Vick Indicted!

Out early?

By Charles Robinson and Jason Cole, Yahoo! Sports
January 4, 2008

Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick could be getting out of federal prison much earlier than anticipated after applying for a prison-monitored drug rehabilitation program and evidently being moved into the program in Leavenworth, Kan.

The program could have Vick out of prison by the end of this year and perhaps back in the NFL by the 2009 season.

A source confirmed to Yahoo! Sports on Friday that Vick has applied to the program, which is run only at the federal facility at Leavenworth. An official with the Federal Bureau of Prisons said Friday that Vick was being transported to Leavenworth.

Under the program, Vick could be released after serving only 12 months of the 23-month sentence Vick was given Dec. 10 in Richmond, Va. It’s unclear exactly when Vick would be released because it’s unclear whether the 12-month term starts from when he voluntarily began serving his prison term in November or whether it starts from when he enters Leavenworth.

Part of the reason Vick was given a 23-month sentence was that he failed a drug test for marijuana after pleading guilty to charges relating to dog fighting. Vick is expected to be held in a minimum security wing of the prison at Leavenworth. According to a federal source, Vick is currently in transit to a minimum security satellite prison that is under the jurisdiction of the Leavenworth facility.

Although it’s unknown what the standards are for entrance to the drug rehabilitation program, two sources confirmed that Vick was eligible for it. An official at Leavenworth told Yahoo! Sports that Vick would have to spend a minimum of one month at the prison before qualifying for the program.

Calls and emails to Vick’s attorney, Billy Martin, were not immediately returned Friday, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Gill refused to comment on Vick’s application.

“I can’t confirm or deny anything on it,” Gill said.

As it stands, Vick’s 23-month prison term could translate to a release in the summer of 2009, putting his attempts at a return to the NFL for that season in jeopardy. But if Vick were to be released in late 2008 or early 2009, his opportunity to return to the league after missing only two seasons would be boosted significantly. Members of Vick’s camp continue to hope that NFL commissioner Roger Goodell will decline to tack on a lengthy suspension following Vick’s release from prison.

Humane Society investigator John Goodwin expressed moderate dismay at the news Vick might get out earlier.

“At the time that he was sentenced, I and a lot of other people who watched this case felt Vick received a fair sentence,” Goodwin said. "If this really happens, that he’s able to get out in what’s basically half the time, I think there’s going to be a lot of outrage about the whole situation.

“It’s just another example of big money allowing someone to get away with something the rest of society couldn’t.”


http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/football/nfl/01/07/bc.fbn.vick.prison.ap/index.html

While this doesn’t say that Vick will definately get out earlier, what kills me is that if he didn’t test positive for drugs, none of this would be an issue. I thought he was sorry for what he did and was willing to pay the price for his actions. I guess Vick was just full of shit and like any other person was looking for a way out.

I wonder what the Humane Societies next move on this is going to be.

Vick transferred to Kansas jail
QB will reportedly enter drug treatment program
Posted: Monday January 7, 2008 4:11PM; Updated: Monday January 7, 2008 7:24PM

RICHMOND, Va. (AP) – Michael Vick left Virginia on Monday to enter a drug treatment program at a Kansas prison, a move that could reduce the former NFL star’s 23-month sentence on a federal dogfighting conviction.

The suspended Atlanta Falcons quarterback is now at the U.S. Bureau of Prisons minimum security facility in Leavenworth, his attorney, Billy Martin, said.

“Mr. Vick hopes to participate in programs offered at that facility, including the Bureau of Prisons drug treatment program,” Martin said in a statement.

Vick tested positive for marijuana in September while he was on supervised release following his guilty plea. The residential drug treatment programs at Bureau of Prisons institutions take place in units set apart from the general prison population, lasting at least 500 hours over six to 12 months, according to Bureau of Prisons policy.

Upon successful completion of the program, nonviolent offenders may be granted up to one year of early release. Staff members review the inmates’ records and behavior to determine if they are eligible for early release.

If Vick was granted early release, he could be ready to play in the 2009 football season, though he is currently suspended without pay by the NFL.

“Mr. Vick looks forward to being reunited with his family upon completion of his sentence,” Martin said. “He is hopeful that following his release he will have the opportunity to resume his career as a professional football player.”

Vick was accompanied by U.S. marshals when he left the Northern Neck Regional Jail on Monday morning, said Maj. Ted Hull of the Warsaw, Va., jail.

Yahoo! Sports first reported Friday that Vick planned to enter a drug treatment program at Leavenworth.

Vick and three co-defendants raised pit bulls and trained them for fighting behind the property he owned in rural Surry County. Several dogs that did not perform well in test fights were executed.

The 27-year-old player pleaded guilty in August, admitting he bankrolled the dogfighting operation and helped kill six to eight dogs. He had been held at the Warsaw jail since he surrendered Nov. 19 in anticipation of his sentence.

Vick lost all his lucrative endorsement deals and still must contend with additional legal woes: He and co-defendants Purnell Peace, Quanis Phillips and Tony Taylor are facing state animal cruelty charges in Surry County. Vick’s trial is set for April 2.

http://sports.yahoo.com/nfl/news;_ylt=AmYU_GgmhLrZ9wJPIi1jAdhDubYF?slug=ap-vick-dogfighting&prov=ap&type=lgns

Man who sold pit bull to Vick gets probation and $500 fine

By LARRY O’DELL, Associated Press Writer
January 25, 2008
RICHMOND, Va. (AP) – A man who sold a female pit bull to Michael Vick’s dogfighting operation and attended some of the fights avoided prison time Friday because he cooperated with investigators and did not physically harm any of the dogs.
Oscar Allen was sentenced to three years probation and fined $500 for his limited involvement in the Bad Newz Kennels dogfighting ring that operated out of Vick’s 15-acre spread in rural Surry County.

