Monday, July 30, 2007

ANIMAL HOUSE: Dog case gets folks fighting mad

What a great article!! I had to pass this along to everyone -

http://www.newsday.com/news/columnists/ny-lspets5313148jul30,0,4800347.column?coll=ny-news-columnists

ANIMAL HOUSE: Dog case gets folks fighting mad

July 30, 2007
Never have so many animal groups, from purebred advocates like the American Kennel Club to domestication opponents such as People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, agreed so unanimously on one single point: Michael Vick sounds like one sick puppy.

Last Thursday, the Atlanta Falcons' star quarterback pleaded not guilty to federal charges that he is involved in an interstate dogfighting venture called Bad Newz Kennels. "I take these charges seriously and look forward to clearing my name," said Vick, who faces up to 6 years in prison, if convicted.

In April, authorities raided a 15-acre estate Vick owns in rural Surry County, Va., and seized 66 dogs, most of them pit bulls. They noted items that, when considered in toto, signaled dogfighting, such as pry bars (used to break a dog's hold during a fight), electronic treadmills (for conditioning), rape stands (a necessity when you breed dogs whose overriding impulse is to eviscerate their own kind, regardless of what their hormones say) and bloodstained carpeting, which needs no explanation.

A week ago, National Football League Commissioner Roger Goodell suspended Vick with pay and barred him from training camp. If convicted, Vick faces up to six years in prison and fines of $350,000.

Vick is hardly the first athlete to tangle with dogfighting, which is illegal in every state and a felony in all but two. In 2005, former NFL running back LeShon Johnson pleaded guilty to possessing fighting dogs and got a five-year deferred sentence. That same year, basketball pro Qyntel Woods copped to animal-abuse charges after abandoning a pit bull with wounds more serious than your average dog-park scuffle. Former Dallas Cowboys lineman Nate Newton was arrested at a Texas dogfight, though charges were dropped, and ex-Oakland Raider Tyrone Wheatley, formerly a pit breeder, told Sports Illustrated that dogfighting was "instinctive" and "motivational."

Rappers such as Jay-Z and DMX get blamed for glorifying dogfighting breeds like the pit bull, but they are only sampling a tradition that stretches back to bull-baiting in medieval Britain (which gave us today's comical, smushed-faced bulldog) and the gladiator dogs of ancient Rome. Among the most graphic photographs coming out of post-Taliban Afghanistan are those of organized dogfights, where groups of robed men crowd around, laughing or staring, mesmerized.

The quasi-erotic qualities of those photos underscore the real truth about dogfighting: It is a communal activity and a perceived form of entertainment that imparts a twisted sense of machismo to its participants.

Vick allegedly was involved in the deaths of dogs at the kennel, some of which were drowned, hanged or electrocuted. Sheer cruelty aside, these deaths likely were not capricious, but rather speak to the seriousness of the fighting operation on his property.

Dogfighting is sort of like cooking - there are varying levels of expertise. The impromptu throw-down in a city alley is at one end of the spectrum; the meticulously organized, high-roller contests, anchored by deliberate breeding programs, are at the other.

Breeders breed to perpetuate inherited qualities - the texture of coat on a poodle, the hippopotamus head of a sharpei - and dogfighters are no different. They are breeding for "gameness": More than just tenacity, it is the refusal of a dog to stop, even as its body drains of life.

Gameness is hard to get in a line of dogs, and easy to lose, because nature finds it counterintuitive: It is those dogs that assess the odds and decide to retreat that live to see another day. The only way to find out if a dog is game is practical application: the pit.

Knowing this, then, the slaughter at 1915 Moonlight Dr. was culling at its cruelest. To a dogfighter, a dog that is not game is useless, either in the pit or at stud. Rehoming him is too much trouble and too risky - the scars from his failed testing reveal his resume. The dead dogs at Vick's estate point to an operation that is schooled in breeding these kinds of dogs, a tradition in the rural South as ubiquitous as mint juleps.

The accounts of how fights were staged at Bad Newz - the street name for Vick's hometown, Newport News, Va. - also points to the work of professionals. Before a fight, the dogs were bathed - presumably by their opponent's owner - to ensure their coats were not doused with substances, such as kerosene or narcotics, that would affect the other dog.

This illuminates another required quality of even the most hard-bitten fighting dog - a willingness, even an eagerness, to be handled by total strangers. For all the terrible things said about the "true nature" of pit bulls, if only this inherent appreciation for human contact - without which a fighting dog cannot be fought - would get some traction. I wouldn't be surprised to find that agents who raided Vick's place this spring were greeted with wagging tails. That, too, is the calling card of the pit bull, game bred or otherwise.

As for Vick himself, the backlash is building, with sites such as NeuterSickVick.com. While the anger is understandable, it also should be channeled into efforts to ensure that dogfighting by anyone - not just a sports celebrity - receives the kind of public outcry and demands for justice that Vick has unleashed.

Email: denise.flaim@newsday.com

Co-defendant: Vick bankrolled nearly all of it

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/20035354/

Taylor, 34, pleads guilty to dogfighting in exchange in deal with prosecution

RICHMOND, Va. - One of Michael Vick's co-defendants pleaded guilty Monday to his role in a dogfighting conspiracy that he says was financed almost entirely by the Atlanta Falcons quarterback.

As part of a plea agreement, Tony Taylor pledged to fully cooperate with the government in its prosecution of Vick and two other men accused of running an interstate dogfighting enterprise known as "Bad Newz Kennels" on Vick's property in rural Surry County.

"The 'Bad Newz Kennels' operation and gambling monies were almost exclusively funded by Vick," a summary of facts supporting the plea agreement and signed by Taylor states.

The plea deal requires Taylor to testify against Vick and his two remaining co-defendants if called upon to do so. Taylor cannot get a stiffer sentence or face any new charges based on any new information he provides, according to terms of the agreement.

Additional charges are possible, however, against Vick and the other two. Federal prosecutors have said a superseding indictment will be issued in August.

Vick's lead attorney, Billy Martin, did not return a phone message left by The Associated Press.

Taylor, 34, of Hampton, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to travel in interstate commerce in aid of unlawful activities, and conspiring to sponsor a dog in an animal fighting venture.

Vick pleaded not guilty to the same charges last week and said in a written statement that he looked forward to "clearing my good name." He also pleaded with the public to resist a rush to judgment.

The gruesome details outlined in the July 17 indictment have fueled public protests against Vick and prompted the suspension of some of his lucrative endorsement deals. Also, NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has barred Vick from the Falcons' training camp.

The summary of facts signed by Taylor supports the indictment's claims that the dogfighting ring executed underperforming dogs by drowning, hanging and other brutal means. Taylor admitted shooting one dog and electrocuting another when they did not perform well in test fights in the summer of 2002.

Vick, 27, attended several dogfights in Virginia and other states with his partners, according to the statement. Prosecutors claim the fights offered purses as high as $26,000.

Taylor, who will be sentenced Dec. 14, said he was not promised any specific sentence in return for his cooperation with the government.

He faces a maximum of five years in prison and a $250,000, although federal sentencing guidelines likely will call for less. The range will be determined by the court's probation office, but the judge can depart from that range if he finds aggravating or mitigating circumstances.

Taylor and his attorney, Stephen A. Hudgins of Newport News, declined to answer reporters' questions as they left the federal courthouse. Prosecutors also would not comment.

During the hearing, Taylor spoke only in response to routine yes-or-no questions from U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson. He answered "Yes" when the judge asked if he had agreed to cooperate with the government.

