Tuesday, August 04, 2020

Anti-Kapparot Group Renews Attempt To Get NYC Police Enforcement of Health Code

As previously reported, in 2018 New York's highest court refused a writ of mandamus to require enforcement of public health and animal cruelty laws against the Jewish pre-Yom Kippur religious practice of kaporos using live chickens. The court held that mandamus cannot be used to order discretionary enforcement action.  Now a motion to renew the request for a mandamus petition has been filed, alleging that the COVID-19 pandemic has revealed new evidence relevant to the claim. In Alliance to End Chickens as Koporos v. New York City Police Department, (NY Ct. Sup. Ct.) a motion and affidavit (full text) filed 7/6/2020, focuses in large part on the animal-to-human spread of COVID-19, saying in part:
99. In light of the health, economic, and financial devastation caused [by] Covid-19, in light of how this pandemic [has] caused our lives to come to a grinding halt, in light of the hundreds of thousands of lives lost worldwide, and in light of the fact that Covid-19 originated from a live animal wet market, we cannot allow our police department to pick and choose what lows to enforce when it comes to the health code. Too much is at stake, which we all so painfully are currently aware of.
JTA reports on these developments. Attorney for plaintiffs issued a press release on the filing.