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Thread: Vick INDICTED!

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  1. #1
    He doesn't know what his sentence will be, as he has yet to be sentenced. It's possible he just wanted to surrender without the publicity.
    The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.

  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Lady's Human
    He doesn't know what his sentence will be, as he has yet to be sentenced. It's possible he just wanted to surrender without the publicity.

    What I meant was, how can they hold him when he hasn't been legally
    sentenced ? How can he start to repay the state's requirements when
    the sentence hasn't been given?
    I've Been Boo'd

    I've been Frosted






    Today is the oldest you've ever been, and the youngest you'll ever be again.

    Eleanor Roosevelt

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    Maybe he's hoping he will get a lighter sentence by starting early.
    No matter what anyone does, someone some where will be offended some how!!!!
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  4. #4
    Liz,

    Vick was out on bond pending sentencing.(Many, many criminals are held pending sentencing) Essentially he revoked his own bail and turned himself in.
    The one eyed man in the kingdom of the blind wasn't king, he was stoned for seeing light.

  5. #5

    More Vick news ~ Restitution money put in escrow ...

    Mickey's been saving his quarters ...
    (November 29, 2007)

    Vick agrees to fund to care for seized dogs ...

    Suspended QB set aside close to $1 million to pay for care of 54 pit bulls.

    MSNBC staff and news service reports
    updated 3:15 p.m. ET, Thurs., Nov. 29, 2007

    Suspended Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick has agreed to set aside close to $1 million to pay for the care of the 54 pit bulls seized from his dog fighting operation.

    In court documents obtained by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Billy Martin, one of Vick's attorneys, said Vick will deposit $928,073 on Friday into an escrow account controlled by Martin's Washington law firm.

    The money is being set aside "to pay whatever restitution amount is ultimately ordered in this case," a court filing said, according to the Journal-Constitution.

    In court papers filed last week, the government asked U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson to issue a restraining order that essentially would freeze the money to fulfill Vick's legal obligation to cover the costs of caring for the dogs and finding homes for them.

    Vick faces a prison term of up to five years when he is sentenced Dec. 10 on a federal dog fighting conspiracy conviction. He voluntarily began serving his prison term on Nov. 19 in Warsaw, Va.

    The pit bulls were confiscated from his Bad Newz Kennels property in Surry County.

    On Tuesday, a judge scheduled for April 2 a jury trial on state dog fighting charges.

    The dogfighting operation known as Bad Newz Kennels operated since 2001 on Vick's 15-acre spread in Surry County. A drug investigation of a Vick relative led authorities to the property, where they found more than 50 pit bulls and equipment commonly used in dogfighting.

  6. #6

    The DOGS get their Day in Court - Justice is Served!



    Vick sentenced to 23 months for dogfighting

    Star QB tells judge he's 'willing to accept responsibility for my actions'


    RICHMOND, Va. - Michael Vick was sentenced to 23 months in prison Monday for his role in a dogfighting conspiracy that involved gambling and killing pit bulls.


    The suspended Atlanta Falcons quarterback could have been sentenced up to five years by U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson. Vick, who turned himself in Nov. 19 in anticipation of his sentence, was wearing a black-and-white striped prison suit.


    After Vick apologized to the court and his family, Hudson told him: “You need to apologize to the millions of young people who looked up to you.”


    Federal rules governing time off for good behavior could reduce Vick’s prison stay by about three months, resulting in a summer 2009 release.


    Vick was suspended without pay by the NFL and lost all his lucrative endorsement deals.


    Two of Vick’s co-defendants were sentenced Nov. 30. Purnell Peace of Virginia Beach got 18 months, Quanis Phillips of Atlanta 21 months. Another co-defendant, Tony Taylor, will be sentenced Friday.
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------


    THANKS, Judge Hudson, for setting the penalty above the minimum.
    We need a few more Judges who treat dogfighting as the Serious CRIME that it is!


    /s/ Phred



  7. #7
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    23 months works for me. I would have liked longer but this will do.
    Amber: Mom to Connor, Carson, Sadie, Maggie and Grant

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