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Animal Cruelty Investigations
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Вернуться на страницу книги Animal Cruelty Investigations
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Страница 1
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Guide
Pages
Страница 6
Animal Cruelty Investigations: A Collaborative Approach from Victim to Verdict™
Страница 8
Страница 9
Preface
Страница 11
About the Companion Website
1 Introduction
1.1 Making the Most of This Resource 1.1.1 How to Use This Book
1.1.2 Roadmap
1.2 Why Definitions Are Important
1.3 Terms and Phrases: Animal Cruelty Cases
1.3.1 Animal
1.3.2 Active Animal Cruelty
1.3.3 Passive Animal Cruelty
1.3.4 Good Animal Husbandry
1.3.5 Mandatory Reporting
1.4 Terms and Phrases: Veterinary Medicine 1.4.1 Acute
1.4.2 Bright, Alert, and Responsive (BAR)
1.4.3 Blunt Force Trauma
1.4.4 Body Condition Score (BCS)
1.4.5 CBC/Chemistry
1.4.6 Chronic
1.4.7 Easy Keeper
1.4.8 Lividity
1.4.9 Necropsy
1.4.10 Nonaccidental Injury or Death
1.4.11 PE
1.4.12 Predation
1.4.13 Radiographs
1.4.14 Rigor
1.4.15 Subjective, Objective, Assessment, and Plan (SOAP) Note
1.4.16 Stereotypic Behavior
1.4.17 Unremarkable
1.4.18 Veterinary Forensics
1.5 Terms and Phrases: Law Enforcement and Field Services 1.5.1 Affidavit
1.5.2 Chain of Custody
1.5.3 Citation
1.5.4 Civilian
1.5.5 Custodial
1.5.6 Evidence
1.5.7 Interview
1.5.8 Miranda
1.5.9 Officer Safety
1.5.10 Probable Cause
1.5.11 Protective Custody
1.5.12 Public Information Officer (PIO)
1.5.13 Reasonable Suspicion
1.5.14 Reporting Party
1.5.15 Risk Assessment
1.5.16 Search Warrant
1.5.17 Seizure
1.5.18 Suspect
1.5.19 Third‐Party Owner
1.5.20 Witness
1.6 Terms and Phrases: Criminal Law 1.6.1 Alford Plea
1.6.2 Arraignment
1.6.3 Authentication
1.6.4 Brady Material
1.6.5 Brief
1.6.6 Charging Enhancement
1.6.7 Charging Information
1.6.8 Defendant
1.6.9 Diversion
1.6.10 Expert Witness
1.6.11 Forfeiture
1.6.11.1 Preconviction Forfeiture
1.6.11.2 Postconviction Forfeiture
1.6.12 Foreclosure
1.6.13 Grand Jury
1.6.14 Hearing
1.6.15 Judgment
1.6.16 Lay Witness
1.6.17 Lien
1.6.18 Mental State
1.6.18.1 Criminal Negligence
1.6.18.2 Recklessly
1.6.18.3 Knowingly
1.6.18.4 Purposefully or Intentionally
1.6.19 Motion
1.6.20 No Contest
1.6.21 Plea Bargain/Agreement
1.6.22 Pretrial Hearing
1.6.23 Possession Ban
1.6.24 Probation
1.6.24.1 Bench Probation
1.6.24.2 Supervised Probation
1.6.25 Release Order
1.6.26 Restitution
1.6.27 Sentencing
1.6.28 Stipulate
1.6.29 Testimony
1.6.30 Trial
1.6.30.1 Bench Trial
1.6.30.2 Jury Trial
1.6.31 Victim
1.6.32 Voir Dire
1.7 Looking Ahead
References
Notes
2 Animal Basics
2.1 The History of the Five Freedoms and Their Impact on Animal Welfare Laws
2.2 Veterinarians as Experts in the Field
2.3 With So Many Species, Where to Begin?
2.4 Defining Animals by Category
2.5 Animal Basics by Species
2.5.1 Hoofstock
2.5.2 Equine
2.5.3 Feline (Domestic Cats)
2.5.4 Canine (Domestic Dogs)
2.5.5 Small Mammals (Rabbits, Guinea Pigs, Mice, Rats, Ferrets)
2.5.6 Avian
2.5.7 Poultry
2.5.8 Reptiles
2.5.9 Unusual Exotics
2.6 Basics That Apply to All Animals
2.7 Putting Your Basic Knowledge to Work
References
3 Fundamentals of All Cases
3.1 Interdisciplinary Roles
3.2 Environment
3.3 Sanitation
3.3.1 Some Considerations Regarding Sanitation 3.3.1.1 Stalls, Kennel Runs, Litterboxes
3.3.1.2 Ammonia/Urine
3.3.1.3 Contaminated/Spoiled Food, Dirty Food, and Water Receptacles
3.4 Food and Water
3.4.1 Assessment of Food and Water 3.4.1.1 Accessibility
3.4.1.2 Type and Amount
3.5 Nutrition
3.6 Documentation
3.7 Body Condition
3.8 Documenting Body Condition
3.9 Dental, Foot, and Hoof Care
3.10 Veterinary Care, Medications, and Treatment
3.11 Nonaccidental Injury and Trauma
3.12 The Link Between Animal Cruelty and Crimes Against Humans
3.13 Emergency Issues
References
Note
4 Initial Investigation and Assessment
4.1 Types of Reports
4.2 Anonymous Reports
4.3 Required Information
4.4 Response Triage
4.5 Legitimate or Not? How to Decide
4.6 Responding to Calls: Initial Site Visit 4.6.1 Using All Your Senses
4.6.2 Attempting Contact: No One Home/No Answer
4.6.3 Attempting Contact: Responsible Party Is Not Home/Is Unavailable
4.6.4 Attempting Contact: Owner Is Home/Contact Successful
4.6.5 Attempting Contact: Owner Is Uncooperative
4.6.6 Unable to Make Contact
4.6.7 Exigent Circumstances
4.6.8 Cross‐Reporting and Other Vulnerable Individuals
5 Witness and Subject Interviewing
5.1 Preparation for the Interview
5.2 Interview Location and Setting
5.3 Miranda and Consent
5.4 Building Rapport
5.5 Ask Clear and Direct Open‐Ended Questions
5.6 Suspect Interviews
5.7 Reading Body Language and Detecting Deception
5.8 Confessions
5.9 Ending the Interview
5.10 Documenting the Interview
5.11 Additional Resources and Training
References
Note
6 The Veterinarian's Role in Animal Cruelty Investigations
6.1 The Veterinarian is an Important Partner in Animal Cruelty Investigations
6.2 The Veterinarian's Oath
Box 6.1
Veterinarian's Oath
6.3 How Veterinary Forensics Differs from Traditional Veterinary Medicine
6.4 Veterinary Confidentiality and Medical Records Requests
6.5 Public Information Considerations
Box 6.2
Case Example
6.6 Conflicts of Interest
6.7 Be Familiar with the Laws
6.8 How to Find and Build Knowledge in the Area of Animal Law
6.9 Understand What the Prosecutor and Law Enforcement Need to Know 6.9.1 Animal Neglect
6.9.2 Animal Abuse
6.10 How Animal Cruelty Investigations Surface and Become Active Cases
References
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