Atlanta QB Michael Vick Indicted in Dogfight Probe
Grand jury indicts Falcons' QB Mike Vick in dogfight probe.
July 18, 2007 — -- Atlanta Falcons star quarterback Michael Vick has been indicted by a federal grand jury for allegedly participating in a dog fighting ring.
The indictment, filed in Richmond, Va., Tuesday afternoon, alleges Vick and three other defendants violated federal laws barring competitive dog fighting, and obtained and trained pit bulls for the purpose of fighting. The charges also state the venture was based in a Smithfield, Va., property, but that the defendants conducted the enterprise across state lines.
Arraignment and a bond hearing for Vick and the other defendants is set for July 26 in Richmond, Va. – the same day the Atlanta Falcons are scheduled to start preseason training in Georgia.
Investigators said Vick purchased the property at 1915 Moonlight Road in June 2001, and that the illicit business started early that year and continued through April 2007.
Vick and the others "used this property as the main staging area for housing and training the pit bulls involved in the dog fighting venture and [for] hosting dogfights," according to the indictment.
Vick, along with co-defendants Purnell Peace of Virginia Beach, Va., Quanis Phillips of Atlanta and Tony Taylor of Hampton, Va., allegedly ran a dog fighting venture called Bad Newz Kennels on the property. It was there, investigators said, that they housed and trained pit bulls for dog fights, which were sometimes held on the property.
The defendants, the indictment alleged, also traveled across state lines with their dogs, not only entering them in fights in other Virginia cities but in other states along the eastern seaboard.
Dog owners reportedly brought their animals from the Carolinas, Maryland, New York, Texas, Alabama and other states to compete in the illegal matches. The owner of the winning dog would receive a cash prize. Those purses ranged from hundreds to thousands of dollars. Spectators and other dog owners were also allowed to bet on the fights.
But the dogs involved did not receive prize fighter treatment. Prosecutors alleged that the losing dogs were sometimes executed -- drowned, hanged, shot or electrocuted.
One female pit bull was entered into a match around March 2003. "The purse for the dog fight was established at approximately 13,000 [dollars] per side, for a total of approximately 26,000," the indictment stated.