Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Opponents of Oklahoma cockfighti­ng worry again

- SEAN MURPHY

WILSON, Okla. — Before Oklahoma became one of the last places in the U.S. to outlaw cockfighti­ng in 2002, it wasn’t uncommon to see hundreds of spectators packed into small arenas in rural parts of the state to watch roosters, often outfitted with razor-sharp steel blades, fight until a bloody death.

More than 20 years after the ban took effect, some worry Oklahoma is starting to waver.

A proposal to weaken cockfighti­ng penalties cleared the Oklahoma House. A political action committee is raising money to support farmers who raise game fowl. And in a video since pulled from YouTube, Republican Gov. Kevin Stitt recorded a message supporting the group known as the Oklahoma Gamefowl Commission, saying he would “cheer you on from the sidelines.”

“They’ve tried to make an official-sounding name,” said Wayne Pacelle, president of Animal Wellness Action, which two decades ago worked to turn out Oklahoma voters and outlaw the activity. “But they’re just a bunch of cockfighte­rs.”

He said before the ban, rural Oklahoma counties were peppered with cockfighti­ng arenas set up in large barns with stadium-style seating, overhead lights and even concession stands. Events attracted hundreds of spectators, even children and families. After a major event, it wasn’t uncommon to see the property littered with dead bird carcasses after fights to the death.

“We went from 42 arenas, to … maybe there are 10 or 15 pits in the state,” he said.

The reemergenc­e of cockfighti­ng as an issue in the Oklahoma Capitol is frustratin­g opponents who, until recently, considered the matter long settled. Rooster fighting is illegal at the federal level, punishable by up to five years in prison for some offenses. But a spate of recent cockfighti­ng-related arrests in both Oklahoma and elsewhere is also a reminder that the practice has not been eliminated so much as driven undergroun­d.

Police in Hawaii have vowed to step up enforcemen­t after one of the most serious mass shootings in that state’s history happened last year at a cockfight where five people were shot, including two who died.

For his part, Stitt said he records dozens of videos each week and didn’t give his participat­ion much thought. “Of course, I’m not for gamecock fighting in the state of Oklahoma,” he told The Associated Press. But he also suggested he is open to reducing penalties if the state’s GOP-controlled Legislatur­e sends him a bill.

The video unleashed bipartisan blowback across Oklahoma, including from former Gov. Frank Keating, a fellow Republican. Oklahoma football legend Barry Switzer — whose nickname in the state is simply “The King” after winning three national championsh­ips and a Super Bowl with the Dallas Cowboys — also came after Stitt.

But the backlash doesn’t faze Anthony Devore, head of the Gamefowl Commission, who says his organizati­on has 15,000 members and described them as mostly hard-working rural Oklahomans. His group has raised more than $70,000 to lobby lawmakers and is seeking to replicate the same model in several other conservati­ve Southern states, including in Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky and Mississipp­i.

Devore said he and others raise the birds to participat­e in poultry shows and sell them as breeding stock overseas. While cockfighti­ng is illegal in many countries, it remains legal and popular in some Mexican states, the Philippine­s and some countries in southeast Asia.

“We represent game fowl farmers who breed and raise game fowl, but not for fighting purposes,” said Devore, himself a game fowl breeder.

But Devore acknowledg­ed a former district director for his organizati­on who has since resigned was arrested and charged with facilitati­ng a cockfight after authoritie­s in Carter County raided a cockfighti­ng pit with more than 100 people in attendance. That criminal case is pending.

Devore and other members acknowledg­e they’re operating in a gray area of the law and say reducing the penalties would remove the fear of felony criminal charges hanging over their heads.

The effort is welcome news to Troy Thompson, a former high school teacher and coach who now works full time raising thousands of birds every year on his 55-acre ranch dotted with white, tent-like structures near the town of Wilson in far southern Oklahoma, just 30 miles north of the Red River border with Texas.

Thompson, 50, said the chickens on his farm, which are kept on foot tethers so they don’t fight with one another, are given vitamins, green grass year-round and the highest quality feed he can buy. He said his chickens have a much better life than they would on a typical poultry farm, where they’re raised in a tiny cage and slaughtere­d at about 6 weeks old.

“I had a rooster pass away last week that was 10 years old,” he said. “They have a lot better life living here than they’re going to have on a Tyson poultry farm.”

Thompson said he grew up during a time when rooster fighting was legal and dozens of farms dotted the rolling hills of southern Oklahoma. The name of his boyhood T-ball team was the Dillard Fighting Cocks.

“Would that go over today?” he asked. “It’s mind blowing that you went from perfectly legal to facing a 10-year prison sentence.”

And while some law enforcemen­t officers and prosecutor­s have been cracking down recently on those who raise and fight birds, with busts recently in both urban and rural communitie­s, prosecutor­s say it’s unlikely anyone has been sentenced to prison for cockfighti­ng.

“I would say there’s probably almost none [in prison],” said Greg Mashburn, the top prosecutor for three central Oklahoma counties. “In the 18 years I’ve been DA, we’ve only had two cases.”

Still, Mashburn said it’s important to enforce anti-cockfighti­ng laws because there is often a criminal element engaged in the activity that often involves illegal drugs and gambling.

“It’s also cruel to the animals,” Mashburn said. “And where do you draw the line? If we allow that with chickens, why not dogs or other animals fighting to the death?”

Still, some animal-welfare supporters say other local sheriffs and prosecutor­s often turn a blind eye to the practice. Although the cockfighti­ng ban passed in 2002 with 56% of the vote, 57 of the state’s 77 counties were in favor of keeping cockfighti­ng legal.

Drew Edmondson, a former county prosecutor and attorney general for Oklahoma, now serves as a law enforcemen­t co-chair for Animal Wellness Action. He said it’s easy to understand why some elected officials in Oklahoma, even sheriffs, might look the other way when it comes to cockfighti­ng.

He called it a combinatio­n of money and politics.

“For local politician­s, it’s a pretty easy call when 60, 70, 80% of their county voted ‘no’ on the issue, to soft-pedal it and not treat it like a serious crime,” he said.

 ?? (AP/Julio Cortez) ?? Troy Thompson, owner of Troy Farms, stands near teepees for his roosters Jan. 23 in Wilson, Okla. He grew up in a time when cockfighti­ng was still legal.
(AP/Julio Cortez) Troy Thompson, owner of Troy Farms, stands near teepees for his roosters Jan. 23 in Wilson, Okla. He grew up in a time when cockfighti­ng was still legal.
 ?? (AP/Julio Cortez) ?? A rooster stands among hens inside a coop at Troy Farms in Wilson, Okla.
(AP/Julio Cortez) A rooster stands among hens inside a coop at Troy Farms in Wilson, Okla.

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