A federal grand jury in Albuquerque, new Mexico returned an
indictment yesterday charging Robert Arellano, 63, of Albuquerque, with 13
counts of violating the animal fighting prohibitions of the federal Animal
Welfare Act, announced Acting U.S. Attorney James D. Tierney for the District
of New Mexico, and Acting Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey H. Wood for the
Department of Justice’s Environment and Natural Resources Division.
Arellano had previously been arrested and indicted on additional
charges in the District of New Jersey pertaining to his alleged involvement in
a multi-state dog fighting network. Those charges alleged criminal acts related
to transporting, delivering, buying, selling, and receiving pit bull-type dogs
for dog fighting ventures and conspiring to commit these acts in New Jersey and
elsewhere throughout the U.S.
The charges returned today in the District of New Mexico
pertain to fighting dogs allegedly kept by Arellano at his residence in
Albuquerque. Those dogs were seized by federal authorities when Arellano was
arrested last June.
This case is part of Operation Grand Champion, a coordinated
effort across numerous federal judicial districts to combat organized dog
fighting. The phrase “Grand Champion” is used by dog fighters to refer to a dog
with more than five dog-fighting “victories.” To date, 85 dogs have been
rescued as part of Operation Grand Champion, and either surrendered or
forfeited to the government.
The federal Animal Welfare Act makes it a felony punishable
by up to five years in prison to knowingly sell, buy, possess, train,
transport, deliver, or receive any animal, including dogs, for purposes of
having the animal participate in an animal fighting venture. Under federal law,
an animal fighting venture means “any event, in or affecting interstate or
foreign commerce, that involves a fight conducted or to be conducted between at
least two animals for purposes of sport, wagering, or entertainment.”
This part of Operation Grand Champion was investigated by
the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Office of the Inspector General, under the
direction of Special Agent in Charge Dax Roberson; and under the direction of
Special Agent in Charge Terry Wade of the FBI’s Albuquerque Division, in
coordination with the Department of Justice.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Letitia Simms and Paul Mysliwiec of the District of New Mexico, and Trial
Attorney Ethan Eddy of the Justice Department’s Environmental Crimes Section,
Environment and Natural Resources Division. The Humane Society of the U.S.
assisted with the care of the dogs seized by federal law enforcement.
An indictment is an allegation based upon a finding of
probable cause by a grand jury. A defendant is presumed innocent unless and
until convicted.
If convicted, the defendant faces up to five years in prison
and a $250,000 fine per count of animal fighting charges. The investigation is
ongoing.
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