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BULL TERRIER TIMES
COMPILATION
Dogfight On The Western Front
BRUSSELS--Germany, France,
Italy, and Britain are battling again in Belgium, and invading bloody Americans
are again ensnarled in the thick of it. That’s American pit bull terriers this
time. Like the doughboys of World War I and the G.I.s of World War II, they are
said to be over-large, overdosed on testosterone, and over here, looking for a
fight.
This time they are seen as allies of neo-Nazis and Huns--Attila’s Huns, who
ravaged Europe from 434 to 453, when the notoriously reactive Attila’s brain
burst as he celebrated his honeymoon. The Justice and Home Affairs Council of
the European Union on September 29 heard a German proposal to ban throughout
Europe the breeding or import of any kind of “fighting dog,” defined as any
member of 14 breeds with American pit bull traits. As well as the American pit
bull and Japanese tosa, who have been banned in Britain and The Netherlands
since 1991, the German proposal would ban Rhodesian ridgebacks, Neapolitan
bulldogs, Staffordshire terriers, English bull terriers, and bullmastiffs.
The latter three breeds are long-time British favourites, popular throughout
much of the former British empire. In theory they are easily distinguished from
American pit bulls and other authentic fighting breeds but dogfighters long
since learned to evade breed-specific pit bull bans by breeding pit bulls with
the Staffordshire black-and-white coloration, instead of the traditional pit
bull brindle.
Bull mastiffs, meanwhile, are also turning up with greater than historical
frequency in reports of life-threatening dog attacks. But English bull terriers
seem to be caught in the crossfire mainly due to their name. Legislation was
rushed into effect in most of the 16 German states during July and August 2000,
soon after an American pit bull terrier named Zeus and a black Staffordshire
terrier named Gypsy leaped a fence to attack 10 children who were waiting in a
Hamburg school yard to be taken swimming. A six-year-old boy of Turkish
immigrant parentage tried to run. Zeus tore his throat out. Gypsy severely
mauled another child. Police shot both dogs on the spot.
The tragedy had racial overtones, not just because the dead boy came from
Germany’s darkest and most often abused ethnic minority, but also because barely
two months earlier an assembly of pit bull fanciers planned to pin yellow stars
on their dogs, like those the Nazis compelled Jews to wear during the Holocaust,
and parade the pit bulls through Berlin to protest a proposed breed restrictive
city ordinance.
Only after Central Council of Jews president Paul Spiegel threatened to take
legal action against the fanciers for alleged defamation did they back off
slightly, apologizing for offending Holocaust survivors. The Berlin ordinance,
now in effect, became the model for the ensuing German state legislation and the
proposed EU legislation. Owners of the 14 designated “fighting dog” breeds are
not required to get rid of them, but must keep them leashed and muzzled at all
times when they are in a public place; must take an examination of their
knowledge of dog-rearing and dog -training; and may not have any criminal
history.
A rash of “fighting dog” abandonment's followed, as owners rushed to avoid
liability. A flurry of Internet postings and some media accounts also blamed
public panic for instances of pit bulls and similar dogs being burned alive,
shot, hanged, and so forth. Not clear from the evidence, however, was that many
of these cases actually involved anything more than dogfighters’ routine vicious
dispatch of dogs who won’t fight, or lose--as in the U.S., where Boston-area
investigators learned in 1999 that some dogfighters skin losing dogs right in
the ring, possibly still alive, and keep the pelts as trophies.
France since January 2000 has required that all pit bulls and dogs of several
other high-risk breed be neutered, with the intention of eliminating them
entirely by 2010. But demands for stronger and faster action rose in June after
five pit bulls escaped from a yard and bodily dismembered Maria Berthelot, 86,
during an evening walk. The hue-and-cry continued when panhandler Jeremie
Acquemin, 20,of Rouen, was convicted in August of setting his pit bull on three
people who refused to give him spare change, plus a police officer who
intervened. All four victims were hospitalized. Similar incidents occur in the
U.S. almost every day, but are so common that they rarely attract more than
local notice. Police officer Didier Lecourbe, in the depressed Paris suburb of
Aubervilliers, warned
Manchester Guardian correspondent Jon Henley in September that just banning some
dog breeds wouldn’t solve the problem. “Now that the authorities have cracked
down on pit bulls and the rest, apes look like the new weapon of choice,”
Lecourbe explained, estimating that as many as 500 Barbary apes--actually a
subspecies of baboon--have been smuggled into France within the past two years.
