Tag Archives: 2013 cases

Torrington, Devon: Diana Curtis

CONVICTED (2024) | serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis, born c. 1958, of Peters Marland, Torrington EX38 8QD – neglected dozens of animals in her care.

Serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Curtis, a notorious animal hoarder well-known to the RSPCA and courts, was given a suspended custodial sentence and laughable five-year ban after horses, dogs, chickens, ducks and a goat were found in squalor at her home.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

RSPCA inspectors were joined by police, vets, staff from the Dog’s Trust and officers from Torridge District Council, at the address in July 2022. They found a number of animals, some left without food, water or the vet care they needed.

A stallion, named Mid Morning Monkey, was found with an eye ulcer; checks with vets showed he’d been left with no treatment. Two other horses, named Symphonies Secret and Summer’s Place Jessica, were both found to have untreated dental disease.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Summer’s Place Jessica also had deformed legs and swollen knees. She had an uneven gait and was regularly seen tripping – particularly on her right fore leg. A vet later diagnosed chronic arthritis which had been left untreated.

The stables, which also housed a female goat alongside horses, were dirty with faeces and soiled straw. There was no clean bedding and no hay, food or water available.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Poultry, which was found standing in pens thick with faeces and soiled bedding with dirty water and no food, were also found to have untreated scaly leg. Inside the address, rescuers found more unsuitable living conditions for animals.

RSPCA deputy chief inspector Suzy Hannaby said: “The property was filthy and appeared to have been used as a dog kennel rather than for human habitation, the floors were bare and the only furniture present was for storage.

“There were no chairs or human beds. There was a strong smell of ammonia in the downstairs of the property. There were dog faeces and soiled straw and shavings on the floor, pieces of wooden board, dirty dog beds and two empty crates. There was no food or water available.”

Following an RSPCA prosecution Curtis was convicted of eight offences, some after trial.

Sentencing | 16-week custodial, suspended for 12 months; £10,000 towards costs plus £154 victim surcharge. FIVE-year ban (expires December 2028).

DevonLive


In October 2010 Curtis was given an ASBO due to excessive noise from 100 dogs kept at her property. She pleaded guilty to a noise abatement offence. She was also fined £2,000.

Police officers and animal welfare officers were forced to remove all but six of the dogs from Curtis after she failed to adhere to a court order to do so.

Following Curtis’s conviction, Devon & Cornwall Police Inspector Andy Lilburn said there was “no suggestion of cruelty here whatsoever”, adding that the dogs were “healthy, well-cared for, fed and watered”.

Curtis said she intended appealing the decision but said that “most of the dogs will have been destroyed by the time I raise the money”.

Following the appeal hearing in November 2010, she was ultimately given permission to keep 14 animals.


In December 2011 a further 34 dogs as well as 14 horses were seized from Curtis. After pleading guilty to breaching her ASBO, she was told she could only have a maximum of six dogs.

The RSPCA said at the time they were considering if any animal welfare offences had been committed and whether to prosecute.


In June 2013 Curtis was given a community sentence of 240 hours of unpaid work and ordered to pay £27,000 in court costs after keeping 33 horses and 34 dogs in appalling conditions.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Officials from the RSPCA found the premises to be covered in faeces and littered with hazards.

The court heard there was no outside grazing available and virtually no food and animals had to eat part of a stinging nettle bush.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Prosecutor Iain O’Donnell said: ‘Thirty-four dogs were removed from the premises. Photographs show the disgusting conditions in which they were living.’

Curtis was only banned from keeping horses and for a mere 12 months.

Daily Mail

Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham: Cain Lambert

CONVICTED (2022) | serial wildlife criminal Cain Anthony Lambert, born 23 August 1987 of 5 Dunoon Close, Stockton-on-Tees TS19 0LH – breached a lifetime ban on keeping animals.

In November 2013 Lambert was jailed for 24 weeks and given a lifetime ban after filming two dogs tearing into a fox, which could be heard yelping in pain.

