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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Aurora vs Centennial

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Aurora, CO and Centennial, CO?

Aurora and Centennial have similar restriction levels.

Aurora, CO

Arapahoe County

Heavy Restrictions

Aurora Animal Services investigates animal hoarding under Chapter 14 cruelty and neglect provisions, coordinating with Adams, Arapahoe, and Douglas County authorities and Colorado Revised Statutes when conditions endanger animal welfare or public health.

View full Aurora rules β†’

Centennial, CO

Arapahoe County

Heavy Restrictions

Colorado criminalizes animal hoarding under the cruelty statute when conditions cause suffering. The law applies uniformly statewide regardless of municipal animal limits.

View full Centennial rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactAuroraCentennial
Lead agencyAurora Animal Services-
State lawCRS 18-9-202 cruelty-
Possible chargeFelony if aggravated-
CountiesAdams, Arapahoe, Douglas-
OutcomeImpoundment plus ownership ban-
Statute-C.R.S. 18-9-202
First Offense-Class 1 misdemeanor
Felony Trigger-Aggravated/repeat offense
Forfeiture-Court-ordered

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Aurora FAQ

How do I report suspected hoarding?

Call Aurora Animal Services or APD non-emergency. Provide the address, number of animals if known, and observed conditions. Anonymous reports are accepted but named complaints aid prosecution.

Can hoarders own pets again?

Courts often impose multi-year or lifetime ownership bans after conviction. Aurora Animal Services maintains records and may seize animals found with banned individuals on follow-up checks.

Centennial FAQ

Is animal hoarding a felony in Colorado?

Hoarding can be charged as felony aggravated cruelty under C.R.S. 18-9-202 when conditions cause severe neglect, death, or repeat offenses, with prison and ownership bans.

Can authorities seize hoarded animals?

Yes. Animal control and Bureau of Animal Protection officers may seize animals with court order. Owners may face cost-of-care bonds and permanent forfeiture upon conviction.

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