In this Friday, Feb. 9, 2018 photo provided by the Suffolk County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, a rooster sits in a cage in Brentwood, N.Y. The rooster was among 60 that were seized when Reynaldo Bonilla on New York's Long Island was arrested for animal cruelty. Authorities also found a mistreated pit bull and a ring believed to be used for cockfighting on the property. (Suffolk County Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals via AP)
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In this Friday, Feb. 9, 2018 photo provided by the Suffolk County Police Department, Reynaldo Bonilla is shown. Authorities arrested Bonilla Friday on charges accusing him of possessing more than 60 roosters trained for cockfighting. (Suffolk County Police Department via AP)
Associated Press
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ISLIP, N.Y. — Police searching for drugs at a home in New York discovered more than 60 caged roosters, a mistreated pit bull, a pheasant and equipment used to stage illegal cockfighting matches.
ISLIP, N.Y. — Police searching for drugs at a home in New York discovered more than 60 caged roosters, a mistreated pit bull, a pheasant and equipment used to stage illegal cockfighting matches.
Officers called in the local Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and arrested 40-year-old Reynaldo Bonilla, who was to be arraigned on Saturday on charges including animal cruelty.
The roosters were trained for cockfighting and will have to be euthanized, because they can’t be rehabilitated and were likely injected with steroids and other chemicals, Suffolk County SPCA Chief Roy Gross said.
Also stored on the property were a fighting ring, razor blade-like spurs that are attached to the roosters when they fight and “little boxing gloves” that protect the birds when they train, he said.
“The call it a blood sport,” Gross said. Spectators who bet on the fights “want to see the birds cutting each other, seeing the blood, and generally they bleed out. It’s barbaric. They generally fight to the death,” he said.
Investigators haven’t determined if fights were staged at the property, or if the birds were only being housed there in the hamlet of Brentwood on Long Island, he added.
The name of Bonilla’s attorney wasn’t immediately available. If convicted, he will be placed on an animal abuse registry that allows authorities to track his whereabouts.