New Jersey's animal cruelty laws apply statewide, prohibiting neglect and overcrowding that constitute hoarding, with enforcement by humane officers and police.
Under N.J.S.A. 4:22-17 through 4:22-26, it is a crime to fail to provide adequate food, water, shelter, or veterinary care, or to keep animals in unsanitary or overcrowded conditions characteristic of hoarding. The 2017 reform transferred enforcement authority to county prosecutors and municipal humane law enforcement officers. Courts may order forfeiture of animals, mental health evaluations, and bans on future ownership. These provisions apply uniformly throughout the state.
Neglect is a disorderly persons offense; aggravated cases carry indictable charges, fines from $250 to $5,000, and potential imprisonment plus animal forfeiture.
Toms River, NJ
Toms River prohibits any dog or animal that habitually barks, howls, cries, or makes other noise over a prolonged period, day or night. Nuisance animals may ...
Toms River, NJ
Toms River Chapter 368 restricts commercial construction, repair, alteration, and demolition noise in residential and commercial zones during nighttime hours...
Toms River, NJ
Toms River Chapter 368 (Nuisances) prohibits loud, unnecessary, or unusual noise that disturbs the comfort, repose, health, peace, or safety of others. Acts ...
Toms River, NJ
Toms River prohibits overnight parking of commercial vehicles with a gross vehicle weight of 4 tons or more on designated streets between 9 PM and 6 AM under...
Toms River, NJ
Toms River regulates street parking through Chapter 477 (Vehicles and Traffic) with multiple schedules designating no-parking zones, time-limited parking, an...
Toms River, NJ
Toms River requires vehicles to be parked on approved hard surfaces. Parking on grass, mulch, or any non-designated surface is prohibited on residential prop...
See how Toms River's animal hoarding rules stack up against other locations.
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