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U.S. cockfighting busts reveal Philippine connection

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From ANIMAL PEOPLE, March 2008:

 

 

U.S. cockfighting busts reveal Philippine connection

 

HONOLULU--Alleged cockfighter Joseph Marty Toralba, 39, on

February 21, 2008 became one of the first persons indicted under the

May 2007 U.S. federal Animal Fighting Prohibition Enforcement Act,

prosecutor Ed Kubo told reporters. The act added felony provisions

to existing federal law against transporting animals for fighting or

animal fighting paraphernalia across state or U.S. national

boundaries.

U.S. Customs agents at the Honolulu airport on February 2,

2008 found 263 cockfighting gaffs in boxes imported from the

Philippines that Toralba said held gas stoves, prosecutor Ed Kubo

alleged. Toralba, of Colfax, Louisiana, keeps 650 gamecocks and

breeding hens, Kuba noted.

Toralba was arrested four months after the San Diego County

Department of Animal Services seized 4,500 gamecocks from a ranch

near San Ysidro, California, less than a mile from the Mexican

border, that allegedly supplied fighting birds to Hawaii and the

Philippines, at prices of up to $1,000 for an egg and $2,000 for a

hatched gamecock.

" The federal law does not apply to raising and training the

birds, so the estimated 50 people arrested in the San Ysidro raid

are being charged under California law, which makes raising the

birds or staging the fights a misdemeanor with a maximum sentence of

a year in jail and a $5,000 fine, " wrote David Hasemyer of the San

Diego Union Tribune.

The 4,500 birds were killed on the property, which is within

the region where approximately three million poultry died or were

culled in 2002 as result of an exotic Newcastle disease outbreak that

apparently originated among gamecocks.

British Columbia SPCA spokesperson Drever questioned

the B.C. laws pertaining to cockfighting on February 29, 2008,

after 17 SPCA staff spent half a day killing 1,270 gamecocks seized

two days earlier from three sites near Cloverdale, in the Fraser

Valley. Drever hoped that as many as 30 people would be charged, as

result of a two-year investigation, but the Royal Canadian Mounted

Police had charged only one 58-year-old man by the end of the week.

He was released on his own recognizance.

The maximum penalty for cockfighting in British Columbia is

six months in jail and a $2,000 fine.

The alleged Cloverdale cockfighting venues were in a poultry

production hub where more than 17 million birds were killed in 2004

due to an outbreak of the avian flu H7N3. Highly contagious among

birds, H7N3 rarely passes to humans, but mildly infected two B.C.

poultry workers.

 

 

 

 

--

Merritt Clifton

Editor, ANIMAL PEOPLE

P.O. Box 960

Clinton, WA 98236

 

Telephone: 360-579-2505

Fax: 360-579-2575

E-mail: anmlpepl

Web: www.animalpeoplenews.org

 

[ANIMAL PEOPLE is the leading independent newspaper providing

original investigative coverage of animal protection worldwide,

founded in 1992. Our readership of 30,000-plus includes the

decision-makers at more than 10,000 animal protection organizations.

We have no alignment or affiliation with any other entity. $24/year;

for free sample, send address.]

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