SUPPORT NO BAIL for MICHAEL VICK. Vick is due in federal court in Richmond, Va., for a bond hearing before U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis Dohnal at 3:30 p.m. and an arraignment at 4p.m. before U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson.
WHAT YOU CAN DO: Contact the Judges and tell them you SUPPORT NO BAIL for MICHAEL VICK!
Here is how:
Hon. Dennis W. Dohnal
United States District Court, Eastern Virginia Phone: (804) 916-2270
Hon. Henry E. Hudson United States District Court, Eastern Virginia Phone: (804) 916-2290
CALL NOW AND SUPPORT NO BAIL FOR MICHAEL VICK.
It only takes a second to send a message.
Read here the entire Indictment http://www.thesmokinggun.com/archive/...
on how Michael Vick brutally tortured and murdered these dogs, including electrocution, beating to death by slamming to the ground, hanging, choking and shooting mercilessly.Michael Vick Indicted
Feds: Falcons QB, cohorts executed pit bulls that failed fight tests
JULY 17--NFL star Michael Vick was indicted today on a federal conspiracy charge for his alleged role in a dog fighting venture that operated from a Virginia property owned by the Atlanta Falcons quarterback. A copy of the indictment, filed today in U.S. District Court in Richmond, can be found below. The 27-year-old Vick, whose nickname is listed as "Ookie" in the indictment, allegedly established the Bad Newz Kennels in early-2001 in Smithfield, Virginia. It was this property, for which Vick paid $34,000, that the star athlete and his codefendants used as the "main staging area for housing and training the pit bulls involved in the dog fighting venture and hosting dog fights." According to prosecutors, Vick and his cohorts began purchasing pit bull puppies in late-2001 and would eventually "sponsor" individual dog fights with purses as high as $26,000. In the indictment's most harrowing parts, federal investigators describe what happened to some Bad Newz Kennels dogs that either lost matches or did not perform well in test fights. After a March 2003 loss by a female pit bull, codefendant Purnell Peace, "after consulting with Vick," electrocuted the animal. In April, prosecutors allege, Vick, Peace, and Quanis Phillips, "executed approximately 8 dogs that did not perform well in 'testing' sessions." These animals, the indictment claims, were killed "by various methods, including hanging, drowning, and slamming at least one dog's body to the ground." (more)