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Major Cockfight Bust in San Diego

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This comes just days after an angry cockfighter in

Northern California opened fire killing a cockfight

referee and wounding several others.

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10 Held in Raid on Cockfight Ranch

San Diego: The operation is called one of the largest

ever found in the West. The arrests culminate a

two-year investigation.

By TONY PERRY, Times Staff Writer

 

 

SAN DIEGO--Authorities on Saturday raided what they

described as one of the biggest cockfighting

operations ever uncovered in the West: a 20-acre ranch

near the Mexican border with more than 2,500 fighting

birds.

Ten people were arrested during the raid by police

from San Diego and Los Angeles and officers from the

San Diego Humane Society and other animal-protection

agencies.

" We're overwhelmed by the amount of birds; it's

incredible, " said San Diego Humane Society Capt. Ken

Beauregard.

The raid in the rural San Ysidro section of San Diego

culminated a two-year investigation, including the use

of undercover informants.

Officials are investigating whether the ranch on

Hollister Street provided birds throughout the state

for use in a clandestine sport that seems to be

spreading despite vigorous enforcement efforts.

" We need to send a strong message to the people of

Southern California: We're going to be serving more

search warrants on this brutal, barbaric activity, "

Beauregard said.

Although there was no resistance when about 70

officers arrived late in the afternoon at the ranch,

dozens of men, women and children tried to flee.

" They scattered into bushes, jumped over fences, even

tried to climb trees, but we got most of them, " said

San Diego Humane Society spokeswoman Gigi Bacon

Theberge.

Officers from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's

Department and the Galt Police Department near

Sacramento assisted because of their experience with

similar raids in their regions.

Many of the roosters had the telltale sign of being

bred for fighting: the natural spurs on their legs had

been trimmed so that steel gaffs would fit snugly.

Fighting birds are kept in individual cages because

they are bred for fighting.

" There were a lot of bloody feathers around, " Theberge

said. " Some of the birds are bleeding and in very bad

shape. "

A veterinary technician accompanied the raiding party

to provide assistance for the birds. Officials found a

" fighting pit " littered with bloody feathers.

Breeding birds for cockfighting, possessing

cockfighting paraphernalia or attending a cockfight is

illegal in California. But the sport, usually

accompanied by gambling, is legal in Mexico.

Officials seized boxes of spurs and so-called boxing

gloves used for sparring matches when birds are

trained to fight to the death.

Although Saturday's raid was the largest, San Diego

County has had several such raids in recent years.

People arrested often plead no contest and are given

$500 fines and suspended jail sentences.

" Cockfighting is a very, very big underground industry

in all 50 states, " said Wayne Pacelle of the Humane

Society of the United States, which has led a national

campaign against the sport. The group assisted in

Saturday's raid.

Pacelle said an operation of 300 to 400 birds is

considered large, making the catch in San Ysidro even

more significant.

A bird with a " killer instinct " can often be sold for

several hundred dollars, sometimes up to $1,000.

Handlers pump drugs into the birds to increase

aggressiveness. Razor-sharp knives or spurs are

attached to the birds' legs. The birds peck and kick

at each other until one collapses.

Because of its large and diverse population,

California is considered a hot spot for cockfighting,

along with Mississippi and Alabama, although a large

ring was recently uncovered in Queens, N.Y.

Although cockfighting is legal in only three

states--Oklahoma, Louisiana and New Mexico--opponents

estimate that 30,000 to 40,000 people engage in the

sport.

There are three monthly magazines devoted to

cockfighting, each with more than 10,000 rs.

They carry ads for birds and fighting paraphernalia

and often include appeals to battle efforts by the

Humane Society.

Pacelle said cockfighting is often associated with

drug sales, gambling and violence. An outraged

cockfight handler shot and killed a referee at a San

Joaquin Valley match recently.

* * *

Times staff writers Jean Merl and Joe Mozingo

contributed to this story. Search the archives of the

Los Angeles Times for similar stories about: Arrests -

San Diego, Cockfighting, Sting Operations. You will

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Copyright 2001 Los Angeles Times Click for

permission to reprint (PRC# 1.528.2001_000044491)

 

 

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