From Animal Wellness Action <[email protected]>
Subject New Report Reveals Urgent Zoonotic Disease Threats from Cockfighting
Date January 30, 2023 5:42 PM
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​# [#]
# [#] New Report Reveals Urgent Zoonotic Disease Threats
from Cockfighting to Avian Wellness and Agriculture
By Jim Keen, D.V.M., Ph.D., and Wayne Pacelle

Typically, Thanksgiving isn’t just rough on turkeys, but also on chickens. It’s opening day for the months-long cockfighting season, with action taking place at hundreds of fighting arenas scattered across the hinterlands. The states of Alabama, Tennessee, Kentucky, Oklahoma, and California and the U.S. territories of Puerto Rico and Guam have the most extensive cockfighting syndicates. And inseparable from the fights is the brisk business of shipping American-raised fighting birds across the states and to more than 25 nations, with Mexico and the Philippines taking in the largest number of exports by a long shot.

Even though cockfighting and a host of related activities are a federal felony everywhere in the United States, and felonies under state law in 42 states, it’s still rare when the sounds of police sirens drown out the sounds of crowing roosters and cries of gamblers at the arenas where the staged fights occur.

While it’s a federal crime to possess birds for fighting, it is not illegal to raise cockfighting breeds itself. Travel around rural reaches of the United States and you’ll see “farms” with dozens, hundreds, and sometimes thousands of brilliantly colored Sweaters, Kelsos, and other breeds tethered to A-frame huts or barrels. The United States may have a population between 10 and 25 million fighting birds, with the cockfighters and their birds “hiding in plain sight” and spinning a yarn that their birds are only for “show” and “exhibition.”

In east Tennessee this weekend, the Union County Sheriff did, however, burst into a major fighting venue after the animal-protection group SHARK tipped him to animal-cruelty crimes in progress, issuing citations for 98 people and even finding children in the crowd. Just two weeks earlier, SHARK got word of a fight in nearby McCreary County in Kentucky and called the police to raid that operation. Cockfighters got wind of the tip and thought better of proceeding with the scheduled derby, so the fighting pits were silent that night.

Right now, AWA and the Center are backing Tennessee legislation [[link removed]] , introduced by Senator Jon Lundberg and Representative Sam Whitson, to make cockfighting a felony offense. And we have also formulated new federal legislation [[link removed].] to strengthen the existing statute against animal fighting and enhance enforcement: *
Banning
simulcasting
and
gambling
of
an
animal
fight,
no
matter
where
it
originates
*
Halting
the
shipment
of
mature
roosters
(chickens
only)
shipped
through
the
U.S.
mail
*
Creating
a
citizen
suit
provision
to
allow
private
right
of
action
against
illegal
animal
fighters
and
ease
the
resource
burden
on
federal
agencies
*
Enhancing
forfeiture
provisions
to
include
real
property
used
in
the
commission
of
an
animal
fighting
crime.

Cockfighting enterprises are not just hotspots of cruelty, but a multi-billion-dollar, above-and-below-ground enterprise entwined with illicit drug possession, illegal gambling [[link removed]] , prostitution, violence [[link removed]] , gang activity [[link removed]] , unlawful guns [[link removed]] , and money laundering [[link removed]] .

The birds are also high-risk vectors and infection reservoirs known to spread zoonotic disease. With the COVID-19 pandemic still a threat, and the nation’s worst-ever outbreak of Avian Influenza wreaking havoc with wild and captive bird populations, it is most certainly time to put combatting cockfighting on America’s priority to-do list.

Cruelty and contagion fester at the cockfights

There’s no question that the illegal cockfighting industry puts our nation’s multibillion-dollar legitimate poultry industry at risk from severe avian infectious diseases, especially potentially zoonotic highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) and virulent Newcastle disease (vND). Both viruses cause severe, highly contagious, acute and often fatal multi-systemic febrile disease of the respiratory, digestive, reproductive, and nervous systems of birds.

Neither virus is normally present in the U.S. or other countries with a well-developed veterinary infrastructure. When HPAI or vND are discovered, authorities typically conduct mass culling of infected and exposed birds to stop the spread. Millions of birds suffer greatly whether they die from the disease itself [[link removed]] or are euthanized due to virus exposure.

The HPAI (H5N1 strain) bird flu epidemic [[link removed]] that began in February 2022 in Indiana has already killed nearly 60 million commercial and backyard poultry and unknown thousands, perhaps millions, of wild birds in 48 states over the past 12 months. There have been 309 commercial poultry flocks (mostly layer flocks and meat turkeys) and 427 backyard flocks in 47 states infected and euthanized as of January 2023. It is unknown if any infected backyard flocks are game fowl because USDA does not report this data. This epidemic is the largest and will be the costliest animal disease outbreak in our nation’s history.

