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 fiscally sponsored, court-adaptable rehabilitation program that uses immersive, sensory-driven storytelling to rewire cruelty into conscience. Created by forensic handwriting expert and trauma psychologist Dr. Mozelle Martin, the program delivers emotionally resonant, ethically designed experiences that challenge harmful behaviors from the inside out.
It’s not punitive.
It’s not passive.
It’s accountability—built on science, not shame.
The legal system punishes—but rarely transforms. P.E.T. introduces emotional consequence without cruelty, reaching offenders others have given up on.
Cruelty doesn’t exist in a vacuum. It’s a pattern—one that starts early, escalates fast, and crosses species lines.
Consider:
88% of households investigated for child abuse also show signs of animal cruelty.
Over 70% of animal abusers also harm humans—via domestic violence, elder abuse, or child maltreatment.
70% of domestic violence survivors report that their abuser also harmed or threatened pets.
600,000 children are abused annually in the U.S. (Childhelp, 2023).
1 in 4 women and 1 in 9 men endure intimate partner violence.
1 in 10 seniors suffer elder abuse—mostly in silence.
60% of sexual offenders reoffend without meaningful intervention.
Cruelty also kills animals:
Over 10 million animals die from abuse annually in the U.S.
1 cat is tortured every 3 hours in Mainland China—a 500% rise in recent years (CNN, 2024).
More than 110 million animals are experimented on each year in U.S. labs.
The dog and cat meat trade in China, Indonesia, and Vietnam trafficked 30 million animals in 2024 alone.
And yet, enforcement is weak:
The U.S. passed its first animal protection law in 1828. The U.K. followed in 1822.
Nearly 200 years later, cruelty laws remain fragmented and under-enforced.
Fewer than 10% of cruelty cases in the U.S. result in felony charges.
China has no national anti-cruelty law—just scattered local rules with little enforcement.
Cruelty is not isolated. It’s a warning sign. And now, it’s digitally profitable.
It’s not just who commits cruelty—it’s who pays for it.
A BBC investigation uncovered a global torture ring where buyers in 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 over 87% of cruelty-related links. Most common targets? Cats, dogs, and monkeys.
The demand side—those who buy, stream, or sponsor abuse content—are fueling the industry. And they're rarely prosecuted.
P.E.T. addresses them too.
Because when cruelty is profitable, it doesn’t just continue—it escalates.
Direct Impact:
Individuals convicted of abuse-based crimes, including:
Animal cruelty
Domestic violence
Elder abuse
Child endangerment
Sexual assault
Buyers, distributors, or consumers of violent or fetishistic cruelty content
Indirect Reach: survivors, therapists, courts, probation teams, animal advocates, and anyone working to interrupt cycles of harm.
Immersive, multisensory scenarios designed to mirror harm—without retraumatizing
Controlled feedback loops to activate authentic emotional resonance
A guided curriculum grounded in forensic psychology, trauma theory, and applied ethics
Progress tracked using both objective (biometric, psychometric) and subjective (self-report, observation) measures
Note: Proprietary delivery methods are protected under NDA and available only to authorized collaborators.
Pre/post empathy assessments using validated forensic instruments
Recidivism data tracked with partnering court and probation systems
Voluntary biometric and self-report data (subject to legal permissions)
Qualitative insights from clinicians, judicial staff, and participants
✅ Core curriculum, ethics framework, and use-case matrix complete
✅ Public education and outreach efforts underway
✅ Fiscal sponsorship secured through Chappy & Friends
🚧 Seeking tech partner to develop secure pilot prototype (currently in talks with Demodern)
🚧 Fundraising and grant positioning in active motion
P.E.T. is adaptable to a wide range of behavioral profiles marked by empathy deficits or detachment:
Juveniles: bullying, cruelty, fire-setting, stalking, peer aggression
Adults: domestic violence, elder abuse, harassment, voyeurism
Animal Abusers: hoarding, organized fighting, neglect, torture
Demand-Side Offenders: those who purchase, stream, or distribute violent animal content, including fetishistic material
Modules are tailored by age, court mandate, and psychological profile—with trauma-informed safeguards and ethical oversight built in.
Following prototype validation, P.E.T. will be positioned for:
Licensing in U.S., U.K., and E.U. court and corrections programs
Juvenile justice, diversion, and probation partnerships
Grant funding through behavioral health, tech innovation, and anti-cruelty initiatives
Public support through transparency and ethical awareness campaigns
Legislative alignment in underregulated countries (e.g., China) through NGO and coalition partnerships
This started as rage—the kind only animal cruelty can ignite. But rage alone doesn't change systems.
So I built a plan.
P.E.T. is the first forensic empathy program designed to make offenders feel what they’ve done—ethically, safely, and without performative punishment.
It’s for the people who click “play” on suffering. For those who hurt others—human or animal—and walk away unchanged. This isn’t vengeance. It’s intervention.
If you’ve ever whispered “eye for an eye” while watching a cruelty video, this is that—but with structure, science, and measurable impact.
P.E.T. isn’t just about confronting harm.
It’s about transforming it.
— Dr. Mozelle Martin
P.E.T. is a fiscally sponsored nonprofit project under Chappy & Friends.
That means your donations are now fully tax-deductible and go directly toward:
Prototype development and immersive scenario creation
Legal integration for court and corrections systems
Measurable outcome tracking and ethical oversight
Global outreach, awareness, and legislative partnerships
🔗 Our official Chappy & Friends donation portal is LIVE!
Donations are tax-deductible!
If, for any reason, this prototype cannot move forward, all donations will be ethically redirected to aligned educational or investigative projects led by Dr. Martin.
No funds wasted. No mission diluted.
The P.E.T. Program is fiscally sponsored by Chappy & Friends, a 501(c)(3) public charity.
This ensures:
All donations are tax-deductible
Funds are managed by a third-party nonprofit
Oversight for ethical, transparent spending
Grant eligibility and nonprofit protections
Learn more about Chappy & Friends.
If you’re tired of cruelty going viral, help something better go viral. Share this with:
Lawmakers
Prosecutors
Survivors
Animal lovers
Anyone who believes empathy can be taught—and that some people deserve a second chance
💥 What You’re About to See Isn’t Marketing — It’s Mission
This short video isn’t here to impress you.
It’s here to wake you up.
Not just to the scale of cruelty happening worldwide—but to the complete lack of meaningful intervention for the people causing it.
What you’re about to see 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 human or animal victims suffer.
🔊 Watch. Reflect. Then decide which 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