P.E.T. — Psychosensory Empathy Training
Justice. Conscience. Change.
P.E.T. — Psychosensory Empathy Training
Justice. Conscience. Change.
If you've ever wished that abusers could ethically feel what they’ve done—you're not alone.
P.E.T. (Psychosensory Empathy Training) is a court-adaptable, forensic rehabilitation prototype that uses immersive sensory storytelling to help shift cruelty into conscience. Designed by forensic handwriting expert and trauma psychologist Dr. Mozelle Martin, this program delivers emotionally resonant, trauma-informed experiences that challenge harmful behaviors from the inside out. It’s not punitive. It’s not passive. It’s accountability—built ethically.
The legal system punishes, but it rarely transforms. P.E.T. introduces emotional consequence without cruelty—designed to reach offenders others have given up on.
There is a significant correlation between animal abuse and human violence.
88% of households investigated for child abuse also show signs of animal cruelty.
Over 70% of animal abusers also hurt people.
This includes domestic violence, elder abuse, and child maltreatment.
88% of child abuse cases also include pet abuse.
These households show cycles of violence that often escalate without intervention.
70% of domestic violence survivors report pet threats or harm.
Abusers use animal cruelty to control and terrify their victims.
1 in 4 women and 1 in 9 men endure intimate partner violence.
600,000 children are abused in the U.S. annually (Childhelp, 2023).
1 in 10 seniors suffer elder abuse—mostly in silence.
60% of sexual offenders reoffend without intervention.
Roughly 10 million animals die from abuse each year in the U.S.
(World Animal Foundation, Shelter Animals Count)
1 cat is tortured every 3 hours in Mainland China,
marking a 500% increase in recent years (CNN, 2024).
Over 110 million animals are experimented on annually in U.S. labs.
These include tests for cosmetics, chemicals, and pharmaceuticals.
Animal abuse is a pervasive global issue,
with millions of animals suffering and dying each year due to cruelty, neglect, and exploitation.
The first formal animal protection law in the United States was passed in 1828 (New York),
and the U.K. followed with the Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act in 1822—strengthened in 2006.
China still has no national criminal law against animal cruelty.
Only scattered local regulations exist, with minimal enforcement.
Despite nearly 200 years of animal protection laws across nations,
enforcement remains fragmented. In the U.S., fewer than 10% of cruelty cases lead to felony charges—most result in probation or fines.
Demand-side enablers—those who purchase, request, or distribute animal torture content—are rarely prosecuted,
even when abuse is monetized or livestreamed.
The rise of social media platforms has fueled an underground market for cruelty-as-entertainment.
Videos of animals being tortured circulate across Facebook, TikTok, and YouTube with minimal consequences. Content is often removed without follow-up investigation.
The dog and cat meat trade continues in parts of China, Indonesia, and Vietnam.
In 2024 alone, 20 million dogs and 10 million cats were trafficked for human consumption. Some interventions have occurred, but the trade persists.
Cruelty is not isolated. It’s a warning sign. And now, it’s digitally profitable.
A BBC investigation uncovered a global torture ring where buyers from the U.S. and U.K. paid to watch baby monkeys tortured to death.
5,480+ animal cruelty videos were found across major platforms like TikTok and YouTube in just 13 months (World Animal Protection, 2023).
Facebook hosts 87.5% of cruelty-related links, with cats, dogs, and monkeys most targeted.
Demand-side participants—those who buy, download, or commission abuse content—are key players in this cycle and often overlooked in prevention.
P.E.T. addresses them, too. Because when cruelty is paid for it enables more cruelty.
Direct: Individuals convicted of abuse-based crimes—animal cruelty, domestic violence, elder abuse, sexual assault, child endangerment—as well as buyers and distributors of violent or fetishistic content.
Indirect: Survivors, courts, therapists, probation teams, animal advocates, and the public.
Immersive, multisensory scenarios that mirror harm—without retraumatizing
Ethically controlled feedback to trigger authentic emotional resonance
Guided curriculum grounded in forensic psychology, trauma theory, and applied ethics
Progress tracked using both objective (e.g., biometric, psychometric) and subjective measures
Note: All proprietary delivery methods are protected under NDA and available only to authorized collaborators.
