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Victoria

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Oct 31, 2002
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Dear Friends,

I have just read and signed the petition: "Suspend NFL Quarterback
Michael Vick for Dogfighting!"

Please take a moment to read about this important issue, and join me in
signing the petition. It takes just 30 seconds, but can truly make a
difference. We are trying to reach 10,000 signatures - please sign here:
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/takeaction/354020737

Once you have signed, you can help even more by asking your friends and
family to sign as well.

Thank you!

V. Cripps


http://www.thePetitionSite.com
 
Signed petition

Thank you for bringing this to my attention. I signed the petition.
Sharon
 
Sharon thank you for taking the time. I'm sickened and disheartened by this kind of cruelty.

V
 
Dear V,

Just breaks my heart! I have signed the petition with one of my favorite prayers for animals. Michael Vick should be booted to the curb and kicked around a little more! Suspension isn't enough punishment for this low life!
 
I'm also packing up whatever I own that has a Nike mark on it and am sending it back to the company. Maybe if everyone hit Nike in their pocket book they might become more socially aware and responsible.

The sports world should also take a stand against the seeming lack of humanity among so many of their kind.

The piece of sub-human excrement (Vicks) believes he's above it all... saying no matter what he does people will still want to be him... whatever, you egomanical waste of skin.


V

P.S. Diane... thanks for caring and signing.
 
Holy Hannah.........Lets all step up and speak for those that cannot speak for themselves. Thanks for the heads-up V...signed sealed and delivered...
jeannie
 
Thanks Jeannie. I'm sure all the support will be much appreciated. :)

V
 
Victoria, I couldn't read the artical...I will have nightmares. I did go sign and then copied your post and emailed to the people on my list that I know will be mad as hell!
Thanks for bringing this to our attention!
 
I signed and will pass it on. This sick jerk needs to get booted for good. I hate people like him it makes me crazy to know he will get a slap on the wrist. Thanks Victoria for your passion on this matter!
 
signed and passed on.....funny thing was tonight's local news featured a well respected sports journalist commenting on just this topic and his view was it was time the NFL took and made an example and others should follow. As heinous as this crime against an innocent animal was, it is just a drop in the bucket - just watch Animal Planet's Animal Cops Miami or Detroit.
I was impressed that this veteran newsman would make the statements he did.
 
There is power in collective voices...

DAVE GOLDBERG and LARRY O'DELL, Associated Press Writers

No matter how nuanced his confession for involvement in dogfighting, Michael Vick got no leniency Friday from the NFL.

Commissioner Roger Goodell suspended the Atlanta Falcons quarterback indefinitely without pay, just hours after Vick filed a plea agreement that portrayed him as less involved than three co-defendants and guilty mainly of poor judgment for associating with them.

Vick acknowledged bankrolling gambling on the dogfights, but denied placing bets himself or taking any of the winnings. He admitted that dogs not worthy of the pit were killed "as a result of the collective efforts" of himself and two co-defendants.

Goodell wasn't moved and didn't bother to wait until Monday, when U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson will formally accept the plea and set a sentencing date likely to land Vick in prison for one to five years.

The commissioner said Vick's admitted conduct was "not only illegal but also cruel and reprehensible." Even if he didn't personally place bets, Goodell said, "your actions in funding the betting and your association with illegal gambling both violate the terms of your NFL player contract and expose you to corrupting influences in derogation of one of the most fundamental responsibilities of an NFL player."

Goodell freed the Falcons to "assert any claims or remedies" to recover $22 million of Vick's signing bonus from the 10-year, $130 million contract he signed in 2004.

The commissioner didn't speak to Vick but based his decision on the court filings. NFL spokesman Greg Aiello said Goodell may meet with Vick in the future, and Goodell said he would review the suspension after all the legal proceedings.

"You have engaged in conduct detrimental to the welfare of the NFL and have violated the league's personal conduct policy," Goodell told Vick in a letter after meeting in New York with Falcons president and general manager Rich McKay.