In the sickening footage filmed in March 2011, Lambert was seen pulling one of the dogs off the fox, then allowing both to chase it before they caught and attacked the animal again.

John Ellwood, prosecuting for the RSPCA, said the evidence appeared to show that Lambert was “encouraging the dogs” when the attack happened. At the time Lambert was already subject to a suspended sentence for dealing in Class A drugs.

But Lambert claimed he could not control the dogs – which he had arranged to look at to buy for ferreting.

He said a man from Newcastle had brought the dogs down and they travelled to a farm in Northallerton. It was while they were there that the fox appeared and the attack happened.

Keith Thomas, defending, said Lambert was now a different person – having since become a dad.

“He is a very different young man. He is full of remorse and shame for what happened.”

n October 2I021, however, Lambert was found with three lurcher-type dogs at his home in a blatant breach of his disqualification order. The breaches came to light following a report of noise.

RSPCA Inspector Garry Palmer attended Lambert’s address, along with police officers. In the garden he discovered a pen with three male lurcher-type dogs – a dark brindle bull lurcher named Crash, a light brindle bull lurcher called Bully and a grey and white male lurcher called Ted.

Lambert has persecuted wildlife for many years. He is active on several Facebook ‘hunting’ groups where like-minded sickos exchange images of wild animals being hunted down and brutally killed.

The three dogs were taken into RSPCA care due to Lambert being in breach of his disqualification order. Investigations later revealed how he was caring for Bully at the time and the pet was returned to his cousin.

Inspector Palmer said: “I advised at the time that as he was banned from keeping animals the two other dogs would remain with the RSPCA while the animal welfare charity looked at a possible prosecution.”

The court heard how Lambert had owned two of the dogs for 17 months, between May 27, 2020 and October 29, 2021. He was looking after his cousin’s dog on October 28, 2021.

Lambert pleaded guilty to two counts of breaching a disqualification imposed after conviction.

In his defence, the court heard how Lambert found it difficult, after the ban, to not to have dogs.

Crash and Ted were rehabilitated in RSPCA care and have since been rehomed by the charity.

RSPCA Inspector Garry Palmer said: “We rely on the public to notify us of any breach of bans and I would always urge them to report matters like this to us so we can intervene.”

Sentencing | 18-month community order with 30 rehabilitation activity requirement days; 150 hours of unpaid work. £495 costs and charges. Lifetime ban from 2013 still applies.

Gazette Live

Ripon, North Yorkshire: Michael Hawkswell

CONVICTED (2021) | Michael Andrew Hawkswell, born c. 1975, of Haldgarth, Nunwick, Ripon HG4 5EE – a serial animal abuser with a string of convictions for offences including barbaric illegal slaughter.

Serial animal abuser Michael Andrew Hawkswell from Ripon, North Yorkshire, UK
2021 police mugshot of Michael Hawkswell

Hawkswell’s first known conviction was in or around 2001 when he abandoned a lorry-load of live turkeys on the A1, leaving them to freeze to death. For this offence he was apparently jailed but no details are available.

Two years later, in February 2003, Hawkswell was jailed alongside another man, Isap Lakha of 122 Saville Road, Dewsbury WF12 9LP after the pair were found to be running an illegal slaughter operation at the height of the foot and mouth crisis.

Hawkswell pictured outside court in 2003 along with co-defendant Isap Lakha.

An undercover investigator from the Hillside Animal Sanctuary in East Anglia began investigating the men after a tip-off. Working in conjunction with the RSPCA, the charity obtained secret video footage showing Hawkswell and Lakha killing 10 goats with a blunt knife in a dirty barn in Londonderry, North Yorkshire, causing the animals immense pain and suffering.

RSPCA prosecutor Tony Kelbrick told the court that the video showed the goats were dismembered and butchered “while they appeared to be still alive”.

Still image from horrific video footage which showed Hawkswell and Isap Lakha sawing at animals’ throats with a blunt knife.

He said the animals were being killed in the Halal way but the method used was “inept, clumsy and cruel and caused considerable pain and suffering”.

