Asbestos delays Punta Gorda hotel demolitionMost Wanted Wednesday: Southwest Florida’s most wanted suspects for April 24, 2024
Photo credit: WJXT News4Jax Less than two months after K-9 Fang with the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office was shot and killed in the line of duty, State Sen. Aaron Bean has followed through with his promise to propose new legislation to toughen the penalty for those who commit such crimes. Currently in Florida, killing a police dog is a third-degree felony — which carries a sentence of up to five years in prison. When Bean was informed of the light charge following Fang’s death, the Republican senator from Jacksonville vowed to try and change the law. “It’s the Fang Memorial Bill, which will hold people accountable for murdering a police dog,” Bean said. Bean filed the bill Tuesday which, if it passes, would make harming a police, fire or search and rescue dog in the state of Florida a second-degree felony — tripling the maximum prison sentence to up to 15 years. The bill is SB 96. Read the full web story from WJXT News4Jax. Video by WINK.