Glenrothes, Fife: John Haxton

#MostEvil | John Wilson Haxton aka John Falconer, born 9 August 1992, previously of Murrayburn Green, Edinburgh and at time of publication living in Glenrothes, Fife – beat his dog so badly she had to be put to sleep to end her suffering.

Dog killer John Haxton and victim Roxy.
Haxton beat Roxy so severely the retinas of both eyes became detached.

Haxton was found to have abused his Staffordshire bull terrier dog, Roxy, leaving her blind with severe swelling.

Haxton first came to the attention of the Scottish SPCA in 2018 after reports had been made to its animal helpline of people having witnessed him kicking or abusing Roxy in public or hearing noises suggesting he was beating the dog inside his home.

The animal charity investigated, but at the time there was no evidence to support the reports and he was only issued warnings.

However, in 2020 members of the public intervened after he was seen to be badly beating Roxy in public.

Two members of the public took Roxy from Haxton and she was bleeding from the eye, had cuts across her body and her neck had significant swelling. She was very distressed and was urinating blood.

Roxy had suffered repeated attacks by her owner sustaining injuries so severe that she had to be euthanised on humane grounds.
Roxy had suffered repeated attacks by her owner sustaining injuries so severe that she had to be euthanised on humane grounds.

The charity intervened again and inspector Fiona Thorburn met the members of the public at the vet where Roxy had been taken for emergency treatment.

The vet found numerous injuries on Roxy which suggested recent trauma including central blindness.

At that time, the vet determined that her vision would likely not return.

Roxy was required to stay at the hospital for 24 hours before she was transferred into the care of the Scottish SPCA.

Further examination found that she also had arthritis and a serious hip injury.

These conditions, as well as her recent injuries and blindness, were causing her immense pain and suffering and the sad decision was made to put her to sleep on welfare grounds.

Inspector Thorburn said: “The post-mortem showed that there had been bleeding to Roxy’s eyes for at least two days. The bleeding is generally associated with trauma to the eye and, in this case, to both of Roxy’s eyes. Her retinae were detached at least three days before her death which supports claims that Roxy was regularly beaten by Haxton.

“The vet concluded that Roxy had been caused severe unnecessary suffering as a result of the beating she received on May 2, 2020 and that the injuries sustained were a result of blunt trauma to her face, head and abdomen. She would have been caused immeasurable physical and mental pain and she was left terrified and anxious of human contact.

“It would have been clear to any responsible owner that Roxy needed emergency veterinary treatment.

“We liaised with the vet Roxy was registered with and found that earlier in 2020, she had been kicked so badly that she suffered a dislocated hip. Surgery to repair the injury was booked in but not taken forward.

“This is a very harrowing case and one that will stay with me and, I’m sure, everyone involved. The level of suffering inflicted on Roxy in Haxton’s care is unimaginable. She was put to sleep as a direct result of Haxton’s actions. We had hoped he would never be allowed to care for an animal ever again.

“We are extremely disappointed given the severity of the injuries Haxton inflicted on Roxy that he did not receive a lengthier ban or custodial sentence. Haxton had opportunities to relinquish ownership of his dog were he not coping but he refused and instead her suffering continued.

“We would like to extend our gratitude to the two members of the public who witnessed Haxton beating Roxy in public and removed her from his care. Her injuries were so severe that who knows what would have happened if they hadn’t intervened. However, we wouldn’t recommend people put themselves in any danger in this sort of situation and to call Police Scotland and the Scottish SPCA should they witness a crime such as this.”

Sentencing | 300-hour community payback order. Five-year ban on owning and keeping animals.

STV News
Edinburgh News


Update September 2022

Haxton is living with a woman named Sarah Falconer at a property in Caskieberran Road, Glenrothes KY6 2NT. It’s rumoured that the pair of them have bought a kitten together despite him being banned from keeping or owning any animal.

Haxton with girlfriend Sarah Falconer, who’s from Glenrothes.

Blairgowrie, Perth and Kinross: Clifford Hodgkins

CONVICTED (2022) | dog thief and abuser Clifford Hodgkins, born 6 December 1981, of 31 Woodlands Park, Blairgowrie PH10 6UW but originally from Kidderminster, Worcestershire.

