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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Birmingham vs Hoover

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Birmingham, AL and Hoover, AL?

Birmingham and Hoover have similar restriction levels.

Birmingham, AL

Jefferson County

Heavy Restrictions

Birmingham works with Animal Services and Alabama state cruelty statutes to investigate hoarding situations, allowing seizure of animals living in unsanitary or overcrowded conditions.

View full Birmingham rules β†’

Hoover, AL

Jefferson County

Heavy Restrictions

Alabama Code Sections 13A-11-14 and 13A-11-241 criminalize animal cruelty and neglect statewide, capturing hoarding conduct that deprives animals of food, water, shelter, or veterinary care.

View full Hoover rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactBirminghamHoover
City ruleBHM Code Title 4-
State cruelty lawAL Β§13A-11-14-
Aggravated crueltyAL Β§13A-11-241Section 13A-11-241
SeizureAllowed with warrant-
Cruelty statute-Section 13A-11-14
Seizure authority-Section 3-1-13
Felony threshold-Serious injury/death
Future ownership-Court may bar

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Birmingham FAQ

How do I report suspected animal hoarding?

Call Birmingham Animal Services or 311. Officers coordinate with state cruelty investigators and JCDH if sanitation complaints are also involved.

Can hoarders own pets again?

Courts can ban future ownership for years after a cruelty conviction. Violating the ban is a separate criminal offense under Alabama state law.

Hoover FAQ

Is animal hoarding a separate crime in Alabama?

No specific hoarding statute exists, but hoarding conduct is prosecuted under cruelty laws Section 13A-11-14 and 13A-11-241 when animals lack food, water, shelter, or care.

Can authorities seize hoarded animals?

Yes. Section 3-1-13 authorizes humane officers and law enforcement to seize neglected or cruelly treated animals, with court hearings to determine forfeiture and impose care-cost restitution.

Will I lose the right to own pets?

Possibly. Courts convicting defendants of cruelty or aggravated cruelty may prohibit possession of animals during probation or permanently as a condition of sentencing.

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