BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS — A 49-year-old Carver man has agreed to plead guilty to conspiring to participate in an animal fighting venture, admitting his central role in a years-long dogfighting ring that bred, trained, fought, and gambled on pit bull-type dogs while inflicting severe cruelty on the animals.
Corey Elliott (note: no booking photo provided by the D.O.J.) entered the plea agreement with federal prosecutors for violating the federal Animal Welfare Act. A plea hearing has not yet been scheduled. He was arrested in April 2026. The U.S. government is also seeking civil forfeiture of four pit bull-type dogs seized from his Carver residence in June 2025.
(Note: 13 “pit bull-type” dogs were seized from a separate individual in an earlier part of the investigation, according to court documents…)
According to the charging documents, Elliott and his co-conspirator ran a close partnership spanning several years. They communicated extensively about arranging fights, discussing outcomes and injuries, placing wagers, and coordinating the buying, selling, and conditioning of dogs specifically for fighting.
The Horrors of Dogfighting (Excerpts from the D.O.J.’s case)
Dogfighting operations like the one Elliott participated in subject animals to systematic brutality. Court documents detail the reality:
“A dogfight occurs when two dogs are knowingly released by their handlers in a controlled environment to attack each other and fight. The fight ends when one dog withdraws, when a handler ‘picks up’ their dog and forfeits the match, or when one or both dogs die.”
Dogs are selectively bred and trained for “gameness” — the drive to keep fighting despite traumatic or mortal injury. Fighters chase “Champion” or “Grand Champion” status by winning three or five fights. Losers often face the worst fate:
“It is not uncommon for dogs that lose matches to be killed in cruel, torturous, and inhumane ways as punishment.”
Before matches, dogs endure a rigorous six-to-eight-week “keep” involving intense running, spring poles and flirt poles to build jaw strength and aggression, and sometimes performance-enhancing drugs or anabolic steroids. Younger dogs are frequently “rolled” — tested in short, brutal fights to assess their fighting spirit.
The physical toll is permanent and visible. As described in the documents:
“Dogs who have been fought may have scars, puncture wounds, swollen faces, or mangled ears. Scars from organized dogfights are commonly found on the face and front legs, as well as on hind ends and thighs.”
Evidence from the Investigation
In June 2023, a search warrant at the co-conspirator’s residence uncovered multiple pit bull-type dogs and extensive evidence of organized dogfighting. Several dogs showed clear signs of prior fights:
- One had “severe, deep scarring around the neck and on the left front leg.”
- Another exhibited “scarring on the front and hind legs, face, neck and head, as well as notching and scarring on the left ear,” plus luxating patella (dislocating kneecaps) in both knees, worn teeth, and masses on the body.
- A third dog had “scarring on the head and both front legs, notching on both ears, and scarring and/or hair loss on both back legs.”
One underweight dog died after seizure (believed to have had cancer), but had already suffered scarring and other injuries consistent with fighting life. Dogs were routinely housed separately in locked cages or chained with heavy collars to prevent unplanned fights. Many were underweight, had dirty ears, long nails, parasites (including giardia and roundworm eggs), and tick-borne diseases. None appeared spayed or neutered.
Seized items painted a complete picture of the operation: spring poles, flirt poles, treadmills/slat mills/carpet mills for conditioning, break sticks (used to pry dogs’ jaws apart), bite sleeves, digital scales for match weigh-ins, and extensive veterinary supplies — including antibiotics, painkillers, wound care materials, steroids, and even fertility medications — many expired. These supplies allowed operators to treat fight injuries themselves rather than risk veterinary scrutiny.
Dogfighting literature, books such as The Pit Bull Bible and The World of Fighting Dogs, back issues of Sporting Dog Journal, pedigrees tracking bloodlines and fight wins, and training regimens were also recovered.
Elliott’s own residence yielded parallel evidence. The four seized pit bull-type dogs were housed separately in locked cage structures (see above surveillance images). Several had scarring. Investigators found training equipment, veterinary supplies, and dogfighting literature. Elliott himself messaged another dogfighter via WhatsApp about “training dogs to fight, the planning and results of dogfights, injuries sustained by and the death of fighting dogs and disposing of dog carcasses.”
The Inhumane Cost and Legal Consequences
These operations generate profit through illegal gambling and the sale or breeding of “game” dogs. Dogs that underperform or lose fights are often discarded or killed.
The four dogs seized from Elliott’s home are now in the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service and being cared for by a contractor. Under the Animal Welfare Act, animals involved in fighting ventures are subject to forfeiture.
Elliott faces up to five years in federal prison, three years of supervised release, and a fine of up to $250,000. Sentencing will be determined by a federal judge using the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines.
U.S. Attorney Leah B. Foley, along with officials from the USDA Office of Inspector General, Massachusetts State Police, and the Animal Rescue League of Boston, announced the plea agreement. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Danial E. Bennett, with the civil forfeiture handled by the Asset Recovery Unit and DOJ’s Wildlife and Marine Resources Section.
The details in the charging documents and civil forfeiture complaint are allegations. Elliott is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. However, his agreement to plead guilty reflects acceptance of responsibility for his role in this cruel conspiracy.
This case underscores the hidden brutality behind dogfighting rings — where dogs endure isolation, forced aggression training, repeated physical trauma, infections, and often death — all for human profit and spectacle. Such operations can exist even in ordinary neighborhoods across Massachusetts and beyond.
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