Michael Vick case blows whistle on dogfighting
From ANIMAL PEOPLE, September 2007:
RICHMOND, Virginia–Pleading guilty on
August 24, 2007 to felony conspiracy, Atlanta
Falcons quarterback Michael Vick will face a
maximum sentence of five years in prison and a
fine of $250,000 when he appears before U.S.
District Judge Henry E. Hudson for sentencing on
December 10.
By then the 50 surviving pit bull
terriers who were seized in April 2007 from the
dogfighting kennel that Vick confessed to
financing for seven years may have already
received the death penalty.
Vick agreed to plead guilty after
co-defendants Quanis L. Phillips, 28, Purnell
Peace, 35, and Tony Taylor, 34, pleaded
guilty to the same conspiracy charge. Each had
agreed to testify against Vick if his case went
to trial.
Vick admitted in a signed statement that
he was present twice when his co-defendants
killed losing dogs after test fights at the Surry
County property where his kennels and a fighting
arena were maintained. The statement said the
dogs “were killed by various methods, including
hanging and drowning.”
Following Vick’s guilty plea, National
Football League commissioner Roger Goodell
suspended Vick for “cruel and reprehensible”
conduct and “significant involvement in illegal
gambling,” an offense often punished in
professional sports by lifetime expulsion.