Assam forest
minister attacks Maneka and PETA:
[India News]: Guwahati, Feb 19 :
Animal activist Maneka Gandhi and animal welfare groups like PETA today
came under attack from Assam Forest Minister Pradyut Bordoloi for their
protests against use of elephants for entertainment in the Kaziranga
Centenary Celebrations. Source: http://news.newkerala.com/india-news/?action=fullnews&id=74744
PETA DEMANDS JAIL TIME IF ALLEGED SAMPSON COUNTY COCKFIGHTERS ARE CONVICTED Community Should Fear for Public Safety, Say Experts For Immediate Release: Contact: Sampson County, N.C . --- This morning, PETA sent an urgent plea to District Attorney G. Dewey Hudson Jr., urging him to vigorously prosecute Jose Alvarez Balderas and Flabio Reynosa Pineda, both of the Newton Grove area. Each faces up to 87 felony charges stemming from authorities’ reported February 8 raid on a cockfighting ring at their shared property. Officers apparently found one fight in progress and 87 birds whose combs and natural spurs had been shaved off to facilitate fighting. News sources state that 63 additional roosters were discovered with yet more hens, three firearms, and paraphernalia commonly associated with the blood sport, including razor spurs and handsaws. "Cockfighting is the sport of cowards," says PETA Casework Division Manager Martin Mersereau. "Birds have razor-sharp blades strapped to their legs and commonly suffer broken wings, pierced eyes, and punctured lungs. The losing birds are typically thrown together in a pile and left to die slowly. People who demonstrate such disregard for suffering can pose a risk to the community at large." Mersereau also points out that animal fighting is almost invariably associated with drugs, weapons, and illegal gambling. <snip> Source: http://www.peta.org/mc/NewsItem.asp?id=5942
<snip> Source: http://www.peta.org/mc/NewsItem.asp?id=5946
Central California And No AR Spin....... South Valley Homicide Investigation February 19, 2005 — Neighbors in a quiet South Valley community are worried after two people are found dead. It happened in the Tulare County community of Plainview. Tulare County Sheriff's deputies say neighbors didn't see anything and no one lives at the home where the bodies were found. Investigators are having a tough time determining a motive or locating any witnesses. Police were called out to the house on Oklahoma Street early Saturday afternoon after neighbors called 911 reporting hearing several gunshots. A neighbor, Kristal Morales, described what she heard, "About noon, we heard gunshots ring out. Four of them, then silence ... and then a whole bunch more rang out, and then we came out front. People were saying that some people were shot ... the guy across the street said he looked over the fence and saw two dead bodies face down." Lt. David Galloway, from the Tulare County Sheriff's Department, spoke about the scene, "We've canvassed the neighborhood and the surrounding streets and nobody's offered any explanation of people leaving this area ... so, we just don't know at this time." Investigators say the two victims, who are described as young Hispanic men, were found in the backyard. The victims did have identification on them, but so far deputies have not been able to contact their families. Investigators say they found several hens and roosters in the backyard of the vacant home, but they did not find any evidence at the scene of any cockfighting. Deputies say at this point, they have no reason to believe the roosters have any connection to why the two men were murdered. Source: http://abclocal.go.com/kfsn/news/021905_nw_plainview.html
.......Deputies say at this point, they have no reason to believe the roosters have any connection to why the two men were murdered........
Seems The AR Might Be Spinning Now?
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Neighbors connect cockfight to killings
Two men are found shot in rural Tulare County community of Plainview.
PLAINVIEW -- Two men were killed Saturday in a shooting in this small farming community in what neighbors believe was a dispute sparked by an illegal cockfight.
Tulare County sheriff's Lt. David Galloway had few details of the apparent homicide, confirming only that two men had been killed at a home about 20 miles southeast of Visalia.
"We are working the scene, investigating what happened. All we can confirm is that two Hispanic men are dead," Galloway said.
Galloway said deputies had not identified the men, and could not release their ages or hometowns.
