Los Angeles Times

Plan targets cockfighti­ng

L.A. County officials consider limits on rooster ownership as a way to reduce cruelty.

- By Howard Blume howard.blume @latimes.com Twitter: @howardblum­e

When Los Angeles County officials raided a property in rural Val Verde in May, they came upon an extraordin­ary sight — nearly 8,000 roosters who were raised and primed to battle to the death.

Officials described the episode as the largest seizure of fighting cocks in U.S. history, and they say their investigat­ion remains active.

Although cockfighti­ng is already prosecutab­le under several laws, Los Angeles County supervisor­s directed staff last week to evaluate a plan that would limit the number of roosters allowed on a property.

“This is animal cruelty,” said Supervisor Kathryn Barger, who represents the Val Verde area. “The razors they put on their feet — if that’s a sport, then God help us all. It’s appalling.

“And this also attracts a pretty unsavory element as it relates to gambling and drugs and, in some cases, prostituti­on,” she said.

In addition to those concerns, authoritie­s say the practice poses a major public health risk. Diseases can spread to legal flocks and even humans.

“Some places we’ve been to are in the middle of tract homes and have several hundred birds in backyards,” said Lt. John Lecrivain, who supervises the L.A. County Sheriff ’s Department team that is handling the Val Verde investigat­ion.

Lecrivain thinks the proposal could help. He wouldn’t expect officers to begin sweeps through homes. There’s only so much manpower to respond to complaints, but they do come.

“One rooster is pretty loud,” he said. “Put 100 in a backyard, it’s pretty deafening.”

The Val Verde property was in a canyon out of sight from the road — an ideal place to store and breed fighting roosters. The property had been the site of an earlier bust that yielded 2,700 roosters.

One element of the investigat­ion has been to look at the role of the property owner and find the bigger players in the racket.

The proposed ordinance is aimed at smaller groups of fighting roosters. The Val Verde investigat­ion, for example, led to a property in more urban Pacoima where roosters were being kept, said Raul Rodriguez, an animal control manager with L.A. County.

Those studying the proposal will also consider the interests of people who own roosters and chickens to keep as pets or for the production of fresh eggs, officials say.

An ordinance would have to balance competing, legitimate interests, said Tony Bell, a spokesman for Barger. And different rules might be needed for large parcels in rural areas compared to urban neighborho­ods or industrial chicken farms, he said.

 ?? Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times ?? AUTHORITIE­S say cockfighti­ng, an illegal practice that can be prosecuted, also poses a public health risk.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times AUTHORITIE­S say cockfighti­ng, an illegal practice that can be prosecuted, also poses a public health risk.

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