The story of Mel the dog....one of Vick's dogs

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And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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I just read this story about Mel.....And now Vick wants to own a dog again##)

here is the story....

BILL PLASCHKE
Dog owner can't forgive Michael Vick

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Mel, a black pit bull, cowers to the corner while another dog, Pumpkin, shields him. Mel was one of the 47 pit bulls in Michael Vick's interstate dogfighting ring. (Richard Hunter / November 16, 2010



Quarterback shows greatness on the field, but evidence of former cruelty remains. By Bill Plaschke November 16, 2010, 8:27 p.m.





While Michael Vick was screaming toward the sky, a black pit bull named Mel was standing quietly by a door.

On this night, like many other nights, Mel was waiting for his owners to take him outside, but he couldn't alert them with a bark. He doesn't bark. He won't bark. The bark has been beaten out of him.

While Michael Vick was running for glory, Mel was cowering toward a wall.
Every time the 4-year-old dog meets a stranger, he goes into convulsions. He staggers back into a wall for protection. He lowers his face and tries to hide. New faces are not new friends, but old terrors.

While Michael Vick was officially outracing his past Monday night, one of the dogs he abused cannot.

"Some people wonder, are we ever going to let Michael Vick get beyond all this?" said Richard Hunter, who owns Mel. "I tell them, let's let Mel decide that. When he stops shaking, maybe then we can talk."

I know, I know, this is a cheap and easy column, right? One day after the Philadelphia Eagles' quarterback officially becomes an American hero again, just call the owner of one of the dogs who endured Vick's unspeakable abuse and let the shaming begin.

Compare Vick's 413 total yards, four touchdown passes and two rushing touchdowns against the Washington Redskins to the 47 pit bulls who were seized from Bad Newz Kennels, his interstate dogfighting ring. Contrast one of the best three hours by a quarterback ever to the 21 months he spent in prison.

Cheap and easy, right? Not so fast. Vick's success is raising one of the most potentially costly and difficult perceptual questions in the history of American sports.

If he continues playing this well, he could end up as the league's most valuable player. In six games, he has thrown for 11 touchdowns, run for four more touchdowns, committed zero turnovers and produced nearly 300 total yards per game. Heck, at this rate, with his Eagles inspired by his touch, he could even win a Super Bowl, one of the greatest achievements by an American sportsman.

And yet a large percentage of the population will still think Michael Vick is a sociopath. Many people will never get over Vick's own admissions of unthinkable cruelty to his pit bulls — the strangling, the drowning, the electrocutions, the removal of all the teeth of female dogs who would fight back during mating.

Some believe that because Vick served his time in prison, he should be beyond reproach for his former actions. Many others believe that cruelty to animals isn't something somebody does, it's something somebody is.

Essentially, an ex-convict is dominating America's most popular sport while victims of his previous crime continue to live with the brutality of that crime, and has that ever happened before?

Do you cheer the player and boo the man? Can you cheer the comeback while loathing the actions that necessitated the comeback? And how can you do any of this while not knowing if Vick has truly discovered morality or simply rediscovered the pocket?

If you are Richard Hunter, you just don't watch football.

"When you look at Mel," said Hunter, a radio personality from Dallas, "you just don't think about how Michael Vick is a great football player."

A couple of years ago, Hunter and his wife Sunny were watching a documentary on Best Friends Animal Society, the Utah sanctuary where the court sent 22 of Vick's 44 seized dogs. It was after 1 a.m. when the show featured a Vick victim that had been so badly abused, it refused to move, behaving as if paralyzed.

"My wife said, 'Get out of bed, get on the computer and e-mail those people, I want one of those dogs,' " Hunter recalled.

Nearly 18 months later, they became one of six people to adopt one of the dogs. The process included a home visit by caseworkers, an extended visit to the southwest Utah sanctuary, home monitoring by a dog trainer and a six-month probation period.

"These dogs were scarred in many ways both emotional and physical," said John Polis, Best Friends spokesman. "It was something we had never really seen before."

Hunter and his wife quickly saw Mel's scars. The dog wouldn't bark, wouldn't show affection, and would spend nearly an hour shaking with each new person who tried to touch him.

It turns out that Mel had been a bait dog, thrown into the ring as a sort of sparring partner for the tougher dogs, sometimes even muzzled so he wouldn't fight back, beaten daily to sap his will. Mel was under constant attack, and couldn't fight back, and the deep cuts were visible on more than just his fur.

"You could see that Michael Vick went to a lot of trouble to make Mel this way," Hunter said. "When people pet him, I tell them, pet him from under his chin, not over his head. He lives in fear of someone putting their hand over his head."

On Monday night, no, Mel was not hanging out by the televised football game. He was hanging on his owner's bed as they watched something on HBO.

"How can you support football when you know one of their stars did this to a dog?" Hunter said. "If more people saw Mel at the same time as they saw Michael Vick, he wouldn't be so lauded."

Meanwhile, in Philadelphia, the lessons learned from Vick's crimes were on display in a postgame quote from Eagles star receiver DeSean Jackson.

"We were like pit bulls ready to get out of the cage," he told reporters.

Cheap and easy, huh?
 

