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23 Dec, 2024 20:10

Suspect in 98 kangaroo deaths arrested

The man has been charged with animal cruelty after dead marsupials were found in October, according to police
Suspect in 98 kangaroo deaths arrested

A man has been charged with animal cruelty after he allegedly shot and killed 98 kangaroos in Australia’s New South Wales, according to a police statement.

The bodies of the animals, along with boxes of ammunition and spent cartridges, were found near the town of Singleton in the Hunter Valley in October.

In a statement on Monday, New South Wales police said that a 43-year-old was arrested and charged with six offences, including committing an act of aggravated cruelty upon animals and harming a protected animal.

The man was granted strict conditional bail to appear in court on January 13. The statement did not elaborate on the possible motives of the suspect.

Kangaroos are among Australia's most recognisable animals. The world's largest marsupials are protected native wildlife under the Nature Conservation Act of 1992.

In 2021, two teenage boys pleaded guilty to deliberately killing 14 kangaroos in New South Wales.

The boys, both aged 17 at the time, drove their vehicles into the animals “without any real rationale other than a brain explosion,” ABC cited a magistrate as saying.

They each faced one count of recklessly beating and killing animals, a crime that carries a maximum penalty of three years in jail.

After pleading guilty, the two teens were referred to a young offenders’ conference, with the charges against them reportedly being dismissed afterwards.

Under New South Wales law, anyone convicted of animal cruelty faces up to five years in jail and a fine of A$22,000 ($15,000).

According to official statistics cited by the Sydney Morning Herald newspaper, over the past five years, only 4.2% of animal cruelty cases resulted in prison time.

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