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6-month jail term for Pasay cat killers

VIRAL VIDEO An act of animal cruelty captured on a CCTV camera led to the conviction of four teenagers in Pasay City. 鈥擲CREENGRAB FROM KRIZ ALDINE LEGASPI鈥橲 FACEBOOK VIDEO

A Pasay City court has sentenced four teenagers to six months and one day in jail for clubbing a stray cat to death last year, an offense that was caught on video and caused an uproar among animal welfare advocates.

Judge Joeven Dellosa of Pasay City Metropolitan Trial Court Branch 47 found John Vincent Tenoria, Avelino Vito Jr., Wesley C. Torres and Jomar Estrada, 鈥済uilty beyond reasonable doubt鈥 for violating Section 6 of the Animal Welfare Act (Republic Act 8485, as amended by RA 10631).

The decision was handed down earlier this month, just weeks after the four were arraigned on April 30. After they pleaded guilty under a plea bargaining agreement, the judge reduced their sentence to six months and a day.

Application for probation

Under RA 8485, the penalty for the act cited in the case is imprisonment of at least one year and six months to a maximum of two years, and/or a P100,000 fine.

Anna Cabrera, executive director of the Philippine Animal Welfare Society (PAWS) said the four convicted teens had yet to start serving their sentence at Pasay City Jail after the judge granted them temporary liberty as they await the approval of their application for probation.

The four posted bail of P4,000 each in February.

Around 2 a.m. on Sept. 5, 2017, Tenoria and his friends were caught on a closed-circuit television camera killing a cat resting just a few meters away from them on Interior Dolores Street at Barangay 66, Zone 8, in Pasay.

Caught on camera

A two-minute video which went viral on social media showed Tenoria hitting the cat on the head with a thick piece of wood handed to him by his friends.

Days after the incident, PAWS filed charges against Tenoria and his three companions, saying they were all 鈥渆qually guilty鈥 since they 鈥渃onspired with each other to strike the cat which eventually caused the animal鈥檚 death.鈥

Report animal cruelty

Scoring a legal victory, Cabrera urged the public 鈥渢o take the initiative to report animal offenders to authorities鈥 They always post on Facebook. Although this is not wrong, this should not be the immediate reaction.鈥

鈥淎nimal violation is a crime,鈥 she said in an interview. 鈥淟ike any other crime鈥 if you see someone being robbed, you call the police.鈥

She cited a study showing that animal rights violators are also prone to be committing violence or crimes against human beings. 鈥淚f we remain quiet, we are not helping our communities [become] safe,鈥 Cabrera said. 鈥WITH A REPORT FROM ROSELIE MARI VILLAFLOR

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