Vick, the suspended star quarterback for the Atlanta Falcons, was sentenced in December to 23 months in federal prison. Three co-defendants also have been sentenced to prison terms.
“Your case is in a clearly different class than the other defendants who’ve appeared before me,” U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson told the 67-year-old Allen. “But for your cooperation the case would not have developed as smoothly and completely as it did.”
Allen, from the Williamsburg area, pleaded guilty in October to conspiracy to travel in interstate commerce to aid in illegal gambling and to sponsor a dog in animal fighting – the same charge to which Vick and the other three men pleaded guilty.
Allen faced a maximum of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine, but federal prosecutors recommended that he spend no time in prison because he cooperated with investigators, had no prior criminal record and was a minor player in Vick’s dogfighting enterprise.
“He came in and cooperated without any immunity or protection, knowing he would be charged,” said prosecutor Michael Gill. He said information supplied by Allen was “a significant factor” in obtaining guilty pleas from Vick and the others.
Prosecutors said that while Allen helped conduct test fights to determine which dogs were good fighters, he was not involved in killing the six to eight that performed poorly.
“I see no evidence of any cruel acts toward animals in this case,” Hudson said.
The judge told Allen that the light punishment did not mean he condoned Allen’s behavior. “You clearly aided and abetted this conspiracy,” he said.
Asked if he had anything to say, Allen told Hudson: “I would just like to apologize to the court for my actions and say I am very sorry.”
Allen sold to Vick’s operation a pit bull named Jane, one of dozens of dogs seized by authorities during a raid in April. Hudson appointed Rebecca J. Huss, professor at the Valparaiso University School of Law, guardian of the dogs.
Based on her recommendations, 47 dogs have been sent to eight animal rescue organizations throughout the country. Two previously were euthanized – one for medical reasons, another because of behavioral issues.
Huss said in a telephone interview Friday that she hopes many of the 47 pit bulls eventually can be adopted by families. Some will require lifetime care by the rescue organizations.
“The individual organizations will be following their own guidelines,” Huss said. “The dogs will have to show they are not a danger to public safety. We have to make sure they have the tools they need to be successful in society.”
She said she has interacted with all the dogs.
“I don’t want to minimize the damage that’s been done because a lot of them have a long way to go,” Huss said. “But what’s amazing is how resilient they are. Most of them want to be with people, but some are still cautious.”
She said Jane was not one of the two euthanized.
“She’s a rambunctious dog,” Huss said. “She entertains herself and, physically, she’s in good shape. She’s a dog that makes a good impression on you.”
Allen was indicted separately from Vick and three co-defendants. Purnell Peace of Virginia Beach was sentenced to 18 months, Quanis Phillips of Atlanta to 21 months and Tony Taylor of Hampton, Va., to 2 months.
Those four men also face state animal cruelty charges in Surry County. Vick’s trial is set for April 2.
Vick, who admitted bankrolling the dogfighting operation and helping execute dogs, entered a minimum-security prison in Leavenworth, Kan., this month.


http://www.cnn.com/2008/LIVING/wayoflife/01/27/vick.dogs.ap/index.html

From fighters to friends, Vick’s pit bulls learn new life

(AP) – His back resting comfortably against her chest, Hector nestles his massive canine head into Leslie Nuccio’s shoulder, high-fiving pit bull paws against human hands.
The big dog – 52 pounds – is social, people-focused, happy now, it seems, wearing a rhinestone collar in his new home in sunny California.

But as Hector sits up, deep scars stand out on his chest, and his eyes are imploring.
Hector ought to be dead, Nuccio knows – killed in a staged fight, executed for not winning or euthanized by those who see pit bulls seized in busts as “kennel trash,” unsuited to any kind of normal life.
Instead, Hector is learning how to be a pet.

After the hell of a fighting ring, he has reached a heaven of sorts: saved by a series of unlikely breaks, transported thousands of miles, along with other dogs rescued with him, and now nurtured by Nuccio, her roommate, Danielle White, and their three other dogs.

The animals barrel around the house, with 4-year-old Hector leading the puppy-like antics – stealth underwear grabs from the laundry basket, dashes across the living room, food heists from the coffee table – until it’s “love time” and he decelerates and engulfs the women in a hug.
“I wish he could let us know what happened to him,” says Nuccio, the big tan dog’s foster mother.
But what she does know is this: Hector has come a long way since he was trapped in the horrors of Michael Vick’s Bad Newz Kennels.

The bust
Authorities descending last year on 1915 Moonlight Road in Surry County, Virginia, found the venue where Vick, the former NFL quarterback, and others staged pit bull fights in covered sheds, tested the animals’ fighting prowess and destroyed and disposed of dogs that weren’t good fighters.

Vick is serving a 23-month federal sentence after admitting he bankrolled the dogfighting operation and helped kill at least six dogs. Three co-defendants also pleaded guilty and were sentenced. The four now face state animal cruelty charges.
Oscar Allen, who sold a champion pit bull to Vick’s dogfighting operation, was sentenced Friday on a federal dogfighting charge.