“It can clearly be seen on the video that a number of cuts were required to sever the arteries and veins and a sawing motion was required as opposed to a clean cut.”

The court heard how the goats were bought at a market in Haswell, Durham, before they were taken to North Yorkshire for slaughter on 14 January 2002.

The hearing was also told how Lakha bought the animal carcasses for about £200 after the slaughter.

He said the meat was to help feed his large extended family which included about 150 people.

However, a 2002 article by now defunct newspaper the Sunday People had already exposed Hawkswell as a “crooked trader” who sold “infected meat to scores of curry shops”. Aside from risking an outbreak of foot and mouth disease and BSE (the human form of mad cow disease), the newspaper described how he made “animals suffer shockingly by letting buyers try their hand at slaughtering in his makeshift abattoir”.

In court, Hawkswell admitted allowing goats he owned to be cruelly ill-treated and also allowing premises to be used as a slaughterhouse without a licence.

His co-defendant, Lakha – a retired slaughterman with 20 years’ experience – pleaded guilty to cruelly ill-treating 10 goats and slaughtering the animals without a licence.

District judge Roy Anderson said the offences were so serious he had no option but to jail the men.

He told the pair the botched operation was “inept, callous, squalid and cruel”.

Hawkswell received a four-month prison sentence while Lakha was jailed for two months. Both were banned from keeping animals for 10 years (ban expired 2013).

Writing about their investigation, Hillside Sanctuary told how Michael Hawkswell had boasted to their covert investigator how he could supply cows, lambs, goats, deer, pigeons and even peacocks. He gloated that most of the animals were stolen from farms late at night.

Hawkswell had also bragged about breeding cockerels for fighting.

Happily, Hillside were able to rescue five nanny goats (pictured) from a horrible death and took them into the care of the sanctuary.

In 2010 Hawkswell was banned from keeping animals for ten years and jailed for six months after livestock was found in squalid conditions. No further details of this conviction are available.

In December 2013 Hawkswell was back in court after repeatedly breaching his animal banning order.

The court heard how trading standards officers visited premises in Thorpe Underwood, between York and Boroughbridge and discovered that Hawkswell had been moving sheep.

Paperwork found in a stolen trailer revealed he had been to a slaughterhouse in Spennymoor.

Hawkswell admitted handling stolen goods and breaching an animal banning order, and was given a suspended prison sentence.

Judge Les Spittle described his actions as “a blatant disregard” for court orders, and also ordered him to carry out 100 hours of unpaid work for the community.

Stuart Young, mitigating, said his client had “struggled to do what the courts tell him” adding that he had “shown poor problem-solving techniques.”

Serial animal abuser Michael Andrew Hawkswell from Ripon, North Yorkshire, UK
Hawkswell pictured in 2017

In February 2017 Hawkswell was jailed for six months after breaching a court order to protect animals from him. His latest conviction came after his vehicle was stopped by North Yorkshire Police and found to contain cardboard boxes holding 14 live chickens and a duck. A few months later Hawkswell was stopped again by road traffic police and this time officers found a sheep, two hens, two pigeons and four dead turkeys.

On both occasions Hawkswell was arrested and subsequently charged.

Sergeant Kevin Kelly, from North Yorkshire Police’s Rural Taskforce, said that Hawkswell was “a danger to animals”.

In May 2021 Hawkswell, still disqualified from keeping or owning animals, was charged with possessing 76 birds and a string of other offences.

They included buying and transporting two goats, possessing seven sheep in his trailer, possessing a duck, unloading poultry from a vehicle into sale pens at Highgate auctions in Rotherham and buying and selling poultry.

In September 2021 Hawkswell was jailed for a total of 32 weeks after pleading guilty to all charges.

The court also disqualified Hawkswell from owning or keeping goats, poultry, birds and sheep for a period of 10 years under the Animal Welfare Act.

Hawkswell was also disqualified from holding or obtaining a driving licence for 16 months.

Speaking after the sentencing, PC Mark Atkinson, of North Yorkshire Police’s rural task force, said:

“Michael Hawkswell knew full well that he wasn’t allowed to have anything to do with animals – with a court order in place to protect them from suffering at his hands.

