Brierley Hill, West Midlands: Walter, Amanda and Kevin Hickman

CONVICTED (2013) | Walter Hickman (now deceased), wife Amanda ‘Mandy’ Hickman, born 4 December 1963, and their son Kevin ‘Squidge’ Hickman, born 10 September 1989, of Wallows Road, Brierley Hill DY5 1PH – kept four horses in conditions the RSPCA called “medieval”.

Mandy Hickman and son Kevin Hickman from Brierley Hill, West Midlands, UK, who were jailed and banned for life from keeping horses.
Mandy Hickman and son Kevin Hickman were jailed and banned for life from keeping horses. Walter Hickman, who was prosecuted alongside them and also sent to prison, died in 2016.

Mandy and Walter Hickman and their son Kevin were told by a judge they showed no remorse and were in denial bordering on arrogance.

The trio pleaded guilty to a total of 44 charges under the Animal Welfare Act in connection with four horses recovered from Fens Pool Nature Reserve.

One of the four horses kept in an "appalling state" at a Black Country nature reserve by the HIckman family

RSPCA prosecutor Nick Sutton said: “These horses were treated in a way which displayed a total lack of knowledge of horse care, they were in an appalling state – close to death.

“They were tethered and suffering with parasites, their hooves needed to be attended to.

“These people should not be near horses or any other animals.”

The case began when RSPCA inspectors were called to the Hickmans’ home in June 2011 to find a foal collapsed in a horse box on the property.
The animal, which was just weeks old and unable to reach his mother to feed, could not be saved and was later destroyed.

Due to his age the foal’s plight could not form part of the case against the Hickman family, however evidence was gathered involving four other animals which were seized by animal welfare workers at the Brierley Hill nature reserve.

The Hickmans, including wheelchair-bound Walter, pictured outside court in 2013
The Hickmans, including wheelchair-bound Walter, pictured outside court in 2013

The Hickmans’ solicitor, Stephanie Brownlees, told the court her clients’ level of care fell short but they loved the horses and were “shell shocked” by their loss.

She added Kevin, who suffered with cancer as a child and had a long-term memory condition, “went there several times a day to feed them, he did feel he was doing all he could”.

Miss Brownlees said: “The defendants appear to have bitten off more than they could chew, they were ignorant of appropriate levels of care, with the issue of horses being thin they felt they could deal with it by feeding them more.”

Another of the four horses kept in an "appalling state" at a Black Country nature reserve by the Hickman family

District judge Michael Wheeler banned all three from keeping horses for life and jailed Amanda for 16 weeks and Kevin for 18 weeks.
He also jailed wheelchair-bound Walter for 18 weeks.

The judge told the trio: “You intended to plead not guilty in the face of overwhelming evidence and ran up a huge legal bill. We allowed for a three day trial and you waited until the first morning to plead guilty.”

Kevin Hickman and his mother Mandy Hickman are pictured leaving court in 2013.
Kevin Hickman and his mother Mandy Hickman are pictured leaving court in 2013.

District Judge Wheeler added: “These horses were in an appalling state, with pest infestations and sores, they hadn’t been hooved properly, they were emaciated and near death. Some had been tethered, some with access to grass and water that was inadequate, and they had been checked infrequently.

“I’m told you’ve been shocked by this prosecution and you are angered and upset by the loss of your horses. What I hear from this is you only think of yourselves.

“Even when these horses were seen and seized by the authorities, you showed no willingness to sign them over. None of you has shown a shred of remorse or responsibility. Your level of denial borders on arrogance.

“This was a case of long-term neglect, and it’s a miracle these animals have survived.”

Speaking after the case, RSPCA inspector Paul Seddon said: “These horses were kept in medieval conditions. We have had numerous dealings with this family, you come to a point where you offer advice to them and they seem incapable or unwilling to take it.”

Sentencing: custodial. Lifetime bans on owning, keeping or being involved with horses.

Stourbridge News
Express & Star

Corby, Northants: Luke Hamilton

CONVICTED (2013) | Luke George Hamilton, born 29/03/1990, originally from Corby and more recently (2020) of Hilary Road, Manchester M22 1PW, for starving a greyhound and dumping the dying animal at the roadside.

Dog killer Luke Hamilton from Corby

Hamilton admitted causing the animal unnecessary suffering by not addressing her weight loss and poor condition.

Kevin McCole, prosecuting on behalf of the RSPCA, said concerns were reported to the charity after people were shocked and distressed to see the condition of the dog.