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beautiful dog, I've volunteered at a pitbull rescue with my "other" family who is there anywhere from 2-5 times a week. Just going and walking these dogs and getting them out of their kennels is such an amazing thing, Vick may be one hell of a football player/athlete, but he is still a piece of shit in my opinion.

http://www.vrcpitbull.com/ is the rescue I was talking about, you may recognize it from the television show "Pit Bulls & Parolees." We've been volunteering there for the last 5 years or so. Between friends and family we have probably adopted 10-15 dogs and hospiced too many to count
 

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I was one rooting for this prick.....hope they break his neck on Sunday
 

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what a piece of fucking shit Michael Vick is. Nothing pisses me off more than mistreating a dog. I hope he fails miserably.
 

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Really, can these people be reformed?

We just got a French Bulldog, never in my wildest imagination would I consider doing anything like that.

WTF is wrong with people, really
 

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i have a soft heart for animals, especially dogs...makes me loathe him.
 

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Vick is quickly becoming one of those cases of where sports has reached too high of a pedestal in society.

He is and always will remain a piece of shit until he does some serious charity work for dogs (which I haven't seen or read yet). Talking to people about the issue isn't good enough. Throwing a ball 70 yards for a touchdown should do jack shit for people to warm up to him, but ESPN, Eagles Fans, and the fantasy nuthuggers worship him like he is a god now.

Makes me sick.
 

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Let it go. I know you guys have a hard on for Dogs and how they should be treated and Vick is easy to hate but let him live his life. Hate and jealousy in here is overwhelming. You don't have to give the guy a second chance but wishing someone would break his neck is just classless.
 

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Dwayne, it's more of a figure of speech.
Vick deserves to make a living, but I really think the court should have mandated after sentencing that he could not own a dog, or something to that effect.
 

powdered milkman
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he has a right to make a lving and i have the right to root for him to fail miserably........its all fair
 

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Let it go. I know you guys have a hard on for Dogs and how they should be treated and Vick is easy to hate but let him live his life. Hate and jealousy in here is overwhelming. You don't have to give the guy a second chance but wishing someone would break his neck is just classless.

Dude where does jealousy factor in here? I have zero jealousy for anyone on this planet. I hope and wish everyone the very best. More power to those who make millions or whatever the case may be. I'm not an envious person by any means. On the other hand if someone beats the shit out of a dog to where he doesn't even bark, I have a huge problem with. Yes, im an animal lover ...especially dogs. Classless is someone who beats the shit out of dogs or someone who defends someone who does that. Yes, he has a right to make a living. But i sure as hell won't be rooting for him.
 

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True...but wishing he breaks something or dies(not saying people in this thread have said that) is just as classless.
 

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Dude where does jealousy factor in here? I have zero jealousy for anyone on this planet. I hope and wish everyone the very best. More power to those who make millions or whatever the case may be. I'm not an envious person by any means. On the other hand if someone beats the shit out of a dog to where he doesn't even bark, I have a huge problem with. Yes, im an animal lover ...especially dogs. Classless is someone who beats the shit out of dogs or someone who defends someone who does that.

Many threads in the off-topic forum have shown extreme amounts of jealousy. Not saying anyone specific but it has happened. I'm not defending what he did at all....it's obviously awful what he did but that's the past and if he wants to own a dog then so be it. You guys have the right to wish failure on him but that doesn't mean he should die or get his neck broken on the field.
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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How old is this dog??? I'm guessing that the dog is at least 3 yrs old....For a pit bull the dog is very small....JMO
 

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he should die Dwayne Bowe lol. I get what your saying, but i think it's more a figure of speech. I hope he trips and falls down Sunday. How's that?
 

And if the Road Warrior says it, it must be true..
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beautiful dog, I've volunteered at a pitbull rescue with my "other" family who is there anywhere from 2-5 times a week. Just going and walking these dogs and getting them out of their kennels is such an amazing thing, Vick may be one hell of a football player/athlete, but he is still a piece of shit in my opinion.

http://www.vrcpitbull.com/ is the rescue I was talking about, you may recognize it from the television show "Pit Bulls & Parolees." We've been volunteering there for the last 5 years or so. Between friends and family we have probably adopted 10-15 dogs and hospiced too many to count

Love that show....You should be commended for the volunteer work...here is a toast to you my friend...
 
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If an 8 year old is exposed to stealing, chances are he will be a thief the rest of his life. If an 8 year old is exposed to drugs, chances are he will become a drug addict the rest of his life. Michael Vick was exposed to dog fighting when he was 8 years old. Granted, when he was older he should have realized his mistake, but like a drug addict he could not stop. It was how he was raised and brought up. It was his life. I am a dog owner and dog lover and have been my whole life, but I am willing to forget the past and let Vick live his life and get his 2nd chance.

I can understand some of the hatred expressed in this thread, but Michael Vick is not the only person in this country who was abusing dogs. I just hope some of you who have this hate in you are not just about hating Michael Vick and are doing something to stop things like this from happening(obviously Riv34 is and I salute him also).

Im sure many wont agree with this and thats your right. Im just stating my opinion on how I feel about it...
 

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I agree with your points. For me i never claimed to hate the guy. Hate is a strong word and i don't hate anyone. Discusted is the word i would use.
 

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