Tag Archives: 2018 cases

Bridgwater, Somerset: Martin Veysey

CONVICTED (2018) | Martin Veysey, born c. 1955, of Albert Court, Albert Street, Bridgwater TA6 7ET – breached a previous life ban on keeping animals imposed on him in 2011

Veysey pleaded guilty to six charges under the Animal Welfare Act and the Cattle Identification Regulations on Tuesday, December 18, 2018 at Taunton Crown Court.

Veysey was banned for life from keeping animals in 2011 after he was prosecuted for causing unnecessary suffering and failing to provide appropriate care for his animals.

The latest prosecution was brought by Devon, Somerset and Torbay Trading Standards Service and related to the purchase, transport and ownership of cattle obtained from markets in the South West.

Charges also related to a pony and an American bulldog owned by Veysey.

Veysey was also found guilty for failing to report and record the movements of cattle and failing to surrender the passports of cattle to Defra’s British Cattle Movement Service.

The court heard that the prosecution followed an investigation by Trading Standards officers.

Officers gathered intelligence from several sources including from members of the public, who responded to adverts he had placed to sell animals, as well as the RSPCA, livestock auctioneers and landowners who had witnessed his involvement with animals.

In sentencing Veysey, the judge told him that ‘the legislation is intended to protect animals from cowboys like you’ and warned him any further breaches would mean that he would go to prison.

Sentencing: eight-month prison sentence suspended for two years. Costs of £2,115.

BridgwaterMercury

Chelmsley Wood, Solihull: Julian Bradbury

CONVICTED (2018) | Julian A Bradbury, born c. 1971, of Somerville House, Waterson Croft, Solihull B37 6TY – left dogs to die in a baking car and buried their bodies in a field

Julian Bradbury pictured outside court.

Julian Bradbury admitted causing unnecessary suffering to  West Highland Terriers Ted and Poppy after leaving them inside his car for nearly 80 minutes in 26C temperatures. The incident took place on the day of an England World Cup game.

Bradbury said he simply forgot the “family members”  were in the car.

CCTV footage shown during the court hearing showed Bradbury, wearing an England football shirt, returning to his vehicle at 4.42pm – some 78 minutes after parking up near his home.

One of the dogs appeared limp and the other panted and gasped for air, the court heard.

Bradbury grabbed both pets before attempting to resuscitate and give mouth-to-mouth to the dog, which appeared motionless.

It was claimed the lorry driver put both dogs in the bath but they died of severe hypothermia.

At 10.25pm that evening, Bradbury was seen leaving the block of flats where he lived with both terriers wrapped in a bundle.

During an interview, he said he was taking their bodies to a garage.

He told the investigation he buried the dogs in a nearby field the next day.

The bodies were dug up as part of an RSPCA probe triggered when CCTV footage was reviewed by council officials looking into complaints of dog fouling in the flats.

Rafe Turner, prosecuting, explained how body temperatures of dogs reaching 43 degrees or more lead to multiple organ failure and death.

“The defendant was ultimately interviewed and, it’s fair to say, he was forthcoming,” Mr Turner said.

“He didn’t give an explanation yet both dogs were left for 78 minutes.

“He mentioned it wasn’t his normal routine and he had difficulty with his children, saying he thought it had been half-an-hour.

“He simply said: ‘I forgot’ and while he was remorseful and clearly upset, he didn’t offer an explanation.

“Considering a vets was close by, why didn’t he take dogs for further treatment? It would have been a few minutes in the car at most.

“But he didn’t and accepted he later wrapped up the dogs and had taken them to a garage to bury them.”

Summing up, District Judge Ian Strongman told Bradbury: “I accept you didn’t deliberately cause this suffering to the dogs.

“Your history of care of dogs is such that you just forgot they were there.

“It was a very hot day. The car would have been extremely hot when you first got in prior to collecting your son.

“The dogs would have been distressed by the car, yet you were stupid enough to leave them for over an hour.

“You showed an awfully low level of care to the animals.”

RSPCA inspector Herchy Boal, who investigated the case, said: “These dogs were left in the full view of the sun during the heat wave for one hour and 18 minutes so they must have suffered a long and lingering decline.

“It was the day when England played Croatia in a World Cup match in the evening and people will, I am sure, recall it was very hot.

“The RSPCA’s annual campaign ‘Dogs Die in Hot Cars’ states how you should never leave your dog in a parked car for even a few minutes as they become dangerously hot very rapidly so to leave them for such a long period is terrible.

“A vet said these dogs would have started suffering within a few minutes and their suffering would have been protracted.”