“However, he has repeatedly shown a blatant disregard for that court order, and persistently breached it on a number of occasions.

“Members of the farming community were aware of Hawkswell’s illegal activity, and came forward with crucial information, allowing us to arrest him and put him before the court. I would like to thank everyone who has spoken to the police in relation to Hawkswell’s activities – your assistance has been so vital and helped our team to put the strongest case together.”

North Yorkshire Police said it would now distribute posters highlighting Hawkswell’s banning order at livestock marts and other rural businesses.

Sentencing (September 2021 conviction): 32 weeks in jail. Disqualified from having anything to do with poultry, goats, sheep or birds for ten years (expires September 2031).

York Press

Cardiff: Thomas Price

CONVICTED (2016) | Thomas Tony Price, born 3 June 1964, Irish traveller and Welsh gypsy cob dealer of Rover Way Gypsy Site, Cardiff CF24 2RX – repeatedly left his horses to graze on public land; ignored a previous ban imposed for similar cruelty offences.

Serial horse abuser Thomas Tony Price from Cardiff, Wales, UK
Tom Price is a serial horse abuser who repeatedly flouts disqualification orders despite being hauled before the courts numerous times

Self-styled ‘Gypsy Horse King’ Price continually ignored a ban on him leaving his horses on land near roads, roundabouts and in other people’s fields..

In July 2013, Price – a former director of Glamorgan Horse Traders Ltd (dissolved in 2014) and then estimated to own 2,500 horses across the country – was banned from any involvement in owning horses for five years and given an eight-month prison sentence. This came after he was found guilty of a total of 57 animal welfare charges and causing unnecessary suffering to 18 horses.

Poorly and diseased horses found in the care of Thomas Tony Price of Cardiff

Cob ponies were removed from five different locations across the Vale of Glamorgan and Bridgend, where they were found emaciated and poorly kept. While some were re-homed, the RSPCA was forced to euthanise others.

Serial horse abuser Tom Price pictured outside court

Price was arrested again in August 2016 after an investigation found he had repeatedly breached the banning order imposed in 2013 and had continued to deal with horses on at least 11 separate occasions.

Poorly and diseased horses found in the care of Thomas Tony Price of Cardiff

After his arrest, 70 horses were seized.

Price pleaded guilty to breaching the Animal Disqualification Order (ADO).

The court also issued an injunction to protect a family in a neighbouring farm who had fallen victim to Price’s actions.

South Wales Police also successfully applied for a Criminal Behaviour Order (CBO).

Sentence: eight weeks in prison suspended for two years; Criminal Behaviour Order; banned from being within 50 metres of a horse, unless it is on his own land (expired 2018).

WalesOnline


Additional Information

Two of Price’s sons are Thomas Hope Price (born 25 July 1986) and Tony John Price (born 23 May 1994) – also involved in Glamorgan Horse Traders Ltd and convicted of horse cruelty in 2013 alongside their father.

Thomas Hope Price
Thomas Hope Price

In December 2014 Thomas Hope Price was jailed after stealing his own horses after they’d been seized for fly grazing.

Thomas Tony Price’s long-term partner is Luanne Bishop. In April 2021 she was convicted alongside him on new cruelty charges involving multiple horses and sheep. Full details here.

Their latest location as of April 2021 is Bonvilston, Vale of Glamorgan.

WalesOnline biographical article on Thomas Price

Bishop Auckland, County Durham: Johnboy Harrop

CONVICTED (2015) | puppy farmer John Watson Harrop (aka Johnboy Harrop), born c. 1980, of Green Lane Travellers Site, Bishop Auckland, Durham DL14 8RS – kept dozens of dogs and puppies in “vile” and “disgusting” conditions.

Police and the RSPCA visited Hostel Farm, in Addison Road, Toronto, near Bishop Auckland DL14 7RN, on 3 April 2014 and found a large number of animals causing concern.

