PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Debbie Sanville and her husband say they tore up their season tickets in 2009 and refused to watch Eagles games once the team signed convicted felon Michael Vick. Nancy Harrold said she became physically ill and has friends to this day so traumatized by the quarterback's arrival they still refuse to watch the Super Bowl champions.
Monica Caraffa was so repulsed the Eagles signed Vick on the heels of his connection to dogfighting that the animal rescue activist trashed every hat, T-shirt and piece of anything connected to the team that plays in a stadium a short walk from her home.
“My hatred,” Caraffa said, “is ongoing.”
Vick signed with the Eagles after he served 18 months in federal prison on a dogfighting conviction. The move sparked a wave of protests, outrage fr

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