Déan an fál nó íocfaidh tú foghail.
Make the fence or you will pay for the plunder.
Undercover film links Gaelic football star to dog-fighting
15 illegal dog fighting gangs in Northern Ireland
The Times - August 31, 2007
by David Sharrock,
A Gaelic football star is a leading player in the illegal and savage
world of dog-fighting, it was claimed last night.
Gerard Cavlan, an All-Ireland medal winner with Tyrone, is a senior
figure in a dog-fighting operation known as The Bulldog Sanctuary
Kennels, a television documentary on BBC Northern Ireland alleged.
The claim comes in the same week that Michael Vick, a star with the
Atlanta Falcons American football team, was suspended indefinitely
by the National Football League after pleading guilty to taking part
in a dog-fighting ring. He is expected to receive a 12 to 18-month
prison sentence.
The 17-month investigation by the BBC, which uncovered 15 illegal
dog-fighting gangs in Northern Ireland, has cast doubt over the
sporting future of Cavlan, from Dungannon, Co Tyrone, who was fined
£650 this year for possessing a dangerous dog.
In April, Dungannon Magistrates’ Court was told that Cavlan, 30, had
merely collected the dog from kennels for a Dublin man, and was not
involved in any other illegal activities.
However, during covert recording by the BBC, and after being raided
by the Ulster Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals,
Cavlan admitted that he still had “a dozen or 15 dogs”.
He also talked about the strength and skill of a pitbull terrier in
a fight. “Sure, he had him in the chest, and he shook him and he
shook him for 25 minutes. A real hard-mouthed dog,” he said. It does
not appear that the BBC filmed Cavlan’s dogs fighting.
Five of the 15 other gangs found by the documentary team to be
operating in Northern Ireland are based in Belfast, and some have
links to international dog-fighting organisations.
One of the gangs, the Farmers Boys, based in Tandragee, Co Armagh,
was infiltrated by the BBC. After being taken into the inner circle
of the gang, its undercover reporter was permitted access to a
dog-fight.
He said that what he witnessed was horrific. “The most shocking
thing wasseeing the dogs being ripped apart and being covered in
puncture wounds, with gristle coming out and bites down to the bone
where you could see the white of the bone underneath,” he said.
“You could hear the skin and flesh tearing as every wound was
inflicted.”
The investigation extended to Finland, where it was revealed how
illegal pitbull terriers are transported from Europe into Northern
Ireland.
It also learnt how the dogs were trained and forced into practice
fights or “rolls” from as young as 10 months.
In Finland, the documentary team won the trust of Robert Gonzales, a
pitbull breeder, who explained how easy it was to export the banned
dogs. When asked if he had registered a dog being exported as a
pitbull on its animal passport, Gonzales explained that he tricked
customs officials by marking it as a mixed breed.
“I’ve imported a lot of dogs so I know how to fool the customs . . .
all you need is a computer and a printer,” he said.
Cavlan, who was a member of Tyrone’s 2003 All-Ireland
Championship-winning side, made no comment yesterday, but the
Belfast daily The Irish News quoted him as saying: “I felt
victimised by the BBC and this has been a witch-hunt from day one.”
The matters in the documentary were unconnected to him, he added.
“I have pleaded guilty and accepted my conviction and paid my fine.
I want this matter to come to an end so I can put it behind me and
deal with the rest of my life.”
During his judgment earlier this year, magistrate Eamon King urged
Cavlan to live up to his position as a role model. “We want people
to imitate you in all that’s good - ie, your successful footballing
career - not in the type of activity that takes place in backyards
in the dark of night involving one animal going face-to-face against
another,” he said.
Source:
The Times, London