Georgia criminalizes animal cruelty and neglect statewide under O.C.G.A. 16-12-4, applying uniformly regardless of local ordinances and covering hoarding situations.
Georgia's animal cruelty statute (O.C.G.A. 16-12-4) makes it a misdemeanor to neglect, abandon, or fail to provide adequate food, water, sanitary conditions, and humane care to any animal. Aggravated cruelty is a felony. Animal hoarding cases are prosecuted under these provisions when an owner accumulates more animals than they can properly care for. Local ordinances may add limits on the number of pets per household, but the state cruelty law applies uniformly and provides the floor for prosecution and animal seizure.
First-offense cruelty is a misdemeanor; aggravated cruelty is a felony with up to 5 years prison and $15,000 fine plus animal forfeiture.
Acworth, GA
Acworth Code Ch. 54 (Offenses) β unreasonable noise disturbances prohibited. Quiet hours generally 10 PMβ7 AM. Violations reported to Acworth Code Compliance...
Acworth, GA
Acworth Ch. 54 noise provisions apply to construction. Standard practice 7 AMβ7 PM weekdays. No construction noise during quiet hours (10 PMβ7 AM). Building ...
Acworth, GA
Acworth Code Ch. 52 (Nuisances) and Ch. 54 β persistent animal noise that unreasonably disturbs neighbors is a violation. Cobb County Animal Control (770-499...
Acworth, GA
Acworth regulates amplified music under the general noise ordinance. Sound permits available for events. O.C.G.A. Β§16-11-39 applies to unreasonable disturban...
Acworth, GA
Acworth follows GA Code Β§40-6-200+ for street parking. Vehicles must be operable, on approved surfaces, and not blocking traffic or driveways. Inoperable veh...
Acworth, GA
Acworth Zoning Β§73-199C β RVs, boats, and trailers must be stored to the side or rear of the principal structure on an improved surface (concrete or pervious...
See how Acworth's animal hoarding rules stack up against other locations.
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