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πŸ” Animal Ordinances/Animal Hoarding

Animal Hoarding: Las Vegas vs Paradise

How do animal hoarding rules compare between Las Vegas, NV and Paradise, NV?

Las Vegas has fewer restrictions than Paradise.

Las Vegas, NV

Clark County

Some Restrictions

Las Vegas treats keeping excessive animals in unsanitary conditions as cruelty under Title 6, with LVMPD Animal Protective Services and The Animal Foundation handling investigations and impoundment when welfare or sanitation thresholds fail.

View full Las Vegas rules β†’

Paradise, NV

Clark County

Heavy Restrictions

Nevada criminalizes animal cruelty and neglect under NRS 574.100, applicable statewide. Hoarding situations involving failure to provide necessary food, water, shelter, or veterinary care constitute misdemeanors, escalating to felonies for willful or repeated cruelty.

View full Paradise rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLas VegasParadise
Code titleLVMC Title 6-
State lawNRS 574 cruelty-
InvestigatesLVMPD APS-
ShelterThe Animal Foundation-
Strip jurisdictionClark County APS-
Statute-NRS 574.100
First offense-Misdemeanor
Willful cruelty-Category C felony
Forfeiture-All animals seized
Ban-Future ownership prohibited

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Las Vegas FAQ

How many pets is too many in Las Vegas?

City pet-limit rules generally cap dogs and cats at three each per household; beyond that you need a kennel or fancier permit, and welfare must always be maintained.

Who do I report a hoarder to?

Call LVMPD Animal Protective Services at 702-229-6444 inside city limits, or Clark County Animal Protection Services at 702-455-7710 for Strip and unincorporated areas.

Paradise FAQ

Is animal hoarding a specific crime in Nevada?

Nevada has no dedicated hoarding statute, but hoarders are prosecuted under NRS 574.100 cruelty and neglect provisions when failure to provide care causes suffering. Prosecutors often charge multiple counts.

Can authorities remove animals from a hoarder?

Yes. NRS 574.055 allows officers to seize animals when probable cause shows cruelty. Courts can order permanent forfeiture and bar the offender from owning animals.

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