Mississippi prohibits private ownership of inherently dangerous wild animals under MS Code Β§49-8-5. Permits required for certain species. Harrison County cities ban large cats, primates, venomous reptiles.
Mississippi's inherently dangerous wild animal law, MS Code Β§49-8-1 through Β§49-8-29, prohibits private ownership of big cats (lions, tigers, cougars, leopards), bears, wolves and wolf hybrids, elephants, rhinos, hippos, non-human primates over 35 pounds, and certain venomous and large constricting reptiles. Possession requires a permit from the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries, and Parks (MDWFP), which grants permits only to USDA-licensed zoos, educational institutions, and sanctuaries β not private owners. Individuals owning inherently dangerous animals before the law's enactment may hold grandfathered permits with strict caging, insurance ($100,000 minimum liability), and registration requirements. Harrison County cities add local bans on additional species. Venomous snakes native to Mississippi (copperheads, cottonmouths, rattlesnakes, coral snakes) may not be kept without a scientific or educational permit. Alligators require MDWFP permits. Hedgehogs and sugar gliders are legal. Ferrets are legal in Mississippi. Escape of an exotic animal is a public safety emergency requiring immediate law enforcement notification.
Possession without permit: misdemeanor, fines up to $2,000 and/or up to 1 year jail per Β§49-8-29. Confiscation of animal at owner expense. Escape incident: civil liability for all damages, potential criminal charges. Sanctuary placement or euthanasia of confiscated animals.
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