Native to Gibraltar, Morocco, and Algeria, they are brought back by ethnic North
Africans now living in France, after visits to relatives still in North Africa.
“There are dozens of them,” Lecourbe continued. “Kids take them out on leads,
and even carry baby monkeys around in nappies. But they can be very dangerous
indeed,” tending to make leaping facial bites. “We’ve heard of monkey-fights
being run in housing project basements,” Lecourbe added. Whether or not
baboon-fighting catches on, dogfights have gone global, and seem to be far
bigger business now than at any time since 1905, when Jack London used the
success of his novel White Fang, about a wolf hybrid who is stolen and forced to
fight, to lead a successful drive to expel dog fighting from respectable sports
pages.
Dog fighting had been a staple of early sporting sheets since advent of mass
literacy and high-speed web printing coincided with the heyday of Kit Burns’
Tavern at 273 Water Street, Manhattan. Burns’ Tavern was the Madison Square
Garden of dog fighting, but was also recently recalled by New York Times
historian David W. Dunlap as “one of the foulest grog shops within staggering
distance of the East River wharves.”
According to Edward Winslow Martin in his 1868 illustrated tract Secrets of the
Great City, Burns’ Tavern nightly attracted “a crowd of brutal wretches whose
conduct stamps them as beneath the struggling beasts.” But despite Martin’s
outrage, even the American SPCA, founded nearby in 1869, couldn’t close Burns’
Tavern or accomplish much else to stop dog fighting until Jack London loaned his
two-fisted influence to the Band of Mercy children’s crusade against animal
fighting of all kinds begun by Massachusetts SPCA founder George Angell.
At that, dog fighting before rowdy crowds of gamblers remained legal in much of
the U.S. beyond London’s death. As late as 1921, along the route that the
fictional White Fang was dragged from Santa Clara, California, to the dog
fighting pits of Alaska and the Yukon, touts built The Doghouse, a dog fighting
stadium on the waterfront at Langley, Washington. The dogfights reputedly ended
at that location within just a few years, as they drew too much attention to the
building’s parallel role as a speakeasy. The Doghouse saloon is still in
business, many ownership changes later.
Organized crime
The modern history of organized crime in the U.S. began with Prohibition-era rum
running. The major criminal syndicates diversified from the liquor traffic into
gambling, loan-sharking, prostitution, and drugs, and became seriously involved
in dog fighting only recently, as an apparent outgrowth of acquiring pit bulls
for guard dogs. The Old Country mafia historically focused on extortion--but
mobsters in Naples and Sicily have readily copied each U.S. underworld success.
“In recent years, the [Italian] mafia has organized illegal horse races,
trafficked in exotic species, and even rustled cattle,” San Francisco Chronicle
foreign service correspondent Adolfo Sansolini reported from Rome on September
15. “But the most lucrative mafia activity is dog fighting, which law
enforcement authorities say is now an estimated $500 million-a-year business.”
As many as 5,000 dogs per year are reportedly killed in Italian fighting rings.
Countless more dogs--and other animals are torn apart by fighting dogs in
training. Gangsters heading south for the winter have also brought increasing
levels of organization and sophistication to dog fighting in South Africa, where
it has long been practiced by the under classes, of both African and Afrikaans
descent, and Honduras, where it is legal and occurs at public stadiums.