Officers who carried out the raid found dogs, some injured and scarred, chained to buried car axles. Forensic experts discovered remains of dogs that had been shot, electrocuted, drowned, hanged or slammed to the ground for lacking a desire to fight.
Hector and more than 50 other American Pit Bull Terriers or pit bull mixes were gathered up. So were “parting sticks” used to open fighting dogs’ mouths, treadmills to condition them and a “rape stand” used to restrain female dogs that did not submit willingly to breeding.

The dogs, held as evidence in the criminal prosecutions, were taken to six different pounds and shelters in Virginia.
Hector was bunked in the Hanover pound in a cage below a dog named Uba who was smaller and showing anxiety.
Uba flattened on all fours when Tim Racer, an evaluator on a team assembled by the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, arrived at his cage.

“Are you going to kill me now?” was the message another evaluator, Donna Reynolds, read in Uba’s eyes.
The black-and-white dog tried to wriggle away once out of the cage, but he came around after a while. He wagged his tail when the team showed him a 4-foot doll, to test his response to children. He spun around and got into a play position when they brought out a dog.
“This is the big secret. Most of them were dog-tolerant to dog-social. It was completely opposite of what we were led to believe,” Reynolds said.

How much to trust the capacity of fighting dogs to have a new life as pets or working dogs is an issue that has divided animal advocates. Some believe they should be put down as a precaution, while others say they must be evaluated individually. One dog seized at Bad Newz was euthanized as too aggressive, but the others have had different fates.
Nearly half have been sent to a Utah sanctuary, Best Friends Animal Society, where handlers will work with them. None showed human aggression and many have potential for adoption someday. Others, evaluated as being immediate candidates for foster care and eventual adoption, went to several other groups.

Chance for a new life
Among the latter was Hector.
A team of animal welfare experts got things rolling last July when federal authorities sought ownership of the seized dogs. The result, they say, was groundbreaking.
The Oakland, California-based pit bull rescue and education group Bay Area Doglovers Responsible About Pit Bulls, or BAD RAP, which had done similar rescues from busts in California, asked Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Gill for permission to evaluate and rescue as many of the dogs as possible, with the hope of eventually placing them in adoptive homes.

“Much to our amazement, he said yes,” said Reynolds, who heads BAD RAP. “This doesn’t happen. People don’t say yes to pit bulls.”
Gill declined to comment, but those familiar with the Vick case said the Justice Department hoped early on to find a way to give the dogs a second chance. As part of his plea deal, Vick agreed to pay for the dogs’ care.

The court even appointed a guardian and special master, Valparaiso University animal law expert Rebecca Huss, who oversaw the dogs’ disposition and recommended which rescue groups would accept them.
One result of the unusual process, said ASPCA’s Stephen Zawistowski, is that shelters that always euthanized such dogs are now saying “you’ve given us permission to care” about giving them a second chance.

Each dog was evaluated as an individual. Huss recalled the good-natured-but-quiet Rose, whose overbreeding had led to mammary tumors. In the end, needing surgery but unable to tolerate anesthesia, Rose was mercifully put down, just days after being transferred to a foster home.
“The good thing was she didn’t die in the shelter,” Huss said. “She had a little time in the sun, not enough, but a little time in the sun.”

Huss received reports from an ASPCA-led evaluation team and from volunteers who observed and worked with the dogs where they were being held as evidence in shelters and pounds.
Nicole Rattay, a volunteer from BAD RAP, spent six weeks visiting the Vick dogs in shelters every day, e-mailing and phoning her observations to Huss.

“Some dogs were ready to learn ‘sit’ and obedience,” she said. “Some needed more time to accept touch and feel comfortable in their surrounding. Sometimes I would just sit in their kennels.” For some, bits of roasted chicken became a “motivator,” she said.

She mentioned Handsome Dan, who bridled at touching at first but gradually grew more comfortable, though not enough for foster home placement, at least not yet. He ended up going to Best Friends.
“I hope that he can overcome what was done to him,” said Rattay.
Hector’s journey
BAD RAP won government approval in mid-October to transport a group of dogs to California foster homes to get them out of confinement.

Hector and a dozen others were about to make the cross-country trip in a rented 33-foot recreational vehicle.
But first, they had to get ready.

Four BAD RAP members – Racer, Reynolds, Rattay and Steve Smith – cruised a Richmond, Virginia, Wal-Mart, loading up with doggy sleeping mats, crates, bowls and chew sticks. The next day, they split up in twos to pick up, bathe and exercise the 13 pit bulls from four shelters. Then they loaded them up.
Rattay walked through the RV, cooing and checking her cargo to the thump-thump-thump of happy tails against dog crates. One dog circled his bed. Another stretched and yawned. A third slathered her outstretched hand with kisses.
“Oh my goodness,” she cooed to them. “It’s nice to see you again. Hi buddy, hi.”

At first, the caretakers put cardboard between the crates to offer the dogs privacy and calm. “But they were happier when they could see their neighbor,” Rattay said.
She and Smith took turns driving and napping on the 2½-day trip (Racer and Reynolds flew home to prepare for the dogs’ arrival).

The dogs drifted to sleep in their crates – atop the RV table, benches, queen bed and couch, and an area above the cab – but jumped right up each time the RV stopped for a break at a highway rest area.
Assembly-line style, the couple walked, watered and fed each of the 13 dogs, causing some gawks from other drivers who’d stopped, but never any questions from the dogs.

