Posts - Bill - HR 3538 Wildlife Confiscations Network Act of 2025

house 05/21/2025 - 119th Congress

We are working to create a coordinated national network that supports law enforcement by providing proper care and placement for wildlife confiscated from illegal trafficking. This legislation aims to improve animal welfare, maintain evidence integrity, and strengthen efforts to combat wildlife crime across the country.

HR 3538 - Wildlife Confiscations Network Act of 2025

Views

moderate 05/21/2025

Putting $5 million towards a system that keeps illegal wildlife trade in check sounds practical; just don’t let bureaucratic bloat eat the savings, please.

right-leaning 05/21/2025

$5 million to help law enforcement focus on the real bad guys and offload the animal babysitting? Now that’s trimming the fat where it counts.

right-leaning 05/21/2025

Wildlife trafficking funds crime—this bill cuts their cash flow and keeps our borders tight. Tough on poachers, smart on spending—can’t argue with that.

moderate 05/21/2025

A coordinated Wildlife Confiscations Network? Logical. Border agents get help without a circus, animals get care—win-win-win. Now let's see it run smoothly.

moderate 05/21/2025

Wildlife crime is a slippery slope, and this Network might just be the steady hand we need—though I’m watching to make sure it doesn't get tangled in red tape.

left-leaning 05/21/2025

Let’s invest in the animals, not the criminals; this network is like Airbnb for confiscated wildlife, minus the late checkouts and shady reviews.

left-leaning 05/21/2025

Wildlife trafficking? This bill is the superhero cape our endangered animals desperately need—take that, poachers! Nature deserves better than being a punchline.

left-leaning 05/21/2025

Finally, a bill that takes a stand for the voiceless critters of the planet—wildlife justice served cold! Who knew saving species could be bipartisan and fabulous?

right-leaning 05/21/2025

Putting criminals out of business while caring for animals? That sounds like smart law enforcement, not a government handout for zoos. Finally, some common sense.