
Dogfighting outcry
Published: Sunday, August 26, 2007
This dog was taken from a Pontiac home, where it was
suspected to have been involved in dogfighting.
PONTIAC -- The dogfighting charges brought against NFL star
Michael Vick have shined a national spotlight on a bloody sport
going on right here.
Some say dogfighting is becoming increasingly popular in
Pontiac, with participants lured by money and the badge of
toughness that comes with owning a "killer" dog. Tracking the
activity can be difficult for law enforcement.
"There's a massive amount of dogfighting, and I think young kids
are doing it now," said Pam Porteous, the community connection
coordinator for the Michigan Animal Rescue League, who has spent
16 years caring for animals on the streets of Pontiac.
'The thing to do'
Dogfighting is illegal in all 50 states and a felony in 48,
including Michigan.
The Humane Society of the United States estimates there are
40,000 professional level dogfighters in the country who partake
in highly organized contests. Officials say the less formal --
and often more brutal -- street fights are occurring with
greater frequency.
"It used to be a rural activity ... What we're seeing is more
popularity with dogfighting in urban areas, and dogs being used
quite like weapons to prove one person's superiority over
another person, and as a macho symbol of young men and boys,"
said Ann Chynoweth, director of the Animal Cruelty and Fighting
Campaign for the Humane Society of the United States.
Porteous estimates as many as 10 fights of all types occur every
week, a number that former Pontiac Animal Control Officer
Victoria O'Neal agrees is accurate. Pontiac police Sgt. William
Ware said that while dogfighting has taken place in the city, he
doesn't know how prevalent it is.
One lifelong city resident who asked not to be identified said
dogfighting has grown in popularity over the last four years,
especially among teens and young adults.
"That's like the thing to do. Years ago, a lot of people would
smoke weed. Now, dogfighting is the thing to do," he said.
Part of an underground industry, owners of fighting dogs often
physically abuse their animals to make them mean. Dogfights
generally take place very early in the morning in basements,
garages or abandoned houses. The animals tear at each other
while being egged on by spectators. A dog generally loses when
it's injured too badly to continue, or dies, according to
Porteous.
The activity has been associated with illegal drug use and
gambling, with purses at some fights reaching several thousand
dollars.
Training sometimes involves letting a dog tear apart a smaller
animal; Porteous said she gets continuous calls from people
whose pets have been stolen. One woman told The Oakland Press
that her pitbull was taken from her yard on a June afternoon,
and it was found later that evening wandering around the
neighborhood with its ears sliced off. Staff at a vet emergency
clinic told her that whoever took the dog likely had plans to
fight it.
While many people find dogfighting horrendous, others are raised
with it as a normal part of life. The unidentified man said
young children walking pitbull puppies around Pontiac have
randomly approached him, asking to participate in a dogfight.
The man doesn't fight his own dogs, but says he has witnessed
dogfights.
"The puppy ran, the other dog chased it, grabbed it, shook it,
tried to kill it with everything it had," he said. "One person
used the shovel to break their lock. The puppy was torn up, it
was limping away, it's neck was gashed open. It was just a baby.
"After five minutes of it crying and whining, the guy hit it
with a shovel" to kill it, and the pup was buried, the man said.
Experts worry that the notion of dogfights as entertainment
desensitizes child witnesses to violence. Chynoweth said
research has shown connections between animal cruelty and
violence toward humans.
"What dogfighting does is it can incite some type of thrill in
them of seeing some animals maul each other," she said.
Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said there hasn't been a
lot of dogfighting activity in the communities that his office
patrols, which are primarily in the northern part of the county.
Difficult to prosecute
O'Neal said it's hard for police officers to prove dogfighting
if they don't catch it in action. She said to get a search
warrant, officers need concrete proof of criminal activity, such
as photos or videos of a fight.
Ware said the July 2006 arrests of several people at a dogfight
at an address on Summit are believed to be the last ones for
dogfighting in the city. One man, Keith O. Jackson Sr., was
sentenced to two to eight years in prison, while other people
received varying amounts of jail time.
Last month, three bloodied and scarred pitbulls were found
chained to trees in a wooded area of Perry Mount Cemetery.
Whoever put them there wasn't around.
"You hear people say that there's dogfighting," Ware said. "To
actually find it and see it is a whole different story. I think
it moves around, and by the time that people who live close by
where it's happened start to complain, it has moved on."
Complicating efforts to stop dogfighting, some residents say, is
the city's lack of a hard-line response to dogfighting and
animal welfare in general due to lack of staffing of animal
control. There were two officers, but one position -- O'Neal's
-- was eliminated in 2005 as the cash-strapped police department
made cutbacks.
The other officer, Donnie Benion, pursues all complaints, Ware
said. "And you know how many (animal control) complaints come in
daily? (They) all fall into a prioritized list," Ware said.
"There's only one Donnie."
The number of animal complaints the city receives wasn't
available at press time.
Local animal lovers supplement animal control. Volunteers from
the Animal Care Network go out a few times a week giving food,
water and shelter to outdoor animals, as well as picking up
strays. Porteous is on the streets daily doing the same.
"This city would be overwhelmed with sick, diseased animals" if
not for Porteous, O'Neal said.
Members of the Animal Care Network recently met with city
officials about a proposed partnership to help out on days when
Benion is off, which Network President Marie Skladd would help
improve animal welfare in the city.
'So barbaric'
Dogfighting moved into the public eye this summer when a grand
jury indicted Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick on
dogfighting charges. He filed his plea agreement in federal
court Friday admitting to conspiracy in a dogfighting ring and
helping kill pit bulls. He denied ever betting on the fights,
only bankrolling them.
Grisly details of the case -- such as how losing dogs were
sometimes killed by electrocution -- have dominated TV news
shows and newspaper pages.
"The Michael Vick case has brought dogfighting to the
forefront," Chynoweth said. "I think the nation now has been
energized to combat it. We've seen the numbers of raids against
dog fighters since the Michael Vick case increase."
Chris Topher Russell, a 52-year-old Pontiac grandfather, has
followed the Vick news coverage. He said he disagrees with the
way those dogs were treated, and with the way many dogfighters
in general treat their animals.
Russell owns two pitbulls, a breed he said sometimes unfairly
gets a bad reputation. He said his dogs are loyal and great with
all of his grandchildren.
Russell said he would never make his dogs fight.
"The way these guys do these things now," he said, "it's so
barbaric, I wouldn't be a part of it."
Contact staff writer Ann Zaniewski at (248) 745-4628 or
ann.zaniewski@oakpress.com. The Associated Press contributed to
this report.
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