Taylor acknowledged in the summary of facts that he found the property that Vick purchased in 2001 for $30,000 for development into a dogfighting compound. Taylor says he maintained and trained the dogs for about three years, using his share of winnings — which were split among the partners — for living expenses.

He left the operation after a falling out with co-defendant Quanis L. Phillips and others in September 2004, according to the statement of facts.

Vick and Purnell A. Peace, 35, of Virginia Beach, and Phillips, 28, of Atlanta, are scheduled for trial Nov. 26. They remain free without bond

Sunday, July 29, 2007

Dog Fighting Program on Sunday All Invited

WGN/Chicago



A note from Steve:

 

 

Dogfghting is the subject Sunday's Pet Central on WGN Radio, you can listen after 8 p.m (cst) . www.wgnradio.com

Chicago Police Superintendent Phil Cline leads a panel discussion on dogfighting with Dr. Gene Mueller, president of the Anti Cruelty Society of Chicago; Reverend Walter B. Johnson, Jr., executive director for the Alliance for Community Peace and Melia Carter of the Dog Advisory Workgroup. 

 

Also - an op ed piece on my home page on who I feel the victims are of dogfighting.

 

steve dale

www.stevedalepetworld.com

 

free to Xpost

Business owner destroys memorabilia in protest

Story:
Business owner destroys memorabilia in protest

Brian Gray is taking a stand. The owner of American Icons has removed a
Michael Vick autographed photo that once hung on the wall of his memorabilia
shop in protest of the recent dog fighting allegations surrounding the NFL
quarterback. Gray plans to destroy the $500 item and any other
Vick-related apparel he has in his store. He is also encouraging equally
outraged community members to follow suit. Throughout the month of August,
customers can bring in their Vick merchandise, including trading cards,
T-shirts, photos, and jerseys, to join in the demolition festivities.

"Dog fighting and the mistreatment of animals in general is a deplorable
thing," Gray said. "Being in the business of celebrating America's heroes
and role models, it is hard to stand by idly without doing something to show
our disdain with recent events."

For more of this story, click on or type the URL below:

http://www.friscoenterprise.com/articles/2007/07/28/frisco_enterprise/sports/a-sportsfri05.txt

Friday, July 27, 2007

Vick!

http://www.comcast.net/sports/index.jsp?cat=SPORTS&fn=/2007/07/27/725531.html&cvqh=itn_vick

FLOWERY BRANCH, Ga. - Nike suspended its lucrative contract with Michael Vick on Friday, while Reebok took the unprecedented step of stopping sales of his No. 7 jersey.

In another dose of bad news for the indicted quarterback, a top trading card company announced it was pulling Vick's likeness from any new packs.

Facing protests from animal-rights groups, Nike announced it was suspending Vick's endorsement deal without pay, as well as halting sales of Vick-related shoes and other products at its retail stores.

"Nike is concerned by the serious and highly disturbing allegations made against Michael Vick, and we consider any cruelty to animals inhumane and abhorrent," Nike spokesman Dean Stoyer said in a statement.

Reebok, the official uniform supplier of the NFL, said it would stop selling Vick's replica jersey at retail stores and through its Web site.

Donruss, one of four major trading card companies, has decided to pull Vick's card from any future 2007 releases, according to Beckett Media, which covers the collectibles industry.
All three hits came one day after the Atlanta Falcons quarterback pleaded not guilty to federal dogfighting charges in Richmond, Va. In the indictment, he was accused of sponsoring a gruesome operation that often shot, hanged, drowned or electrocuted losing dogs.

Since Vick has not been convicted of any crime, Nike left open the door to resume its business relationship with the star player if he's acquitted. The company already had decided to suspend release of his fifth signature shoe, the Air Zoom Vick V.

"We do believe that Michael Vick should be afforded the same due process as any citizen in the United States," the Nike statement said. "Therefore, we have not terminated our relationship."
Vick signed with Nike in 2001, the same year Atlanta chose him as the NFL's No. 1 overall draft pick. He led the Falcons to the NFC championship game during the 2004 season and last year became the first quarterback in league history to rush for 1,000 yards.

Vick is barred from the Falcons' training camp while the league investigates his actions for possible violations of its new personal conduct policy. He is set for trial Nov. 26 and faces up to five years in prison.

The case began April 25 when investigators conducting a drug search at a massive home Vick built in rural Virginia found 66 dogs, including 55 pit bulls, and equipment typically used in dogfighting. They included a "rape stand" that holds aggressive dogs in place for mating and a "breakstick" used to pry open a dog's mouth.

PETA _ People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals _ called off its planned protest at a dozen Niketown stores across the country next week.

"Regardless of Vick's guilt or innocence in a court of law, the facts in this case clearly support this decision," PETA said. "No company wants a spokesperson with a massive illegal dogfighting ring operating on his property, regardless of his level of involvement."

The Humane Society of the United States said the companies couldn't ignore the overwhelming opposition to having any association with Vick. He said some 165,000 e-mails were sent to Nike through the group's Web site.

"I think there's a direct relationship," said Wayne Pacelle, president of the HSUS. "We asked them to do this and the pressure continued to build, especially as the facts of the indictment came out. It simply became an untenable position."

There was no immediate response from the Vick camp. An after-hours phone message was left with his agent, Joel Segal, while unsuccessful attempts were made to reach his new attorney, Billy Martin, by phone and e-mail.

Although Reebok does not have a business relationship with Vick, the Massachusetts-based company serves as the official supplier of apparel and equipment to all 32 NFL teams. Through that deal, it holds the coveted rights to sell jerseys at the retail level.

"We just find the allegations very upsetting and very disturbing," Reebok spokeswoman Denise Kaigler said. "While this is just the beginning of the legal process and we know that it has to have time to run its course, we felt that making this decision now was important and the right things to do."

Reebok said it also was willing to take back any unsold Vick jerseys that are returned by retail outlets.

Kaigler said she already had received numerous e-mails in support of the decision. Even though numerous NFL players have run afoul of the law, this is the first time Reebok has stopped sales of an individual jersey.

"The number of e-mails and statements we're getting from consumers was pretty telling about how disturbing people find these allegations to be," Kaigler said.

Beckett Media reported on its Web site that Donruss dropped Vick's card at the behest of owner Ann Powell, whose five dogs accompany her to work every day and have virtually free reign inside the company's headquarters.

"If anybody who knows about the current Vick situation knows Donruss, they know that this is a decision we had to make because of Ann and her love of dogs," company spokesman Scott Prusha told the Web site. "This decision came straight from Ann."

Donruss had an autograph agreement with Vick, and much of the company's plans for the remainder of the year included the insertion of both autograph and memorabilia cards bearing the quarterback's picture.

Prusha said that "wasn't even a consideration. We met as a company and the idea was brought up to pull him. There was no opposition from anybody in the room."

NIKE SUSPENDS VICK!!

WOW, what a blow for Vick, Nike suspends his contract without pay and Reebok stops selling his #7 jersey!  WAY TO GO FANS!!! 

Vick's co-defendant copping plea on Monday!!

Plea hearing set for Vick co-defendant in dogfighting case

Associated Press - July 27, 2007 8:55 PM ET

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - 1 of Michael Vick's co-defendants in a federal dogfighting case will appear in court in Richmond Monday for a plea agreement hearing.

Tony Taylor's hearing was added to US District Judge Henry Hudson's docket a day after he and the other three defendants pleaded not guilty before the same judge.

Vick and the others still are scheduled for trial November 26th.

Prosecutors claim the 34-year-old Taylor found the Surry County property purchased by Vick and used it as the site of "Bad Newz Kennels," a dogfighting enterprise. The Hampton man also allegedly helped purchase pit bulls and killed at least two dogs that fared poorly in test fights.