Thieving animal abuser Clifford Hodgkins and one of the four dogs he stole from the Blairgowrie area in October 2020.
Thieving animal abuser Clifford Hodgkins and one of the four dogs he stole from the Blairgowrie area in October 2020. The unnamed female dog remains missing nearly two years on although the three other dogs were recovered in the English West Midlands, from where Hodgkins originally hails.

Hogkins, who has strong links to the Stourport travelling community, was convicted of dog theft in relation to four dogs taken from their owners, and cruelty to a lurcher he left chained up outside in sub-zero temperatures.

Police mugshot of Clifford Hodgkins -a dog thief and abuser from Kidderminster.
Hodgkins has a violent past and a long criminal record.

Hodgkins, who has a long history of violent offending, stole three Jack Russells terriers and a Springer spaniel from remote properties in the Blairgowrie area.

He lifted one dog out of his kennel and bundled him into a car, while his horrified owner looked on.

Three of the dogs were later found more than 400 miles away, in different parts of the English West Midlands. The Springer remains missing, almost two years on.

Clifford Hodgkins -a dog thief and abuser from Kidderminster.

Hodgkins, whose previous convictions include domestic violence, assault, carrying knives, burglary, and racially aggravated harassment, was found guilty of the thefts at two properties in Meikleour and Forneth in October 2020 following a trial at Perth Sheriff Court.

He was further convicted of a separate animal neglect charge, after a “crying” lurcher-type dog was seized by animal welfare teams from a property in Rattray, near Blairgowrie.

Police and the SSPCA swooped on the house in MacDonald Crescent, Rattray, and found the dog, called Bruce, tethered in the back garden.

Clifford Hodgkins -a dog thief and abuser from Kidderminster.

Hodgkins was found guilty of failing to provide the animal with adequate shelter and exposing him to the elements between 27 and 29 November 2020. He failed to provide a suitable living environment and limited his movement by tethering him.

SSPCA inspector Katherine Aitchison told the trial she went to the property on November 28, 2021, following complaints from neighbours.

She said: “A male answered the door. At the time, he did not identify himself but I later understood that he was Clifford Hodgkins.

“He stated there was no dog in the back garden at all. I was told that a Lhaso Apso that I could see on the stairs behind him was the only dog on the property.”

Ms Aitchison said she returned with police the following day. She described the lurcher-type dog in the back garden as “very cold and all hunched up”.

She said: “I think the night before the temperature had dropped to minus four. The dog was obviously tired and was shivering.

“Its tail was between its legs and it had a roached back. That’s not happy body language.”

She said the dog had access to a wooden shed, which had a tarpaulin sheet with a slit in it instead of a door.

“There was a small blanket on the floor of the shed. It wasn’t providing much comfort and it definitely wasn’t providing any heat.”

Clifford Hodgkins -a dog thief and abuser from Kidderminster. Photo: Facebook.

The dog was taken to SSPCA offices and examined.

Ms Aitchison said Bruce had cracks on his paws, an infected claw and scarring on his face.

“He relaxed after a few minutes of being in the heat,” she said.

One witness told the trial she heard the dog crying and later saw Hodgkins shouting at him.

“He was being aggressive,” she said. I was on the phone to the police, watching it happen.

“He picked up a handful of gravel and threw it at the dog.”

Police mugshot of Clifford Hodgkins -a dog thief and abuser from Kidderminster.

Taking the witness stand, Hodgkins told the trial he had bought the dog for £400 after seeing it advertised on the internet.

“I bought it on the Friday and the police came and took him on the Sunday,” he said.

“It was a pet. I wanted to take him on walks in the countryside.”

He denied neglecting the animal, insisting that the shed – which had no door or windows – was wind-proof, dry and insulated.

Hodgkins rejected claims made by a neighbour that he threw stones at the dog and shouted aggressively at it.

“The dog was whinging because it was in a new environment,” he said.

“So I told it to get in (the shed) a few times.”

He said: “You have to train them, because they’re brain dead. You have to show him.”

But Sheriff Gill told Hodgkins that he found the evidence of SSPCA officers, police and neighbours to be credible and reliable and said it was clear the dog was left in a state of distress.

The sheriff found a further charge, that tree surgeon Hodgkins behaved in a threatening or abusive manner and threw stones at the dog, not proven.

Sentencing | jailed for 90 days and fined £500 for the thefts. He was fined another £400 for the animal neglect charge. Two-year disqualification order (expires June 2024).