Dog killer Luke Hamilton from Corby, Northants, UK. Picture: Facebook

A PCSO also investigated a report that the greyhound had attacked and killed a cat.

Mr McCole said: “The officer told the defendant to take the dog to the vet as its whole ribcage could be seen. He said he would do so.

“Later a greyhound was found collapsed and dying on the side of the road in Viking Way, Corby. It was severely emaciated and was conscious but unable to move.”

The five-year-old animal was taken to a vet and tests showed she had organ failure. She had to be put down.

Dog killer Luke Hamilton from Corby, Northants, UK. Picture: Facebook

The RSPCA made inquiries and traced a former owner of the greyhound who had transferred ownership of the dog to Hamilton.

He was so upset to hear of the dog’s condition that he burst into tears.

The RSPCA was then able to track down Hamilton who at first denied responsibility, lying that he had given the dog to his brother.

Sentence: sentenced to eight weeks in prison by Corby magistrates and banned from owning an animal for 20 years (expires March 2033).

Source: Northamptonshire Telegraph (article removed)

Heckmondwike, West Yorkshire: Alistair Fleming

CONVICTED (2013) | Alistair Paul Fleming, born 9 December 1985, of Redberry Avenue, Heckmondwike WF16 9FD – moved out of a property and left his dog behind to die in appalling conditions

Dog killer Alistair Fleming from Heckmondwicke, West Yorkshire, UK. Picture: Facebook

A court in Huddersfield heard how Alistair Fleming moved out of his home and left his pet dog behind to starve to death.

The body of the mastiff, named Sasha, was in such a horrendous state that a post-mortem examination could not be carried out.

Following the sentencing of Fleming, RSPCA inspector Rachel Oprysk described the case as one of worst she had ever witnessed.

Sasha died a slow and painful death in this filthy property
Sasha died a slow and painful death in this filthy property

Fleming admitted four charges of failing to ensure that the needs of an animal were met.

Tanya Forret, prosecuting on behalf of the charity, told Kirklees magistrates that the offences first came to light on September 5, 2012.

Ms Oprysk visited Fleming’s then home on Chapel Lane in Heckmondwike after getting a call about a dog being left alone in the house and living in its own excrement.

As soon as the inspector entered the back yard she was hit with a “foul smell of decay”, Ms Forret said.

The window to the kitchen was thick with bluebottles buzzing around it.

The inspector then opened the door with the help of the landlord.

Ms Forret said: “As soon as the door was opened there was the most overwhelming smell of decay.

“It was so intense that she had to return to her van and put on a full body suit and mask.

“She was absolutely horrified to find the emaciated body of Sasha, dead behind the door.”

The house was filthy, with rubbish piled on every surface and a stack of unopened post belonging to Fleming.

Ms Forret said: “The dog was far too decomposed for any meaningful post-mortem to be carried out.”

Magistrates were told that the case was particularly distressing for Ms Oprysk.

She had previously visited the dog in May 2012 following a call about her being thin, but found the dog to be normal and left after giving Fleming care advice.

Magistrates heard that two tenants had been living at the house.

These were Ryan Dixon, who was described as too disabled to cope with the dog, and his carer Fleming.

Dog killer Alistair Fleming from Heckmondwicke, West Yorkshire, UK. Picture: Facebook

Mr Dixon had moved out in April but continued to pay rent for his former housemate.

Ms Oprysk was unable to contact Fleming until December 2012, who confirmed that the last time he’d seen his pet was in June when he moved out.

The labourer, who was not represented, claimed that when he moved out he had suffered a personal meltdown.

Ms Forret said: “He admitted he should have done more for the dog.

“He said that the conditions in the house were inadequate for humans and animals.”

Magistrates described the case as an appalling example of neglect and banned Fleming from animals for life.

After the case Ms Oprysk said: “This was an absolutely horrendous case. I’ve been an inspector for nine years and this is one of the worst I’ve ever seen.

“Sasha would have suffered an excruciating death and months of suffering – you don’t get to that condition in days.

“But I am pleased to see that the magistrates looked on this as very serious and made a lifetime disqualification.”

Sentencing: 240 hours of unpaid work; £1,749 in court costs. Banned from keeping animals for life.

Examiner Live

Macclesfield, Cheshire: Kalson Abbey

CONVICTED (2013) | Kalson George Abbey, born 28/09/1972, of Devon Close, Macclesfield SK10 3HB – subjected his dog to regular beatings over three months before she was rescued by a ‘posse’ of neighbours

Kalson Abbey and Mishka, the dog he subjected to regular beatings over three months
Kalson Abbey and beaten puppy Mishka, who had blood on her coat and horrific bruising under her fur

Former soldier Kalson Abbey repeatedly whipped six-month-old Northern Inuit Mishka with a braided strap in a series of “punishment” beatings because she kept soiling his carpet.

