In this paper, an experimental velocity database of a bacterial collective motion , e.g., B. subtilis, in turbulent phase with volume filling fraction 84% provided by Professor Goldstein at the Cambridge University UK, was analyzed to emphasize the scaling behavior of this active turbulence system. This was accomplished by performing a Hilbert-based methodology analysis to retrieve the scaling property without the β−limitation. A dual-power-law behavior separated by the viscosity scale ℓ ν was observed for the qth-order Hilbert moment L q (k). This dual-power-law belongs to an inverse-cascade since the scaling range is above the injection scale R, e.g., the bacterial body length.The measured scaling exponents ζ(q) of both the small-scale (resp. k > k ν ) and large-scale (resp. k < k ν ) motions are convex, showing the multifractality. A lognormal formula was put forward to characterize the multifractal intensity. The measured intermittency parameters are µ S = 0.26 and µ L = 0.17 respectively for the small-and large-scale motions. It implies that the former cascade is more intermittent than the latter one, which is also confirmed by the corresponding singularity spectrum f (α) vs α. Comparison with the conventional two-dimensional Ekman-Navier-Stokes equation, a continuum model indicates that the origin of the multifractality could be a result of some additional nonlinear interaction terms, which deservers a more careful investigation. *