Daily Record
The Courier

Currock, Carlisle: John Gibson

CONVICTED (2022) | slaughterman John Gibson, born c. 1981, of Mount Pleasant Road, Currock, Carlisle – caught on CCTV decapitating cattle before they had ‘bled out’.

Gibson, who works at Carlisle Abattoir on Brunthill Road, Kingstown, Carlisle, which is operated by West Scottish Lamb Ltd, pleaded guilty to four breaches of the Welfare of Animals at the Time of Killing (England) Regulations 2015.

Prosecutor Pam Ward said the offences came to light after CCTV footage of the defendant’s workplace was reviewed by a vet.

It showed that the defendant had not abided by the regulation that requires an animal, after it has been stunned, and then had its throat cut, to be bled for at least 30 seconds.

The bleeding regulation applies after the animal has had its carotid or jugular arteries severed by the slaughterman.

Inflicting suffering on helpless animals is also Gibson’s hobby, with his Facebook profile littered with images of him lamping and persecuting wildlife with dogs.

The CCTV review showed that the defendant had flouted the regulation on four separate occasions in 2021: on May 14 and 18 and on May 20 and 21.

From the dock of the court, the defendant said he “got carried away.”

As she passed sentence, presiding magistrate Jill Robinson noted that the defendant was “too engrossed” in his work. As a result of him rushing, animals had suffered, she said.

Sentencing: ordered to pay a total of £726.

News and Star
BBC News

Gringley on the Hill, Nottinghamshire: Bryan and Georgina Riley

CONVICTED (2022) | Bryan Riley, born c. 1946, and wife Georgina Riley, born c. 1951, both of Gringley on the Hill – kept eight neglected dogs in the back of a filthy van.

Four of the dogs rescued from the stinking van where they were kept by their cruel owners, the Rileys. Lola (top left) had to have her eye removed.

The Rileys were prosecuted by the RSPCA after failing to comply with an assessment notice in relation to their eight badly neglected dogs. When RSPCA inspector Daniel Bradshaw and a police officer attempted to apprehend the couple, they drove off in a transit van.

The dogs were eventually removed from the back of the foul-smelling van, which was strewn with faeces

Among them was a four-year-old French bulldog called Lola, whose eyeball was so badly infected it later had to be removed.

Another French bulldog named Hugo had thinning fur and scabs on his coat, as well as a weeping sore.

A third French bulldog, Libby, had open sores on her face. Her collar was fastened so tightly that her neck was reddened.

A dachshund called Iggy was suffering from extensive hair-loss and scabbing. A second dachshund, Lady, had thinning fur.

Two poodles – a mother and daughter named Angel and Coco – had dirty matted coats while a a third poodle Rosie’s coat was matted with faeces and urine.

Veterinary examination found that most of the dogs were in various states of malnutrition.

In his witness statement, RSPCA Inspector Daniel Bradshaw said: “Lola’s eyeball was hanging out and appeared to have a large scab that was oozing blood and pus and appeared to have faeces stuck to it. She had scabs and sores in her coat as well as a skin condition.”

The inspector said of the van: “There was such a strong smell of faeces, urine and ammonia that I struggled to put my head inside for more than two seconds.”

Bryan Riley pleaded guilty to two offences of causing unnecessary suffering; one of failing to provide veterinary care for three dogs who were suffering from skin disease and the other of failing to provide veterinary care for the injury to Lola’s eye. He also admitted a third offence of failing to ensure the needs of all eight dogs were met.

Georgina Riley pleaded guilty to one charge of failing to ensure the needs of the eight dogs were met.

In mitigation, the court was told that the defendants suffer from physical ill health and were left with a number of dogs they had struggled to cope with, and were keeping them in the van because their property had become a target for burglars.

Thankfully the dogs all recovered and have been rehomed by the RSPCA.

Speaking after the court hearing, Inspector Bradshaw said: “Lola’s eye was very infected and to leave a dog with her eye hanging out like that was unacceptable, as was leaving all the dogs in such a poor environment in the back of a van from which urine and faeces was just seeping out.”

Sentencing |
Bryan Riley: ordered to pay a fine, costs and surcharge totalling £1,225.
Georgina Riley: ordered to pay £684 in total.
Both were banned from keeping animals for eight years.