Taylor's lawyer did not immediately return a phone message, and federal prosecutors have declined to talk about the case.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Contacts for NFL and M. Vick

I felt this needed posting again - please write all the letters you can.  Goodall has barred Vick (and also that lowlife Pacman) from training camp.  Send him a letter THANKING him.

IF you feel like writing letters/emails to the M.Vick group....

Federal Attorney, Eastern District of Virginia:
600 East Main Street
Suite 1800 Richmond, VA 23219-2447
(804) 819-5400
Contact/comments via email:
usavae.usattys@usdoj.gov

Arthur Blank owns the Falcons GrantInquiries [mailto:GrantInquiries@ambfo.com ]

Roger Goodell's info. (NFL commissioner):
email address: Roger.Goodell2@nfl.net
telephone #: (212)450-2027

Call Joanna Hunter with the NFL at (212) 450-2449 and give her your thoughts

To contact the Falcons
Mailing Address:
Atlanta Falcons
4400 Falcon Parkway
Flowery Branch, GA 30542
Phone Number: 770-965-3115
Website Address: http://www.atlantafalcons.com/
Email Address: feedback@fans.atlantafalcons.com.

Also, here's another:
NFL Main Office/Public Relations
1-212-450-2000
(you may end up having to leave a voicemailmessage)
fax +1-954-267-0971
email dns_admin@nfl.net

Thursday, July 26, 2007

New Pittie SAR dog.

 NBC10.com

More

http://www.nbc10.com/images/structures/buttons/button_enlarge.gif

http://www.nbc10.com/2007/0724/13748628_240X180.jpg

 


Pit Bull Lovers Fight Back

POSTED: 6:48 pm EDT July 24, 2007

UPDATED: 7:50 pm EDT July 24, 2007

EXETER TOWNSHIP, Pa. -- Over the past year, Sage has been training to sniff out those in need.


Video Report




While she's not the first K-9 to become part of the Blue Mountain Search and Rescue Team, she is the first pit bull to be trained to find missing people in trouble, reported NBC 10's Stacey Weaver.

Calling the dog "a sweetheart," Winterstein said Sage is a shining example that there is definitely another side to this breed.

Many people contacted NBC 10 to tell us about what they say is the "other" story about pit bulls.

This after Greeyli Gonzales was bitten in the leg as she got out of her car on Windsor Street in Reading. It was the city's 33rd recorded dog attack of the year -- the 22nd by pit bulls.

Gonzales suffered deep puncture wounds down to the bone. The dog that attacked her was euthanized.

City officials are thinking about activating a dangerous dog ordinance scheduled for next year, but pit bull owners are fighting back.

"I am the proud owner of two pit bulls, and they are wonderful," wrote an NBC 10 viewer named Audrea. "It is a shame that some people would ruin the reputation of a great breed because of their own irresponsibility and selfishness."

Another viewer, Sue, said of her pet: "She loves people, including kids, listens very well and is a great dog. She does not like other dogs, so we keep her away from them. But she does have respect for the two cats that she lives with."

Even Winterstein admitted he was unsure about bringing a pit bull onboard the Schuylkill County search and rescue team.

But after watching Sage grow, the head of the rescue group said the pit bull has become the perfect example of how the breed can be, if trained the right way.

"If these people could see a dog that's a pit bull-mixed that actually does something for humanity, they would change their minds," Winterstein said.

"...I don't believe it's the dogs that do this. I think it's the people that own these dogs that train these dogs to do whatever they're doing, to bite, to attack or whatever," he added.

Winterstein said he is fed up with the bad rap pit bulls have gotten because of the recent rash of dog bites in Reading.

"Everybody always sees the junkyard dog, the dog that's in the back yard tied up on the chain. They don't see this pit bull with an orange vest on running through the woods looking for somebody. I mean, it shocked me," Winterstein said. "It actually shocked a lot of the people in the K-9 community."

Sage knows all about being rescued. Her owner, Julie, saved her from an animal shelter when she was just a puppy.

Sage has about a year more of training left before she'll be tested for state and national rescue certification.

When asked if he worried the dog could ever turn on them and his volunteers, Winterstein said, "No I'm not.

"That dog is treated like a baby at home. It's loved," he said. "I'm very proud to have it."

The team was headed to a rescue in Hazleton on Tuesday night. Because Sage isn't yet certified, she couldn't join them on the mission, but her handlers wish she could, Weaver reported.

 

Cookeville Boy Killed By Dogs (huskies)

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

LOVE IT! Michael Vick

Minor League team to host "Michael Vick Animal Awareness Day"

July 23, 2007

LONG BEACH, California (Ticker) - A minor league baseball has announced that on Sunday they will host "Michael Vick Animal Awareness Day."

The Long Beach Armada of Los Angeles of California of the United States of North America including Barrow, Alaska in the Independent Golden League are holding the event on the heels of Vick - the quarterback of the Atlanta Falcons - being indicted on federal dogfighting charges.

Fans are invited to bring their dogs and sit in a special section at Blair Field.

Also, any fan who trades in a Michael Vick jersey will receive free admission to the game. The Armada also will destroy all Vick jerseys in protest to the inhumane treatment of animals.

Vick case illustrates pit bull’s changing status

Dog once portrayed as lovable now has image of vicious aggressor

Image: Rescued pit bull
Updated: 6:20 p.m. ET July 24, 2007
 
RALEIGH, N.C. - The image of the American pit bull terrier was once the smiling dog living in a shoe with Buster Brown, or the lovable pooch with the circle around one eye that used its powerful jaws to pull members of the "Little Rascals" from danger.

But today, many see the pit bull as something very different: As either the center of a rural, Southern white tradition of animal baiting, or the vicious devil dog snarling on the covers of rap CDs or mauling other dogs for big-time purses, as in the recent indictment of NFL star Michael Vick.

"It's important to understand that this isn't about race, but it is about culture," said Cindy Cooke of the United Kennel Club. "One is rural, and the other is urban. But both are equally horrible."

The American pit bull was developed in the late 19th century by British breeders crossing bulldogs with terriers. They were "looking for a dog that combined the gameness of the terrier with the strength and athleticism of the Bulldog," the kennel club says.

But to a dogfighter, "gameness" is code for a dog's ability to keep struggling, even as its body goes into shock from blood loss.

'Tied into the hip hop culture'
The breed's image remained largely positive until the late 1970s, when some widely publicized attacks on children started to turn the public's perception, says Karen Delise, a veterinary technician who has studied fatal dog attacks for 15 years and is the author of the book "The Pit Bull Placebo: The Media, Myths and Politics of Canine Aggression."

Every generation has had its guard dogs — the German shepherd, the Rottweiler and others over the years, she says. She blames the music industry — in concert with the media and the Internet — for making the pit bull the devil dog du jour.

"It's all tied into the hip hop culture, the image and projection of a dog as an extension of your manhood," she says. "The pit bull is the ultimate accessory."

It's not just white people like Delise saying that.

"Hip-hop culture put Vick in this bind," declared the headline on a recent column in The Kansas City Star. Staff columnist Jason Whitlock, who is black, said he hoped Vick's troubles would "serve as yet another wakeup call for black athletes to reject the hip-hop/prison culture that glorifies much of the negative behavior and attitude that has eroded the once-dignified and positive reputation of black athletes."

Gerald Early, a professor of English and African-American studies at Washington University in St. Louis, thinks there is some truth to the argument that rap and hip hop music have helped make the pit bull the "tough dog of the day."

