Date Contact In Defense of Animals IDA is an international, California-based animal advocacy organization dedicated to ending the abuse and exploitation of animals by defending their rights, welfare and habitats. |
IDA Urges Middletown Prosecutor to Prosecute Cockfighter to the Fullest Extent Animal Protection Group Says Man Arrested Should Pay Highest Price for Staging “Violent, Bloody Events” Middletown, Ohio—International animal protection organization In Defense of Animals (IDA) sent an urgent appeal today to Middletown Prosecutor Doug Adkins, urging his office to vigorously prosecute the man arrested last Friday on fourth-degree misdemeanor charges of animal fighting. According to Middletown police reports, William Everhart, of Jacksonburg, was found to be in possession of five caged roosters and items used for cockfighting. Police said they confiscated the animals, two boxes of metal talons, several beak protectors, steroids, vitamins, a fight schedule and a T-shirt picturing two roosters that read, “Death Before Dishonor.” In the United States, cockfighting is illegal in all but two states and, in thirty-three states, it is considered a felony offense. A federal law increasing the penalties for shipping game fowl across state lines for fighting purposes or for international export took effect in 2003. “Cockfighting is egregiously cruel and anyone caught participating in these violent, bloody events should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law,” said Elliot M. Katz, DVM, founder and president of IDA. During cockfights, “gamecocks,” bred to be aggressive, are pumped full of stimulants like strychnine and testosterone and blood-clotting drugs. Their natural spurs are sawed off and replaced by razor sharp steel blades or curved implements called gaffs which measure from one to three inches long to make fights more “exciting.” Fighting birds suffer gruesome injuries, including broken wings and legs, punctured lungs, severed spinal cords and punctured eyes. Cockfighting is also a breeding ground for other criminal activities. Illegal gambling, weapons and drugs are part and parcel of “gaming.” For more information, please visit www.idausa.org/campaigns/sport/cock/cockfighting.html. A copy of the letter is available upon request. |