Connecticut 2021 2021 Regular Session

Connecticut Senate Bill SB00925 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 03/30/2021

                     
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OLR Bill Analysis 
sSB 925  
 
AN ACT PROHIBITING THE IMPORT, SALE AND POSSESSION OF 
AFRICAN ELEPHANTS, LIONS, LEOPARDS, BLACK 
RHINOCEROS, WHITE RHINOCEROS AND GIRAFFES.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill generally bans importing, possessing, selling, offering for 
sale, or transporting in Connecticut a specimen (dead or alive) of any 
of six types of African animals, which the bill collectively refers to as 
the “big six African species.” It applies to certain elephants, lions, 
leopards, giraffes, and two rhinoceros species. 
The bill makes violating the ban a felony and subjects a violator to a 
fine of up to $10,000, up to two years in prison, or both. It requires 
seizure of and holding the specimen and any property or item used in 
connection with the violation. If there is a conviction or a judgment 
restraining someone from violating the ban, the bill requires that the 
specimen, property, or item be forfeited. The specimen (unless it is 
alive), property, or item also must be destroyed. 
The bill contains several exemptions, including for a specimen that 
is already legally in the state or distributed to a beneficiary or heir, as 
long as the owner or distributee timely obtains a certificate of 
possession from the Department of Energy and Environmental 
Protection (DEEP). The ban also does not apply to fossils and ivory 
and the following under certain conditions: circuses; museums; 
zoological institutions; and motion picture, television, or digital media 
production companies. 
Lastly, the bill specifies that the ban does not prohibit transporting 
through the state endangered or threatened species subject to the terms 
of another state’s permit, which existing law allows. 
The United States regulates the trade of the species covered by the  2021SB-00925-R000216-BA.DOCX 
 
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bill, except the giraffe, through the Convention on International Trade 
in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and laws such 
as the Endangered Species Act (16 U.S.C. § 1531 et seq.). Specifically, 
trade of the species requires permits at a minimum (see 
BACKGROUND). 
EFFECTIVE DATE:  October 1, 2021 
SCOPE OF BAN 
Species Covered 
The ban applies to any specimen of any of the following six species: 
1. African elephant (loxodonta Africana), 
2. African lion (panthera leo), 
3. African leopard (panthera pardus pardus), 
4. African giraffe (giraffa camelopardalis), 
5. Black rhinoceros (diceros bicornis), and 
6. White rhinoceros (ceratotherium simum cottoni). 
A specimen generally includes any part, product, or offspring of the 
species, whether dead or alive, including part of a manufactured or 
food product (see Exemptions, below).  
Exemptions 
Fossils and Ivory. The bill’s ban does not apply to fossils or ivory.  
Individuals and Museums. The bill also exempts from the ban, so 
long as federal law does not prohibit it, a specimen that is: 
1. located or possessed in Connecticut before October 1, 2021, and 
whose legal owner obtains a certificate of possession from DEEP 
within the 180 days after that date; 
2. distributed directly to a legal beneficiary of a trust or to a legal 
heir and he or she also obtains a certificate of possession from 
DEEP within 180 days after receiving the specimen; or  2021SB-00925-R000216-BA.DOCX 
 
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3. part of a museum collection of an institution with a federal 
educational or scientific tax exemption or will be used by a 
zoological institution for educational purposes, as long as it is 
not subsequently sold, offered for sale, traded, bartered, or 
distributed to another party. 
For a transfer to a legal beneficiary or heir to be exempt, the 
specimen must also have been located or possessed by the decedent 
before October 1, 2021, and the beneficiary or heir may not then sell or 
offer the specimen for sale, or trade, barter, or distribute it to someone 
else. 
Zoos, Circuses, and Production Companies. The bill allows 
zoological institutions and circuses to import, transport, or possess live 
big six African species. 
It also allows for the exhibition, purchase, transport, or use of these 
animals in a motion picture, television, or digital media production. To 
do so, the involved production company must employ or contract with 
a federally licensed dealer or exhibitor or a federally registered carrier, 
intermediate handler, or unlicensed exhibitor.  
By law, these dealers and exhibitors must meet U.S. Department of 
Agriculture (USDA) standards for humanely handling, caring for, 
treating, and transporting animals (7 U.S.C. § 2143). Carriers and 
intermediate handlers must follow USDA requirements for accepting 
animals for transport, such as documentation, transport conditions, 
and delivery notification (9 C.F.R. § 3.136).     
ENFORCEMENT 
Beginning October 1, 2021, any law enforcement officer may enforce 
the bill's provisions, including executing warrants to search for and 
seize a banned specimen.  
The bill requires (1) seizing the specimen and any other property or 
item used in connection with violating the ban and (2) holding the 
specimen, property, or item pending any criminal proceeding. In the 
proceeding, the bill allows secondary evidence, such as photographs,  2021SB-00925-R000216-BA.DOCX 
 
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to be admissible as evidence to the same extent as the banned 
specimen. 
Under the bill, if there is a conviction or an entry of judgment 
restraining a defendant from violating the ban, any specimen, 
property, or other item seized and held related to the violation must be 
forfeited. A specimen (unless alive), property, or item must also be 
destroyed. 
BACKGROUND 
International Law on Animal Trade 
CITES is an international treaty under which governments agree to 
restrict international trade in certain plants and animals and products 
derived from them. It provides a framework for countries to follow 
when adopting legislation to implement the treaty. Trade in protected 
species must be licensed and there are different levels of protection 
based on a species’ endangered status. CITES currently has 183 
members as parties to the treaty, including the United States. 
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Environment Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 24 Nay 8 (03/12/2021)