Attention Walmart Shoppers: The story below entails
The next story involves the state of Kentucky passing a law last month outlawing bestiality. OMG! You mean to tell me that people need a law passed so they won't fuck their sheep and goats. Seriously? And if you're wondering if Kentucky was the last state to pass a bestiality ban, wonder no more! There's still states where animals aren't safe. The article claims that
Kentucky Passes Bill to Outlaw Sex With Animals
Four other states and Washington D.C. are the last remaining areas in the U.S. that don't have a law against bestiality
Kentucky Governor Matt Bevin has signed a bill that would make it illegal for a person to have sex with an animal in the state.
The bill defines the illegal interaction as "any act committed between a person and an animal for the purpose of sexual arousal, sexual gratification, abuse or financial gain".
Kentucky is one of the final states in the union to outlaw sex with animals. The remaining states without a law that prohibits bestiality are: Wyoming, New Mexico, West Virginia, Hawaii and Washington, D.C.
"Not only will it protect our animals from abuse, but it will also protect women and children from violence," said Sen. Julie Raque Adams according to the Courier Journal. "It is proven beyond a doubt that persons who sexually assault animals are very likely to turn their violent tendencies toward women and children."
SB 67 easily passed through Kentucky's House and Senate, making sex crimes with animals a Class D felony, punishable by up to five years in prison.
Source:
The bill defines the illegal interaction as "any act committed between a person and an animal for the purpose of sexual arousal, sexual gratification, abuse or financial gain".
Kentucky is one of the final states in the union to outlaw sex with animals. The remaining states without a law that prohibits bestiality are: Wyoming, New Mexico, West Virginia, Hawaii and Washington, D.C.
"Not only will it protect our animals from abuse, but it will also protect women and children from violence," said Sen. Julie Raque Adams according to the Courier Journal. "It is proven beyond a doubt that persons who sexually assault animals are very likely to turn their violent tendencies toward women and children."
SB 67 easily passed through Kentucky's House and Senate, making sex crimes with animals a Class D felony, punishable by up to five years in prison.
Source:
Legality of bestiality in the United States:
Bestiality is legal
Bestiality is a misdemeanor
Bestiality is a misdemeanor or a felony
Bestiality is a felony