Harrop with wife Amanda

Serial animal abuser Harrop, who in 2013 was jailed and banned from keeping horses for 10 years, admitted three charges of failing to take reasonable steps to ensure that the needs of the animals were met under the Animal Welfare Act.

Pony-tailed Harrop, who comes from a family of travellers, watched as Darlington magistrates were shown a video of the scene with commentary from RSPCA Inspector Caz Doe.

She described ferrets in cages full of faeces and waste, surrounded by bits of wood with nails sticking out.

A large dog – said to be a central Asian Shepherd dog – was housed in a “quite disgusting and completely unsafe” building.

More dogs, including a saluki, lurchers and spaniels, were kept in “vile” conditions with no clean, dry flooring and everything sodden with urine and waste.

Inspector Doe said in the video: “The dogs are just living in a sewer of their own waste.”

Prosecuting, Kevin Campbell said vets determined that the animals were not being kept in a suitably hygienic environment, which could ultimately have resulted in infectious diseases.

Simon Walker, for Harrop said there were 65 dogs, including some puppies on the farm premises, and 13 were removed.

Another member of the family, Jim Harrop, born July 1977, also of Green Lane Caravan Site, had a number of animal welfare charges against him dismissed with no evidence offered. He had denied the offences.

Sentencing | 12-month community order with 150 hours of unpaid work. Five-year ban on keeping dogs (expired 2020).

Northern Echo

High Heaton, Newcastle Upon Tyne: John and Lesley McKie

CONVICTED (2013) | John McKie, born c. 1953, and wife Lesley McKie, born c. 1955, both of Thropton Terrace, Newcastle upon Tyne NE7 7HT – caused extreme suffering to their elderly pet dog by failing to treat his multiple health issues.

The McKies’ German Shepherd, named Prince, had been unable to walk for weeks, was severely underweight and had filthy, matted fur and urine burns when RSPCA officers discovered him.

The 12-year-old dog was in such poor condition that, after an examination, a vet immediately put him to sleep.

The McKies pleaded guilty to a charge each of causing unnecessary suffering to an animal and failing to meet the needs of an animal.

Judith Curry, prosecuting, told the court Prince was in such a bad way, his skin was infected with maggots, which only usually happens on the bodies of dead animals.

She said: “On August 23 [2013], RSPCA officer Claire Hunt attended the property and spoke to Lesley McKie.

“She was taken to the back door where there was a dog lying, unable to use its back legs. He also had a large urine scold on his left hip, which was bright red and hot to touch.

“The smell coming from the dog was overpowering. His coat was matted and wet to touch. There were also a number of flies on his back end.”

Prince was taken to a nearby vet, where he was found to weigh just 24.2kg, 10kg less than the average weight for a dog of his size.

Ms Curry added: “The vet also found he had no awareness in his back legs at all. And, once his matted hair was parted, she found a mass of maggots.

“Usually, they are found feeding on dead animals.

“The maggots had eaten away tissue and they were living underneath the skin.

“Prince would have been suffering and he was suffering unnecessarily.”

The McKies had owned Prince for about 12 years.

The court heard Prince had started to become ill and the couple had struggled to pay for treatment.

Magistrates were told Lesley McKie used Lavender wipes to clean Prince as they had no hot water or a bath downstairs.

Mark Humble, defending, said the couple had never had problems with him before but had struggled financially when his health started to deteriorate.

He said: “Sadly, it was towards the end of the dog’s life when he became infirm and they found it difficult to cope and keep the animal clean.

“They didn’t intend to cause the dog any suffering. I think their limited financial means contributed to the problems.

“They had contacted the PDSA but believed they weren’t on the correct benefits to receive help from them.

“The second time they contacted the PDSA they were told they would treat Prince but they had to bring him to the surgery, which they had no means of doing.”

Sentencing: each was ordered to pay £289 in fines, costs and charges. Banned from keeping animals for 10 years (expires December 2023).

Chronicle Live

Update July 2021

Both McKies were hauled back to court by the RSPCA for breaching their ban although only John McKie was convicted and sentenced.

