Dogfighters get creative as spotlight on Vick case fades
But when the headlines faded, the blood sport grew stronger and went even more underground, with thugs taking inventive precautions to keep police at bay, animal cruelty experts say.
"They know it's just not smart to have large crowds anymore, so we've seen fights where you've got the two handlers, a referee and Web cams everywhere broadcasting the fight on the Internet," said Mark Kumpf, an investigator based in Ohio who directs the National Animal Control Association.
Fights are also being staged on the move -- in 18-wheelers. "These guys are very sophisticated," Kumpf said. "If you're driving down the road, there could be dogs in that truck driving next to you that are dying."
Dozens more dogfighting cases have been investigated and prosecuted since the Vick case, said Alison Gianotto, who runs the database PetAbuse.com.
The computer programmer, horrified when a neighbor's cat was set on fire eight years ago, created the California-based organization to track animal cruelty cases and animal abusers.
The database, which logs media stories, has also become a popular place for law enforcement to send reports.
"There's not a central body keeping track of what's happening nationally, which is unfortunate when you consider that a lot of these cases cross state lines," she said.
Still, detectives, animal welfare professionals and prosecutors agree that the attention the Vick case has brought to dogfighting has been positive because more people are inclined to report their suspicions. Dogfighting is illegal in all states; penalties vary but usually include heavy jail time or steep fines.
The National Football League suspended Vick indefinitely in August 2007 after he pleaded guilty to a federal charge of bankrolling a dogfighting operation at a home he owned in Virginia. Vick, 29, was freed from federal prison in Leavenworth, Kansas, on May 20 and returned to Virginia to serve the last two months of his 23-month sentence in home confinement.
"At the height of attention on the Vick case, things quieted down across the country with some of these dogfighters getting out of the business," veteran animal abuse investigator Tim Rickey said. "But then, the headlines went away, and people thought the attention was off. It just started right back up, almost stronger than before."
"Every Saturday night in every county in Missouri, there is a dogfight going on," Rickey said.
While the Vick case was making its way through the court system, Rickey, who directs the animal cruelty task force at the Humane Society of Missouri, was initiating what would become an 18-month investigation linking dogfighting rings in eight states.
That probe led to the July 8 arrest of 28 people from eight states. As many as 400 dogs were confiscated in raids coordinated by federal, state and local law enforcement agencies, Rickey said. He said it was the largest such case involving dogfighting in the U.S.
While those involved with the national case declined Monday to give details about that investigation, CNN spoke with several detectives across America who have worked other dogfighting cases. Among the abuses they've uncovered:
• Dogs with missing ears and patches of skin
• Animals with teeth shaved down to the bone
• "Vets" who have used leg splints that are to tight to "treat" animals in dogfighting rings
• Contraptions, usually fashioned out of wood, much like a treadmill, that force chained dogs to run or be choked.
Detective Keith Coberly of the police vice squad in Dayton, Ohio, described a case he recently investigated that resulted in the convictions of three men.
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- groups:
- News, Crime, Animal Videos and News, Law, 1 more
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- tags:
- Dogs, Dog Fighting + add
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- xiola
- added this
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These people make me so sick. Click the link and finish the article, if you have time. Just awful.
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Anyone caught involved in dogfighting should be thrown into a pit with the rest of the shitbags that do this type of activity and be forced to fight to the death. The only thing the winner should get is another round with the next shitbag. No food, water, or medical care should be wasted on them. They do not deserve it. They do not deserve to be called human beings. They have given up their rights to be treated humanely.
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- Ihatethemall
- 4 months ago
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And the NFL can go to hell. I will not watch another game.
Hockey is better anyways.-
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- Ihatethemall
- 4 months ago
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I am not saying this is right but... If they were wild dogs would I believe they would still be fighting it out to the death in order to survive... It is a dog's first instinct to protect its "territory" so they are just doing what they are doing best but, as for the people that are forcing them to fight then killing them afterwards meh... I am indifferent...
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- Viciouspike
- 4 months ago
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Vick - bankrolling dogfighting 2yrs prison
Burress - shoots himself in leg, facing 3.5 yrs jail
Stallworth - DUI, kills man sentenced to 30 days jail, serves 24 days
Of course this makes sense?? Maybe b/c alcohol sponsors nfl, idunno??I love dogs and other animals but seriously people chill out the mans done his time for a crime he was made an example for.
If I go to a game this season and see peta protesting I'm going to eat a litter of kittens wrapped in of raw bacon right in front of them.
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- Wesnology61
- 4 months ago
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we humans are the "top" animal on this planet, yet we abuse and kill all non-human animals. we are terrible. i say we start a vigilante group, and find these animal killers and abusers, one by one, and waste them, degenerates waste of life.
essentially, yeah, ruthless animal abuser death squads. the word would get out, and it would stop quick. most of the population loves animals, and would support the squads.
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- Wessagusset_Oracle
- 4 months ago
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