His aggressive yells of “bad dog” and the terrified yelps of pain from the animal so distressed neighbours in the cul-de-sac where he lived that in a dramatic rescue mission they confronted Abbey on his doorstep and forced him to hand over his pet.

They took Mishka to the RSPCA, whose vets discovered savage bruising on her body.

Dog abuser Kalson Abbey, who is a former soldier
Former soldier Abbey whipped his dog in a series of beatings. He was caught out when concerned neighbours confronted him on his doorstep

Jobless Abbey denied causing unnecessary suffering and claimed he was the victim of a “vendetta”. But he was convicted after four neighbours gave evidence.

One nearby resident who asked not to be named said yesterday: “Abbey is nothing but a cowardly bully. That dog is only tiny and a fraction of his size. It’s no wonder the neighbours had to step in to rescue her.”

The court heard Abbey had fed and walked Mishka regularly but routinely gave her severe beatings and on one occasion was seen holding the dog off the ground by dangling her from a lead around her neck.

A policeman and an RSPCA officer took Mishka into kennels after her rescue. There, a vet discovered she was suffering from “very extensive bruising and superficial lacerations with one area consistent with an injury from a braided strap or similar object”.

Dog abuser Kalson Abbey

Prosecutor Claire Aldridge said even Abbey’s ex-girlfriend complained about his behaviour and produced a video on her iPhone in which he is heard shouting “bad dog Mishka, bad dog Mishka”.

Miss Aldridge added: “The defendant is an angry man who beats his dog and an incident caused several neighbours to attend his home.

“They acted out of concern for a puppy they felt was in need of rescuing. He inflicted repeated emotional and physical trauma. Even a healthy dog can be an abused dog.”

Abbey’s defence lawyer John Gallagher said his client had two prolapsed discs and could not have harmed the dog. He added: “My instructions are that he intends to appeal.”

But bench chairman Shelagh Mayer said: “The offence occurred over a prolonged period of time and we believe that the act was committed with intent and there was injury.’’

RSPCA officer Emma Timmis said: “We are very happy that he has been given a ban and thankfully Mishka is not going back to him.”

Sentencing: six-week custodial sentence suspended for two years. Ordered to pay £250 towards the £5,000 costs of the prosecution and Mishka’s kennel feels. Banned from keeping any animal for five years (expired March 2018).

Express
Daily Mail


Update November 2020

Abbey was convicted of animal cruelty for a second time in connection with a kitten’s untreated fractures, which a vet said had been caused by ‘high energy blunt force trauma’

An investigation was launched into the welfare of kitten, called Missy, after a concerned member of the public reported Abbey to the RSPCA.

Abused kitten Missy

Abbey was visited by Inspector Jenny Bethel on January 2, 2020, who asked to see the four-month-old kitten.

Inspector Bethel could see the kitten was struggling to walk and offered to take her to the vet but Abbey refused. She advised Abbey that he must take her to a vet as soon as possible and that she would be checking if he had.

However, a few days later, on January 8, a neighbour found the injured kitten struggling outside Abbey’s property and took her to a nearby vet for treatment.

The vet was concerned about how the injuries to Missy were caused and called the RSPCA.

Inspector Andy Harris collected Missy from the vets and she was transferred to the RSPCA’s Greater Manchester Animal Hospital for treatment where staff could see she was struggling to walk due to her injuries.

An X-ray revealed that Missy had a fractured left hip joint and two fractures of the left thigh bone. All showed various signs of bone remodelling.

A vet report stated the injuries were caused by ‘high energy blunt force trauma’ which would not have occurred in the home environment – and Abbey stated the kitten had not been outside his garden.

The vet added that injuries to the kitten were what he would expect to see in the case of a road traffic accident and said Missy would have suffered for at least 14 days as Abbey failed to get her veterinary treatment.

Missy was given pain relief but needed an urgent operation and the RSPCA returned to Abbey’s house to seek permission for this.

The hearing was told Abbey was in breach of a lifetime ban on keeping animals at the time of the offence, which was imposed in 2013 after he was convicted of another animal welfare offence.

Inspector Andy Harris said: “Missy’s leg was saved and she adapted to her disability.

“I am pleased to say that last week she was rehomed by the RSPCA Bury and Oldham district branch and is now enjoying life.”

