§4-501. Disposal of animals kept for pleasure - Method.
319 words·~1 min read·
/ok/title-4-animals/4-501A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
A. Any dog, cat or any other animal which is kept for pleasure rather than utility in or about a household, held by or in the custody of a private or public animal shelter or agency and not reclaimed by the owner, may be disposed of only by:
1. Adoption as a pet in a suitable home;
2. Delivery to a licensed educational or research institution in accordance with the provisions of Sections 391 through 402 of this title; or
3. Euthanasia by only one of the following methods:
a. administration of denatured sodium pentobarbital,
b. the use of a carbon monoxide chamber, using
commercially compressed cylinder gas; provided that
kittens and puppies under sixteen
(16)weeks of age
shall not be euthanized with carbon monoxide but with
injections of denatured sodium pentobarbital, or
c.
any other method approved by the Animal Industries
Services Division of the State Department of
Agriculture which shall include current acceptable
euthanasia recommendations from the American
Veterinary Medical Association, with the exception of
curariform derivative drugs. The following
requirements must be met to ensure the euthanasia
agent is humane:
(1)the method should be as painless as possible to
the animal as determined by the best available
medical and scientific knowledge and technology,
(2)the animal should be kept as free from anxiety
and fear as possible,
(3)the technique should be:
(a)simple enough to be used by relatively
unskilled personnel,
(b)legally available to all animal shelters and
humane societies,
(c)as mechanically simple and maintenance free
as possible within reasonable cost, and
(d)physically safe for personnel using it.
B. Death should be confirmed by cessation of vital signs. Professional judgment should be used in consideration of the animal species and method of euthanasia to determine the means of confirming death. Added by Laws 1981, c. 167, § 1. Amended by Laws 2000, c. 199, § 1, eff. Nov. 1, 2000.