the appropriate federal, state, local or
international law enforcement or regulatory agencies. Every report that
is referred is sent to one or more law enforcement or regulatory
agencies that have jurisdiction over the matter. At that point, the
report may be assigned to an investigator. IC3 cannot guarantee that
your complaint will be investigated.
- What else can I do?
- Because abusive content often violates the user
agreement that the creator of the website has signed with the Internet
Service Provider
(ISP), notifying the ISP about the abusive content may
result in the website being removed from the Internet.
- To make a report to the ISP, you need to
determine who hosts the website. To do that, go to http://www.domaintools.com/,
enter the
website URL in the “Whois Lookup” search box and click on the
search button. Scroll down the results page until you find the
numerical
Internet Protocol (IP) address assigned to the website. Then go to http://www.arin.net/
(American Registry for Internet Numbers) and enter
that IP address in
the “Search WHOIS” box and click on the search button. The search
results page will provide information about the ISP
that hosts the
website. The page also might display information about how to report
abuse. If it does not, go to www.search.org/programs/hightech/isp
and find the complete contact information for the ISP on the list. All
of this information should
also be included in your FBI complaint form, where possible.
- If you believe an animal is in immediate harm,
and if the location is known, contact local police and your local FBI
branch office as soon as possible. To locate your local FBI branch,
visit http://www.fbi.gov/contact/fo/fo.htm.
- How does the law currently handle Internet
animal cruelty?
Because communications through the Internet
have the ability to cross state lines, the Internet is largely governed
by federal law. Improving the
federal laws as they pertain to Internet animal abuse is critical.
Currently, only a few federal laws address the issue directly:
- The Crush Act (P.L.106-152)
penalizes the display of acts of cruelty and sexual abuse of animals
that is intended for interstate commerce.
If convicted, offenders may receive up to five years in prison or a
large fine. Two criteria must be met before this statute applies: 1)
actual abuse must occur and 2) the website in question must intend to
sell the images across state lines. In other words, a website may
legally
display images of animal cruelty and sexual abuse under this law as
long as it is not charging visitors for access or otherwise selling the
images. In 2005, the first conviction under this statute occurred in a
federal district court in Virginia.
- The Animal Fighting Prohibition
Enforcement Act (P.L. 110-27) strengthens the ability of
law enforcement to combat animal fighting
by providing felony penalties
for interstate commerce, import and export related to animal fighting
activities, including commerce in
cockfighting weapons. Each violation
of this federal law is punishable by up to three years in prison and up
to a $250,000 fine for
perpetrators.
- Internet Hunting: The
Computer-Assisted Remote Hunting Act (H.R. 2711/S. 2422) is a pending
federal bill introduced by Rep. Brad Sherman (D-CA) and Sen. Sheldon
Whitehouse (D-RI). It seeks to prohibit knowingly making available a
“computer-assisted remote hunt” (using a computer or other device,
equipment or software to control the aiming and discharge of a weapon
to hunt).
Courtesy
of American Humane
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