“They did fabulous,” Rattay said. “They understood the program right away and got in and out of their crates.”
Mostly things went fine for Hector and his fellow passengers in the rolling kennel, though one incident briefly worried Smith and Rattay.
It hadn’t occurred to them to map a route that avoided places with ordinances banning pit bulls. A groundskeeper at an Arkansas rest stop warned them that “further down the road, they will take that dog from you unless you have proper paperwork.”

“We finished it up and got moving,” Rattay said.
At 10 a.m. on a Tuesday, Rattay pulled the RV in front of Racer and Reynolds’ house.
It had been a long trip, and soon after the two couples unloaded and walked the dogs, both drivers and animals fell asleep in the living room waiting for foster families to arrive.
Smith snored a little, Rattay remembered, and a dog gave a low grumble.
Hector’s settling into his new life, getting further and further from his past.

Weekly “canine good citizen” classes are correcting his social ineptitude. And he’s taking cues on good manners from patient Pandora, a female pit bull mix who’s queen of the household’s dogs. Once Hector graduates, he’ll take classes to become a certified therapy dog, helping at nursing homes and the like.
For now, he’s learning the simple pleasures of a blanket at bedtime, a peanut butter-filled chew toy, even classical music.
“I put on Yo-Yo Ma one day and he cocked his head, laid down and listened to the cello next to the speaker,” Nuccio said. “He’s turning out to be a man of high class and culture.”

Series to chronicle retraining days for Vick’s dogs

LAS VEGAS (Hollywood Reporter) - National Geographic Channel said Monday that its new series “Dogtown” will spend the next few months documenting the attempted rehabilitation of dogs that belonged to jailed Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick.
The 22 animals now reside at Dogtown, the Best Friends animal sanctuary in Utah.
The series will focus on four of the toughest cases as the experts at Dogtown try to “resocialize these seriously aggressive pit bulls.”
“Dogtown” is in production on episodes set to premiere in the summer.

Here is a link to the show:

It might be a bit much for non dog lovers, but I like it.

***Note: The dogs in the above picture are one’s that have already been rescued from Vick’s group.

Vick’s pit bulls sniffing fresh air in Utah

http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/01/03/vick.dogs.ap/index.html?iref=newssearch

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (AP) – Twenty-two of the pit bulls seized from suspended NFL quarterback Michael Vick’s dogfighting operation are sniffing the dry desert air, getting to know human kindness and gobbling treats at a Utah animal sanctuary.

Each dog has its own pen inside an octagonal housing unit and an outdoor run. They’re being fed “canine caviar” – a special dog-food formulation. They’re chewing rubber bones. They can wrestle rubber toys filled with doggie treats.

“We’re walking these guys and touching them more,” said Patty Hegwood, director of animal care for the Best Friends Animal Society in Kanab, about 260 miles south of Salt Lake City.
"This is red cliffs and rocks and desert as oppose to Virginia, which is green and humid. So they have lots of noses up in the air, taking in all the different smells. Some are a little pensive.

They’re trying to figure out where they are, basically. They’re looking at us like, ‘Who the heck are you?"’
The dogs landed Wednesday after an 8-hour flight in a chartered twin-prop from Richmond, Virginia.
Other shelters are taking another 25 dogs from Vick’s 15-acre country estate in southeastern Virginia.

“It’s the end of a long grind for these guys,” Best Friends spokesman John Polis said.
“Our fondest hope is that they get adopted, but we have to be very conservative because these dogs come from a rough background,” he said.

Caretakers are keeping the pit bulls separated from some 600 other dogs at a 3,000-acre sanctuary that leases another 30,000 acres of federal land for grazing animals.
Best Friends has 400 employees.

Helping the pit bulls adjust to a new social life will be difficult, but their handlers will observe the animals for at least six months and work to correct any behavior problems, Polis said.
Polis said the sanctuary euthanizes dogs only for medical reasons.

A court order prevents the sanctuary from discussing any of the dogs’ conditions until the last of three co-defendants who trained them for fighting is sentenced January 25, Polis said.
Vick is serving a 23-month prison sentence for a dogfighting conspiracy.
The Best Friends sanctuary will appear in a new National Geographic channel series called “Dog Town” that starts Friday.


NFL is now taking the Vick signing bonus issue to a federal court. I would imagine that after all his fines, lost work/endorsements, legal fees etc. that Vick really needs this money.

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/2008/football/nfl/02/14/vick.signingbonus.ap/index.html

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) – The NFL is asking federal court to vacate a judge’s ruling allowing suspended quarterback Michael Vick to keep $16.5 million in bonuses.
The NFL also wants to end the jurisdiction of U.S. District Judge David Doty over labor matters.

Doty ruled earlier this month that the Atlanta Falcons would violate the NFL collective bargaining agreement if they tried to recover the roster bonus Vick already received. The league argues that Doty’s public comments show he is biased against them.
Vick is serving a 23-month prison sentence after pleading guilty to federal charges in a dogfighting operation. After the plea, the Falcons tried to recover about $20 million in bonuses Vick earned from 2004 to 2007.

“Michael Vick breached his contract and cannot play because he was convicted of a felony and is sitting in jail,” the NFL said in a statement. “Despite those facts, the judge held that Vick is entitled to keep nearly $20 million in bonus money paid to him for playing football through the 2014 season.”