Sentencing: total of £885 fines, costs and charges. Banned from  keeping animals for life.

BirminghamLive

Manor Park, Newham, London: Amarpal Singh

CONVICTED (2018) | backyard breeder and serial animal abuser Amarpal Singh, born c. 1986, of Banks Way, Manor Park, Newham, London E12 5NZ – neglected 23 dogs and puppies in a home reeking of animal urine and faeces.

Filthy conditions at the property where backyard breeder and serial animal abuser Amarpal Singh kept 23 starving dogs and puppies in squalor.
Filthy conditions at the property where backyard breeder and serial animal abuser Amarpal Singh kept 23 starving dogs and puppies in squalor.

Amarpal Singh forced seven alapaha bulldogs and 16 puppies to live in such sickening conditions they became malnourished and underweight.

One of the dogs had to have her tail amputated.

Notorious greeder Singh had already been issued with an improvement notice in 2015, when Newham Animal Welfare Services and police officers found three dogs living in filthy conditions in his back garden.

Singh said he’d clear up the area, and the dogs were taken away.

However when officers visited his home again in November 2017 they found the 23 animals squeezed into the house which stunk of urine and faeces.

Pc Holly Hoare, who led the investigation, said: “After seeing the conditions the dogs were living in, I wouldn’t want any dogs to be living in this way ever again.

“When we went to the address, the puppies were very quiet and unable to interact with us. A number of the dogs were showing signs of diarrhoea and there was little evidence of water or food.”


FILE PHOTO: Alapaha bulldogs are a rare breed. They should be socialised early on in life, and their personalities make them natural guard dogs. 

Pc Hoare added: “They were all living in extremely poor conditions, with excrement that had not be cleared up in a number of days. Some of the dogs were in cages that were too small for them and it was distressing to see them in such a poor state of health.”

Sentencing | 200 hours of unpaid work. Total of £1,360 costs and charges. Banned from dealing in, owning or keeping dogs for just two years (expired December 2020).

Newham Recorder
My London News

Skipton, North Yorkshire: James Featon

CONVICTED (2018) | puppy dealer James Featon, born 19/01/1968, of Roughaw Road, Skipton BD23 – kept 23 dogs in horrendous conditions at a Selby pig farm.

Puppy dealer James Featon and some of the puppies rescued from the pig farm where he kept them.

Gypsy traveller Featon pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to dogs after two adult dogs and 21 puppies were found in “disgusting conditions” in pig pens on a farm in North Duffield, near Selby.

Photo of cruel puppy dealer James Featon
Cruel puppy dealer James Featon.

RSPCA officers and North Yorkshire Police visited the farm on 7 October 2017 where the dogs were found living in pig pens.

Cruel puppy dealer James Featon also enjoys hunting with dogs. Photo shows him with a dog and dead rabbit.
When not exploiting dogs for money, James Featon enjoys persecuting wildlife.

The animals were taken into immediate veterinary care. Sadly, only 18 of the dogs survived.

Puppy farmer James Featon with son James Heaton Jr

RSPCA Inspector Alice Cooper, who led the investigation, said:

“Some of the puppies were in very poor condition; thin and lethargic with swollen, distended abdomens.

“Three Jack Russell terrier puppies had collapsed.

“Police seized all of the dogs and we rushed them to the vets where a number of the pups were diagnosed with parvovirus – a highly contagious and potentially fatal disease.

“They were all hospitalised and needed intensive veterinary treatment but, unfortunately, we lost four because they were so incredibly poorly.”

Adult dog found at James Featon's puppy farm

Eighteen dogs – including spaniels, lurchers and crossbreeds – pulled through and were taken in by RSPCA centres while the investigation was ongoing.

Inspector Cooper added: “Our investigations established that Mr Featon was buying in dogs from Ireland and elsewhere in England, and then selling them on to the public.

“However, he was keeping the dogs in disgusting conditions and had categorically failed to provide veterinary care to those that had fallen ill.”

Adult dog found at James Featon's puppy farm

PC Sarah Ward of North Yorkshire Police said: “I’m very pleased with the result and thankful that we found the puppies when we did, saving them from more suffering.

“They were kept in cold, damp conditions without their mums and most of them were very ill with a number needing urgent veterinary attention.

“Sadly, some did not make it.

“We urge members of the public to only ever buy puppies from reputable dog breeders or adopt a rescue dog from a known charity.”

The dogs – which have all been in RSPCA care during the investigation – were signed over this week and can now be rehomed.

Inspector Cooper added: “Unfortunately this sort of thing is something we see all too often at the RSPCA.