Organized dog fighting has spread as well from the U.S. into Canada, as an
adjunct to drug trafficking. The Ontario Provincial Police found perhaps the
biggest Canadian dog fighting training centre to date during a mid-July 2000
search for narcotics at a seemingly abandoned farm in Percy Township, north of
Cobourg. The Ontario SPCA took 29 pit bull terriers into custody, who had not
been given food or water in at least two days, along with rabbits who were
evidently raised to be live bait, while the OPP seized exercise equipment and a
stash of steroids.
Dope growers
Veteran U.S. dog fighting investigators, like chief dog warden Tom Skeldon of
Lucas County, Ohio, learned long ago that related drug charges bring offenders
the most prison time--so Skeldon wasn’t disappointed in August 1999 when Lucas
Country sheriff’s deputies ended his multi-year surveillance of suspected
dogfighter Otha Jones Jr., 30, by busting Jones for cultivating marijuana that
they spotted from a helicopter.
Already serving a four-year sentence for felonious assault, Jones on July 21
drew another four years and six months on the marijuana charges plus illegally
possessing a firearm and dog fighting. The dog fighting conviction was made
possible by discoveries made during the drug raid. An air search for marijuana
plantations in early September nabbed previously convicted marijuana dealer
Benjamin Donald Butts, 39, of Surry, Virginia--along with 29 allegedly mangy,
malnourished adult pit bulls and four puppies.
Hit with 33 counts of dog fighting, 33 cruelty counts, drug charges and a charge
of carrying a gun as a convicted felon, Butts on September 6 confessed that he
had organized dogfights and trained fighting dogs. The number of dogs seized
from Butts was not unusually high.
On August 13, for example, in Booneville, Mississippi, Prentiss County sheriff’s
deputies seized 30 pit bulls while arresting alleged dog fighting trainers
Wilson D. Watkins, 38, and Edward Haddox, 41. On August 30, a multi-agency law
enforcement task force nabbed 36 pit bulls while busting Darell Hunter, 27, on
41 counts of dog fighting and one count of cruelty to his allegedly neglected
18-month old son.
Suspects keep dogs
What happened next in the Butts case, however, was unusual: Surry County
District Court Judge Larry Palmer, at request of prosecutor Gerald G.
Poindexter, released Butts’ 33 dogs back into his own custody, -- though Butts
may be facing life in prison.
There was, however, one recent Virginia precedent. An April 12 raid by the
Roanoke County Sheriff’s office found 73 pit bulls chained to trees and old car
axles on property owned by North Carolina “pet psychiatrist Tom Garner”--and
another 19 pit bulls on neighbouring land belonging to alleged dog fighting
trainer Kyle Arthur Pearce.
Evidence found during the Pearce bust led U.S. federal agents in late September
to the home of his former housemate, Philip William Reynolds, publisher of the
underground American Gamedog Times magazine plus an accompanying web site. Five
pit bulls and alleged dog fighting paraphernalia were seized from Reynolds,
against whom charges are reportedly pending. Back in April, however, during the
initial raid, “Garner showed up at the site where the dogs were chained while
police were investigating,” wrote Matt Chittum of the Roanoke Times. “Garner
claimed ownership of most of the dogs,” Chittum continued, “and said he raised
them to be sold as pets. An affidavit filed with the search warrant that
authorized the raid, however, said Garner is known to the USDA as ‘a breeder of
pit bull dogs sold to dogfighters.’
Veterinary records found during the investigation indicate Pearce had several
dogs treated for ‘injuries consistent with those inflicted in organized dog
fighting,’ the search warrant says. Garner paid those bills, according to the
warrant.’” Yet Garner was only charged with not licensing the dogs on his
property. Two dogs were held as evidence. The rest remained on chains. Garner
kept 71 of them, after paying $2,026 in fines.
