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.
Duluth, GA
Construction noise typical Duluth hours 7 AM-7 PM weekdays, 9 AM-6 PM Saturdays, prohibited Sundays and holidays. Emergency repairs exempt. Verify active hou...
Duluth, GA
Duluth Code of Ordinances Chapter 34 (Offenses) prohibits unreasonable noise audible beyond property lines. Quiet hours typically 11 PM-7 AM weekdays, midnig...
Duluth, GA
Abandoned vehicles regulated under state law GA Code Β§40-11-1+ (10 days on public property). Duluth Code Compliance enforces removal of inoperable or abandon...
Duluth, GA
RVs, boats, trailers, and campers may NOT be stored in front yards or driveways visible from the street in residential zones. Must be parked in rear yard, si...
Duluth, GA
Residential driveways must be paved (concrete, asphalt, or pavers) and meet zoning district setback requirements. Curb cuts require a permit from Duluth Publ...
Duluth, GA
Duluth residential fence height: 4 ft in front yard, 6 ft in rear/side yards. Corner lots have visibility triangle restrictions (typically 3 ft max within 25...
See how Duluth's animal hoarding rules stack up against other locations.
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