How the FBI Responded to Elon Musk's Email Isn't Shocking. The Lib Media...
Elon Musk's Latest Directive for Federal Workers Is Straight Out of Office Space
Possibly The Dumbest Example Of Waste DOGE Has Discovered (So Far)
Maine Governor Janet Mills: Leader Of The New Confederate States of America
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 256: What the New Testament Says About Pride...
Dem Gov. Under Fire for Paying Cabinet Members Sweet Bonuses in 2024
It’s Over: Joy Reid’s MSNBC Show Canceled
Trump Seeks to Sell the Nancy Pelosi Federal Building in San Francisco
JD Vance Dominates CPAC Straw Poll as Leading Contender for 2028 GOP Nomination
Tony Evers Aims to Change 'Mother' to 'Inseminated Person'
Israel Does Not Have the Kishkes* to Win
USAID is Funding Political Persecution in Ukraine
Congress Must Cancel Foreign Derived Intangible Income Tax Break
Trump Taps Kash Patel as the New Acting Director of the ATF
Trump Reveals the One Thing That Made Him Run Again
Tipsheet

Pentagon Official Charged With Running Dogfighting Ring

Bullit Marquez

A senior communications official at the Defense Department allegedly took part in an illegal dog fighting ring for more than two decades in the Washington, D.C. area.

Advertisement

Maryland resident Frederick Douglass Moorefield Jr., a deputy chief information officer for command, control and communications for the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and an associate, Mario Damon Flythe, 49, also of Maryland, were arrested and charged with “promoting and furthering” a dog fighting venture, the Department of Justice said in a release on Monday.   

The two used an encrypted messaging app to discuss their operation, dubbed “the DMV Board,” with individuals across the U.S., including how to train dogs for the fights. They also shared videos about dogfighting, planned the events and bet on them, shared media reports about people who were caught, and communicated about how to keep their operation hidden from law enforcement.

Authorities recovered 12 dogs at Moorefield and Flythe’s residences and found veterinary steroids, training schedules, a bloodied carpet, and a “device consisting of an electrical plug and jumper cables, which the affidavit alleges is consistent with devices used to execute dogs that lose dogfights,” the DOJ said. 

Anne Arundel County authorities had received complaints about Moorefield and Flythe for years, and in November 2018 the county animal control was alerted to a report of two dead dogs in a plastic dog food bag in Annapolis, about six miles from Moorefield’s home, Daly wrote. In addition to the dogs in the bag, investigators found mail addressed to Moorefield, Daly’s affidavit stated.

When Daly spoke to Moorefield on the day of the raid, he acknowledged that he operated under the name “Geehad Kennels,” and that local animal control and law enforcement had previously visited his property, the affidavit states. Flythe told another FBI agent that he used the name “Razor Sharp Kennels” and “admitted to having engaged in dogfighting in the past.” (The Washington Post)

Advertisement

A Pentagon spokesman, Lt. Cmdr. Tim Gorman, said the DOD was "aware of the criminal complaint" filed against Moorefield and confirmed "the individual is no longer in the workplace" but did not comment further. 


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement