PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Convicted dogfighting-ring operator Michael Vick hopes to own a dog again someday.
The Eagles quarterback told TheGrio.com in a video
interview posted this week that he genuinely cares for animals and one day
hopes to have a dog as a household pet, saying it would be just another
"big step" in his rehabilitation process.
"I would love to get another dog in the
future," Vick told TheGrio, a website that's affiliated with NBC and
focuses on African-American issues. "I think it would be a big step for me
in the rehabilitation process. I think just to have a pet in my household and
to show people that I genuinely care, and my love, and my passion for
animals."
Vick served 18 months in prison after being
convicted in 2007 in the Virginia-based ring. The federal judge overseeing the
case also prohibited him from ever owning another dog.
"Vick should be banned from owning dogs for
life," Jane Dollinger, spokeswoman for People for the Ethical Treatment of
Animals, said in a news release this week. "Just as convicted pedophiles
aren't allowed free access to children, anyone who is responsible for hanging,
electrocuting, or shooting dogs and who causes them to suffer in other
unimaginable ways should never again be allowed access to dogs."
Since his release from prison, Vick has become an
advocate for the Humane Society of the United States and makes school
appearances to talk to students about his past. Vick said he's doing that work
because he wants to.
"Well first off, the court doesn't make it an
obligation for me to go out and speak," Vick said. "It doesn't make
it an obligation for me to work with the Humane Society. I'm putting in the
hard work to do it so it's not for any personal benefit, it's to help
others."
Vick's on-the-field success this season has made
his story more compelling — from star quarterback to reviled dogfighter to
comeback kid. And now he's adding mentor to his resume.
"I think if I can help five or six kids daily,
then I'm playing my position as a positive role model in our society,"
Vick told TheGrio. "I tell a lot of people that it's easy to do the wrong
thing. It's hard to do the right thing."
Vick said he allowed outside influences to affect
his behavior, but said prison helped him see the changes he needed to make.
"I hate to use our culture as an excuse, but
it is what it is and that's what happened and that's the way I thought about it
growing up," Vick told TheGrio about dogfighting. "This is just the
way we were brought up."
The quarterback said he hopes his success with the
Eagles will continue breaking the stereotype that black athletes can't or
shouldn't play the position.
"I think if you're good and good enough to
play the position, I think you'll get the opportunity," he said.
Copyright
2010 The Associated Press.
(AP
Photo/Wilfredo Lee, File)






