Kentucky prohibits importing, possessing, or transporting designated inherently dangerous wildlife as exotic pets. The Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources enforces these rules statewide, applying uniformly across all counties and cities regardless of local preferences.
Under 301 KAR 2:082, Kentucky bans private possession of inherently dangerous wildlife including big cats, bears, nonhuman primates, venomous snakes, alligators, and certain large constrictors unless the animal was lawfully owned before July 13, 2005, and registered. KRS 150.180 grants the Department of Fish and Wildlife Resources statewide authority over wildlife. Permits are required for transporters and certain native species. Domesticated species like ferrets and most parrots remain legal. Local governments cannot authorize possession of state-prohibited species, though they may impose additional restrictions on legal exotic animals.
Possession of prohibited inherently dangerous wildlife is a Class A misdemeanor punishable by up to 12 months in jail and $500 fine, plus animal seizure.
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