Pre/post empathy assessments using validated forensic instruments
Reduced recidivism data tracked in partnership with probation/judicial systems
Voluntary biometric and self-reporting data (subject to local legal permissions)
Qualitative insights from therapists, participants, judicial staff, etc.
Core curriculum, ethics framework, and use-case matrix are complete
Public education, branding, and cross-sector outreach efforts are active
Seeking a tech innovation partner to build the secure, pilot-ready prototype
Fiscal sponsorship, legal groundwork, and fundraising infrastructure are in motion
P.E.T. addresses a wide range of individuals with impaired empathy or behavioral detachment, including:
Juveniles: bullying, animal cruelty, fire-setting, peer aggression, stalking
Adults: domestic violence, child endangerment, elder abuse, harassment, voyeurism
Animal Abusers: cruelty, neglect, hoarding, organized animal fighting
Buyers of cruelty: purchasers, downloaders, and fetishistic viewers of animal abuse, including those who financially sponsor or distribute cruelty content
Modules adapt to age, motivation, court mandate, and psychological needs, offering trauma-informed safeguards and clinical oversight.
Upon successful prototyping and validation, P.E.T. will be positioned for:
Licensing to court and corrections programs in the U.S., U.K., and E.U., with select opportunities in China and other regions where legal reform is underway.
Partnerships with diversion, probation, and juvenile justice systems
Grant funding through behavioral health, legal innovation, and anti-cruelty programs
Broad public support through data transparency and ethical education campaigns
International collaboration with NGOs, ethics boards, and anti-cruelty coalitions to push for legislative recognition in underregulated countries such as China
This began with outrage. The kind only animal cruelty can ignite. But it evolved into something more: a plan for emotional justice. Not vengeance. Not virtue signaling. Real accountability, through real transformation.
I built P.E.T. to help offenders feel—really feel—what they’ve done. Because that’s where change begins. And not just for animal abusers. It works for batterers, exploiters, and those who click "play" on suffering.
This is forensic empathy, rooted in science and made personal through experience. If you’ve ever said "eye for an eye" while watching a cruelty video, this is that with ethics, safety, and measureable results.
P.E.T. isn’t just about confronting harm. It’s about transforming it.
— Dr. Mozelle Martin
Your support helps bring this one-of-a-kind empathy training program to life. While donations are not yet tax-deductible, we’re currently applying for fiscal sponsorship and will update this page once it’s approved. In the meantime, every dollar makes a real difference in building the first prototype and pushing this mission forward. Thank you for believing in ethical change.
Your donation helps develop:
Prototype & multisensory programming
Legal documentation for court integration
Measurement instruments & ethical oversight
Global outreach, advocacy, and legislative efforts
👉 DONATE NOW to Build Ethical Accountability because what society has been doing for decades has not been working.
We have interested tech partners—but if this prototype can't move forward for any reason, your contributions will be ethically redirected to aligned educational or investigative projects led by Dr. Martin. No funds will be wasted. No mission diluted.
If you're tired of watching cruelty go viral, help something better go viral. Share this with:
Lawmakers
Animal lovers
Prosecutors
Survivors
Anyone who believes empathy should be taught and that some people deserve second chances.
💥 What You’re About to See Isn’t Marketing—It’s Mission
This short video isn’t designed to impress you. It’s designed to wake you up.
Not just to the scale of animal abuse happening around the world—but to the lack of meaningful intervention for the people causing it.
What you’re about to watch introduces a first-of-its-kind solution grounded in:
Ethical accountability
Neuroscience and behavior change
Court-adaptable logic
Measurable, empathy-driven outcomes
This isn’t about punishment.
It’s about breaking cycles before more victims—human or animal—suffer.
🔊 Watch. Reflect. Then decide what side of justice you want to be on.
© 2025 Mozelle Martin. All rights reserved. P.E.T.™ is a proprietary program. Unauthorized use or reproduction is prohibited.
© 2018 Mozelle Martin. P.E.T. – Psychosensory Empathy Training™. All rights reserved. U.S. Copyright Office.
📄 Official concept archive (timestamped) on Archive.org