"The only, absolute and best friend that a man has, in this selfish world, the only one that will not betray or deny him, is his Dog," King Frederick of Prussia is reported to have said in 1789. There's a reason we still say something like that today, and it's because you can't say the same thing about people. Like Frank Javier Fonseca, a Texas man caught on video punching and kicking his Rottweiler, Buddy, for getting out of the yard, reported Reason.
In early February 2019, a passerby filmed Fonseca as
he punched his dog on his porch. He kicked and choked him and hit him with a
piece of wood. The video was shared with Animal Care Services (ACS) of San
Antonio, which questioned Fonseca, who told them that that was his way of
disciplining Buddy. The dog was removed from Fonseca's home, aided to a full
recovery, and placed with a new family that presumably has a better handle on
obedience training.
Fonseca, meanwhile, will spend the next 25 years in
prison. While I love dogs as much as the next person, this is not justice.
Fonseca's sentence for beating up his pet—which was his property under Texas
law—grossly exceeds most punishments Texas dispenses for those convicted
of assaulting
a human being. Defendants found guilty of an assault causing physical harm
face up to a year in prison. When the alleged victim is a government official,
security officer, emergency services worker, family member, or date, that
punishment may be anywhere from two to 10 years behind bars. And when someone
brandishes a deadly weapon and causes serious physical harm, they may land
behind bars for anywhere from two to 20 years.
The city of San Antonio boasted about
forcing taxpayers to house Fonseca in a steel cage for the next 25
years—for $22,751
annually, well over half a million dollars total—for losing his temper and
beating an animal. It "is one of the longest punishments for animal
cruelty ever recorded in the state of Texas," Lisa Norwood, the public
relations and outreach manager for ACS, said in a statement.
Taxpayers will subsidize Fonseca's living
arrangements for longer than someone who assaults a disabled or elderly person,
longer than someone who assaults their mother, longer than someone who takes a
knife and inflicts serious, lasting physical damage to another human being,
which the city of San Antonio acknowledges is not the case even with Buddy, who
recovered from his injuries. It is also a considerably longer sentence than
most receive for rape,
which in Texas is capped at 20 years without aggravating factors. Fonseca's
sentence is even longer than many defendants receive for murder.
So why is Fonseca, 56, getting what amounts to a
life sentence for hurting his dog? While Norwood's statement suggests this is
about sending a message to other dog punchers, the government says Fonseca had
felony priors for crimes of retaliation and drug possession.
It's difficult to argue with a straight face that a
years-old drug possession conviction should be used to increase his sentence
for hurting Buddy. Fonseca's consumption habits may harm himself, but invoking
that offense at sentencing is not about keeping San Antonio safe. It is about
securing a sentence that would otherwise be impermissible
under the law. Access to that kind of leverage is one of the primary
reasons law enforcement groups oppose ending the war on drugs.
And while the same cannot be said for "crimes
of retaliation," in which people threaten government workers, Fonseca had
already paid his debt to society for that, just as he had for possessing drugs.
It's certainly reasonable to consider a criminal defendant's history at
sentencing—someone who assaults people over and over again, for example, should
not receive the same sentence each time.
But even if you find animal cruelty to be abhorrent,
as I do, a decades-long prison term is not the appropriate response to all
objectionable behavior—something we often forget in the context of the U.S.
system, which is utterly
addicted to lengthy prison terms. Desensitized bystanders may view
Fonseca's punishment as normal. It shouldn't be.
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