In
Alliance to End Chickens as Kaporos v New York City Police Department, (NY Ct App, Nov. 14, 2018), New York state's highest court agreed that a petition for a writ of mandamus to require enforcement of public health and animal cruelty laws should be denied. According to the Court:
Plaintiffs allege those laws are routinely violated when thousands of chickens are killed during the religious practice of Kaporos performed in certain Brooklyn neighborhoods prior to Yom Kippur....
Enforcement of the laws cited by plaintiffs would involve some exercise of discretion.... Moreover, plaintiffs do not seek to compel the performance of ministerial duties but, rather, seek to compel a particular outcome. Accordingly, mandamus is not the appropriate vehicle for the relief sought.
WABC reports on the decision.