Armley, Leeds: Gary Samuel and Rochelle McEwan

CONVICTED (2016) | former vet Gary James Cassius Samuel, born 09/06/1966, of Weston Road, Enfield EN2 0QD and vets’ assistant Rochelle McEwan, born 18/03/1987 of Stonecliffe Close, Leeds LS12 5BJ – trapped 22 huskies and eight cats in a squalid cellar.

Disgraced former vet Gary Samuel and his assistant Rochelle McEwan during a court appearance on despicable animal cruelty charges.

Vet Gary James Cassius Samuel, who practised for 16 years and had 10,000 customers, and assistant/partner Rochelle McEwan were convicted of animal cruelty after officers discovered 22 dogs and eight cats in the back room, living quarters and basement of Armley Vets, on Town Street, in Armley, Leeds.

Cruel Samuel, a father, and McEwan let the helpless animals starve in dirty cages in a secret basement underneath his practice which has hidden by a trap door.

Of the 24 dogs kept in the Leeds practice where Samuel also lived, 22 were huskies and six were puppies. One puppy found in a cage had to be put down, as did one of the eight cats found.

In February 2015 police were called to the property after a 999 call reported that Samuel was threatening McEwan with a hammer.

Video footage showing the foul conditions in which Gary Samuel and Rochelle McEwan kept starving dogs and cats

When they arrived they found husky type dogs living in dirty, overcrowded cages, which were kept below a trap door that was covered by a carpet and a table.

Some of the puppies found in the filthy cellar at Armley Vet’s in Leeds

The animals also had very little water and police officers who searched the building said there was a strong smell of urine and faeces.

Officers also found three cats in the back room. They were described as ‘skin and bone’ and one of them had to be euthanised.

The police called the RSPCA and some animals were removed from the house that night.

Three further dogs had to be put down on veterinary advice.

Gary Samuel

Samuel claimed that McEwan collected the dogs and he wasn’t happy about them being kept in the cellar, but they weren’t his responsibility. This wasn’t accepted by the court, however, and he was convicted of all charges.

RSPCA inspector Nikki Cheetham said: “I’ve seen a lot of shocking things working for the RSPCA but I would certainly never have expected to deal with something like this.

“People who work in the veterinary profession are the first port of call if an animal needs help. It is unthinkable to consider what was going on in this surgery as clients were coming and going, paying their vet fees.

“Dogs and cats were in a back room, the vet’s living quarters and a basement, accessed by a trapdoor in the floor that had been hidden by a piece of carpet – that’s where most of the dogs were found. They were in cages covered in faeces, with no access to food or water, in the pitch black. It was like a dungeon.”

Ms Cheetham said most of the dogs were Husky-types, with the exception of two Chinese crested dogs. Adult dogs were in the basement while puppies were found shut in one of the rooms, with most of the cats in another.

She said 21 animals – 15 dogs and six cats – have already been re-homed from RSPCA centres and branches in County Durham, York, Liverpool, Chester, Leeds and Harrogate.

In July 2018 Samuel was struck off after the disciplinary committee of the Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons (RCVS) ruled that he was unfit to practise as a veterinary surgeon.

A tribunal report revealed details of the raid on Samuel’s Armley veterinary practice in Leeds in February 2015.

It said: “Police entered the premises and described an immediate and strong smell of stale urine mixed with a strong smell of faeces.

“Having entered through the rear of the premises, they found themselves in an examination room, where there appeared to be a dirty towel with instruments on a table.

“As they moved onwards, they found cages, two of them occupied by husky-type puppies. They did not appear to have any water or bedding.

“An officer opened a chest freezer and discovered meat that appeared to be off.

“Dr Samuel was found in the main bedroom… He put his headphones on as a police officer approached him.

“The police noted that there were five animals in the bedroom, including two small dogs and two cats.

“Dr Samuel told the police about a cellar and showed them a trap door, covered by a carpet and a table.

“Dr Samuel turned on the light and officers saw that there were a large number of dogs in cages in the cellar. Dr Samuel said ‘these are her animals, she collects them, she never feeds them’.

“The police noted the dirty state of the premises and that the cages in the cellar were dirty. There was only water in one cage and the lack of water was a common theme throughout the premises.