The league also questioned whether Doty, who presided during the 1992 antitrust suit that led to the 1993 labor agreement after six years without a contract, should continue to oversee its dealings with the NFL Players Association.

“No other industry has its labor relations supervised by a federal judge in the way we do, and at this point, after 15 years of labor peace, it is hard to understand why such oversight is necessary or (why it is) an appropriate use of judicial resources,” the statement said

I admire your consistency.

I have two dogs, labs, so i really do appreciate your championing them. Even if it is secondary.

[quote]OctoberGirl wrote:

I admire your consistency.

I have two dogs, labs, so i really do appreciate your championing them. Even if it is secondary.

[/quote]

Hi October Girl,

Thank you very much!

There hasn’t been a lot of news lately but I have found this next story. I can’t speak to how accurate it is.


I researched this but nothing came up but this same link. Does anybody know if it is accurate?

thanks,
mike

http://www.mediatakeout.com/21914/exclusive_mike_vick_pays_for_protection_in_prison.html

February 26, 2008. If you thought Mike Vick was in some kind of country club prison - you’re wrong. MediaTakeOut.com spoke with a person whose relative is currently incarcerated with Mike Vick in Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary - in the same cell block. And according to our source, Mike Vick is having a difficult time fitting in.

The insider explained, “Michael Vick is not in [administrative segregation] - he’s right there with the rest of the inmates. A few [inmates] stepped to him when he first got there but everything is cool now … My [family member] says that he’s paying a Mexican gang to keep him safe.”

You know what … we’re not even gonna criticize him for that. Do what you gotta do Mike…

Here is an update on Vick’s situation regarding his state charges. It looks like the state is going full speed ahead with this. I am confused how the state and federal charges work. If the state gives him say 5 years, is that in addition to the time the feds gave him or does he get time served, for lack of a better word?

Also, there has been no more news about him in jail per the other story I posted about him having to seek protection.

Vick’s Virginia trial rescheduled for June

By D. ORLANDO LEDBETTER
Published on: 03/25/08
Michael Vick’s trial on state dogfighting charges has been rescheduled for June 27, according to his attorney.
“Yes, that’s the date,” said Lawrence H. Woodward, Vick’s longtime attorney who was reached on vacation Tuesday. “I haven’t seen the actual order yet, but that’s the date that we all agreed on.”

Surry County, Va., Commonwealth Attorney Gerald Poindexter and Vick’s lawyers agreed to the new date for the trial, which was set to start on April 2.
Vick, who is suspended indefinitely from the National Football League, is currently serving a 23-month sentence in Leavenworth, Kan., after pleading guilty to federal dogfighting related charges.
In Virginia, Vick, who is seeking a jury trial, has been charged with
two state felony counts of beating or killing or causing dogs to fight other dogs and engaging in or promoting dogfighting. He is facing 10 years in prison as each felony is punishable by up to five years in prison.
Vick’s co-defendants, Quanis Phillips and Purnell Peace, are in federal prisons in New Jersey and Oklahoma. Their trials were originally set for March 5. Phillips has elected to seek a non-jury trial and it was rescheduled for June 13, while Peace’s jury trial was reset for June 20.
Poindexter has cited the transportation of the prisoners from federal prison to the courthouse as the main reason for the delay.
Tony Taylor, who was released from federal prison last Thursday after serving two months, still has a May 7 trial date that is not expected to be rescheduled. Taylor, the one-time main caretaker of Bad Newz Kennels, cooperated with federal authorities in the investigation.
Taylor’s attorney, Stephen A. Hudgins, did not return a call to his office or respond to e-mail.

Hey Gang,

I got this off of TMZ and wasn’t sure it was too legit until I checked their source. I will post there source in a couple of seconds but it turns out that Mike Vick is, get this:
THE QUARTERBACK ON THE PRISON FOOTBALL TEAM!

I don’t find this surprising, just a little interesting.

Check it out:

Michael Vick Scores In Prison!
Posted Apr 7th 2008 10:42AM by TMZ Staff
Just when you thought Michael Vick’s football career was over, he’s resurrected it once again in the joint.

Apparently Leavenworth’s most athletic inmate is showing off his moves on the field, er jail yard, and is quarterbacking the prison football team. Falcons owner Arthur Blank tells the NY Daily News the disgraced baller is adjusting as well as he can to prison life, and is staying busy by doing dishes and writing letters.

For his toil and trouble as a dishwasher, Vick gets about 12 cents an hour. In his last season with the Falcons, Vick raked in $1.4 million, all part of a 10-year, $130 million contract that he signed in 2004.

He’s set for release in July of 2009.

Here is the original source:

http://www.nydailynews.com/sports/football/2008/04/05/2008-04-05_michael_vick_playing_prison_football.html

Michael Vick playing prison football
Sunday, April 6th 2008, 12:16 AM

Michael Vick has a new job and is playing football again. The money is not quite the same and the records of the players are a bit different, too.
Falcons owner Arthur Blank has been communicating by letter with Vick, who is at the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kan., incarcerated at the facility’s minimum security satellite prison camp.

Blank told the Daily News that Vick writes that he is washing pots and pans for 12 cents an hour. He was sentenced to 23 months in December after pleading guilty to federal dogfighting charges.
And in a scene straight out of the Longest Yard, Blank says Vick is playing football at Leavenworth. That’s one way to pass his time and keep his arm loose. He’s likely the first player picked when the inmates are choosing up sides or the guards are choosing up sides for them. Vick’s sprinter speed surely comes in handy just in case a dog-loving inmate thinks it’s cool to sack an NFL quarterback and break his shoulder.