In July 2019, the RSPCA was tipped off by a concerned member of the public who informed the charity that McKies had breached their ban.

Inspector Kirsty Keogh-Laws was sent to the McKies’ home to investigate and found three cats inside the property.

The cats were taken into RSPCA care.

Mrs Keogh-Laws said: “I advised that as he was banned from keeping animals they would remain with the RSPCA while the animal welfare charity looked at a possible prosecution.”

Two days later, McKie was found to have another cat at the property and she too was taken into RSPCA care.

Three of the cats were rehabilitated and have since been rehomed.

However, an elderly cat had a series of serious health complications and a vet made the decision to put her to sleep to end her suffering.

John McKie pleaded guilty to breaching an animal disqualification order.

He was given another 10-year ban on keeping animals (expires July 2031) and was ordered to pay a £120 fine, £400 costs and a £32 victim surcharge.

Magistrates also warned the pensioner that any further breaches could see him facing up to six months behind bars.

Mrs Keogh-Laws added: “We rely on the public to notify us of any breach of bans and I would always urge them to report matters like this to us so we can intervene.”

Chronicle Live

Castleford, West Yorkshire: Stephen Sankey and Devonn Smith

CONVICTED (2013) | badger baiters Stephen Sankey, born 15 June 1981, and Devonn Smith, born 16 September 1992, previously of St Andrews Road, Castleford WF10 2NF*

Sankey and Smith were fined £520 for interfering with a badger sett in the Aberford area of Leeds. The couple were found guilty at the end of a one-day trial .

They were arrested under the 1992 Badgers Act on May 23, 2013, when police discovered an abandoned vehicle at the side of a road and then found the culprits digging into a known badger sett in nearby woodland.

A terrier was also found within the sett wearing a locator collar which allows the dog to be found underground by his or her owner.

Spades were recovered from the scene.

Sentencing | fined £520. No other penalties.

Source: Yorkshire Post (article removed).


*Additional Information

2022 address for Stephen Sankey:

LANCASTER STREET
CASTLEFORD
WF10 2NP

Whitehawk, Brighton: Derek Goldsmith

CONVICTED (2013) | Derek Goldsmith, born c. 1949, of Kingfisher Court, Albourne Close, Brighton BN2 5FX – neglected his dog so badly her front paws dropped off

Neglected dog Florence - as found and following treatment
Elderly Florence also had infections in her eyes and ears and her teeth were so rotten that they had to be taken out.

Shih-tzu cross Florence was found in an appalling state when RSPCA inspectors visited the home of Derek Goldsmith after receiving a tip-off.

The 14-year-old pet had more than 1.5kg of matted fur and when it was clipped it was discovered she had lost her front paws through lack of circulation.

In addition, her eyes and ears were infected, she was suffering from gastroenteritis and her teeth were so rotten they all had to be removed by the vet.

Goldsmith admitted failing to provide Florence with veterinary care for her severed front paws and failing to get treatment for her severe dental disease.

RSPCA inspector Tony Woodley said: “This was one of the most shocking cases of long-term neglect I have witnessed in my 17 years as an inspector.

“As well as her missing paws she had to have more than 1.5kg of matted, encrusted fur removed.

“I am satisfied that the sentence reflects the severity of this neglect and pleased that a ban on keeping animals has been handed out” he added.

Florence went on to make a remarkable recovery.

Vets worked hard to treat her conditions and students at a local college even created a harness on wheels to help her get around without paws.

She was also rehomed with a new owner.

Sentencing: four-month prison sentence suspended for 18 months; community integration order; costs of £2,301. Banned from keeping animals for five years (expired 2018)

Daily Record
LatestBrighton

Montrose, Angus: Kevin Hutcheon

CONVICTED (2013) | Kevin Hutcheon, born 26/01/1989, of Golden Acre, Montrose DD10 0EX – repeatedly stabbed a dog in the street

Kevin  Hutcheon pictured outside court
Kevin Hutcheon adds animal cruelty to his long list of criminal convictions

Violent career criminal Kevin Hutcheon left the Staffordshire Bull Terrier, named Rocco, “lifeless” after claiming the dog had bitten his foot.