“The huskies in the cellar had been there without a break for 48 hours in cramped conditions with no natural light and that they had been spending long periods in the cellar for at least several weeks. It found the cages in the cellar were in fact built to house the huskies.”

Samuel tried to blame McEwan, in her 20s at the time, by claiming they were her sole responsibility. The pair were experiencing relationship issues.

However, Samuel was found to have breached his duties as a vet as he was ‘completely indifferent to their plight’ and ‘tried to wash his hands’ of the situation by ignoring it.

Sentencing:
Samuel – 12-week suspended prison sentence; 150 hours of unpaid work; total of £700 fine and costs. Banned from keeping animals for life. Barred from practising as a veterinary surgeon.

McEwan – 12 weeks in prison, suspended for 12 months; 150 hours of unpaid work; £250 costs. Disqualified from keeping animals for life.

Daily Mail 


Update December 2021

Leeds Live reported that Samuel had failed in his bid to get back his licence to practise as a vet.

In trying to convince the RCVS tribunal to reinstate his licence, Samuel claimed he was ‘in a completely different place than he was before’ and had ‘read extensively about animal welfare issues’.

He said: “Now that I have gone through this reformation process I would never have animals belonging to someone else kept in a vet practice, [I] understand that it is important that animals under my care must meet animal welfare standards of adequate lighting, space, ventilation a clean supply of food and water, exercise and social interaction.”

But a stunned Royal College of Veterinary Surgeons [RCVS] committee rejected his case.

They said: “Dr Samuel had, by this time, been practising as a veterinary surgeon for some 16 years.

“The Committee considered it extraordinary that he would require some sort of reformation in order to realise that animals under his care would need such basic essentials as adequate lighting, space, ventilation a clean supply of food and water, exercise and social interaction.

“All pet owners, let alone veterinary surgeons, would or should be aware of such basic matters.

“Furthermore, although he claimed to have undergone a reformation, the Committee noted that Dr Samuel referred to his conduct variously as an error, a mistake and a misjudgment. “Having heard from him, the Committee witnessed no depth of feeling, no sense of true remorse and no degree of upset for the animals that had suffered.

“The Committee could not be confident that Dr Samuel would not allow animals in his care to suffer in the future.”


Worthing, West Sussex: Shaun Peckham

CONVICTED (2016) | Shaun Peckham, born 30 May 1968, of Anscombe Close, Worthing BN11 5EW – prosecuted for animal cruelty after his two starving dogs were found roaming the streets

Before and after photos of neglected dog Kaiser
Before and after photos of neglected dog Kaiser

Shaun Peckham was traced after his Rottweiler called Kaiser and Labrador called Biscuit were found by passersby roaming the streets near his home.

The dogs were not chipped and were taken to be examined by a vet who said both pups were starving and that this was a case of cruelty.

The welfare team at Worthing District Council posted pictures of the dogs to their Facebook page, appealing for the owner to come forward.

Concerned residents gave up Peckham to the team and the police visited his property on December 22, 2014.

Two other dogs were found, but they were in healthy condition, and Peckham told the team Biscuit and Kaiser had in fact been stolen from him eight days before they were found.

He was interviewed under caution and said Kaiser was owned by his son, Lloyd Peckham, but that he was responsible for the dog and that his son lived elsewhere. He accepted that Biscuit belonged to him.

He once again said the dogs had been stolen but had not reported it to the police, also telling them “Biscuit had always been thin”.

The council’s dog wardens then received an expert report which said the state of the dogs was the result of a “prolonged period of inadequate or inappropriate nutrition”.

It would have taken the dogs eight weeks to reach the state they were in and so Peckham was taken to court where he pleaded guilty to charges under the Animal Welfare Act.

Sentencing: 12-month community order, 150 hours of unpaid work; ordered to have his two other dogs rehomed. Disqualified from keeping pets for five years (expired January 2021).

The Argus

Daventry, Northamptonshire: Steven Cook

CONVICTED (2016) | Steven Cook, born 03/07/1977, of Greenhill Crescent, Daventry NN11 9BL –  repeatedly stabbed a young Shih-Tzu with a kitchen knife in the face, neck and body, causing fatal injuries.

Shih Tzu Ronnie was stabbed to death by deraned owner Steven Cook
Stock photo

Cook inflicted a number of stab wounds on the dog, known as Ronnie, after taking him to local Spider Park. The court heard Cook “lost the plot” after Ronnie supposedly “went for” his newborn baby daughter and then bit him.