"He is staying in shape,�?? Blank told The News. "Apparently, there was a prison football team and he played quarterback for both sides.�??
That’s only fair.
Blank, a Flushing product, says Vick wrote to him first and they’ve now opened a dialogue by mail. He also says that Kevin Winston, the Falcons’ senior director of player development, has visited Vick several times in prison. Blank says he has no plans to visit Vick.
"He’s written me a couple of times,�?? Blank said. "I’ve written him back, he’s stayed in touch.�??

Vick’s life has taken quite a nosedive from his days as a superstar quarterback. He can be comforted financially by Judge David Doty’s ruling in Minneapolis in February that he can keep $16.25 million of the $20 million in bonus money the Falcons were trying to recoup. The NFL is challenging the ruling.
Even if Blank feels betrayed by Vick, whom he signed to a 10-year, $130 million contract in 2004, he still clearly has a place in his heart for him, if not on his team.
"I just try to be supportive and as understanding as I can be,�?? Blank said. "He talks about the process he is going through and what he has learned, the lessons of life, how he’s going to come out a different person. He’s sorry he has affected so many people in a negative way �?? the league, our club, our fans. He feels awful about that. The letters sound quite sincere to me. From a mental standpoint, he sounds good.�??

What does he write to Vick?
"I told Michael I’ll do whatever I can to be helpful to him personally. Nothing to do with the Atlanta Falcons,�?? Blank said. "He’s a human being and I would like to reach out and if I can be productive to him in some way, I would be happy to do that.
"I’d love to see him playing again in the NFL. I would love to see him back in society where he can make a difference and go back to some of these communities and talk to some of these young folks about the impact of choices �?? choices he personally made about people he was with and choices he made about his own actions. That would be important.�??
It will take an owner secure in his own community to sign Vick, knowing there will likely be protests and a public backlash.

It’s inconceivable Vick could ever play for the Falcons again. They are moving on. There’s a good chance they will make Boston College quarterback Matt Ryan the new face of the franchise and select him with the third pick on April 26.
When asked if he could ever see Vick returning to the Falcons, Blank said, "I don’t know that. Right now, he’s in a federal penitentiary.�??
Blank said Winston told him Vick is "doing well.�?? Asked if the inmates were giving Vick a hard time, Blank said, "I have no idea. He seems to be okay.�??
Blank, who is starting all over with a new coach (Mike Smith), general manager (Thomas Dimitroff) and surely a new quarterback, says he’s excited about the team’s future. After Vick set his franchise back years, Blank had every reason to throw Vick’s letters in the garbage. Instead, he’s been glad to hear from him.

"He doesn’t want anything,�?? he said. "He’s just talking about his journey, his life and where he is. I was happy to respond to him and give him my thoughts on that. I do wish him the best.�??
Vick’s trial on state charges in Virginia was pushed back to June 27. According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, his projected release date on the federal case, which includes the potential to have his sentence reduced by 90 days for good conduct, is July 20, 2009. That’s right before training camps open.

He has been indefinitely suspended by Roger Goodell, who told The News last week he will meet with Vick before determining any further suspension once the quarterback gets out of prison. Goodell likely will suspend him for one season after he is released. If Vick is out next July 20 and Goodell doesn’t suspend him for the '09 season and if he doesn’t get further jail time �?? he faces two state felony counts each punishable by up to five years in the Virginia case �?? then he could be back on the field for the '09 season. And he will be only 29.
But for now, it’s pots and pans and playing quarterback for two prison teams in the same game with teammates who have criminal records, not touchdown records. Vick has traded in his No. 7 jersey for a Federal Bureau of Prisons register number with eight digits

As much as I despise Vick for what he was involved in, I agree with Blank. I hope that after he is done serving his time, he can get his life on the right track. Be it by talking to kids about his life and making the right decisions. Or by being in the NFL again and becoming a positive role model.

Either way, what he has done should not follow him for the rest of his life. Although, I’m sure it will. He served the amount of time that was deemed necessary by our judicial system and should be able to get on with his life.

People make mistakes. Let them move on and do something meaningful with the rest of their lives.


Not sure who created this, but it is pretty funny given the above subject matter:

http://www.profootballtalk.com/category/media/pic-of-the-day/

Arthur Blank was a little off in his description of Mike Vick�??s prison activities.

Vick’s future isn’t in Atlanta; is it anywhere in NFL?
You can only imagine what was going through Michael Vick’s mind as NFL commissioner Roger Goodell emerged from the left side of the Radio City Music Hall stage, walked to the podium, leaned toward the microphone and said, “With the third pick in the 2008 NFL Draft, the Atlanta Falcons select [dramatic pause] Matt Ryan, quarterback.”
In the time it took to say those two words – Matt Ryan – Vick’s Falcons career, or what remained of it, came to a final resting place on the NFL sea bottom. There will be no comeback in Atlanta. Perhaps there will be no comeback at all.

Seven years ago Vick stood on a stage in New York, just as Ryan did this past Saturday. There was a freshly issued Falcons ball cap on Vick’s head and a beaming NFL commissioner at his side. Together he and Paul Tagliabue had pinched the sleeves of a Falcons No. 1 jersey and held it in the air for the requisite draft day photo op. Vick’s silverish-blue suit gleamed in the lights.

