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View Full Version : Last Vick cohort gets 2 months


samanthajane13
12-15-2007, 12:06 AM
By LARRY O'DELL, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 50 minutes ago

RICHMOND, Va. - If federal prosecutors had their way, the man who gave them most of the gruesome details about Michael Vick's dogfighting enterprise wouldn't go to prison for killing dogs and helping create "Bad Newz Kennels."

U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson disagreed, saying it wouldn't be right to let Tony Taylor walk after sentencing Vick to 23 months in prison and two other co-defendants to 18 and 21 months.

"You were as much an abuser of animals as any other defendant in this case," Hudson told Taylor on Friday before sentencing him to two months in prison.

Prosecutor Michael Gill had recommended Taylor only serve probation.

Hudson agreed Taylor deserved a break. However, he said the "gross disparity" suggested by Gill was inappropriate for a person who helped develop and run the dogfighting operation and admitted killing two dogs, one by gunshot and one by electrocution.

"I realize those were inhumane and stupid decisions I did make," Taylor told the judge during his 10-minute sentencing hearing.

Federal sentencing guidelines suggested a range of zero to six months for Taylor, who was given credit for accepting responsibility for his crime.

Prosecutor Michael Gill said it would have taken much longer for the government to build a case against Vick and the others had it not been for Taylor's cooperation.

"He was the most significant source of information in this case," Gill told Hudson. "He did not hesitate in any way."

Animal rights activists had no quarrel with Taylor's light sentence.

"There are those who may feel this is the proverbial slap on the wrist, but it reflects the significant role Tony Taylor played in making a lot of information available that led to the other guilty pleas," said Randall Lockwood, senior vice president for animal cruelty initiatives for the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals.

Wayne Pacelle, president of the Humane Society of the United States, agreed.

"Taylor's role in bringing down Bad Newz Kennels was invaluable," he said.

According to court papers, Taylor in 2001 found the 15-acre tract that Vick bought for about $34,000 to develop into a dogfighting compound. Taylor oversaw and trained pit bulls at the Surry County site for three years before quitting because of a falling out with co-defendant Quanis Phillips and others.

"He left behind everybody involved with that and did not get back involved in that activity," Stephen A. Hudgins told Hudson.

Hudgins said Taylor was immediately cooperative when contacted by investigators who discovered dogfighting equipment and dozens of pit bulls at the Surry County site. Taylor never once asked "How can I get out of this?" Hudgins said.

Taylor, of Hampton, was the first of the four men to plead guilty and agree to cooperate. Phillips, of Atlanta, and Purnell Peace of Virginia Beach soon followed, then Vick.

Taylor, whose prison term begins Jan. 22, also will serve three years' probation. Like his co-defendants, he cannot own dogs during that probation.

The case began in April when a drug investigation of Vick's cousin led authorities to the Surry County property. Details outlined in court papers, including the executions of dogs that did not perform well in test fights, prompted a public backlash against Vick.

Animal rights activists say the case has shed light on a brutal underground blood sport.

"It has awakened in the general public, as well as law enforcement, to the need to be alert to signs of dogfighting — report it, investigate it, prosecute it and follow up with appropriate sentences," Lockwood said.

Pacelle said dogfighting prosecutions have increased since the Vick case began, and the Humane Society expects about 25 states to consider legislation strengthening dogfighting laws in 2008.

"We hope we're farther down the road now than ever before in eradicating this activity in the United States," Pacelle said.

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I'd personally like to slap the stupid off Prosecutor Michael Gill, but all his manuevering didn't work.

U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson is one of my new heroes.

He should be given whatever highest honors are available from PETA, The American Humane Society, The ASPCA, and any other animal rights groups.

He stood up for the "little guys and girls", and slapped it to all these FREAKS, dispite public out-rage and opinion. I know he was just doing his job, but he needs to be an example for humane people everywhere.

He's a bright and shining star for all those poor animals, and I'm sure that when his time on Earth is through, he'll have a special place in Heaven for defending God's innocent little creatures.

:) :) :) :) :)

deputydi
12-15-2007, 11:47 AM
I agree with you in theory. Personally, I'd like for him to have received as much time as the others and slapped with as stiff a fine as the law allows. Unfortunately, sometimes prosecutors have to make a "deal with the devil" in order to get the big guys. As distasteful as that is to me and all animal lovers, Michael Vick was the "big guy" in all of this. That doesn't make everyone else's participation any less criminal and inhumane -- it just means a deal had to be struck to shut down the operation for good.

samanthajane13
12-15-2007, 09:05 PM
"I agree with you in theory. Personally, I'd like for him to have received as much time as the others and slapped with as stiff a fine as the law allows. Unfortunately, sometimes prosecutors have to make a "deal with the devil" in order to get the big guys. As distasteful as that is to me and all animal lovers, Michael Vick was the "big guy" in all of this. That doesn't make everyone else's participation any less criminal and inhumane -- it just means a deal had to be struck to shut down the operation for good."

I agree-they ALL should have gotten stiffer sentences, but I'll take what they got...

And Mikey is soooooooo screwed...he still has to face the state charges, and he's gonna be BROKE!!!

ROTFLMAO!!!!!!!