Virulent Newcastle disease can cause commercial and backyard poultry devastation similar to that of HPAI if not contained. There have been 15 introductions of vND into the United States since 1950, ten of which occurred via the illegal smuggling of game cocks across our southern border from Mexico. (Virulent Newcastle disease is endemic in Mexico and all of Latin America).

On three occasions, in 1971, 2002, and 2018, vND introduction led to large-scale epidemics in Southern California. The 2002 and 2018 outbreaks started from smuggled cockfighting birds from Mexico. In all three epidemics, cockfighting activities prolonged the outbreak. In total, 16 million birds died or were killed in these three vND epidemics at an inflation-adjusted cost of more than one billion dollars.

This week, Animal Wellness Action and the Center for Humane Economy are releasing a comprehensive 63-page report [[link removed]] on the links between cockfighting and avian influenza and virulent Newcastle Disease.

What’s all this got to do with the price of eggs?

Avian diseases and cockfighting may be below the general public’s radar, but not without their effects on our lives. In the ongoing HPAI epidemic, more than 13 percent, or about 44 million laying hens have died, while 9 million of 217 million US turkeys have died (4%). This has resulted in record high prices for eggs (up 60% in December) [[link removed]] in the US and record high prices for turkey meat (up 73%) over the 2022 Thanksgiving holiday. [[link removed].]

One way to understand the role of cockfighting in bird flu or vND is to imagine an avian-human relay race where the baton is the virus. 1.
For
HPAI,
the
first
relay
leg
is
among
wild
migratory
birds
that
are
naturally
infected
with
bird
flu.
They
cover
thousands
of
miles,
crossing
cockfighting
country,
especially
throughout
the
Upper
South,
the
mid-section
of
the
nation
and
down
the
corridors
on
the
West
Coast.
2.
As
they
migrate
over
the
Mississippi
or
central
flyway,
they
defecate
onto
cockfighting
roosters
tethered
outdoors
in
long
rows
across
rural
America.
The
game
cocks
are
infected
from
the
wild
bird
waste,
taking
the
baton
from
the
infected
wild
birds.
When
the
wild
bird-origin
flu
virus
passes
through
poultry,
it
sometimes
becomes
more
virulent.
3.
Infected
fighting
birds
are
taken
to
cockfighting
tournaments,
traded,
sold,
or
shipped
to
destinations
near
and
far,
where
the
virus
is
spread
to
other
fighting
birds
and
game
fowl
farms
and
where
human
attendees
also
become
contaminated
with
the
virus,
the
third
leg
of
the
relay.
(Note:
One
gram
of
manure
from
an
HPAI-infected
chicken
has
enough
virus
to
infect
one
million
birds).
4.
On
the
anchor
(fourth
and
final)
relay
leg,
the
bird
flu
virus
is
spread
by
cockfighters
who
also
work
in
the
live
poultry
industry,
and
thus
vector
the
virus
to
layers,
turkeys,
and
broilers.
This
leads
to
the
epidemic
death
of
commercial
birds
from
infection
or
depopulation.
Humans
can
also,
so
far
rarely,
become
infected
with
the
bird
flu
virus
at
cockfighting
derbies.
About
850
people
have
died
of
bird
flu
since
2003
globally.

This relay-race scenario has been well documented in Southeast Asia, especially Thailand, during the 2003 to 2006 HPAI H5N1 epidemic.

A similar three-leg relay can be visualized for vND, and likely occurred in Southern California in 2002 and 2018, where 1) smuggled vND-infected fighting cocks carried the virus into the Southwest, 2) virus spreads among cockfighting farms and derbies, and 3) cockfighters who also work at poultry farms act as mechanical vectors and spread the virus to commercial poultry farms.

Scientists are recognizing that zoonotic disease spread and spillover are now widely recognized to be vastly more common than we thought prior to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.

The War on Cockfighting

Most people rightly believe cockfighting is a morally settled matter. But it’s far from settled on the ground, with cockfighting organizations and their infrastructure and sales operations at work as if it’s all a legitimate enterprise. The nation will stop it only when there are sufficient enforcement assets deployed; legal penalties in the courts that cut as deeply as their fighting implements do in the pit; and a strategic effort to nab the kingpins, seize the live contraband, and penalize the whole cast of characters involved.

The imminent introduction of the Animal Fighting Amendment of 2023 in the new Congress offers the prospect of shutting down the pathways for transporting fighting animals, cutting off the gambling that fuels it all, and empowering average citizens to join in on the enforcement efforts and run the bad guys out of town. But even as Congress considers that legislation, state and federal officials should know they already have formidable legal tools to interdict illegal animal fighting operations. Mercy must come, at some point, to the sentient, iridescent birds at the center of these merciless and gratuitous death matches.
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