300 Malnourished Cockfighting Roosters Euthanized Following Discovery At Scene Of Fatal Stabbing

300 Malnourished Cockfighting Roosters Euthanized
Cocks fight in a cockfighting match in Teguise on the Spanish Canary island of Lanzarote, on June 9, 2012. Cockfighting is generally illegal in Spain with the exception of the Canary Islands, where it is considered traditional. The Canary Islands has 24 associations or 'galleras' who support this practice and are constantly criticized by environmentalists or defenders of animals. AFP PHOTO/ DESIREE MARTIN (Photo credit should read DESIREE MARTIN/AFP/GettyImages)
Cocks fight in a cockfighting match in Teguise on the Spanish Canary island of Lanzarote, on June 9, 2012. Cockfighting is generally illegal in Spain with the exception of the Canary Islands, where it is considered traditional. The Canary Islands has 24 associations or 'galleras' who support this practice and are constantly criticized by environmentalists or defenders of animals. AFP PHOTO/ DESIREE MARTIN (Photo credit should read DESIREE MARTIN/AFP/GettyImages)

Close to 300 malnourished cockfighting roosters were euthanized on Tuesday following their discovery as part of an ongoing investigation into a fatal stabbing which took place in late July.

As reported by The Associated Press, local police secured a warrant to investigate a business property in Santa Paula, California, after receiving information that the unsolved stabbing had taken place there.

Once on the property, the police found hundreds of roosters in “terrible shape”, many of which were starving, according to Regina Wilcox, a rescue worker from the local animal rescue center who confirmed the subsequent euthanization.

While this case ended in tragedy for the innocent birds, it stands in contrast to a series of recent incidents where the tables were turned and it was humans partaking in this illegal blood sport who paid extreme prices.

In April of this year, in La Blanca, Texas, along the border with Mexico, three people were killed and eight more were wounded as a wild shootout broke out at a “pretty elaborate” site that had various fighting arenas and a concessions stand.

Stranger still is the July 2011 case of Jose Luis Ochoa, a known owner and trainer of cockfighting roosters in Central California, who died after a rooster stabbed him in the leg with a knife which had been fastened to its limb.

At the time, Sgt. Martin King, who had served 24 years with the local sheriff’s department told the Bakersfield Californian, “I have never seen this type of incident.”

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