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American Football: Vick charged with staging dogfightings
The career of Michael Vick, one of the National Football League's biggest stars, was in the balance yesterday after he was charged with running an illegal dogfighting ring. If convicted, the Atlanta Falcons quarterback faces up to six years in jail and a $350,000 (?170,000) fine, as well as severe disciplinary action from the NFL.
According to an 18-page grand jury indictment, Vick and three associates ran their operation, known as the "Bad Newz Kennels", out of a house bought by Vick in rural south-eastern Virginia in 2001. There investigators earlier this year found live fighting dogs, equipment used for dogfighting, a bloodstained carpet as well as the remains of several animals.
Apart from organising the dogfights - a crime in all but two of the 50 US states - the NFL player is said to have taken part in the execution of "approximately eight" dogs in April 2007 after they had performed poorly in test fights. One was allegedly doused with water and electrocuted. Others were killed "by various methods, including hanging, drowning, and slamming at least one dog's body into the ground," the indictment said.
An NFL spokesman yesterday described the practices outlined in the charges as "cruel, degrading and illegal", but appealed to fans to withhold judgement on Vick until a court passes its verdict. Even if he is acquitted, however, the player is likely to be punished by the League, which has already imposed long suspensions on players involved in repeated brushes with the law, in a bid to improve its tarnished off-field .
The NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has already unprecedentedly banned Adam "Pacman" Jones, a cornerback for the Tennessee Titans, for the entire 2007 season after 10 incidents in which he was interviewed by police, while two other NFL players have been given eight-game, half-season suspensions.
None, however, is anywhere near as celebrated as the elusive and lightning-fast Vick, one of the League's most exciting players and holder of several quarterback rushing records.
The indictment, moreover, comes only six weeks before the start of the 2007 season. Vick, in the midst of a 10-year $137m (?66.7m) contract, is the highest paid player in the history of the NFL . He is due to start pre-season training with the Falcons next week. In a statement the team apologised that one of its players was "being presented to the public in a negative way".
If convicted, what do you think should happen to him??
The career of Michael Vick, one of the National Football League's biggest stars, was in the balance yesterday after he was charged with running an illegal dogfighting ring. If convicted, the Atlanta Falcons quarterback faces up to six years in jail and a $350,000 (?170,000) fine, as well as severe disciplinary action from the NFL.
According to an 18-page grand jury indictment, Vick and three associates ran their operation, known as the "Bad Newz Kennels", out of a house bought by Vick in rural south-eastern Virginia in 2001. There investigators earlier this year found live fighting dogs, equipment used for dogfighting, a bloodstained carpet as well as the remains of several animals.
Apart from organising the dogfights - a crime in all but two of the 50 US states - the NFL player is said to have taken part in the execution of "approximately eight" dogs in April 2007 after they had performed poorly in test fights. One was allegedly doused with water and electrocuted. Others were killed "by various methods, including hanging, drowning, and slamming at least one dog's body into the ground," the indictment said.
An NFL spokesman yesterday described the practices outlined in the charges as "cruel, degrading and illegal", but appealed to fans to withhold judgement on Vick until a court passes its verdict. Even if he is acquitted, however, the player is likely to be punished by the League, which has already imposed long suspensions on players involved in repeated brushes with the law, in a bid to improve its tarnished off-field .
The NFL commissioner Roger Goodell has already unprecedentedly banned Adam "Pacman" Jones, a cornerback for the Tennessee Titans, for the entire 2007 season after 10 incidents in which he was interviewed by police, while two other NFL players have been given eight-game, half-season suspensions.
None, however, is anywhere near as celebrated as the elusive and lightning-fast Vick, one of the League's most exciting players and holder of several quarterback rushing records.
The indictment, moreover, comes only six weeks before the start of the 2007 season. Vick, in the midst of a 10-year $137m (?66.7m) contract, is the highest paid player in the history of the NFL . He is due to start pre-season training with the Falcons next week. In a statement the team apologised that one of its players was "being presented to the public in a negative way".
If convicted, what do you think should happen to him??