During the interview, Abbey said he thought the kitten, which he said he found as a stray, dragged her leg because she was in-bred.

He said he intended to take the cat to the vet following the RSPCA visit but that Missy went missing before he could.

Abbey also said he thought he had been banned from keeping animals for five years [this is what was originally reported].

Abbey pleaded guilty to one animal welfare charge.

At the sentencing on November 5, 2020, Abbey was given a lifetime ban and also ordered to pay £500 costs, an £80 fine and £32 victim surcharge.

CheshireLive

Hackney, London: James Neil White

CONVICTED (2013) | James White, born 08/07/1991, formerly from York but as of April 2020 living at Webster House, Boleyn Road, London N16 8LW – burned a hamster to death in a frying pan.

Animal abuser James Neill White pictured outside court
James White, who is originally from York, pictured outside court

Police found the dead Syrian hamster in a frying pan next to a heated oven hob in James White’s flat, but it was unclear whether the animal was dead or alive when it went into the pan.

White, who at the time was studying politics and international relations at the University of York, denied killing the hamster by frying her on February 4, 2013, but admitted animal cruelty.

James Neil White

District judge Roy Anderson heard a post-mortem examination showed the hamster did not die of natural causes, but it was not clear whether she died from being fried or from rough handling minutes before she was put in the pan.

“Quite what happened on that night is still shrouded in a degree of mystery,” he said to White. “You, by your treatment of this small unfortunate rodent, destroyed your good character and earned a criminal conviction.”

Sentencing: 120 hours of unpaid of work in the community; £1,000 costs. Eight-year ban on keeping animals (expired March 2021).

York Press
BBC News
ITV News

Grimsby/Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire: Liam Ardito, Gary Cannon and Mark Smith

CONVICTED (2013) | Liam Patrick Ardito, born 28/11/1979, of Westwood Road, Healing, Grimsby DN41 7SA, Gary Lee Cannon, born 12/03/1985, of Davenport Drive, Cleethorpes DN35 9JT, and Mark Wesley Smith, born 05/11/1959, of Broadway, Little Coates, Grimsby DN34 5RN – set dogs on foxes and a badger and watched them being savaged to death

Wildlife criminals from Grimsby/Cleethorpes, North East Lincolnshire Gary Cannon, Liam Ardito and Mark Smith
L-R Gary Cannon, Liam Ardito, Mark Smith

The odious trio’s sickening activities were uncovered during an early-morning RSPCA raid on Smith’s home in Broadway, as other officers conducted a simultaneous operation in Newbury Avenue, where Ardito was living at the time.

Gary Cannon caught on camera with a brutalised fox
Gary Cannon caught on camera enjoying his sick hobby

Items removed from Smith’s property included an air rifle, a wild bird trap and a terrier-cross dog. Birds of prey, ferrets and dogs were being kept in the back garden of the property which was fitted with seven security cameras.

Gary Cannon and Mark Smith drag a screaming fox from her den before throwing her to a pack of dogs to be savaged to death
Gary Cannon and Mark Smith drag a screaming fox from her den before throwing her to a pack of dogs to be savaged to death

Ardito, Cannon and Smith carried out the sickening attacks – some of which they recorded on video – between April 2010 and August 2012.

Smith had thousands of images of dogs attacking animals on his computer, and memory sticks found in his home.

Twisted Mark Smith with a helpless fox
Twisted Mark Smith with a helpless victim

The men’s lawyer Clive Rees of Clive Rees & Associates admitted there was “no justification” for his client’s actions. He added the best he could say for his clients was they had been winding down their activities, saying they believed it was “getting too hot and too heavy.”

Nigel Burn, prosecuting for the RSPCA, described their behaviour as “intentionally cruel”, telling the court, it amounted to “torture”.

The men's dogs suffered a catalogue of facial injuries
The men’s dogs suffered a catalogue of facial injuries

Liam Ardito admitted the following charges:

  • Causing unnecessary suffering to dog by causing it to fight with another animal
  • Jointly causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • Causing an animal fight between a dog and a fox
  • Jointly with Gary Cannon causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • Causing an animal fight between a dog and a badger
  • Causing unnecessary mental suffering to a fox by caging it
  • Jointly with Gary Cannon causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • Jointly with Gary Cannon causing unnecessary suffering to fox by causing it to be attacked by two dogs
  • Jointly with Mark Smith causing an animal fight between two dogs and another animal
  • Jointly with Mark Smith causing unnecessary suffering to a black and tan terrier by making it fight with another animal
  • Jointly with Mark Smith, taking wild birds, namely sparrowhawks
  • Keeping premises for use in animal fighting