"You are now justifiably facing consequences for the decisions you made and the conduct in which you engaged. Your career, freedom and public standing are now in the most serious jeopardy," Goodell wrote. "I hope that you will be able to learn from this difficult experience and emerge from it better prepared to act responsibly and to make the kinds of choices that are expected of a conscientious and law abiding citizen."

Falcons owner Arthur Blank supported Goodell's decision and said:

"We hope that Michael will use this time, not only to further address his legal matters, but to take positive steps to improve his personal life."

Nike, meantime, said it terminated its contract with Vick.

Earlier Friday in Richmond, Va., a "summary of facts" signed by Vick was filed along with his written plea agreement on a federal dogfighting conspiracy charge.

"While Mr. Vick is not personally charged with or responsible for committing all of the acts alleged in the indictment, as with any conspiracy charge, he is taking full responsibility for his actions and the actions of the others involved," the defense team said in a written statement after the plea agreement was filed.

"Mr. Vick apologizes for his poor judgment in associating himself with those involved in dog fighting and realizes he should never have been involved in this conduct," the statement said.

Vick and his lawyers said his involvement was limited when it came to the enterprise known as the Bad Newz Kennels.

"Our position has been that we are going to try to help Judge Hudson understand all the facts and Michael's role," Vick's defense attorney, Billy Martin, said in telephone interview. "Michael's role was different than others associated with this incident."

Vick's summary of facts said he provided most of the Bad Newz Kennels operation and gambling monies, echoing language in plea agreements by the three co-defendants — Tony Taylor, Purnell Peace and Quanis Phillips.

When the dogs won, the statement said, gambling proceeds were generally shared by Taylor, Peace and Phillips.

"Vick did not gamble by placing side bets on any of the fights. Vick did not receive any of the proceeds of the purses that were won by Bad Newz Kennels," the court document said.

According to the statement, Vick also was involved with the others in killing six to eight dogs that did not perform well in testing sessions last April. The dogs were executed by drowning or hanging.

"Vick agrees and stipulates that these dogs all died as a result of the collective efforts" of Vick, Phillips and Peace, the statement said.

In the plea agreement, the government committed to recommending a sentence on the low end of the federal sentencing guideline range of a year to 18 months. However, the conspiracy charge is punishable by up to five years in prison, and the judge is not bound by any recommendation or by the guidelines.

Hudson has a reputation for imposing stiff sentences, according to lawyers who have appeared in his court. The judge will set a sentencing date at Monday's hearing.

Martin said Vick will "speak to the public and explain his actions." Though he declined to say when and where, the Tom Joyner Morning Show, a syndicated program based in Dallas, said it will have a live interview with Vick on Tuesday.

The case began in April when authorities conducting a drug investigation of Vick's cousin raided a Surry County property owned by Vick and found dozens of dogs, some injured, and equipment commonly used in dogfighting.

A federal indictment issued in July charged Vick, Peace, Phillips and Taylor with an interstate dogfighting conspiracy. Vick initially denied any involvement, and all four men pleaded innocent. The three co-defendants later pleaded guilty and agreed to testify against Vick.

Taylor was the first to change his plea, saying Vick financed the dogfighting ring's gambling and operations. Peace and Phillips soon followed, alleging that Vick joined them in killing dogs that did not measure up in test fights.

The sickening details outlined in the indictment and other court papers prompted a public backlash against Vick, who had been one of the NFL's most popular players.

Animal-rights groups mobilized against Vick — even protesting at NFL headquarters in New York — and sponsors dropped him.

"It is fitting that the NFL has suspended him," said Wayne Pacelle, president and CEO of The Humane Society of the United States. "He's now a role model for something terrible, and it's not appropriate that he suit up in an NFL uniform."
 
While I do think jail time is in his future, I think a better and more fitting lesson is community service, dedicated to the rescue and care of abandonned and abused animals.
Oh, and no more football for the duration of the community service.

V
 
I agree with you, victoria. Maybe it would teach him a little compassion.
I just don't understand the sick minds that get off on that kind of thing.
And to think they are saying that within 3 years he'll be back on the field.
:fdevil:
 
I don't object to his being back on the field. He has to make a legal living doing what he is good at. But first he has lessons to learn.

V
 
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