Janita Patel, prosecuting for the RSPCA, said the dog was found by a member of the public in the park shortly before 8pm on August 23, 2015.

Ms Patel said Cook had been seen walking out of the park with “blood on his hands” and all over his shins and socks.

The court heard Ronnie, who was still breathing despite suffering severe blood loss, was taken to a vets in Northampton for treatment.

They heard Ronnie had a collar around his neck with a phone number and contact was eventually made with Cook’s father-in-law who attended the vets. The father-in-law was told the cost of treating Ronnie’s wounds was likely to be £2,500 to £3,000 and he made the decision, on his son-in-law’s behalf, to have the dog put down.

Ronnie suffered 10 wounds to his body, including a fractured skull, fractured leg and multiple stab wounds.

In December 2015 Cook pleaded guilty to animal cruelty and in January 2016 was sent to jail to serve a pathetic 12-week sentence.

Sentence:  sentenced to 12 weeks in jail. Disqualified from keeping animals for life.

RSPCA News
Northampton Chronicle

Craigavon, County Armagh: Peter Cawley and Nina Reaney

CONVICTED (2016) | Peter Cawley, age unknown, of Colban Crescent, Lurgan BT66 8HY and ex-wife Nina Reaney, born 04/06/1983, most recently of Holly Hill, Dollingstown BT66 7UB – allowed three dogs to become emaciated.

Convicted dog abusers Peter Cawley and his ex-wife Nina Reaney
Convicted dog abusers Peter Cawley and his ex-wife Nina Reaney of Craigavon received a pitiful five-year ban, which expires in January 2021.

The pair pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering and failing to meet the needs of three dogs in their joint care.

This little shih-tzu, who was blind and missing all but three of his teeth, had to be put to sleep to end his suffering.

Charges were brought against them by Armagh Banbridge and Craigavon District Council under Sections 4 and 9 of the Welfare of Animals Act (NI) 2011.

Animal Welfare Officers, who visited the couple’s former property on the Calverstown Road, Bleary, in October 2014, came across three emaciated dogs with no access to food, water or bedding. The dogs were kept in a pen with significant accumulations of dog faeces.

Animal abuser Nina Reaney from Craigavon, Northern Ireland
Mother-of-seven Nina Reaney (formerly Nina Cawley)

The veterinary surgeon who attended the scene noted a Shih Tzu type dog, who was blind and all but three of his teeth were missing. He had to be euthanised because of his extremely poor condition.

The second crossbred type dog had a growth on her back leg. She was extremely thin with dirty skin. Both she and a third boxer type dog were removed from the property and have since been successfully rehomed.

Sentencing:
Cawley: three-month custodial sentence suspended for two years Reaney: two-month custodial sentence suspended for one year. Costs of £3,727 each. Both were banned from owning any animal for a period of five years (expired January 2021).

Lurgan Mail

Buntingford, Hertfordshire: Samuel Lyas and Valentine Baldock

CONVICTED (2016) | Samuel Lyas, born 27/03/1990, and Valentine Baldock, born 26/05/1984, both of Brent Pelham, Buntingford – for leaving their injured dogs to suffer after forcing them to fight foxes and badgers

Wildlife persecutor, dog abuser Samuel Lyas of Buntingford, Hertfordshire

Lyas (pictured) and Baldock admitted causing unnecessary suffering to terriers, some of whom were left with the skin ripped from their lower jaws.

The RSPCA’s special operations unit began investigating Lyas, who is originally from Witham in Essex, after being made aware of allegations that he used his dogs to attack wild animals. A warrant was executed by Herts Constabulary’s rural operations team at his home in April 2015.

The dogs had painful untreated facial injuries

RSPCA officers found six terriers, including a red male called Max and a black longhair called Bronson who both needed treatment for their injuries. Max was suffering ‘de-gloving’ injuries – the dog had no skin on his lower jaw, leaving the flesh exposed after it had been ripped off.

A tethering post was found by RSPCA and police officers, which pictures on Lyas’ phone showed was used to tie up foxes for the dogs to practise on.

A homemade noose was also found.