Early, who is black and has written extensively on athletics in black culture, says football is a macho sport dominated by black men, many of them raised on rap and "fired up by the sort of romantic image of being a gangster." Some arrests of players has brought an NFL crackdown effort.

"Vick, of course, becomes a perfect storm," Early says. "Because just as they're trying to deal with this image problem, this whole thing comes up."
 

'Hideous crimes'
The Humane Society of the United States points to CDs such as DMX's "Grand Champ" — code in the dogfighting world for an animal that's won five straight contests — or to the video for Jay-Z's "99 Problems," which features a pit bull lunging at the camera.

But rap impresario Russell Simmons, founder of Def Jam Records and manager of such acts as Run-D.M.C., Public Enemy and the Beastie Boys, says those images are just reflections of what is happening on our streets.

"That's the reality," he told the AP in a telephone interview. "That's why we have poets, have always had poets and artists in society, to say things that sometimes people don't say otherwise."

Simmons co-signed a letter last week with the Rev. Al Sharpton and others denouncing "these hideous crimes" and calling on the sporting world to join the fight.

Simmons says the Vick case "is a blessing in the fact that he's brought this to light, that this is happening in our society." The question now is "how we handle it now that it's on the front page."

30th most popular breed
Caught in the middle of this whole thing is the breed itself.

Cooke says research has disproved common myths about the pit bull, such as the one about its bite force being greater than that of other breeds. "It can't really be the T-rex in a dog suit that it's portrayed as in the media," she says, noting it's Americans' 30th most popular breed, ahead of even Dalmatians and collies.

But the breed's image problem is not helped when Web sites such as www.gamedogs.org carry links to kennels with names like Hellz Comin' and Death Before Dishonor. Many breeders take great pains to distance themselves from the blood sport.

"No pup will be sold for illegal or cruel purposes," declares the Web site of Pitfall Kennels, the Atlanta breeding operation started by Antwan "Big Boi" Patton, a founding member of the hip hop group OutKast. His site boasts tennis star Serena Williams, and musicians 50 Cent and Usher among Pitfall's clients.

'Serves their purpose'
Authorities say North Carolina has become something of a center for pit bull breeding and fighting. According to the indictment, several of Vick's dogs came from North Carolina.

Tom Garner, who lives outside of Raleigh, is a leading breeder. A 1985 dogfighting conviction, he says, was the result of being in the wrong place at the wrong time.

In an e-mail response to the AP, Garner said he would not knowingly sell to someone who wanted to fight one of these "magic animals." But dogs are out of his control once they leave his yard.

"I am aware that some dogs from my bloodline are fought," he wrote. "This is analogous to criminals using Toyotas for getaway cars because of their reliability. Certainly Toyota doesn't set out to build getaway cars, but nevertheless the criminal will often find a way to get the item that serves their purpose."

Monday, July 23, 2007

NFL to Vick: Stay out of camp

 

In part …

 

NFL to Vick: Stay out of camp

League will review dogfighting charges against QB

Posted: Monday July 23, 2007 8:00PM; Updated: Monday July 23, 2007 9:16PM

NEW YORK (AP) -- Michael Vick was ordered by commissioner Roger Goodell on Monday to stay away from the Atlanta Falcons' training camp until the league reviews the dogfighting charges against him.

"While it is for the criminal justice system to determine your guilt or innocence, it is my responsibility as commissioner of the National Football League to determine whether your conduct, even if not criminal, nonetheless violated league policies, including the Personal Conduct Policy," Goodell said in a letter to the quarterback.

After his indictment last week, the NFL's position was that it would monitor developments and allow the legal process to "determine the facts."

Since then, pressure has been mounting on the league and the Falcons, particularly from animal-rights groups.

 

 

If convicted, Vick and three others charged with him could face up to six years in prison, and $350,000 in fines

Atlanta Falcons and Michael Vick

"I hold that the more helpless a creature, the more entitled it is to protection by man from the cruelty of man" M. Gandhi (1869-1948)
 
I think the Atlanta Falcons should dump Michael Vick.  This opinion piece from MSNBC really says it all for me:
 
They should dump him not only because he is overpaid and his performance slipping, not only because he tried to sneak a water bottle on board an airplane that had a "secret compartment" that smelled like marijuana....not only because he has been sued for giving a woman herpes but add that all together with the recent indictement on dog fighting and he is a poor example of a human being and not worth of being a role model.
 
If you want to read his indictement papers, see this website

Sunday, July 22, 2007

Shelter Tails: Pit bulls: Friend or foe? Part 2

 

Shelter Tails: Pit bulls: Friend or foe? Part 2

1 of 2
Top Photo
Clarion is an under-1-year-old pit bull mix pup available for adoption at the Town of Newburgh Animal Shelter. She is sweet and loves attention. Her high-energy and rambunctiously fun personality requires a home without small children, as she likes to jump and needs some training. Call 561-3344.
By


July 20, 2007

Last week, I wrote about Dakota, a 3-year-old brindle pit bull awaiting adoption at the Goshen Humane Society. My interest in the breed sparked a two-part column that I hope will open your eyes, as it did mine, to the other side of the rumors and to the sweet and gentle side to this dog.


What do our experts say?

A call-out to shelters and rescues on this topic resulted in a flood of responses. Here is a sampling of opinions on this misunderstood breed:

"I've never owned a pit bull, but the majority that come into the clinic are sweet, friendly and great with other animals and kids. Unfortunately, it's always the not-so-nice ones that make news, and we've seen our share of those, too."

— Colleen Roche, office manager,

West Point Vet Clinic

"Normal pit bulls are true clowns and great family pets. Some do not like other animals, like any other breed of dog. They are the most abused dog in this nation, due to their use as fighting machines for profit. Our shelter has adopted numerous pit bulls and pit bull mixes. One is the hostess of a bed-and-breakfast in New Jersey. Boomer, an abandoned, humongous-mouthed brute, was one of our true ambassadors for his breed who took part in a pet parade in full costume surrounded by five other dogs."

— Suzyn Barron, president

Warwick Valley Humane Society

"Do not blame the breed, blame the deed. No dog is born mean; it's how you raise them. In the last three weeks, I've had bite reports on a Jack Russell, Shih Tzu and a Lab. Shepherds and small dogs, they're the most prone in my bite reports. It's not the dominant breed (that bite). You're more apt to get bit by the small, yappy dog."

— Theresa Dougherty, manager

Blooming Grove Humane Society

"One of my best volunteers adopted the greatest pit from us. All was fine until three months down the line. Dallas became very destructive and then aggressive. The owner became fearful of his dog. The story does not have a good ending.

"Dogs are dogs. When a poodle or a cocker bites, it's a bite. When a pit bull bites, it's a rip, it's a tear. The difference being, when they go off, they go off — you're talking major damage.

"Unfortunately, the majority of people wanting to adopt these dogs do not meet our criteria."

— Linda Maresca, manager,

Humane Society of Middletown

"I've been bitten many times, but never by a pit bull or any of the bull breeds. Their natural traits — loyalty, love of their human family and protectiveness — are exploited by nefarious characters, with the intent of transforming the dog into an overly protective and loyal fighter. But a dog that has not been mistreated or exploited will make a wonderful family pet."

— Christine Martin, manager,

Oasis Animal Sanctuary


What's the poop on pits' real temperament?

