Tag Archives: trapping / snaring

Falkirk: Laurence Brown

CONVICTED (2018) | Laurence Brown, born. c. 1958, of Derwent Avenue, Falkirk FK1 5HZ – trapped his neighbour’s cat in an illegal and inhumane fox snare.

Cruel Laurence Brown bought an illegal snare off the internet and used it to trap his neighbour's cat. Miraculously she was unhurt.
Cruel Laurence Brown bought an illegal snare off the internet and used it to trap his neighbour’s cat. Miraculously she was unhurt.

Brown told the court he set a fox-snare for his neighbour’s cat because she wouldn’t stop fouling in his hot tub

The lorry driver said he had tried screens, pepper, and even lion dung after the feline began to “repeatedly” defecate in the heated outdoor whirlpool.

After these attempts failed to stop the cat, Brown bought a snare on the Internet and set it where the animal was squeezing through the palings of the fence that divided his garden from the cat’s owner’s garden.

Animal abuser: Laurence Brown from Falkirk, Scotland. Pic: Facebook

Prosecutor Susan Campbell said: ‘His garden backs onto their garden, and the gardens are separated by a six foot fence which has spaces which the cat can fit through.

‘On 22nd June the owner of the cat heard a yowling noise coming from the area of the fence.

‘He saw his cat dashing and realised that she had a piece of wire round her neck.

‘It was a loop of yellow wire with a small metal fixing and there was no stopper on the device which would have prevented it from continuing to tighten.

‘He got some scissors and cut it off. The cat was not injured.’

Ms Campbell said the cat’s owner challenged Brown about the incident, who claimed he was ‘trying to catch foxes’.

In court, Brown pleaded guilty to setting an illegal and inhumane snare and trapping the cat, whereby she became entangled and unable to free herself, causing her unnecessary suffering.

He also admitted contravening the Wildlife and Countryside Act by setting a snare ‘calculated to cause unnecessary suffering’ to any animal coming into contact with it, in that it had no ‘stop’ on its noose.

Sheriff James MacDonald told Brown:  ‘You had a limited record when you appeared before me, but you now have a conviction for animal cruelty, and that will live with you.

‘Not only that, you will have to live with the consequences of your actions – not least of which is knowing that your neighbour knows that you set a trap for his cat, which on the basis of the narration given to me by the Crown, can only have been with the intent to either maim that animal or at least cause it significant injury.

‘Fortunately for you it was unhurt, but I should tell you this: Parliament intended these offences to be taken seriously, and that is why Parliament provided me with the power to send you to prison for up to 12 months.

‘You should understand that if there is any repeat of this sort of behaviour, the court will undoubtedly regard it seriously.’

Sentencing | Fined £300. 

Daily Mail

Gravesend, Kent: Julius Gadzor

CONVICTED (2018) | Julius Gadzor, born c.  1979, of Wellington Street, Gravesend  DA12 – caught wild birds by using glue traps.

Julius Gadzor from Gravesend is originally from Slovakia
Julius Gadzor from Gravesend is originally from Slovakia

Roma gypsy Gadzor, from Slovakia, admitted possessing wild birds and trapping them.

Officers from the Rural Task Force for Kent joined forced with the RSPCA on Thursday, June 14, 2018, to conduct a search of Gadzor’s home following a tip off they received from the RSPB.

A number of caged wild birds were seized as well as rat glue and other bird trapping equipment.

Some of the cages in which Julius Gadzor kept the wild birds he'd trapped

Gadzor was interviewed four days later where he admitted that he was trying to catch them illegally in his garden.

Sergeant Darren Walshaw, who co-ordinated the search, said: “This is an excellent example of partnership working. The intelligence received from the RSPB allowed us to gain enough information to request a search warrant and the case built by the RSPCA resulted in the man having to admit his guilt.

“Bird trapping is not only illegal, it is incredibly cruel. We are committed to working with our partner agencies to put these criminals, who illegally trap birds for their own financial gain, before the court.”

A spokesman for the RSPCA said: “To take a wild bird from its natural habitat and shut it inside a tiny cage is so cruel. They suffer greatly in captivity, are not used to being in cages and, sadly, often die.

“All wild birds in England and Wales, their nests and their eggs are protected by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 and actions may only be taken under specific licences.’