The Lincolnite
Yorkshire Post

East Retford, Nottinghamshire: Gemma Slinger

CONVICTED (2022) | Gemma Ruth Slinger, born December 1973, of 3 Westside Cottages, North Road, Torworth, Retford DN22 8NT – neglected pigs on her smallholding.

Gemma Slinger left pigs on her land to starve.

Slinger, who is a company director and owner of the Cuckoo Café in East Retford, pleaded guilty to a number of welfare and animal by-product offences.

Officers from the county council’s trading standards division found goat and pig carcasses on her land that had rotted and decomposed to the bone, while malnourished pigs rooted around for food.

There was no feed nor water available for the animals and officers also found chickens roaming the grounds freely, exposed to the risk of catching bird flu, despite national measures requiring poultry to be housed.

Sentencing | fined £350. Banned from owning farmed livestock for 10 years.

Lincolnshire Live
West Bridgford Wire

Millom, Cumbria: Emma-Marie Thompson

CONVICTED (2022) | Emma-Marie Thompson of Lapstone Road, Millom LA18 4BT – kept a starving emaciated dog in her back yard.

Three-year-old German Shepherd crossbreed Xena was so underweight her ribs, spine and pelvic bones were clearly visible.

Her owner, full-time mother Emma-Marie Thompson, pleaded guilty to one charge of causing unnecessary suffering to a dog and one of failing to ensure the needs of the dog were met.

Acting on reports of concerns for a dog at the address, RSPCA inspector Martyn Fletcher visited Thompson on January 15, 2022, and was shown into the backyard where the dog was being kept.

In his witness statement, Inspector Fletcher said: “I could immediately see that the dog was in a very poor bodily condition, with its spine and hip bones prominent and its ribs visible.

“The dog’s head also had a sunken appearance. It was subdued and uninterested in my presence.”

The inspector took the dog to a vets where an examination showed she weighed only 15kg, while she was scored only one out of five in a body condition rating.

Xena also had two skin lesions on her legs. Blood tests showed she was suffering from severe malnutrition.

Vet Emily Jones said in her witness statement: “I would have expected a dog of her stature to be a minimum of 27kg, so she was severely underweight.

“There is no other reason for her emaciated condition other than starvation through malnutrition.”

Thompson agreed to sign Xena over into the care of the RSPCA Cumbria West Branch the day after the inspector’s visit.

In mitigation the court was told that she was suffering from mental health issues after multiple bereavements.

Since being cared for by the RSPCA, Xena is said to have returned to a healthy condition and has been rehomed with new owners.

After the court hearing, Inspector Fletcher said: “This case shows again how important it is for members of the public to report any suspicions that they may have of animal neglect to the RSPCA so we can investigate.

“I am thrilled to see that Xena has progressed so well in RSPCA care and is now a healthy dog who loves her new home.”

Sentencing | six-week curfew; 25 rehabilitation activity days. A five-year ban on keeping animals.

The Mail

Tarbolton, South Ayrshire: Anne Dick

CONVICTED (2022) | Anne McCrae Dick, born c. 1949, of Rowanmyle House, Tarbolton, Mauchline KA5 5LU – neglected a donkey and a pony.

Dick pleaded guilty to failing to provide necessary farriery treatment and veterinary care for her pony and donkey. Her sole punishment was a £500 fine and she was not banned from owning animals.

An investigation by the Scottish SPCA revealed the animals had been suffering and in extreme pain for up to nine months.

The pony, Ebony, sadly had to be put down while the donkey, named Annie, was able to make a recovery and is now looking for a new home.

SSPCA Inspector Caitlin Rea said: “On October 22, 2021, we attended the property of Anne McCrae Dick in response to a report regarding a pony with overgrown hooves that were curling upward.

“There was no reply at the door so a calling card was posted.

“A few days later, we spoke to Mrs Dick on the phone and advised that she must make an emergency appointment with a farrier as a matter of urgency.

“Despite several calls and voicemails requesting Mrs Dick to confirm she’d made an appointment with a farrier, we received no response.

“We revisited the property on November 2, 2021, but there was again no response.

“We could see a black Shetland pony and a grey miniature donkey grazing in the field.

“We proceeded to take a closer look. The donkey approached and we immediately noticed her feet were overgrown, in particular her front feet.