According to Pit Bull Rescue Central, the pit bull is not an official breed. It is a common term used to describe a certain type of dog. There are three breeds that can be easily confused. The correct designations are: American pit bull terrier, American Staffordshire terrier and Staffordshire bull terrier.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that although fatal attacks on humans appear to be a breed-specific problem (pit bull-type dogs and Rottweilers), other breeds may bite and cause fatalities at higher rates. However, they do indicate that pit bull-type dogs were involved in about a third of human dog bite-related fatalities from 1981-92, and Rottweilers were responsible for about half of human DBRF reported from 1993-96.

"If they identified them (the breed) correctly," disputes Cydney Cross, president and co-founder of Out of the Pits pit bull rescue in Albany. "Any statistics are only valid if the dog is identified correctly by both people working on legislation and breed statistics."

Cross believes breed misidentification significantly adds to the bad pit reputation. Fewer than 50 percent of the dogs seeking refuge in her rescue are actually pit bulls. She also claims many reporting agencies only report incidents with pits and not any other breeds, also distorting the stats.

Out of the Pits dogs are subjected to strict and rigorous temperament testing by the American Temperament Test Society. The ATTS is a national nonprofit for the promotion of uniform temperament evaluation of purebred and spayed/neutered mixed-breed dogs.

ATTS' Web site (www.atts.org) lists the pass/fail stats on numerous breeds. The American pit bull terrier passed its tests 84.1 percent of the time, while the American Staffordshire terrier passed 83.9 percent of the time. Many breeds scored below these two, including border collies, Chihuahuas, collies, dachshunds, Dalmatians, golden retrievers, Jack Russells and miniature poodles.

The test, which includes distractions such as loud noises and a simulated human predator attack, aims to accelerate stress levels on the dog and their recovery rate.

In operation for 12 years, Out of the Pits has tested every one of their (age 2 and older) dogs in the last six years. Their success rate?

"Ours is 100 percent, we've never had one that has not passed."

Impressive for an organization that has placed about 1,000 pits to date.

"We want to have people know the true nature of the pit bull," Cross said. "For a dog that is up for adoption, having already gotten its respected ATTS title makes the dog more desirable for adoption. It proves the soundness of the individual dog and ultimately of the breed."


So, who's really doing all the biting?

The Humane Society of the United States reports that the breeds most commonly involved in both bite injuries and fatalities changes from year to year and from one area of the country to another, depending on the popularity of the breed. Factors other than genetics play some part in determining whether a dog will bite: whether the animal is spayed or neutered, properly socialized, supervised, humanely trained and safely confined.


What's the verdict?

The way I see it, it comes down to some nature, mostly nurture. When adopting any dog, you must choose one that is right for your family. If it is a large, strong-breed dog, it is imperative to educate yourself on the breed and properly train, socialize and love him.

I probably would never adopt a pit bull, mostly because I'm partial to other breeds. I have, however, learned not to fear or pre-judge them.


Considering adoption?

Qualifications for adopting a pit bull from a local shelter vary but may include: restricting adoptions of pits to homes without any children (for safety reasons when walking such a strong breed) or only with children over a certain age; criminal background checks; stable background; adults over a certain age; having a fenced-in yard; agreeing to always fence or leash the dog; experienced owner who understands the breed; interaction with the dog in a gentle, loving way.

Pits on the Web

www.pbrc.net

www.badrap.org

www.outofthepits.org

www.pitbullsontheweb.com


Dakota update:

Three-year-old Dakota, a brindle pit bull featured in last week's Shelter Tails, might be close to getting a home. About 12 interested adopters called the shelter after reading her story, and applications have been taken on three of them.

"I can be selective at this point as to who she goes with," said shelter manager Elijah Howe. "I know she's going to find a good home."

Amy Richardson, a freelance writer living in Sullivan County, contributed to this report.

 

Saturday, July 21, 2007

From USA Today

Window on a cruel world - Yahoo! News
http://news.yahoo.com/s/usatoday/20070720/cm_usatoday/windowonacruelworld

Fri Jul 20, 12:22 AM ET

Until this week, dogfighting was something many Americans heard about in passing and quickly forgot. With Tuesday's federal indictment of Atlanta Falcons star quarterback Michael Vick, forgetting will be tougher.

In gruesome detail, the indictment links Vick and three associates to a dogfighting operation in rural Virginia with the fitting name of Bad Newz Kennels. Amid the 19 grim pages is one particularly haunting sentence: In April 2007, Vick and two associates allegedly "executed approximately eight dogs by various methods, including hanging, drowning, and slamming at least one dog's body to the ground."

The animals' crime? They performed badly in "testing" sessions to see how viciously they would fight.

It will be up to the courts to decide Vick's guilt or innocence. But if the case serves as a window on this seamy, secretive world, it will have a served a worthy purpose. While holding dogfights is illegal in every state — a felony in all but two — weak penalties, legal loopholes, and disinterested police and prosecutors allow it to thrive from the rural reaches of Georgia and Texas to the city streets of New York and Chicago.

Because much of the public has been unaware of the details, enthusiasts have gotten away with calling dogfighting a sport and themselves "fanciers." What they really fancy is cruelty.
The dogs, typically American pit bull terriers, are bred as killing machines. At fight sites shrouded in secrecy, two dogs are placed in pits, usually 16-by-16 feet. Spectators wager, sometimes thousands of dollars. The dogs do battle, tearing into each other's flesh until one is dead or can't move. The loser is sometimes shot. Those are the lucky ones. Others are electrocuted; it makes less noise.

How has this despicable activity been able to flourish?

In many states, authorities must catch owners in the act to prosecute. That's difficult. Fights are held in secret, with spectators told of the location only at the last minute. If caught, participants can claim they are simply spectators: That's a felony in only 22 states and legal in two. And with fines of less than $5,000 in some states, owners can chalk it up to the cost of business. There's big money in wagers on champion dogs.

The hopeful news is that some of this is changing.

In South Carolina, after the attorney general got involved, a legendary breeder was convicted in 2004 and sentenced to 40 years in jail. That's sure to get the attention of other "fanciers."
And with prodding from the Humane Society of the United States and other animal advocates, Congress passed a law this year making interstate transport of fighting dogs a felony, triggering more interest from federal prosecutors.

Educating police and the public on the horrors of dogfighting is the surest way to spur stronger laws, tougher penalties and more prosecutions.

For now, the dogs born into this brutal world have little hope. Those rescued in raids — including many of the 50-plus found on Vick's property — are almost always euthanized. Dogs bred to kill dogs can't be adopted.

Thousands of others remain innocent victims. Only an end to this reprehensible "sport" will stop their suffering.

Wednesday, July 18, 2007

You Tube Videos on M. Vick

 

contacts for the Atlanta Falcons and M. Vick's indictment

IF you feel like writing letters/emails to the M.Vick group....

Federal Attorney, Eastern District of Virginia:
600 East Main Street
Suite 1800 Richmond, VA 23219-2447
(804) 819-5400
Contact/comments via email:
usavae.usattys@usdoj.gov

Arthur Blank owns the Falcons GrantInquiries [mailto:GrantInquiries@ambfo.com]

Roger Goodell's info. (NFL commissioner):
email address: Roger.Goodell2@nfl.net
telephone #: (212)450-2027

Call Joanna Hunter with the NFL at (212) 450-2449 and give her your thoughts

To contact the Falcons
Mailing Address:
Atlanta Falcons
4400 Falcon Parkway
Flowery Branch, GA 30542
Phone Number: 770-965-3115
Website Address: http://www.atlantafalcons.com/
Email Address: feedback@fans.atlantafalcons.com.

Also, here's another:
NFL Main Office/Public Relations
1-212-450-2000
(you may end up having to leave a voicemailmessage)
fax +1-954-267-0971
email dns_admin@nfl.net

From the Richmond Times Dispatch

Vick charged in dogfighting
Former Virginia Tech star, three others could each get six years on federal count
By TOM CAMPBELL
TIMES-DISPATCH STAFF WRITER

A federal grand jury in Richmond yesterday ended the suspense by indicting NFL quarterback Michael Vick and three men alleged to be his dogfighting associates.

In an on-again, off-again investigation that started in April, the grand jury handed up a one-count indictment that could mean up to six years in prison for each man charged.

The defendants are: Vick, 27, of Atlanta, where he plays for the Falcons; Purnell A. Peace, 35, of Virginia Beach; Quanis L. Phillips, 28, of Atlanta; and Tony Taylor, 34, of Hampton.

Vick, a Newport News native and former Virginia Tech star, might also face penalties from the NFL. In recent months, Commissioner Roger Goodell has put a new emphasis on discipline, suspending three players who faced a variety of legal charges. Most notably, Goodell banned Tennessee Titans cornerback Adam "Pacman" Jones for the entire 2007 season.

NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said: "We are disappointed that Michael Vick has put himself in a position where a federal grand jury has returned an indictment against him."

"The activities alleged are cruel, degrading and illegal," McCarthy said. "Michael Vick's guilt has not yet been proven, and we believe that all concerned should allow the legal process to determine the facts."

Efforts to reach Vick and his agent for comment were unsuccessful.

The Falcons called the indictment troubling and apologized to the team's fans, but said the legal process would be allowed to unfold.

Each of the defendants faces a federal charge of conspiracy to travel in interstate commerce for unlawful activities and to sponsor a dog in an animal-fighting venture.

If convicted on the interstate-commerce portion of the charge, each defendant faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. If convicted on the dogfighting portion, each faces up to one year in prison and a $100,000 fine.

The indictment gives Vick's nickname as "Ookie," Peace's as "P-funk" or "Funk," Phillips' as "Q" and Taylor's as "T."

The indictment accuses the men of a conspiracy, starting in 2001, to form Bad Newz Kennels -- a dogfighting venture that authorities say operated at Vick's property in Surry County at 1915 Moonlight Road until this past spring.

The indictment alleges, among other things:

  • Vick purchased the property in June 2001 after Taylor had picked it out as suitable for development into a dogfighting training and fight-hosting complex. (The purchase came two months after Vick was the first pick in the NFL draft after two seasons at Virginia Tech.) That year, the four men started acquiring American pit bulls for fighting from Virginia and other states.
  • By the spring of 2002, Bad Newz Kennels was taking part in arranged dogfights in North Carolina. In late 2002, Bad Newz hosted a dogfight at Vick's property with a purse of $2,000.
  • Through 2003, Bad Newz dogs and the defendants took part in about eight organized fights, some sponsored at 1915 Moonlight Road and some in other states. Purses ranged from a couple of thousand dollars to $26,000 for one match. In 2004 and 2005, Bad Newz hosted approximately 10 fights at the Vick property.
  • Over the years, it was the Bad Newz' custom to kill young dogs that did not show fighting aptitude and sufficient aggressiveness when they were tested in matches with other dogs.
  • In April this year, Vick, Peace, Phillips and two others tested dogs this way. When it was over, Vick, Peace and Phillips killed about eight dogs that failed the test by methods including hanging, drowning and slamming the dog's body to the ground.

    The investigation into possible dogfighting at the Surry County property started April 24 when Vick's cousin, Davon Boddie, was arrested in Hampton on drug charges. He gave his address as 1915 Moonlight Road in Surry.

    The next day, police searched the property under a warrant to look for drugs and paraphernalia. They found what looked like a dogfighting complex and called animal-control officers. Under another warrant, more than 60 dogs and evidence of dogfighting were seized.

    Vick early on denied any involvement in dogfighting. He said Boddie lived at the Moonlight Road house and that he had seldom visited.

    John M. Seward, chairman of the Surry Board of Supervisors, said he doesn't believe the indictments reflect poorly on the county.

    "This is not something that's exclusive to Surry," he said of dogfighting. "I hope they go ahead and prosecute whoever's responsible."

    But Seward said that the federal case could cast Surry law-enforcement authorities in a bad light for not bringing charges. "The local authorities, it would appear, didn't want to charge anyone or they would have. They certainly had time," he said.

    Neither Surry Commonwealth's Attorney Gerald G. Poindexter or Sheriff Harold D. Brown could be reached for comment last night.

    While experts say the volume of dogfighting activity is hard to quantify because of its illegal, secretive nature, it appears to be on the rise nationally and in Virginia.

    "It's clear there has been a growth in dogfighting in our communities," John P. Goodwin, deputy manager of animal-fighting issues for the Humane Society of the United States, told The Times-Dispatch recently.
    Contact Tom Campbell at (804) 649-6416 or tcampbell@timesdispatch.com.

    Staff writer Kiran Krishnamurthy contributed to this report.

  • More on Michael Vick

     
     
    Falcons' Vick indicted in dogfighting probe
    Star quarterback, 3 others charged with training and procuring pit bulls
    The Associated Press
    Updated: 9:44 p.m. ET July 17, 2007

    RICHMOND, Va. - NFL star Michael Vick was indicted by a federal grand jury Tuesday on charges of sponsoring a dogfighting operation so grisly the losers either died in the pit or sometimes were electrocuted, drowned, hanged or shot.

    The Atlanta Falcons quarterback and three others were charged with competitive dogfighting, procuring and training pit bulls for fighting and conducting the enterprise across state lines.

    The operation was named "Bad Newz Kennels," according to the indictment, and the dogs were housed, trained and fought at a property owned by Vick in Surry County, Va.

    The 18-page federal indictment, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, alleges the 27-year-old Vick and his co-defendants began the dogfighting operation in early 2001, the former Virginia Tech star's rookie year with the Falcons.

    The indictment states that dogs fought to the death — or close to it.

    If convicted, Vick and the others — Purnell A. Peace, Quanis L. Phillips and Tony Taylor — could face up to six years in prison, $350,000 in fines and restitution.

    Telephone messages left at the offices and home of Vick's attorney, Larry Woodward, were not returned. A woman who answered the phone at the home of Vick's mother said "no comment" and hung up.

    "We are disappointed that Michael Vick has put himself in a position where a federal grand jury has returned an indictment against him," NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said.

    "The activities alleged are cruel, degrading and illegal. Michael Vick's guilt has not yet been proven, and we believe that all concerned should allow the legal process to determine the facts."

    Vick and the Falcons are scheduled to report to training camp on July 25.

    "Obviously, we are disturbed by today's news," the team said in a statement posted on its Web site, apologizing to fans for the negative publicity.

    "We will do the right thing for our club as the legal process plays out. We have a season to prepare for," it said.

    John Goodwin of the Humane Society said the manner in which losing or unwilling dogs were killed was especially troubling.

    "Some of the grisly details in these filings shocked even me, and I'm a person who faces this stuff every day," he said. "I was surprised to see that they were killing dogs by hanging them and one dog was killed by slamming it to the ground. Those are extremely violent methods of execution — they're unnecessary and just sick."

    Vick and the others are accused of "knowingly sponsoring and exhibiting an animal fighting venture" and conducting a business enterprise involving gambling, as well as buying, transporting and receiving dogs for the purposes of an animal fighting venture.

    About eight young dogs were put to death at the Surry County home after they were found not ready to fight in April 2007, the indictment said. They were killed "by hanging, drowning and/or slamming at least one dog's body to the ground."

