Animal Cruelty in the First Degree. Animal cruelty in the first degree is a class C felony. A person may commit this crime in manner of different ways. A person commits first degree animal cruelty if the person, except as authorized by law:
A person will not be guilty of animal cruelty by means of exposing an animal to excessive heat or cold, if the exposure is due to an unforeseen or unpreventable accident or event caused exclusively by an extraordinary force of nature.
A person may also commit first degree animal cruelty if the person knowingly:
Felony Seriousness Level. In 1981 Washington enacted the Sentencing Reform Act (SRA) which replaced a system of indeterminate sentencing, where a person's release date was determined by a parole board, with a system of determinate sentencing, where formulas and matrices determined a set sentence length.
Under the SRA, when determining a particular person's standard sentence range, the determinate range of time in which a judge may set the sentence, the court must first determine the seriousness level of the crime. Felony crimes range in seriousness from level XVI for the most serious crimes to level I for less serious felonies. However, some felonies that are rarely charged or recently created are not included in the table listing crimes by seriousness level or in the felony sentencing grid. These are commonly referred to as unranked felonies.
Unlike ranked felonies, unranked felonies have no standard sentence range, and a judge may impose a determinate sentence up to 12 months confinement, and may also impose community service, legal financial obligations, and community supervision.
Seriousness level of Animal Cruelty in the First Degree. First degree animal cruelty involving sexual conduct or contact with an animal is considered a seriousness level II offense meaning a person convicted of this crime with no relevant criminal history would face a standard sentence range of one to three months of confinement, and a person with a maximum offender score of nine, would face a standard sentence range of 51 to 60 months confinement.
First degree animal cruelty by means of inflicting substantial pain or death, or by means of negligently starving, dehydrating, or suffocating an animal, or exposing an animal to extreme heat or cold, are considered unranked class C felonies. A person convicted of first degree by either of these means, regardless of the person's criminal history or offender score, could face up to one year of confinement.
Animal cruelty in the first degree, regardless by which means the crime is committed, is classified as a seriousness level III offense.