A former South Carolina prosecutor told the AJC on Friday that he saw evidence that Vick kept dogs in that state while he was prosecuting a major dogfighting case in 2004.
"I had actually heard, as part of our investigation, that Vick had some dogs here in South Carolina," said William Frick, the lead prosecutor in the David Ray Tant dogfighting case.
Frick said he did not know what kind of dogs Vick had in South Carolina but that he assumed they were "fighting dogs." Asked for specifics, Frisk said Vick had a "dog yard" and it was not something that would bring charges.
Frick is no longer with the attorney general's office and currently is in private practice in Columbia. Tant, whom authorities labeled as the No. 2 dog breeder in the country, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to a 40-year prison term.
"I'm not surprised to hear that somewhere here in South Carolina that we have a connection," Frick said. "But as far as whether it's Tant or not, I really don't know if they dealt with each other."
According to Poindexter, investigators have interviewed two South Carolina inmates regarding the case involving Vick's Virginia property. Poindexter also said of Thursday's involvement by federal authorities, "The jurisdictional basis is some sort of interstate violation."