Wayne County Animal Services (WCAS) investigates hoarding under Michigan animal cruelty statute MCL 750.50. Hoarding cases trigger seizure when conditions endanger animal welfare or public health.
WCAS partners with Wayne County Sheriff's Office (WCSO) and local police to enter properties under search warrants when neglect is suspected. Michigan defines cruelty broadly under MCL 750.50, including failure to provide adequate care, food, water, or shelter. Hoarding cases often involve dozens of animals living in unsanitary conditions, leading to seizure and forfeiture proceedings in district court. WCAS coordinates with Michigan Humane and rescue partners for placement. Convicted hoarders face misdemeanor or felony charges depending on count and severity, plus mandatory mental health evaluation and prohibition on owning animals.
Felony cruelty charges apply when more than ten animals are involved; misdemeanor under ten animals. Violators face up to four years prison, $5,000 fines, and ownership bans.
Dearborn, MI
Dearborn prohibits dangerous exotic animals including large cats, bears, venomous snakes, primates, and wolves. Small reptiles, ferrets, and common caged bir...
Dearborn, MI
Dearborn does not have breed-specific legislation, but dangerous and vicious dogs of any breed are regulated under Michigan MCL 287.321 and local ordinance r...
See how Dearborn's animal hoarding rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.