    The indictment also outlined a rough chronology:

    —In March 2003, after a pit bull from Bad Newz Kennels lost in a fight, it said Peace consulted with Vick about the losing dog's condition, then executed it by wetting it with water and electrocuting it;

    —In March 2003, after two Bad Newz Kennels dog lost fights to dogs owned by a cooperating witness, it alleged that Vick retrieved a bag containing $23,000 and gave it to the owner of the winning dogs. One of the fights had a $20,000 purse;

    —In the fall of 2003, a person witnessing a dog fight involving one of the dogs trained by Bad Newz Kennels incurred the ire of another cooperating witness by yelling out Vick's name in front of the crowd during the fight.

    It also said that after establishing Bad Newz Kennels in early 2002, Vick and the others obtained shirts and headbands promoting their affiliation with the kennel.

    After a police raid on the property in April, Vick said he was rarely at the house, had no idea it may have been used in a criminal enterprise. He blamed family members for taking advantage of his generosity.

    On Vick's Web site, he lists his birthplace as Newport News, "a.k.a. BadNews."

    Purses for the fights ranged from hundreds of dollars to the thousands, and participants and spectators placed side bets, the document said.

    Local authorities have been investigating the allegations since the April 25 drug raid at the property Vick owned. On June 7, officials with the Department of Agriculture executed their own search warrant and found the remains of seven dogs.

    Surry County prosecutor Gerald G. Poindexter said he didn't know of the indictment before it was filed, and said he's not sure how the county will continue its case.

    At the start, authorities seized 66 dogs, including 55 pit bulls, and equipment commonly used in dogfighting. About half the dogs were tethered to car axles with heavy chains that allowed the dogs to get close to each other, but not to have contact — an arrangement typical for fighting dogs, according to the search warrant affidavit.

    The indictment said dogfights were held at the Virginia property and dog owners brought animals from six states, including New York and Texas.

    In a search warrant executed July 6, the government said the fights usually occurred late at night or in the early morning and would last several hours.

    Before fights, participating dogs of the same sex would be weighed and bathed, according to the filings. Opposing dogs would be washed to remove any poison or narcotic placed on the dog's coat that could affect the other dog's performance.

    Sometimes, dogs weren't fed to "make it more hungry for the other dog," it said.

    URL: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/19814494/page/2/

    Vick's Indictment Papers

    If you're interested in seeing the indictment papers here's a link to them

    http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/years/2007/0717072vick1.html

    Vick has been indicted

    Thursday, July 05, 2007

    Tuesday, July 03, 2007

    Dogfighting sees a cultural shift

    http://www.kansascity.com/440/story/173977.html

    Dogfighting sees a cultural shift
    By BILL BURKE
    The Virginian-Pilot (Norfolk, Va.)

    Hardly a day goes by without John Goodwin receiving a phone call or e-
    mail about his most popular subject: Atlanta Falcons quarterback
    Michael Vick.

    Some, like the man who called June 1, are confidential informants
    passing along tidbits about Vick to Goodwin, the top dog in the
    Humane Society's campaign to wipe out animal fighting in the United
    States.

    Shortly after Vick's house was raided and evidence of a suspected
    dogfighting operation was found there in April, Goodwin added the NFL
    star to a massive database he oversees.

    The 20,000 names it contains include a rogue's gallery of the
    nation's most notorious known and suspected dogfighters:

    David Tant, a 300-pound bear of a man and one of the world's most
    prolific breeders of fighting dogs, serving a 30-year sentence in
    South Carolina, among the stiffest ever imposed for the crime. One of
    the "directional mines" he planted to keep people away from his dogs
    injured a land surveyor.

    "Fat Bill" Reynolds of Virginia, convicted in 2001 of transmitting
    images of fighting dogs across state lines and sentenced to 30 months
    after Tant testified against him before a federal grand jury. He has
    served his time and is now back on Goodwin's radar.

    Louisiana's Floyd Boudreaux, one of the patriarchs of the blood
    sport, who has played cat-and-mouse with investigators for decades
    and is reported to have once traded his grand champion dog, Blind
    Billy, for a house.

    The cast of suspects is a mongrel mix that includes legendary dogmen
    such as Mountain Man and the Gambler, professional athletes, rap
    music performers and Alane Koki, a patent-holding cancer researcher
    in North Carolina.

    Those familiar with dogfighting say it has undergone a cultural shift
    in recent years. A pursuit once practiced chiefly in the rural South
    has moved to the mean streets of the city.

    Enforcers like Goodwin -- the Humane Society's deputy manager of
    animal fighting -- describe a brutal business in which dogs that lack
    the killer instinct are often shot or electrocuted, then tossed in a
    trash bin or buried in a bone yard.

    "We don't want that type of barbaric activity going on in South
    Carolina," said Mark Plowden, a spokesman for the state's Attorney
    General's Office, which in 2004, created a dogfighting task force
    that has snared Tant and others.

    "It's clear that when you have dogfighting, drugs and gambling and
    other criminal subcultures follow," Plowden said. "We want to drive
    it out of South Carolina. If it shows up in other states, that's
    their problem, not ours anymore."

    When agents raided Reynolds' property in September 2000, among the
    evidence they seized was a treadmill with the inscription: "Custom
    Made for Fat Bill by the Gambler, 8-24-00. Happy Birthday."

    "Fat Bill" and the Gambler, legendary figures in the shadowy realm of
    dogfighting, have earned the distinction of "dogmen" -- professionals
    in the blood spectacle.

    The term is part of a clandestine covenant many use to avoid
    prosecution for an activity that was once a misdemeanor in all
    states, but is now a felony everywhere but Wyoming and Idaho. The
    fight itself is called a "show," and dogs with superior fighting
    traits are said to have "gameness."

    Along with the treadmill, authorities seized from Reynolds' trailer
    syringes, steroids -- which are often used to pump up fighting dogs
    -- and copies of underground dogfighting magazines, one of which, the
    "American Gamedog Times," Reynolds was said to have published.

    Treadmills are often used to train fighting dogs. "Bait animals" such
    as cats are sometimes placed in cages just out of range of the
    charging dog, which is rewarded by getting to feast on the cat after
    the training session.

    Tant was among those who testified before the federal grand jury that
    indicted Reynolds. His attorney, Michael Bosnak, said Tant was
    granted immunity from prosecution for his cooperation in the Reynolds
    case.

    But that did not stop members of a new South Carolina state animal-
    fighting task force from bringing charges after a raid on Tant's
    property in 2004.

    That April, a land surveyor was injured by birdshot fired by a booby
    trap Tant had planted on his property to keep intruders away.

    Investigators confiscated from Tant's property 47 dogs, cattle prods,
    treadmills, five more armed booby traps and a framed photo of Tant's
    grand champion Yellow, whose pedigree is one of the most revered --
    and expensive -- in the world of dogmen. Offspring of Yellow, who
    died in 1994, can fetch several thousand dollars each.

    The Internet has revolutionized the way dogmen do business, making it
    easier for members of the secret society to find and learn from one
    another.

    Mark Kumpf, the director of the Montgomery County, Ohio, Animal
    Resource Center, noted a parallel with another class of social pariahs.

    "The Internet has brought two groups to prominence, and that's the
    pedophiles and the dogfighters," he said.

    Through the Internet, dogfighters research how to treat injuries,
    pick up training techniques and discuss tactics, Kumpf said. The
    newest craze, he said, is to broadcast fights on the Web so people
    can bet on them offshore.

    The stakes are rising in what is now a half-billion-dollar industry
    as animal-rights groups turn up the heat on prosecutors and the
    number of task forces increases.

    In August, a suspected dogfighter in Texas was killed by intruders
    who apparently intended to torture him into revealing where he had
    hidden $100,000 wagered in a high-stakes dog match.

