jespear wrote:In ALL the interviews I've seen with Vick, I NEVER got the feeling that he felt remorse for what he did to those dogs.
He's a POS, IMHO.
I agree,and for the sake of argument,even if he is the "sorriest" MF'er (which I think he is
), how can a person with morals or a conscience do the things he did to those dogs and not realize that hanging a dog or sticking a cattle prod up a dog's ass is some sorry sick chit!
And remember,now as he "shows remorse and has been rehabilitated and shows humility",that he has inside him the capability to torture,maim,and kill dogs(should animals other than dogs fear him) without being disgusted by his actions.Only showing "remorse" when he was caught and confronted with prison and being expelled from the NFL
RICHMOND, Va. -- Michael Vick was sentenced to prison Monday
for running a dogfighting operation and will stay there longer than
two co-defendants, up to 23 months, because he lied about his
involvement when he was supposed to be coming clean to the judge
who would decide his fate.
The disgraced NFL star received a harsher sentence than the
others in the federal conspiracy case because of "less than
truthful" statements about killing pit bulls.
Vick said he accepted responsibility for his actions, but U.S.
District Judge Henry E. Hudson said he wasn't so sure.
"I'm not convinced you've fully accepted responsibility,"
Hudson told Vick, who arrived in court wearing the black-and-white
striped prison uniform he was issued when he voluntarily
surrendered Nov. 19 to begin serving his sentence early.
Despite the early surrender, a public apology and participation
in an animal sensitivity training course, Vick was denied an
"acceptance of responsibility" credit that would have reduced his
sentence. Federal prosecutors opposed awarding Vick the credit.
Dogs that did not perform up to expectations were killed by
electrocution, hanging, drowning and other violent means by the
dogfighting ring. Hudson said evidence, including statements by the
co-defendants, showed Vick was more directly involved than he
admitted. Hudson also mentioned that Vick had been deceptive on a
polygraph test. Though that evidence was not admissible in court,
the results were discussed.
"He did more than fund it," prosecutor Michael Gill said,
referring to the "Bad Newz Kennels" dogfighting operation. "He
was in this thing up to his neck with the other defendants."
Read the entire article here:http://www.espn.com/nfl/news/story?id=3148549
If I remember correctly,didn't he try to pass it off as a black cultural thing that white people would never understand?