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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Converse vs Live Oak

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Converse, TX and Live Oak, TX?

Converse and Live Oak have similar restriction levels.

Converse, TX

Bexar County

Heavy Restrictions

Bexar County prosecutes animal hoarding under Texas Penal Code 42.092 (animal cruelty) and Texas Health and Safety Code 821 (seizure of cruelly treated animals), with Bexar County Animal Care Services and BCSO investigating complaints in unincorporated areas.

View full Converse rules β†’

Live Oak, TX

Bexar County

Heavy Restrictions

Bexar County prosecutes animal hoarding under Texas Penal Code 42.092 (animal cruelty) and Texas Health and Safety Code 821 (seizure of cruelly treated animals), with Bexar County Animal Care Services and BCSO investigating complaints in unincorporated areas.

View full Live Oak rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactConverseLive Oak
Cruelty statuteTX Penal Code 42.092TX Penal Code 42.092
Seizure lawTX HSC Chapter 821TX HSC Chapter 821
Case threshold6+ animals heightened6+ animals heightened
InvestigatorsBCAS and BCSOBCAS and BCSO
Felony triggerRepeat or tortureRepeat or torture

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Converse FAQ

How many animals constitute hoarding in Bexar County?

Texas law sets no specific number, but Bexar County Animal Care Services treats six or more animals with inadequate care as a hoarding indicator triggering enhanced multidisciplinary investigation.

Will hoarders lose their pets permanently?

Yes. Under Texas HSC 821.023, justice courts may divest ownership permanently after a cruelty hearing, and convictions under Penal Code 42.092 can include lifetime ownership bans.

Live Oak FAQ

How many animals constitute hoarding in Bexar County?

Texas law sets no specific number, but Bexar County Animal Care Services treats six or more animals with inadequate care as a hoarding indicator triggering enhanced multidisciplinary investigation.

Will hoarders lose their pets permanently?

Yes. Under Texas HSC 821.023, justice courts may divest ownership permanently after a cruelty hearing, and convictions under Penal Code 42.092 can include lifetime ownership bans.

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