    In Ohio earlier this year, 28 people were indicted in state and
    federal court after an inquiry by state investigators and a federal
    task force.

    And earlier this month, the feds, apparently concerned that Virginia
    investigators were dragging their feet, intervened in the
    investigation into the suspected operation at Vick's house. No
    charges have been filed.

    Those who post on Web sites in the United States, where enforcement
    is growing, often include disclaimers noting that the sponsors do not
    encourage or condone dogfighting. They also state that any accounts
    of fights are fictional.

    But those who maintain Web sites in countries where dogfighting is
    not criminalized often make no effort to conceal their purpose.

    "Hallo and Welcome to all lovers of fighting dogs!" exclaims the site
    for Serbia-based Balkan Boys Kennel. The site posts the "Cajun rules"
    for dogfighting, which are the pre-eminent set of regulations among
    today's dogmen.

    The rules were promulgated in the 1950s by Lafayette, La., Police
    Chief G.A. "Gaboon" Trahan, who hosted dogfights that drew attendees
    from all over the South long before animal activists demonized the
    activity and legislatures criminalized it.

    To hear "Chopper Dan" Brouseaux, another Lafayette native son, tell
    it, dogfighting is as ingrained in the Southern culture as NASCAR,
    and has been around much longer.

    "Cajuns and black people have been fighting dogs for 200 years," said
    Brouseaux, a dog breeder and former merchant seaman who said he has
    never been involved in the activity.

    Still, Brouseaux, 60, remembers the day that the events were a
    Saturday ritual "that would draw 50 to 100 people, and there would be
    guys selling popcorn and chewing gum."

    The Humane Society's Goodwin bristles at those who romanticize
    dogfighting. He said that "Law enforcement is realizing it's a real
    community problem, intertwined with other crimes" such as drugs and
    gambling.

    He cited one raid that turned up an electrocution device that had
    been used to kill dogs.

    Another law effort in Massachusetts turned up dogs with broken legs
    and one whose tongue had been ripped out.

    Pit bulls have become iconic in the rap and hip-hop music culture.
    Missy Elliott and rapper DMX feature the animals on album covers, and
    an unedited version of rapper Jay-Z's video "99 Problems" features
    footage of dogs preparing to fight in a pit as spectators watch.

    Dogfighting has also caught on within some gang cultures, where
    "there is less revulsion to violence," Goodwin said.

    Though dogfighting remains primarily a Southern phenomenon, the
    center of gravity in recent years apparently has shifted eastward.
    Today, if there's a dogfighting capital in the United States, it may
    be North Carolina.

    One of several magazines that provide services for pit-bull fanciers,
    the "Pit Bull Advertiser," is published in Gastonia. It features ads
    for more than 20 North Carolina-based kennels, offering dogs for
    sale, stud services and a variety of products, including canine
    treadmills.

    The magazine features kennels with names such as Outlaw, Rampage and
    Lockjaw, and characteristics of some of the featured dogs like
    Blondie, with "ability, style and one of those mouths that would
    break you into pieces."

    Another advertiser is Tom Garner of Hillsborough, N.C., who Goodwin
    insists is a patriarch of dogfighting in America. His name is
    contained in Goodwin's database.

    Garner, convicted of dogfighting in the mid-1980s, insists he breeds
    dogs and sells only puppies these days -- none for fighting. If
    buyers use them for illegal purposes, Garner says, there's nothing he
    can do to stop them.

    His prize dogs included legendary grand champions Chinaman and Spike.
    "I still have frozen semen off of Spike and have made some breedings
    that have produced some excellent offspring," Garner notes on his
    kennel Web site.

    Garner's name came up earlier this year when Orange County, N.C.,
    officials created a task force to study the legality of tethering
    dogs. Garner failed in his effort to be named to the committee, but
    one of its members was Alane Koki, who purportedly has ties to
    Garner's dog-breeding operation.

    Koki, a published scientist and cancer researcher, is perhaps one of
    the most unusual alleged dogfighters on Goodwin's list. After an
    independent weekly newspaper in the Raleigh area published stories
    about her links to Garner -- she reportedly operated a kennel called
    Thundermaker Bulldogs -- she resigned from the committee while
    denying any wrongdoing.

    Dogfighting in North Carolina can now be found from the coastal
    flatlands to the mountainous west, say Goodwin and others who monitor
    the activity. The state's vast expanses of piney wilderness are a
    lure for dogmen, some of them forced out of South Carolina in recent
    years.

    Others have traveled to the Tar Heel State, where until a few years
    ago dogfighting was a misdemeanor, from Virginia, where it has long
    been a felony.

    One of them is the local breeder who knows what it's like to gather
    with other men late at night on a moonlit landing strip, in a wooded
    clearing or in an abandoned warehouse, with thousands of dollars
    riding on thick-chested beasts named Lil Hitler, Crunch and So Evil.

    Potential champion dogs are the product of cross-breeding between
    animals that often have champion pedigrees. Aggressive dogs are
    identified early on as "prospects" and receive special treatment. At
    8 or 9 months, a less-aggressive littermate is placed in front of the
    chained prospect "to see how aggressive he is."

    The first competition, called a "roll," usually takes place at about
    15 months when two prospects are allowed to "have at it" for about 10
    minutes, the breeder said.

    "You want to see how your dog -- I'll call him Joe -- takes the
    pressure," he said. "Certain dogs go for certain areas. Yellow, he
    went for the head and chest. You like to see that."

    The prospect is put "back on chain" until it is about 19 months old,
    when a second practice session is held, lasting up to an hour.

    If Joe looks good, he's ready for "the show."

    Four or five backers ante up a few hundred dollars apiece for a
    "first time out" dog, the breeder said. The prospect is now "open to
    the world." A pot of about $3,500 is typical. A "show" is scheduled,
    and a judge chooses the location.

    An intensive six-week training routine follows, and the dog is said
    to be in "the keep." He is fed a lean, nutritional diet -- some
    trainers have secret diets -- and works out on a treadmill every day.

    Many dogs in training often swim in a pool. The circular above-ground
    pool discovered at the house owned by Vick was typical of those used
    for getting fighting dogs into shape, the breeder said. One hour on
    the treadmill and two in the pool is a common regimen.

    Trainers often try to gain advantages by injecting dogs with steroids
    or sharpening the animals' teeth. Some even shave the dog's fur and
    mix roach killer with its food, hoping the bitter taste of the new
    fur will repel a foe.

    "The show" takes place at a secluded location in a makeshift wooden
    pit about 2 1/2 to 3 feet high and 8 feet square, often with a dirt
    or carpeted floor for traction. A dog that fails to make weight may
    forfeit, forcing its owner to surrender an amount equal to half the
    purse.

    Before the match, the dogs are washed, each by his foe's owner, to
    ensure that the animal's fur has not been coated with poison. The
    handlers sometimes use Everclear, a brand of grain alcohol, to wash,
    and milk to rinse.

    The dogs are taken to their respective corners and released after the
    command of "face your dogs" by the judge. The competition continues
    until one animal retreats or is injured so severely it is unable to
    continue.

    The first victory for a fighting dog is the beginning of his
    "campaign," which can result in a champion (three victories) or a
    grand champion (five victories with no losses).

    After his campaign, a champion dog can command sizable stud fees.
    Mayday earned $100,000 a year for his services, the breeder said.

    "I look at it a lot like boxing," said the local breeder. "You've got
    your power fighters and your finesse fighters, your power dogs and
    your finesse dogs. And they can make their owners a whole lot of money."