KnowMo Laws shieldKnowMo LawsShow-Me State Laws
Other Offenses
RSMo 578.029effective 01 Jan 2017

Knowingly releasing an animal

In plain English

This law is about letting someone else's animal loose on purpose without permission. If a person releases an animal that is being legally kept — like a pet, a guard animal, or an animal used for shows or education — without the owner's okay, that person has broken the law. A public worker doing their official job is not covered by this law. The first time someone breaks this law it is a smaller crime, but if they have done it before it becomes a more serious crime.

Penalties named in this law
class B misdemeanorup to 6 months in jail
class E felonyup to 4 years in prison

Classifications stated in the statute. Actual outcomes vary.

Word-for-word law

578.029. releasing an animal — . — 1. A person commits the of knowingly releasing an animal if he or she, acting without the of the owner or of an animal, intentionally releases any animal that is lawfully confined for the purpose of companionship or protection of persons or property or for recreation, or educational purposes.

2. As used in this section "animal" means every living creature, domesticated or wild, but not including Homo sapiens.

3. The of this section shall not apply to a acting in the course of such servant's official duties.

4. The offense of intentionally releasing an animal is a , unless the has previously been of a violation under this section, in which case it is a .

Tap any gold-underlined word to see what it means.

Source & history notes

(L. 2001 S.B. 462, A.L. 2014 S.B. 491) Effective 1-01-17

View official source

Legal information, not legal advice. Always confirm with the official source at revisor.mo.gov.

RSMo 578.029: Knowingly releasing an animal | KnowMo Laws