“It is illegal under the Wildlife and Countryside Act to trap wild birds.”

Sentencing | 28-day curfew; total of £385 costs and charges. 

Metro
KentOnline

Oswestry, Shropshire: Micheal Anitt

CONVICTED (2017) | Micheal Anitt, born February 1977, of Erw Wen, Oswestry SY10 9NY – made a homemade snare trap, which resulted in a cat sustaining injuries after getting caught in it

Micheal Anitt
Micheal Anitt

Anitt pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to the cat left injured.

The court heard that Anitt made the trap from wire because he didn’t like neighbours’ cats coming into his garden.

On this occasion, he had set the trap and then gone away for the weekend.

Jeremy the cat and the snare in which he was trapped for hours
Anitt set up a makeshift trap to catch his neighbour’s pet cat . The cat, Jeremy, was found in a distressed state 12 hours later

A cat named Jeremy then became caught in the snare and remained trapped for 12 hours.

He was rescued after his horrified owners went looking for him and found him wrapped in wire and suspended off the ground. He was bleeding and suffered a foot injury during the ordeal.

Investigating RSPCA inspector Phil Lewis said: “Poor Jeremy had got caught around his torso and the more he tried to free himself, the tighter the snare got around him. He simply wasn’t able to get free.

“For over 12 hours Jeremy struggled and by the time he was found by his worried owners, he was clearly in a lot of distress. His owners managed to free him and took him to a vet, where thankfully he was not too seriously injured. He has made a full recovery, but he could have very easily not have been that lucky. The snare could have caught him around his neck, strangling him to death.

“Snare traps are horrible things and can cause a lot of damage to any animal which comes across it. Unfortunately for Anitt he discovered this because his homemade trap injured an innocent animal.”

Sentencing: ordered to pay a total of £706. Disqualified from keeping animals for 10 years (expires September 2027).

Shropshire Star

Northampton, West Northamptonshire: Terrance Blanch

CONVICTED (2016) | Terrance Blanch, born c. 1942, of Bourne Crescent, Northampton NN5 7JD – injured a cat he caught in a wire trap set up in his garden.

Cruel Terrance Blanch was fined after catching his neighbour’s cat in a wire snare in his garden.
Cruel Terrance Blanch was fined after catching his neighbour’s cat in a wire snare in his garden.

Blanch pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal.

The court heard that the long-haired cat, known as Lilith, went missing on two occasions in November 2014 and December 2015.

Her owner, Michelle Batchelor, who lives a few doors away from Blanch’s address, said on both occasions she heard her cat crying from behind the fence of his garden.

Ms Batchelor, who has four other cats, said she looked over the fence and saw Lilith had been trapped in a cage.

Each time Ms Batchelor was forced to knock on the Blanch’s door and he then agreed to release the cat.

Ms Janita Patel, prosecuting, said Blanch was given two warnings from the RSPCA about the use of traps or snares in his garden.

In February 2016, Lilith again went missing and Ms Batchelor heard her crying behind Blanch’s garden fence.

When she looked over, Ms Batchelor saw her cat had become wrapped up in a wire snare.

After phoning the RSPCA and police, Ms Batchelor was informed she could climb the fence and go into the garden to retrieve her cat.

Ms Batchelor said: “Lilith was hissing and crying and I thought she was injured and her back legs had gone. I tried to pull her out but she would not move. I then noticed that around her waist was a wire snare. The snare was tight round her waist and did not move freely.”

Ms Batchelor eventually managed to remove Lilith from the snare and she was taken to a vets.

Lilith was given painkillers and antibiotics and checked for internal bleeding. Ms Batchelor said her pet had now recovered from her physical injuries but was much more fearful about going outside now.

Ms Batchelor said: “I feel absolutely horrified that one of my cats has been caught in this way, not only a cage but also a snare.”

In his interview with the RSPCA, Blanch said he set up the snares and traps to stop rats and rabbits from getting into the aviary, which was in his garden.

Blanch claimed he was not aiming to catch cats but admitted he was not aware of the legislation for setting snares or that it was his responsibility to check them daily.

The court heard that when he was asked what he would do to deter cats from entering his garden he said “You don’t want to know.”

Sentence: two-year community order; fine, costs and chares totalling £560.

Northampton Chronicle
The Sun