The cost of care
Accused Humane Society of the U.S. program specialist Pat Wagner in a September
14 alert on the Butts case, “The city doesn’t want to take financial
responsibility for caring for these dogs while awaiting the trial.” It was a
plausible claim. On May 6, the Humane Society of the Huron Valley in Superior
Township, Michigan, received 12 pit bulls seized from dog fighting suspects
Ronald J. Wroble, 33, of Canton, and Jeffrey D. Pepper, 36, of Belleville. The
pit bulls were held for six weeks as evidence. A dozen animals were killed to
clear cage space for them, cutting into anticipated adoption revenue, and the
pit bulls’ upkeep cost $500 a week, HSHV cruelty investigator Stacie Dugas told
Ann Arbor News staff reporter Susan L. Oppat. That was cheap, as pit bull
holding goes.
In Pueblo, Colorado, Pueblo Animal League director Shelley Tipple told Denver
Post staff writer Jim Hughes, the kennelling bill for 41 pit bulls seized in
June from alleged dogfighter Brian Speer was expected to reach $14,000 within
six weeks, and $90,000 if the case remained ed in court for a year. “They’ve
chewed up about 20 hoses. They’re bored,” Tipple explained. “They’re also
tearing holes in the sides of their cages to get to the other dogs. Soon they’ll
figure out how to dismantle the cages and it will be a free-for-all.”
The Speer case pit bulls were initially housed in rented space at a greyhound
track, but security concerns eventually forced the Pueblo Animal League to bring
them into the PAL shelter. A hidden cost of keeping fighting dogs as evidence is
physical risk. In Asheville, North Carolina, for example, 12 pit bulls seized
last spring from alleged dogfighter Darrell Durham, 27, bit animal services
director Jim Medford and four of his staff. Durham drew 120 days in jail. The
dogs got death.
HSUS and PETA drummed up a storm of mail to Judge Palmer about the Butts case.
Someone in Florida reportedly offered $500 to underwrite care of the dogs by
anyone except Butts. The letters swayed Palmer several days later to vacated his
own previous release order, and to take the care of the dogs under advisement
until October 3. PETA senior caseworker Daphna Nachminovitch recommended killing
all the dogs immediately. Prosecutor Poindexter, however, called the pups
“people friendly and hoped they could eventually be adopted. The 33 pit bulls
temporarily taken from Butts were held at three different shelters. Four were
stolen almost immediately from the shelter at Isle of Wight, Virginia.
That too is a familiar pattern. Several times per month ANIMAL PEOPLE hears of
“fighting” breed dogs vanishing from shelters, sometimes with the collusion of
corrupt shelter staff. In early September someone even took a pair of pit bulls
from the Dog Adoption League shelter and the county animal control shelter in
Santa Barbara, California; apparently fought them, possibly against each other;
and brought the wounded dogs back after the weekend.
Hot in Florida
A July 14 raid on a dogfight in West Palm Palm Beach, Florida, encapsulated all
the elements of dog fighting as it continues, 95 years after Jack London hoped
to end it forever. The raid came three days after one Kendall Gadsen surrendered
to sheriff’s deputies in East Fort Myers, Florida. An investigation of skeletal
remains of dogs discovered along a road in East Fort Myers had led to the
seizure of videotapes from an undisclosed location, which according to Charlotte
County Sheriff’s Office spokesperson Chuck Ellis, “showed at least four
different fights at different parts of the day and different parts of different
counties. We identified Mr. Gadsen as a participant, actually inside the ring,
baiting and fighting the dogs.”
Sixty-five people were apprehended in the West Palm Beach raid, of whom 53 were
charged only with watching a dogfight, a misdemeanour. Among them were Palm
Beach County corrections deputies Alton Harrell, 31, and Reginald Mickens, 32.
Palm Beach County Judge Cory Ciklin on September 25 offered to allow any
defendant without prior convictions to plead guilty in exchange for a sentence
of 12 months on probation, 200 hours of
community service, a prohibition on keeping any pet or being around a pet except
in the presence of another adult, and a donation of $1,000 to an approved animal
rescue charity. Only one defendant immediately accepted. Six other defendants
were charged with felony dog fighting. Two pit bulls seized as evidence against
the six were stolen from the West Palm Beach Animal Care and Control shelter
during the night of July 29- July 30. No charges have been announced against the
remaining six attendees.
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