
Standardizing and coordinating animal cruelty reporting across jurisdictions to improve enforcement, accountability, and prevention.
Supporting law enforcement, animal control, and agencies nationwide.
ACVN is a verification and coordination system and does not replace emergency services. If an animal is in immediate danger, contact local authorities immediately.
Animal cruelty cases are fragmented across jurisdictions, underreported, and difficult to verify.
Agencies lack a centralized system to track offenders, share intelligence, and prevent repeat abuse.
ACVN is building a centralized verification network that allows agencies, shelters, and partners to:
Log and verify animal cruelty cases
Track repeat offenders across jurisdictions
Share data securely between agencies
Improve enforcement, prosecution, and prevention
Law Enforcement
Animal Control Agencies
Prosecutors & Courts
Government & Regulatory Bodies
Shelters & Rescue Organizations
By centralizing verified data and improving collaboration, ACVN aims to:
Reduce repeat animal cruelty offenses
Improve prosecution success rates
Increase accountability for offenders
Strengthen animal welfare systems nationwide
ACVN is currently in active development with foundational infrastructure, partnerships, and funding initiatives underway.
We are seeking grant funding and agency partnerships to accelerate national deployment.
System Status: ACTIVE DEVELOPMENT - ACCEPTING AGENCY PARTNERS.
National intake system in development for cross-agency coordination and case verification.
Serving law enforcement, animal control, and partner agencies nationwide.
For law enforcement, animal control, and partner agencies requesting access, coordination, or pilot program participation.
All submissions are encrypted, logged, and routed through the ACVN national intake system.
Secure intake for agency access, coordination, and pilot onboarding.
Upon submission, your request is assigned a case ID and reviewed by ACVN coordination staff.
“Built for national deployment and government integration.”