“The pony was reluctant to walk and was sweating which is an indication of pain. She was not interested in grazing so it was clear that she was suffering.

“When we eventually managed to reach Mrs Dick, she stated that she was on holiday and confirmed that she hadn’t made any appointments with a farrier but that she would do so when she returned home.

“She refused to have her own vet attend and was advised that we would be calling an independent vet to examine the pony, Ebony, and Annie the donkey as treatment could not be delayed any longer. Mrs Dick terminated the call.

“Ebony was administered pain relief to make her more comfortable while being transported to the veterinary surgery.

“Both animals were found to have chronic laminitis, an extremely painful condition affecting the tissues bonding the hoof wall to pedal bone in the hoof.

“Ebony’s heart and respiratory rates were elevated.

“Closer examination also revealed that Annie was suffering from loose and decaying teeth as well as ulcerated gums caused by severe dental overgrowths.

“Judging by the amount of growth on their hooves, it was estimated that Ebony and Annie had been suffering for six to nine months.

“These equines needed emergency treatment for their feet and teeth.

“Their lack of proper care unfortunately resulted in Ebony having to be put to sleep to end her suffering.

“Annie, now renamed Diamond, is currently being cared for by one of our animal rescue and rehoming centres.

“After receiving the treatment she needed, Diamond is now ready to find her forever home.

“This is a very disappointing result given the severity of the neglect.

“Knowing there is nothing in place preventing the accused from owning or caring for equines going forward is equally concerning and frustrating.

“Ebony and Annie need not have suffered had their owner acted responsibly and sought the necessary farriery and veterinary treatment.

Cumnock Chronicle

Brompton, North Yorkshire: Chris Barker

CONVICTED (2022) | Christopher Barker, born June 1977, of Barker Rails Farm, Carr Lane, Brompton, Scarborough YO13 9DH – tormented a pod of dolphins by repeatedly circling them in his speedboat.

Chris Baker. Photos: Facebook.

Barker, director of All Game and Eggs Ltd and Chubby Eggs Ltd, aimed the small water craft at the group of cetaceans off the Scarborough coast on 9 July, 2021

Witnesses said Barker, who is also a terrierman with the Derwent Hunt, had driven at speeds of up to 25 knots (30 mph).

In his defence, he said he had only owned the boat for a month and was unaware of dolphins’ protected status.

Geoff Ellis, prosecuting, read a number of witness statements which suggested the speedboat had come within 20 to 30m of the group of bottlenose dolphins.

The aquatic creatures tried to move further out to sea but were unable to do so, and at one point were split up into two.

Witnesses estimated it took 10 minutes for Barker to stop, despite people on a nearby pier and on a passing boat trying to attract his attention, Mr Ellis said.

Mr Ellis said the defendant had told police he only purchased the boat in June 2021 and had no experience or training in its use at sea.

The defendant’s solicitor said he had set out knowing “nothing about dolphins” and had no experience in handling the boat.

When interviewed by police he told officers he was unaware of the legal protections provided to dolphins and had been “stupid rather than reckless”.

Barker’s solicitor said he had received a great deal of unpleasant messages on social media as a result of the case.

She said he had done “something stupid,” which he acknowledged and apologised for.

Barker, who had initially denied the offence, admitted intentionally and recklessly disturbing an endangered species.

District Judge Adrian Lower said it was the first case of its kind heard by the court and he was sure the defendant had no idea his actions would “amount to a criminal offence”.

Sentencing | fined £200 plus costs and surcharge totalling £334.

BBC News

Skerton, Lancaster: Cameron Casson

CONVICTED (2022) | Cameron Robert James Casson (aka Cameron Bulger), born 1 May 2000, of 4 Mount Avenue, Skerton, Lancaster LA1 2EF – allowed his routinely abused pet dog to be hit by a slow-moving train.

Casson, the son of a notorious, now deceased, lifelong career criminal and drug addict Danny Casson, allowed the dog, Cali, to roam without a lead at Bare Lane Station in Morecambe, where she was struck by the train.

Cali, who is 10 months old, was also found to have suffered broken ribs during the previous month, for which Casson had not sought veterinary care.

On the platform of the rail station, an eye witness reported seeing the defendant, a father of one, punching his pet.

She was later picked up by a dog warden and taken to a vets in Lancaster, where she received treatment for wounds to her back and tail and bruising around her eye and there was also evidence her fur was contaminated by oil.

