Exclusive | More NYC dogs mauled without consequence as state bill to close legal loophole stalls: Should not be happening

City dogs continue to be mauled by other pooches without consequence because a state bill prompted by the horrific Penny the Chihuahua attack has stalled, animal activists say.Upper West Side resident Jennifer Busse told The Post a pit bull who was illegally off his leash mauled her tiny 13-year-old shih tzu-chihuahua mix Forrest in Riverside Park earlier this month — and that the NYPD said there are still no avenues in the criminal-justice system to punish the four-legged attacker’s careless owner.“Something needs to change,” Busse fumed.She said Forrest was sleeping in the grass at the Manhattan park June 6 when he was suddenly pounced on by the pit bull in front of her screaming terrified children, ages 6 and 8.Busse said her poor pooch lost vision in his right eye while being left with more than a dozen puncture wounds from the attack.Yet cops said their hands were tied, according to Busse.“Due to current laws, harm or death to an animal caused by another animal is not a criminal matter,” an NYPD rep confirmed to The Post.The attack occurred just weeks after a similar incident involving Penny the Chihuahua on the Upper West Side made national headlines.The 16-pound Chihuahua was mauled by a pair of pit bulls near Columbus Avenue on May 3.The case prompted state Assemblywoman Jennifer Rajkumar last month to introduce a bill that seeks to allow owners to be potentially criminally charged for pet-on-pet injuries, as opposed to only facing a possible civil lawsuit.“Pets are not property, they are family,” Rajkumar said at the time.But the legislation remains stalled in the Assembly’s Agriculture Committee, although it’s unclear exactly why.The bill would make it possible to levy charges against careless owners, including “cruelty to animals through negligent handling of a dog” and “leaving the scene of an animal attack.”It would also impose harsher penalties for those who repeatedly violate city leash laws.The bill is named after Penny.�...

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Publisher: New York Post

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