Facts About Animal Abuse & Domestic Violence
In association with the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence
Why it Matters
•71% of pet-owning women entering women’s shelters reported that their batterer had injured, maimed, killed or threatened family pets for revenge or to psychologically control victims; 32% reported their children had hurt or killed animals.
•68% of battered women reported violence towards their animals. 87% of these incidents occurred in the presence of the women, and 75% in the presence of the children, to psychologically control and coerce them.
•13% of intentional animal abuse cases involve domestic violence.
•Between 25% and 40% of battered women are unable to escape abusive situations because they worry about what will happen to their pets or livestock should they leave.
•Pets may suffer unexplained injuries, health problems, permanent disabilities at the hands of abusers, or disappear from home.
•Abusers kill, harm, or threaten children’s pets to coerce them into sexual abuse or to force them to remain silent about abuse. Disturbed children kill or harm animals to emulate their parents’ conduct, to prevent the abuser from killing the pet, or to take out their aggressions on another victim.
•In one study, 70% of animal abusers also had records for other crimes. Domestic violence victims whose animals were abused saw the animal cruelty as one more violent episode in a long history of indiscriminate violence aimed at them and their vulnerability.
•Investigation of animal abuse is often the first point of social services intervention for a family in trouble.
•For many battered women, pets are sources of comfort providing strong emotional support: 98% of Americans consider pets to be companions or members of the family.
•Animal cruelty problems are people problems. When animals are abused, people are at risk. [
Did You Know?
•More American households have pets than have children. We spend more money on pet food than on baby food. There are more dogs in the U.S. than people in most countries in Europe - and more cats than dogs.
•A child growing up in the U.S. is more likely to have a pet than a live-at-home father.
•Pets live most frequently in homes with children: 64.1% of homes with children under age 6, and 74.8% of homes with children over age 6, have pets. The woman is the primary caregiver in 72.8% of pet-owning households.
•Battered women have been known to live in their cars with their pets for as long as four months until an opening was available at a pet-friendly safe house.
The New Zealands SPCA is taking animal abusers to task by actually naming them in their hall of shame and their new ad campaign puts a human face with that of these precious animals we call friend
If You Need Help
Contact your GAIN or a trusted veterinarian to see if they have temporary foster care facilities for pets belonging to battered women.
What You Can Do
Have your pets vaccinated against rabies, and license your pets with your town or county: make sure these registrations are in your name to help prove your ownership.
•Consider and plan for the safety and welfare of your animals. Do not leave pets with your abuser. Be prepared to take your pets with you: many women’s shelters have established “safe haven” foster care programs for the animal victims of domestic violence.
•Alternatively, arrange temporary shelter for your pets with a veterinarian, family member, trusted friend, or local animal shelter.
What Advocates Can Do For Battered Women With Pets
•Add questions about the presence of pets and their welfare to shelter intake questionnaires and risk assessments.
•Work with animal shelters, veterinarians, and rescue groups to establish “safe haven” foster care programs for the animal victims of domestic violence; some women’s shelters are building kennels at their facilities.
•Include provisions for pets in safety planning strategies.
•Help your clients to prove ownership of their animals.
•Help victims to retrieve animals left behind.
•Include animals in abuse prevention orders.
•Help victims find pet-friendly transitional and permanent housing.
•When victims can no longer care for their pets, make referrals to animal adoption agencies.
•Establish community coalitions against family violence that include humane societies, SPCAs, animal control agencies, and veterinarians. Invite representatives from these agencies to train your staff on how animal abuse cases are investigated and prosecuted: offer to train their staffs and volunteers about domestic violence issues.
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