The RSPCA launched an investigation and Casson admitted two charges of causing unnecessary suffering to the dog and one of not ensuring the needs of the animal were met.

In a statement to the court, an eye-witness said she had restrained the dog, who was without a collar and lead, on the platform and returned her to the owner.

But she later spotted him shouting and swearing at his pet.

She said Casson had attempted to tie a jumper around the dog’s neck to “use as a lead”.

She said: “The dog seemed reluctant to follow him, so he grabbed the dog by the skin of the neck and attempted to drag her along the station platform.”

Another eyewitness said she saw the dog being punched to her face and head three or four times with “hard force”.

Cali was found a couple of hours later on a public footpath in Hest Bank.

In his expert report, veterinary surgeon Dr Sean Taylor said the dog’s lacerations and the oil contamination were consistent with her having been hit by a slow-moving train.

X-rays showed two bilateral rib fractures, which in the surgeon’s view were sustained in mid to late June 2021.

The defendant had claimed he was unaware of how they could have been caused, other than the dog “falling from a rope swing”.

Dr Taylor concluded: “The rib fractures indicate Cali had sustained high force focal blunt force trauma to both sides of the chest.

“Although they did not occur on July 19 it is highly likely these injuries occurred via physical abuse when taking into account the defendant’s lack of reasonable explanation as to how these fractures could have occurred accidentally.”

RSPCA Inspector Amy McIntosh said in her witness statement that Casson admitted slapping his dog for trying to get back on the train.

The inspector said he’d told her: “You can’t do nowt for slapping a dog.”

She said: “The dog got off the train with him, then got back on and he chased the dog and it ended up on the tracks.”

In mitigation, the court was told Casson, who has previous convictions for robbery and assault, suffered from mental health issues and lacked maturity.

Since her ordeal Cali has come on leaps and bounds in the care of boarding kennels whose staff will soon be finding her loving new owners.

Sentencing | eight-week prison sentence suspended for 12 months; £128 victim surcharge. 20-year ban on keeping animals.

Lancashire Telegraph


Additional Information

Casson’s brother is Callum Lee Casson, a self-described “top dog man” and a violent career criminal in his own right.

When not committing crime against humans, Casson spends his free time time persecuting wildlife with dogs trained to attack.

Walton, Liverpool: Leanne McConnell

CONVICTED (2022) | Leanne McConnell, born 12 September 1990, of Andrew Street, Walton, Liverpool L4 4DT – abandoned starving pets in a house for weeks.

McConnell was prosecuted after the RSPCA discovered one cat eating another’s body after she abandoned them. She had left the cats, who she named ‘Fat Slag’ and ‘Tilly’, alone in her home for so long that one of them died of thirst and starvation.

The other cat and a dog, called ‘Chunks’, were found emaciated and distressed inside the house in Norris Green, Liverpool, in 2021.

A vet said the animals had been allowed to suffer after McConnell left them without enough food or water.

RSPCA animal inspector Anthony Joynes visited McConnell’s house with police after concerns were raised for the animals’ welfare.

When he arrived at the home on Hollingbourne Road a neighbour told him they had not seen her for weeks.

He managed to call McConnell and she came round to the house to let him in.

Inspector Joynes found rubbish and animal faeces littered the home that stunk of urine.

He then found one of McConnell’s cats in a ‘filthy’ downstairs bathroom eating the cat that had died.

Inspector Joynes said: “He also had a marked skin tent and was clearly distressed being found actively feeding on a deceased black and white cat.”

Veterinary surgeon Vanessa Whitfield said the court most likely died of inadequate nutrition or malnutrition, although she said disease within the missing organs could not be ruled out.

Dr Whitfield said: “The two cats and dogs were allowed to suffer due to a lack of accessible, clean and fresh water leading to thirst, dehydration and contributing to the death of one of the cats.”

McConnell admitted three charges of causing unnecessary suffering to protected animals and a fourth charge of failing to meet animal’s needs at Liverpool Magistrates’ Court earlier this year.

The court heard McConnell was suffering with mental health issues when she abandoned the animals and her case was sent to the Complex Case Court for sentencing.

Sentencing | six month jail term suspended for a year; a total of £1047 in fine, costs and a surcharge. Banned for keeping animals for twelve years.

ITV News
Liverpool Echo