From Wayne Pacelle <[email protected]>
Subject Deadly for roosters—and maybe for you, too. The scourge of cockfighting
Date March 5, 2023 3:45 PM
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͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌ ͏‌To prevent cruelty to animals, we promote enacting and enforcing good public policies. To enact good laws, we must elect good lawmakers, and that’s why we remind voters which candidates care about our issues and which ones don’t. If you’d like to unsubscribe, click here. [[link removed]]

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[link removed] [[link removed]] Animal Wellness Podcast: The Criminal and Viral Infectivity of Cockfighting [[link removed]]
By Wayne Pacelle

Cockfighting deadens the human attributes of empathy and decency. It is criminally infectious, with cruelty then blending with gambling, money laundering, corruption of public officials, and other illicit behaviors. This kind of moral rot masquerading as sport deserves no refuge in any state, territory, county, or even neighborhood.

Yet despite a strong federal law criminalizing the practice, and 50 state laws forbidding it (though varying in their penalty provisions), there exists a thinly concealed syndicate of cockfighters and their fighting arenas, gamecock breeding farms, knife and gaff makers, and associated commercial actors.

Right now, the cockfighting season is in full swing. In fact, an allied organization, Showing Animals Respect and Kindness (SHARK), reported that its sources revealed that there are four scheduled cockfighting derbies at different underground arenas in Kentucky this weekend (March 4–5). The fights are most prevalent in jurisdictions where cockfighting is a misdemeanor (eight states) or not forbidden at all under territorial law (Guam, Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands).

On this subject, federal law against animal fighting is supreme, and that makes cockfighting and associated activities a felony on every inch of U.S. soil. But especially in the places where state and territorial laws are lax or non-existent, the cockfighters often decide to take their chances, hoping that a federal dragnet won’t snare them and result in imprisonment.

The federal law forbids not only fighting, but also possessing birds to fight or transporting them anywhere. Yet as my colleague Jim Keen, D.V.M., Ph.D., says, “the cockfighters are hiding in plain sight.” 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 of more than 10 million fighting birds, with the cockfighters spinning a completely fraudulent yarn that their birds are only for “show” and “exhibition.”

Right now, we are in a battle to shut down the fight pits and the illegal gamecock farms; to hold in place Oklahoma’s strong state law, which is under attack from the state’s politically active cockfighting community; to strengthen state anti-cockfighting laws from Georgia to Tennessee; and even to fortify the already potent federal law against animal fighting.

The new federal legislation, soon to be introduced in both chambers of Congress, would do the following: *
Ban
simulcasting
and
gambling
of
an
animal
fight,
no
matter
where
it
originates.
*
Halt
the
shipment
of
mature
roosters
(chickens
only)
shipped
through
the
U.S.
mail.
*
Create
a
citizen
suit
provision
to
allow
private
right
of
action
against
illegal
animal
fighters
and
ease
the
resource
burden
on
federal
agencies.
*
Enhance
forfeiture
provisions
to
include
real
property
used
in
the
commission
of
an
animal
fighting
crime.


It’s time to write to your federal lawmakers in support of the FIGHT Act and urge them to strengthen the law and not tolerate the level of lawlessness that we’ve discovered in the United States. [[link removed]]
TAKE ACTION [[link removed]]


Cockfighting threats animal and human health

As if the cruelty and crime were not enough, there’s also the contagion associated with cockfighting. 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. *
Cockfighting
threatens
to
extend
the
geography
and
prolong
the
duration
of
the
current
highly
pathogenic
avian
influenza
(HPAI)
H5N1
(“bird
flu”)
US
epidemic.
*
Bird
flu
has
killed
or
caused
the
deaths
of
almost
60
million
US
poultry
[[link removed]]
in
the
past
12
months,
including
44
million
laying
hens
(13%
of
the
national
flock)
and
nine
million
turkeys
(4%
of
the
national
flock),
driving
up
egg
[[link removed]]
and
turkey
meat
[[link removed].]
prices
to
record
highs.
Millions
of
wild
birds
have
also
likely
died
from
HPAI.
[[link removed]]
*
There
have
been
15
introductions
of
virulent
Newcastle
disease
[[link removed]]
(vND)
into
the
United
States
since
1950,
10
of
which
occurred
via
the
illegal
smuggling
of
game
cocks
across
our
southern
border
from
Mexico,
costing
the
federal
government
a
billion
dollars
in
a
series
of
containment
and
compensation
efforts.


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 the USDA does not report this data. This epidemic is the largest and will be the costliest animal disease outbreak in our nation’s history.

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.

Last month, Animal Wellness Action and the Center for Humane Economy released a comprehensive 63-page report [[link removed]] on the subject. The primary author is Dr. Keen, who received his veterinary medicine degree and doctorate in epidemiology from the University of Illinois College of Veterinary Medicine. A former USDA infectious disease specialist and faculty member of University of Nebraska School of Veterinary Medicine, he is now the director of veterinary sciences for the Center for a Humane Economy. His co-author is Thomas Pool, D.V.M, MPH, Dipl. ACVPM, who earned his master’s in public health from Harvard University, and doctor of veterinary medicine degree from Oklahoma State University. He spent 26 years in the U.S. Army and served as commander of the U.S. Army Veterinary Command, a worldwide, tri-service command. He also graduated from the US Army War College. Upon retirement as a full colonel from the Army, Dr. Pool served as the Territorial Veterinarian for Guam for 17 years, and now he works as senior veterinarian for the Center for a Humane Economy.

Drs. Keen and Pool, in the most recent episode of the Animal Wellness podcast, report that a growing number of scientists now recognize that zoonotic disease spread and spillover may be vastly more common than we thought prior to the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic.

By tuning in, you’ll get a sense of the complex, intersecting set of threats that cockfighting poses to our nation. You can listen to the podcast here [[link removed]] or watch the video version of it here [[link removed]] . The whole bloody enterprise will only stop when there are sufficient enforcement assets deployed; legal penalties in the courts cut as deeply as their fighting implements do in the pit; agriculture agencies and organizations treat the threat with the seriousness that it deserves; and there is a strategic effort to nab the kingpins, seize the live contraband, and penalize the whole cast of characters involved in this form of organized crime.
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