When police arrived at the scene, they found the dog with multiple injuries and covered in blood. Despite his wounds, Rocco survived the attack.

Sergeant James Robertson told the court that he and a colleague found the badly injured dog lying in Victoria Street, Montrose on 9 August 2013.

He said: “When I arrived the dog was heavily covered in blood – it was soaked in blood and lifeless.”

PC Rhiannon McDonald, who also attended the incident, said Hutcheon, who did not own the dog, had said the animal attacked him.

She said: “[Hutcheon] had two small puncture wounds on his foot – he said he had been bitten on the foot and that he had stabbed the dog twice because he had been bitten.

“I had seen the dog a few times before in the street – he was always very happy and friendly and let you pat him.”

A search of Hutcheon’s home later found a blood-soaked knife sitting on a baby’s high chair.

Kevin  Hutcheon pictured outside court

Hutcheon, giving evidence in his own defence, said he “loved animals” – but had been left with no choice but to stab the dog.

He said: “He was trying to take a snap at either my face or my neck. I gave it a kick and the dog went for my foot.

“I love animals. He attacked me and wouldn’t let me go.”

Earlier, a vet told the trial that the dog would have died within an hour if he had not received treatment for a series of wounds, which included a cut to his jugular vein.

A jury convicted Hutcheon of causing a protected animal unnecessary suffering by repeatedly stabbing it with a knife, contrary to the Animal Health and Welfare Act, and being in possession of a knife in Victoria Street following the attack.

He was acquitted of charges of threatening two men and a woman at the property, headbutting the woman and being in possession of a knife.

Sentencing: jailed for 12 months on the animal welfare charge and 21 months on the knife charge. Sentences were concurrent.

BBC News

Newbold Verdon/Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire: Sam, Hazel and Damon Hessin

CONVICTED (2013) | Sam Hessin, born 15/11/1973, and daughter Hazel Hessin, born 08/12/1994, both of Cadle Street, Leicester LE9 9PA, plus son Damon Hessin (aka Damon Taylor), born 02/07/1991, now of Belvoir Street, Melton Mowbray LE13 1QA – left eight puppies to starve to death in a room in their home

The vile Hessin family from Leicestershire, who locked puppies in a kitchen and left them to starve to death
The vile Hessin family from Leicestershire, who locked puppies in a room and left them to starve to death

This wicked bunch of reprobates are the Hessin family previously all of Melton Mowbray.

Together they are responsible for the death by starvation of eight Staffordshire bull terrier puppies.

The trio barricaded the helpless dogs inside the kitchen of their family home at Wren Close, Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, and over the next few weeks ignored their desperate howls.

Some of the dogs survived longer by eating the others. Neighbours heard the puppies’ cries but did precisely nothing until it was too late.

Sam and Hazel Hessin
Hazel Hessin with mother Sam Hessin

On 1 May 2013 RSPCA officers raided the Hessins’ home after a tip-off from the family’s landlady. Investigators were shocked to find the rotting remains of the dogs, including two puppies’ SKULLS, in the kitchen.

Prosecutors told magistrates: ‘When the inspector walked into the kitchen the smell was rancid and putrid, to her horror she saw the puppies were in advanced stages of decomposition, on a urine stained bed.

‘Dog faeces was several inches thick and everything in the kitchen was in a total state of disarray.

‘The vet estimated the puppies would have been about six months old when they died. The sight and smell of them was shocking and deeply distressing.’

Damon Hessin, who is now known as Damon Taylor
Damon Hessin is now known as Damon Taylor

Despite the horrific outcome of their actions, the sentence passed on the vile family by Leicester Magistrates’ Court in December 2013 was typically lenient.

Damon and Hazel Hessin were both banned from keeping animals for life and given suspended sentences Their mother was given an 18-week prison sentence, suspended for 12 months, ordered to do 200 hours of unpaid work and told to pay an £80 victim surcharge. She was also banned from keeping animals for life.

SWNS
RSPCA