Vick was going to redefine the way the quarterback position was played. He was going to do so many things. That’s what everyone said.
And now he’s in prison. The U.S. Federal Prison Camp, to be exact.
From Madison Square Garden in 2001, to Leavenworth, Kan., in 2008. Tailored suit to prison wear. Handshake-with-the-commish shots to mug shots.
What a weird, weird Saturday it must have been for Vick, especially if he had access to the television feeds of the draft. Vick knew what it was like to stand there. He knew exactly what Ryan was feeling.

Of course, the Falcons could have taken someone else. LSU defensive tackle Glenn Dorsey, considered to be the best pure player in the draft, was still there at No. 3 when Atlanta went on the clock. Dorsey, said the scouts, has an upside to die for.
But the Falcons had already decided on Ryan. The decision to select the Boston College quarterback was made nearly two full days before the draft. Dorsey’s availability was an intriguing twist, but nothing more.
“The gods were with us, so to speak,” Falcons general manager Thomas Dimitroff would tell an NFL Network reporter.

The message is clear: The Vick Era, so to speak, is finished in Atlanta. A manhole cover has been all but welded shut over whatever hopes Vick has of returning to his first and only pro team, and to the doting owner who adored him, Arthur Blank.
Blank had told ESPN’s Chris Mortensen months ago that a scenario existed involving Vick’s return to the Falcons. But all that ended Saturday, when a Falcons rep handed an NFL official a draft day card with Ryan’s name on it.
When Dimitroff said days before the draft that Atlanta’s picks would be “needs-based,” he could have been referring to the Falcons’ apparent need to distance themselves from Vick. Ryan is the opposite of Vick in so many ways, which is exactly why the Falcons chose him.

Think about it: prototypical pocket passer versus hybrid runner/passer �?� “sneaky” athletic versus once-in-a-lifetime athletic �?� 32 career college starts versus Vick’s 20 starts at Virginia Tech �?� no off-field issues versus, uh, once-in-a-lifetime athletic �?�
The Falcons didn’t come right out and say they were looking for squeaky-clean, but they used the buzzwords. They gushed about Ryan’s leadership skills, his competitiveness, and the “new dimension” he brings to the team – that new dimension being no CNN video of a Ryan-financed dogfighting compound.
So Vick can forget about Atlanta. Blank either recused himself from the draft day process (doubtful), or simply agreed with Dimitroff and new head coach Mike Smith that it was time to use that third pick – and more of Blank’s millions – on a quarterback. In fact, it wasn’t long after the pick was made that Smith said Ryan could win the starting job over incumbent Chris Redman. Duh.

Meanwhile, you can find Vick at 1300 Metropolitan Ave. in Leavenworth, just off Highway 73. According to the federal government’s penitentiary Web site, inmate Vick (Register No. 33765-183) is eligible for release July 20, 2009. Training camp time.
There’s also a possibility Vick could be transferred to a halfway house as early as January 2009, but only if he is admitted into a residential drug abuse program and a paycheck. His most likely employer: an NFL team.
Again, weird how this works out. The man who shook Ryan’s hand and helped the BC quarterback hold up a Falcons No. 1 jersey on Saturday – Goodell – is the same man who ultimately will decide whether Vick can rejoin the league.
Vick deserves a second chance. But once Goodell gives it to him, then what?

No other quarterback, with the possible exception of Tennessee’s Vince Young, does what Vick does �?� or did: stretch and spread a defense to the breaking point. If those 23 months don’t rob Vick of those singular athletic skills, it becomes a matter of finding a team willing to play a 29-year-old quarterback whose last game was Dec. 31, 2006.
The Oakland Raiders come to mind, mostly because owner Al Davis has a lifelong romance with speed, and he’s nutty enough to try anything. Plus, he could get Vick cheaply.
The problem is, Davis has a six-year, $61 million deal (including a $29 million signing bonus) with 2007 No. 1 overall pick JaMarcus Russell. And whatever team signs Vick is going to have to alter its entire offense.
Vick moves the pass pocket. He gets to the edges. He runs. But he also sees only half the field that way. And he’s never been Mr. High-Percentage Passer. So something is going to have to give.

I can see a team taking a flier on Vick. But will a team blow up its existing offense for him? Will it simply incorporate a Vick-type play package? Or will it ask him to switch positions and become a left-handed, supercharged version of Antwaan Randle El?
The answers could begin to arrive nine months from now. Until then, Vick does his time just 43 miles from the Kansas City Chiefs’ Arrowhead Stadium.
No, Saturday couldn’t have been any fun for Vick. As if Leavenworth and an estimated $142 million in financial losses weren’t humiliating enough, he was repudiated by Blank and his Falcons.
Now he counts the days to freedom, to a meeting and a handshake with Goodell. Most of all, he wants what Ryan got.
A job and a chance.

I found this interesting. This seems to add up to a boatload of cash with the inclusion of lawyers fees and interest. I have never been in jail so I am not sure how hard it is to fight/manage this stuff from prison. I would just imagine that with all the financial issues he seems to be having (some good and some bad) things may push him to go back to the NFL whether he still wants to play or not.

Vick ordered to repay more than $2.4 million for defaulting on loan
Associated Press

Updated: May 8, 2008, 3:36 PM ET
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RICHMOND, Va. – A federal judge ordered imprisoned quarterback Michael Vick to repay more than $2.4 million to a Canadian bank for defaulting on a loan.

