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View Full Version : Tougher penalties earn praise




Marty
05-08-2008, 08:52 PM
Augusta,GA, -- Animal rights groups on Tuesday applauded a new law that toughens penalties for dogfighting in Georgia. And they credited Michael Vick -- the former Atlanta Falcons quarterback now serving time for running a brutal pit bull ring -- with making it possible.

"He has brought such awareness to the issue. Michael Vick has been the best thing to happen to pit bulls for a long time," said Paul Berry, the chief executive officer of the Best Friends Animal Society, which helped write the Georgia law.

Gov. Sonny Perdue signed the bill into law at a state Capitol ceremony Tuesday, flanked by two police dogs from Cobb County.

"It's really barbarism," Mr. Perdue said of dogfighting. "It's dangerous, cruel and, for those of us who love animals and love dogs particularly, it's unconscionable," Mr. Perdue said.

Mr. Perdue is a former veterinarian who owns two dogs.

The new law takes effect immediately and makes it a crime to attend a dogfight or breed the animals for fighting. It also becomes illegal to possess a dog with the intent to fight the animal. That makes it easier for authorities to bust dogfighting rings because they no longer have to catch fights in progress.

John Goodwin, the manager of animal fighting issues with The Humane Society of the United States, said Georgia's dogfighting laws had been among the weakest in the nation. The new law catapults the state from last among the 50th states in a Humane Society ranking of dogfighting laws to 20th, Mr. Goodwin said.

"We are ecstatic that now law enforcement in Georgia will have the tools they need to take a bite out of dogfighting," Mr. Goodwin said.

Animal rights advocates have been pushing for several years to beef up Georgia's laws. But they faced opposition from some state lawmakers from rural areas who worried the effort could restrict hunting dogs.

Mr. Vick's involvement in the underworld of dogfighting changed that. He is serving 23 months in prison after admitting he helped run a dogfighting ring out of his Virginia home and executed dogs that performed poorly.

"He certainly helped us put it over the goal line," the Georgia bill's sponsor, state Sen. Chip Rogers, R-Woodstock, quipped Tuesday.

A sanctuary run by Berry's Best Friends Animal Society is caring for 22 of the dogs seized from Mr. Vick's home at a shelter in Utah.

http://chronicle.augusta.com/stories/050708/met_197973.shtml




ColbyDogs
05-08-2008, 10:58 PM
The writing is on the wall folks, wonder what kind of BS they use to determine the "intent" of ones actions. This is just a back door policy for them to easliy eradicate our dogs, its a friggin shame they have the power to do this shit.

Unregistered
05-15-2008, 08:30 PM
I am new to the posts, I recently took in the mother of the 2 pits I already had, turns out she was pregnant when she gave birth the first week she was fine, the following weeks, she got into fights with all my other dogs. I mean big pit bull fights so intence I was scared, I just dont know what to do. I would like to keep her, she is a good dog but is there going to be always going to be bad blood between them, or after the puppies are gone will she be better, I never gave her reason to believe I would ever let anything happen to the puppies. Help please