HR-8723-119
Referred to the House Committee on Agriculture.
What it does
This bill would amend the Animal Welfare Act to make it a federal crime to gamble on animal fighting ventures, whether in person or via a broadcast event. It would add gambling to the existing list of prohibited activities — which already includes sponsoring, exhibiting, attending, or bringing a minor under 16 to an animal fight. The bill does not change penalties for existing offenses; it extends the law's reach to cover bettors and gamblers who participate financially in these events.
Who benefits
Animals used in fighting ventures, who would face reduced demand as the financial incentive structure around these events is weakened. Law enforcement agencies, who would gain an additional legal tool to prosecute participants beyond organizers and spectators. Animal welfare organizations that have long sought to close perceived gaps in the Animal Welfare Act. Communities where animal fighting is associated with related criminal activity, such as illegal gambling operations and drug trafficking.
Who is hurt
Individuals who currently gamble on animal fighting events — primarily cockfighting and dogfighting participants — who would face new federal criminal exposure. Defendants in rural or agricultural communities where cockfighting has historically been more culturally embedded and where enforcement may fall disproportionately. Defense attorneys and civil liberties advocates may raise concerns about the breadth of "broadcast event" language potentially capturing remote or online bettors in ambiguous circumstances.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the Animal Welfare Act already prohibits organizing, attending, and profiting from animal fights, but that gamblers — who provide the primary financial incentive for these events — have remained largely outside federal reach. They contend that closing this gap directly targets the economic engine that sustains animal fighting, making prosecution more effective and deterrence more complete. They also argue that animal fighting is frequently linked to other serious crimes, including illegal weapons and drug trafficking, meaning this provision could have broader public safety benefits.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that existing federal and state laws already provide substantial tools to prosecute animal fighting participants, and that adding a gambling-specific prohibition may result in duplicative charges without meaningfully reducing the underlying conduct. They contend that the bill's inclusion of "broadcast events" is vague and could expose individuals who unknowingly place bets on streamed content to federal criminal liability, raising due process concerns about fair notice. They also argue that enforcement resources would be better directed at organizers and traffickers — the primary drivers of animal fighting — rather than bettors at the periphery.