The Royal Bank of Canada sued Vick in September, arguing his guilty plea to a federal dogfighting charge – and the resulting impact on his career – prevented him from repaying the loan.

According to the suit filed in U.S. District Court in Newport News, the loan’s terms specify that any employment change negatively impacting Vick’s income constitutes a default on the loan.

Vick is serving a 23-month prison sentence at the U.S. penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kan., after pleading guilty last year to bankrolling a dogfighting ring. He was subsequently suspended indefinitely without pay and lost all his major sponsors, including Nike. He also faces state charges related to dogfighting.

“The criminal charges and resulting impact on the defendant’s employment … materially affect his ability to repay the term note,” the bank said in the lawsuit.

The order Wednesday from U.S. Magistrate F. Bradford Stillman requires Vick to pay $2.4 million, plus $499 in interest per day, starting Sept. 19, 2007, and the bank’s attorneys’ fees and costs of $11,950 plus interest.

Vick’s attorneys did not immediately return phone messages seeking comment.

After the plea, the Atlanta Falcons also tried to recover about $20 million in bonuses Vick earned from 2004 to 2007. But a federal judge held that Vick is entitled to keep all but $3.75 million of the money paid to him for playing football through the 2014 season.

A default judgment for $1.08 million was also entered in January against Vick and a business partner in a lawsuit brought by Wachovia Bank over a loan for an Atlanta-area wine shop and restaurant.

Vick Wined then Fined
Posted May 14th 2008 7:06PM by TMZ Staff
They just keep piling it up on Michael Vick. Now he’s been ordered to fork over more than a million bucks for a failed wine bar he tried to open.

Court docs allege Vick and buddy Gerald Jenkins borrowed more than $1.1 million in May of 2006 from Wachovia Bank to open a joint called Atlantic Wine & Spirits. In August of '07, Vick and his cohort failed to make the $8,000 monthly interest payment. Wachovia then declared the loan was in default because “the prospect for repayment was substantially impaired.”

A 23-month sentence definitely puts a cork in Vick’s ability to pay those bills.

you are a man of convictions.

thanks Mike

[quote]OctoberGirl wrote:
you are a man of convictions.

thanks Mike[/quote]

Hi October Girl!

Thanks again for the support, it’s awesome!

Here are a couple of new stories, one older one newer:

Mike Cruickshank

Hall, other Falcons to travel to Virginia to visit imprisoned Vick
ESPN.com news services

ATLANTA – Atlanta Falcons tight end Alge Crumpler wants to visit imprisoned quarterback Michael Vick soon. The only problem is Crumpler doesn’t know where to start.

“We have to find out the rules, like if he can have visitors and what the procedures are,” Crumpler said last week. “The thing is we’re still trying to find the details, and that’s not information you can get with a quick phone call.”

Vick was sentenced three weeks ago to 23 months in federal prison for his role in an interstate dogfighting conspiracy.

Crumpler and running back Warrick Dunn said several times this season that they routinely spoke with Vick after a federal grand jury indicted him on July 17. All contact stopped on Nov. 19, when Vick voluntarily reported to a regional jail in Warsaw, Va.

The three-time Pro Bowl quarterback became a federal inmate as he stood before U.S. District Judge Henry E. Hudson earlier this month in Richmond, Va.

Crumpler and Dunn have asked Kevin Winston, the Falcons’ senior director of player development, to learn what visiting privileges, if any, Vick has.

“A couple of us, me and Warrick and maybe some other guys on the team want to see him face to face,” Crumpler said. “It’s been a long time since all this stuff started up.”

According to a listing Monday on the Federal Bureau of Prisons Web site, Vick’s location is “in transit.” He has been assigned register number 33765-183.

DeAngelo Hall, also planning to visit Vick, said it would be tough to see Vick in prison, but it may be even harder for the star quarterback to see Falcons team members.

“It’s probably going to be real tough for him. I know when I spoke to him before training camp started, being told he wasn’t going to be able to come to training camp crushed him. He loved this team more than anything,” Hall said, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Crumpler considers himself Vick’s closest friend on the Falcons.

In 2001, Atlanta drafted Vick, a Virginia Tech sophomore, No. 1 overall. Crumpler, a North Carolina senior, was picked in the second round.
Former Falcons coach Dan Reeves had Vick and Crumpler share hotel rooms when the team took road trips during their rookie season.

“We’ve always been very close, and that’s why Mike knows I’ll be there for him no matter what,” Crumpler said. “He made some bad decisions and he’s paying a heavy price for those mistakes, but that doesn’t mean that I should turn my back on him.”

Vick also is scheduled to stand trial April 2 for state dogfighting charges in Surry, Va., the site of former property he owned to house “Bad Newz Kennels.”

Crumpler, a four-time Pro Bowl tight end, was among five Falcons who were fined for violating the NFL’s uniform code in their support of Vick on Dec. 10. The league fined Crumpler, Hall, Roddy White and Chris Houston $10,000 each for wearing “MV7” on their black eye strips in Atlanta’s blowout loss to New Orleans.

Receiver Joe Horn was fined $7,500 for pulling up White’s jersey and letting television cameras show his teammate’s “Free Mike Vick” T-shirt underneath.

Hall did not appeal his fine, but the other four players did.

Crumpler caught two touchdown passes in the Falcons’ season finale, a 44-41 victory over Seattle on Sunday. Atlanta’s 4-12 record was its worst since 2000.