Gary Cannon admitted the following charges:

  • Jointly with Liam Ardito causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • Jointly with Liam Ardito causing an animal fight between a dog and a badger
  • Jointly with Liam Ardito causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by dog
  • Jointly with Liam Ardito causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by two dogs
  • Jointly with Mark Smith causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog

Mark Smith admitted the following charges:

  • Being present at an animal fight between a fox and a dog
  • Aiding and abetting Liam Ardito in causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • Two counts of aiding and abetting Liam Ardito and Gary Cannon in causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • Being present at a fight between a dog and a badger
  • Being found, in Broadway, in possession of a trap for the trapping of wild birds
  • Aiding and abetting Liam Ardito and Gary Cannon in causing unnecessary suffering to two terrier dogs by causing them to fight with a fox
  • Aiding and abetting an unknown person to cause unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • Together with Liam Ardito, at Littlecoates Road, causing an animal fight between two dogs and an unknown animal
  • Together with Gary Cannon, causing unnecessary suffering to a fox by causing it to be attacked by a dog
  • With Liam Ardito, causing unnecessary suffering to a black and tan terrier by causing it to fight with an unknown animal
  • Possessing a wild bird, namely a curlew
  • Possessing a wild bird, namely a rook

Sentencing: four-month custodial sentence for each count to run concurrently. Ardito and Smith were banned from keeping dogs and birds for at least 10 years and Cannon from keeping dogs for at least 10 years (expires March 2023).

North West Hunt Saboteurs



After Ardito, Cannon and Smith were sentenced, the RSPCA released a series of photographs of men believed to be associates of the trio. It is unknown whether any of them were ever traced or prosecuted.

Unidentified associates of Ardito, Cannon and Smith

Source: North West Hunt Saboteurs Association

Bradford/Leeds: Timothy Davey and Charlotte Mountain

CONVICTED (2013) | backyard breeders Timothy Davey (aka Timothy Lee O’Reilly), born 20/07/1985, of Ravenscliffe Avenue, Bradford BD10 0JX and Charlotte Mountain, born c. 1986, of Victoria Avenue, Yeadon, Leeds LS19 7AS – banned from keeping animals for just five years after three dogs were found in a shocking state

Backyard breeder Timothy Davey and one of the dogs found at partner Charlotte Mountain's property in Victoria Avenue, Yeadon
Backyard breeder Timothy Davey and one of the dogs found at his partner Charlotte Mountain’s property in Victoria Avenue, Yeadon, Leeds

Charlotte Mountain admitted allowing dogs Gismo, Rino and Bingo to suffer, while partner Timothy Davey, a career criminal with convictions for violence, was found guilty of neglect following a trial.

Backyard breeder Timothy Davey and one of the dogs shared at partner Charlotte Mountain's property in Victoria Avenue, Yeadon

The bull breed dogs were suffering from severe skin and eye conditions, which saw two of them lose extensive amounts of fur.

RSPCA inspector Nikki Cheetham said: “These dogs were in a shocking state when they came to our attention and could not have looked more different after getting the treatment they needed.

“Gismo had virtually no hair on her body and her skin was red raw from sarcoptic mange. She really was a sad sight. Rino wasn’t much better.”

The dogs came to the RSPCA’s attention in June 2012.

Sentencing:
Mountain – 10-week curfew; £100 costs. Banned from keeping animals for five years.
Davey – banned from keeping animals for five years
.

Wharfedale Observer

2019 update:
Timothy Davey, now calling himself Timmy Lee O’Reilly, continues to operate a highly dubious backyard dog breeding operation, which he calls ‘pittz r us’.

Even though he’s on benefits, Davey is a prolific producer of bull terriers and appears to be raking in the cash.

This is not a man who cares about the fate of the dogs he sells either: and there is more than a hint of links to the dog-fighting world

Backyard breeder Timothy Davey aka Timmy Lee O'Reilly from Bradford
Backyard breeder Timothy Davey aka Timmy Lee O'Reilly from Bradford
Backyard breeder Timothy Davey aka Timmy Lee O'Reilly from Bradford
Backyard breeder Timothy Davey aka Timmy Lee O'Reilly from Bradford
Timothy Davey openly flogs puppies on his FB page
Backyard breeder Timothy Davey aka Timmy Lee O'Reilly from Bradford
Backyard breeder Timothy Davey aka Timmy Lee O'Reilly from Bradford