“Breeding and selling puppies is big business and with certain breeds selling for hundreds if not thousands of pounds there are a lot of people trying to cash in.

“Sadly, some sellers like Mr Featon will put profits ahead of the health and welfare of the dogs.

“This is completely unacceptable.

Sentencing: total of £460 in fines, costs and charges. Disqualified from dealing in dogs, meaning he can own dogs as pets but isn’t to be involved in commercial activity involving dogs. Two adult lurchers returned to him.

StrayFM
Northern Echo

Little Hulton, Salford: Laura Kiseliova and Raimondas Titas

CONVICTED (2018) | Laura Kiseliova, aka Laura Kiselova-Tite, born 14/06/1979, and Raimondas Titas, born 13/03/1981, formerly of Ladywell Avenue, Manchester M38, but believed to have fled to their native Lithuania – imported and sold sick ‘designer’ pets.

Salford-based Lithuanian puppy traffickers Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova pictured outside court.
Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova during an earlier court appearance. They have now fled to their native country of Lithuania.

Lithuanians Laura Kiseliova and Raimondas Titas kept sick dogs and cats in filthy, cramped cages to sell for thousands of pounds.

They set up an online puppy farm called Pets313 and encouraged customers to buy popular breeds like pugs and French bulldogs.

An investigation into the pair began after they were twice stopped from importing dogs at ports in Kent.

A local vet had also raised the alarm about a puppy that had been sold in the city, but had an Eastern European microchip.

Badly neglected and exploited animals trafficked by Salford-based Lithuanians Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova.
Many of the animals had not received the appropriate care and veterinary attention they needed and were suffering from conditions such as conjunctivitis, gastroenteritis or had sore and infected wounds.

The animals included French bulldogs and pugs, as well as pedigree cats, and they were being sold for between £800 and £1,000 each.

The pair made around 680 sales, generating between £230,000 and more than £300,000.

Despite buyers being told they were receiving British-bred pups, they were actually getting Eastern European dogs that had travelled over to the UK on a Pet Passport bought by the Lithuanian couple.

And when they arrived home, the dogs suddenly became ill and lethargic after having been kept in dire conditions in small cages or crates in a garage.

Badly neglected and exploited animals trafficked by Salford-based Lithuanians Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova.

The pair were sentenced to years behind bars at Manchester Crown Court in their absence, as they fled abroad before the hearing on Thursday 13/12/2018. 

They had previously pleaded guilty to a total of 29 charges, including several animal welfare offences.

RSPCA inspectors, police and trading standards found 41 dogs, including French and English bulldogs and pugs, and eight cats, which included Persian and spinx types, when they searched their previous home in Prestwich on November 18, 2013.

They discovered the pair were trafficking dogs under the pet passport scheme, and selling them to members of the public under the company name Pets 313 Ltd.

Badly neglected and exploited animals trafficked by Salford-based Lithuanians Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova.
Pedigree cats were also found at the property.

Officers also found more than 40 pet passports which didn’t match the dogs at the property, suggesting they were passing off trafficked dogs as those bred in the UK.

The dogs who were found included French bulldogs and pugs, as well as pedigree cats, which were being sold for between £800 and £1,000 each.

The pair were charged with a number of offences, including failing to provide them with a suitable environment, and failing to provide veterinary care.

Badly neglected and exploited animals trafficked by Salford-based Lithuanians Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova.

One of the RSPCA investigators leading the operation, who didn’t want to be named, said: “The front room of the property was being used to sell the animals to members of the public but it was when you entered the rest of the house the scale of this operation became apparent.

“There were cages and pens containing different breeds of dogs in almost every room including a litter of puppies in a filthy ensuite bathroom upstairs. In a large garage at the back we found cages of animals stacked on top of each other.

Badly neglected and exploited animals trafficked by Salford-based Lithuanians Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova.
Many of the cats were in very poor condition.

“It was clear there were some cats and puppies that needed immediate veterinary treatment and sadly two of the puppies that were rushed to the vets for treatment later died from parvovirus.

“There was little sign of proper isolation pens for sick animals or biosecurity measures meaning any animal that passed through this place would be at risk of catching and spreading diseases and parasites.

“This was a large money-making operation at the expense of the welfare of the animals and the unsuspecting members of public who thought they were buying healthy, happy puppies.”

Salford-based Lithuanian puppy traffickers Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova pictured outside court.

RSPCA SOU Chief Insp Ian Briggs said: “It was obvious that this duo were dealing and trading in a large number of animals and that many of them were not receiving the appropriate care and veterinary attention they needed.

