By Jack Baer, Staff writer
Kansas City Chiefs defensive tackle Isaiah Buggs turned himself into Tuscaloosa Police on Thursday after following arrest warrants were issued against him for animal cruelty.
According to WIAT Birmingham, Buggs is charged with two counts of second-degree animal cruelty after two starving and dirty dogs were found on a Tuscaloosa property he was renting.
A subsequent report from Patch revealed that Buggs was accused of shoving the Tuscaloosa police chief in April.
Buggs was booked and released after paying a $300 bond for each charge. He has a June 13 hearing set in the case.
The circumstances around the case with the dogs, as painted by the petition, are dark. Tuscaloosa police received information March 28 about two dogs being left on the back porch of a house. When police and animal control arrived, they found a grey and white pit bull on a screened-in back porch and a black Rottweiler mix locked in a metal cage in direct sunlight. Neither dog had access to food or water.
Both dogs were reportedly seized and found to be “malnourished, emaciated, neglected,” with the property appearing to be abandoned. A neighbor told the authorities that the dogs had been on the porch for 10 days.
Investigators later determined the house was rented by Buggs, who was found to have been served with a notice of termination in April due to $3,116.90 in back rent owed. Witnesses told investigators that he moved out of the house on or about March 19.
Buggs has made $5.3 million in his NFL career, per Spotrac.
Trey Robinson, Buggs’ agent, denied the charges and said he client is a victim of a “subversive campaign” to force the closure of a hookah lounge he owns in Tuscaloosa.
“Under no circumstance does Mr. Buggs condone the mistreatment of any animal,” Robinson said in a statement. “The dogs at issue did not belong to him, and he was unaware they remained at the property in question.”
Robinson said that Buggs was arrested twice at his hookah lounge twice on misdemeanor charges in the past two months “but each time no public record was made of these arrests.” He added that the city was using the allegations against his client as “leverage” in hopes of Buggs surrendering his business license.