Sam Lyas

A separate warrant the same day at Baldock’s address, also in Brent Pelham, found more dogs, including black terriers called Gravel and Todd, with head, facial and jaw injuries which had not received proper treatment.

A vet also found staples in the corner of Gravel’s mouth, some of which had become partially detached from the skin. These had been inserted by Baldock.

A series of text messages between Lyas and a friend revealed Bronson had been involved in a fight with a fox. One text said: “Had hold of him from start to finish not a noise from him just grunted with his mouth full.”

Prosecutor Lauren Bond told the court: “These people are not fit and proper to look after animals.

“They have shown a complete contempt for the safety of animals, not just the dogs but the foxes.

“These are not injuries that have occurred by accident, they have occurred through deliberate placing of a dog in that situation.”

Lyas and Baldock lived in neighbouring houses in Brent Pelham, which were provided by their employers, who have since sacked and evicted them. While the employer is not named in the linked article, it is known that both men worked for the Puckeridge Hunt, Lyas as a terrierman and Baldock as a kennel huntsman. It is alleged that the hunt paid their legal costs but then cut ties just before conviction following negative publicity.

Screenshot of the Puckeridge Hunt webstie shows Valentine Baldock listed as a kennel huntsman.
A screenshot of the Puckeridge Hunt website lists Valentine Baldock as a kennel huntsman.

The decision to seize a dog found in Lyas’ home drew an angry reaction from the public gallery, with his friends and family claiming she belonged to his partner.

One of his entourage shouted: “How much more do you want to take away?”

Lyas has a history of violence being part of a gang of thugs convicted for assault in 2010.

Sentencing: Lyas – 26-week custodial sentence, suspended for two years; £3,600 in costs; 280 hours’ unpaid work. Baldock – 225 hours’ community service; £3,025 in fines. Both banned from keeping animals for life.

Dog News


Additional information

Sam Lyas runs a landscaping business. Its name is SJL Exterior Improvements and its Facebook page is here.

Crawley, West Sussex: Kieran Taylor

CONVICTED (2016) | Kieran James Taylor, born 04/02/1997, of Holbein Road, Crawley RH10 5LB – killed a tame sheep by kicking him, stabbing him and then setting him on fire

2018 social media image of Kieran Taylor
Kieran Taylor in FB image from 2018

The sheep was kept in a paddock at Tilgate Nature Centre in Crawley.

Nature Centre staff found the young semi-wild male Boreray sheep savaged and burned in the woods on October 16 2014.

Prosecutor Timothy Forster said the animal’s injuries were “consistent with the use of a sharp blade such as a pen knife”.

Taylor pictured outside court  in February 2016
Taylor pictured outside court in January 2016

He added: “[Taylor] was seen going into the pen and the sheep was chased. It was assaulted a number of times while still in the paddock.”

Twisted Kieran Taylor admitted kicking and stabbing the innocent animal before burning its remains.

Taylor avoided jail but was given a court order banning him from drinking.

He was also ordered to observe a curfew and attend behaviour therapy sessions after engaging in sexual activity with underage girls.

Sentencing: four months in jail for animal cruelty, suspended for two years and a further 11 months for the underage sex offences. Banned from drinking alcohol.

Daily Star



A second man, Matthew Dean, born 19/08/1997, of Whittington Road, Crawley RH10 5AQ was found guilty of hitting, kicking and stabbing  the sheep along with Kieran Taylor and a third person who has never been identified.

Taylor's accomplice Matthew Dean pictured at court in 2016
Taylor’s accomplice Matthew Dean pictured at court in 2016

Dean had denied one count of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal but was found guilty.

On 22 March 2016 Dean was jailed for 14 weeks suspended for 12 months with requirements to do 90 hours of supervised unpaid work and comply with a daily electronic tag curfew from 9pm to 7am. He was ordered to pay £50 compensation, £20 victim surcharge and £750 costs.

Crawley Observer

Reading, Berkshire: John Shackell

CONVICTED (2016) | alcoholic career criminal John Michael Shackell, born 13 October 1982, most recently of Talbot Court, Reading RG1 6QH – launched a frenzied attack on a stranger’s dog

Violent dog abuser, alcoholic, career criminal John Shakell from Reading, Berkshire, UK

Shakell thought he had got away with dishing out the savage kicking to the dog but the horrific incident, which took place outside the One Stop store in Fairview Road, Hungerford, was caught on CCTV.