The shooting drew dozens of neighbors to the scene, where they sat on cars and watched detectives investigate.
"I heard the gunshots, seven or eight gunshots, right at noon. Right after that, the deputies started getting here," said Crystal Morales.
Morales said the home, in the 19700 block of Oklahoma Avenue, was recently occupied by a family of five, including three small children.
Neighbors disagreed, though, over whether the family had left the neighborhood.
Morales said she was sure, though, that the two men killed did not live in the neighborhood, and that both had been fighting roosters earlier in the day. "They were definitely cockfighting, there's a lot of that here," Morales said.
Cockfighting and dog fighting arrests have been made in several small Tulare County communities in recent months, including 19 so far in February.
The fights are popular in several cultures, but in the United States, they are only legal in Louisiana and New Mexico.
Sheriff's Lt. Marsh Carter said this month that gambling, guns, drugs and alcohol are commonly found when police raid cockfights.
In November, a multiagency drug warrant raid on a Merced house netted 40 people, 3,600 pounds of marijuana, eight guns and 50 fighting roosters. An additional 14 people were arrested in Fresno and one in Corona in Riverside County.
Galloway declined to comment on the neighbors' story, or whether the homicides were the results of an argument over a cockfight.
Residents on Oklahoma Avenue said they weren't sure whether the house where the homicides occurred was vacant. The house immediately east of the small pink stucco home secured by crime scene tape is burned out, one of several houses on the street that appear to have been destroyed by recent fires.
Several other houses appear abandoned, the yards overgrown with grass and weeds, or flooded by recent rains.
Morales said that within minutes of the gunfire, the narrow street was crowded with sheriff's cars, including patrol cars and unmarked cars driven by detectives.
Two ambulances also responded.
"They left, though, and we didn't see them load any bodies," Morales said.
Francis Guerrero, who lives two doors down from the homicide scene, said she has never seen cockfighting in the neighborhood, where she has lived her entire life.
"That doesn't mean they don't do it, though. They could do it in their back yard and I would never know, because I don't look anymore," Guerrero said.
Plainview is a small collection of narrow streets with two convenience stores on Road 196, the main thoroughfare.
Oklahoma is one of just five side streets, with small homes surrounded, in most cases, by chain-link fences.
Dogs of all sizes run loose, in packs and alone, and children were playing in front yards next to the homicide scene.
In recent years, Guerrero said, many new people have moved into her neighborhood from San Francisco and Los Angeles, changing the makeup of a community that she said used to be very tight-knit.
"When those people came in, more trouble started. I've heard lots of gunfire when people shoot into the air at night, but I've never heard of anyone getting killed until now," Guerrero said.
A Tulare County mobile crime lab sat in front of the house as detectives videotaped evidence markers that ran in a straight line from the street to the house.
"Most of the people here work in the fields. I've been here a year and never heard of anything like this," Morales said.
The reporter can be reached at dboyles@fresnobee.com or (559) 622-2411.
"Dogfighting and cockfighting are barbaric activities that deserve stiff penalties," Green said. "Unfortunately, however, our current laws amount to a slap on the wrist for violators, leaving federal authorities with little to no incentive to hunt these criminals down and break up their operations. This legislation will change all that by putting some needed teeth into our animal fighting laws."
Green says current federal law treats animal fighting violations as misdemeanors, with a maximum jail time of one year. By establishing tougher penalties for animal fighting, his legislation would give federal prosecutors a greater incentive to pursue violators and get at the other crimes that often accompany animal fighting activities.
Supporters of the bill also claim that cockfighting has been associated with the spread of Exotic Newcastle Disease, which is an often fatal virus in chickens. After having spread to several large-scale egg farms throughout the country in recent years, END cost U.S. taxpayers nearly $200 million to eradicate, and cost the U.S. poultry industry millions more in lost exports.
Source: http://www.wisconsinagconnection.com/story-state.cfm?Id=220&yr=2005