The dog’s owner said in a statement that her pet was now frightened of strangers and afraid to go out.

Jennifer Riddell, prosecuting said Shackell, then of Embrook Way, Calcot, was visiting the store with his partner, children and his Staffordshire bull terrier.

She added: “He allowed his own dog to approach the other animal, which was tied to a post.

“He then pulled his own animal away and kicked the tied-up dog.”

Shakell then marched into the store and began shouting and swearing before leaving his pet with his family and rushing, in an “agitated state”, back outside.

Ms Riddell said: “There, he proceeds to furiously kick the tied-up dog in the head.

“A female came along and he started shouting at her.”

Shackell was arrested after police viewed the CCTV footage.

Shackell, whose previous convictions include assault and theft, admitted causing unnecessary suffering to an animal by repeatedly kicking it.

Ben May, defending, said his client “lashed out, in a ‘moment of madness” after the dog began to fight with his own.

He described jobless Mr Shackell as a “dog lover” who was signed off work owing to alcoholism.

Mr May said his client was addressing his alcohol dependency and told magistrates: “A custodial sentence would put back his recovery.”

A probation officer assessed both Mr Shackell’s risk of harm to others and his risk of re-offending as ‘medium’.

She went on to tell the court that, in her opinion, Shackell was not suited to a sentence involving unpaid community work because of the medication he takes for his drink addiction.

Sentencing: 10- month community order with 20-day rehabilitation activity requirement; £145 costs and charges. Not banned from owning animals.

Newbury Today

Bournemouth, Dorset: Christopher Rushton and Kirsty Hales

CONVICTED (2016) | Christopher Rushton, born 05/02/1978, and Kirsty Hales (aka Kathleen Johnston), born 07/08/1986, previously of Henley Green, Coventry, but more recently of Christchurch Road, Bournemouth BH7 6DT – prosecuted for animal cruelty after handing in “walking skeleton” puppy to RSPCA

Chris Rushton and Kirsty Hales, who were banned from keeping animals after handing in a starved puppy to RSPCA
Christopher Rushton and Kirsty Hales told the RSPCA they had found a starving puppy on the streets when he had been living with them for two months

Four-month-old lurcher William was handed into the RSPCA centre in Allesley by NHS workers Christopher Rushton and Kirsty Hales, who lied that they had found the starved puppy in the street. However, RSPCA investigators eventually uncovered their deception to reveal the couple had in fact failed to feed William properly, causing him to become seriously malnourished.

William the lurcher, who was found curled up and unable to stand by a passer-by in Willenhall Lane, Binley, in September 2015.
William the lurcher was found curled up and unable to stand by a passer-by in Willenhall Lane, Binley, in September 2015.

One RSPCA inspector said it was the worst case she had seen in ten years.

The pair had bought William – who was initially named George – on impulse after seeing him advertised for sale on the internet. But they had not done their research on how to look after a puppy or how much to feed him, leading him to lose so much weight that he became seriously ill.

Chris Rushton and Kirsty Hales, who were banned from keeping animals after handing in a starved puppy to RSPCA
The pair, who have two children, relocated to Bournemouth from Coventry

As well as the effects of starvation, a vet said William was also anaemic and dehydrated when he was taken into the RSPCA’s care.

The couple pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to the puppy between August 26 and September 9, 2015.

Chris Rushton and Kirsty Hales, who were banned from keeping animals after handing in a starved puppy to RSPCA

RSPCA inspector Nicky Foster, who investigated the case, said: “This would never have happened if they had done their research before getting him.

“Getting a dog should never be done on impulse, and this is evidenced by what happened to William. It is heartbreaking to think that, because of this, four months ago he was close to death.

“Thankfully, William has made a fantastic recovery and has now been rehomed with a family who dote on him.”

Lurcher William has recovered from his ordeal
William came on leaps and bounds in the RSPCA’s care and was eventually rehomed

The ban means parents-of-two Rushton and Hales had to give up their two other pets – a dog and a cat – who had to live with relatives.

Sentence: 12-week prison sentence suspended for a year; 35 hours of unpaid work; £889 costs each towards the RSPCA investigation and court case plus £80 victim surcharge. Banned indefinitely from keeping animals (can re-apply to keep animals after five years, i.e. 2021).

CoventryLive