“Some of the animals were suffering from problems such as conjunctivitis, gastroenteritis or had sore and infected wounds.”

Most of the animals have been signed over into RSPCA care and have been rehomed.

Badly neglected and exploited animals trafficked by Salford-based Lithuanians Raimondas Titas and Laura Kiseliova.

Chief Insp Briggs added: “We have seen a concerning increase in the number of calls we are receiving about large-scale traders dealing, predominantly, in puppies.

“We are regularly appalled by the conditions we find puppies living in and the stories we hear from owners who have, just days after bringing their puppy home, held their new dog as he died in their arms from preventable diseases and infections.

“Unfortunately, a major factor in this trade is traffickers – such as this pair – bringing in poorly pups from abroad, without the right vaccinations and documents, and selling them to unsuspecting buyers here in England.”

Sentencing |
Kiseliova was sentenced to a total of four years in prison while Titas was jailed for three years and six months. Both were banned from keeping pets for life.

Manchester Evening News
The Sun


Update September 2019

Laura Kiseliova was finally behind bars in the UK after surrendering herself to Spanish police in Barcelona in August 2019. A European Arrest Warrant was executed to bring her back to Britain.

Co-defendant Raimondas Titas is still on the run.

Kiseliova’s barrister said her client had spent a month in a Spanish jail, which was a ‘salutary and intimidating experience’,

The circumstances surrounding her arrest are unclear, but police found she had no cash or bank cards, and an ID document in a different name.

In a letter to the judge, Kiseliova claimed that she handed herself in because her child was now two years old, and old enough for one of her adult children to look after them in her absence.

But Judge Richard Mansell QC said that without a birth certificate or photo of the child, he would not accept her claims.

He described it as ‘just yet another lie this lady will spin to try and get out of a tight situation’.

Judge Richard Mansell QC told Kiseliova: “You left the country in quite a deliberate attempt to evade justice.”

“A tight situation created by lie after lie after lie to innocent customers to who she sold dogs,” the judge added.

The judge said the only mitigation available to Kiseliova was her guilty plea to breaching bail.

She had previously made an unsuccessful attempt to vacate guilty pleas she had entered to the original puppy farm offences.

Judge Mansell described Kiseliova as “a fraudster and a liar” demonstrated by her “attempt to wriggle out of her pleas of guilty”.

Sentencing, the judge told Kiseliova: “You left the country in quite a deliberate attempt to evade justice.”

Judge Mansell said that the delays in the case caused by Kiseliova had caused added expense and inconvenience.

Manchester Evening News

Cumbernauld, North Lanarkshire: Rose Innes

CONVICTED (2018) | Rose Galbraith Innes, born 1970, of Millcroft Road, Cumbernauld G67 2QW – left her two dogs severely malnourished and with protruding ribs.

Rose Innes: an animal abuser from Cumbernauld, North Lanarkshire, Scotland
Rose Galbraith Innes – we believe this is quite an old photo of her and that she looks quite different.

Innes was found guilty of causing unnecessary suffering to tri-colour spaniel Toby, 7, and 11-year-old crossbreed Scamp.

She is said to have failed to provide adequate diet or veterinary treatment for the two dogs and has been admonished and given the ban following an investigation by the Scottish SPCA.

Photos of Toby and Scamp when they were rescued from Rose Innes. Both dogs were very thin and poorly.

Concerns were raised by a member of the public about the condition of the dogs in December 2017, leading to the Scottish SPCA visiting Innes’ property to check on their welfare.

Commenting on the investigation, Scottish SPCA inspector Emma Sergeant said: “After we opened our investigation, we tried our best to work with the accused but were denied entry to her house.

“Innes eventually took Toby and Scamp to a veterinary practice and upon inspection both were given a body score of 2/9 with their hips, bones and spine clearly prominently protruding.

“Innes was given clear feeding advice by the vet and the practice raised concerns with us about the conditions of both animals.

“She failed to show for a follow-up appointment later that month, leaving the Scottish SPCA with no choice but to secure a warrant to remove the dogs from her care. At the time they were removed Toby and Scamp were malnourished and severely underweight.”

Toby and Scamp were then taken to the SSPCA animal rescue and rehoming centre in Lanarkshire.

Sadly, Scamp developed lameness in his right hind limb in October and scans revealed a tumour in his leg, as well as malignant bone cancer which had spread, and he had to be put down.

SSPCA staff say it’s highly unlikely Scamp’s death was related to his physical condition.

Toby has made a full recovery and following Innes’ sentencing he can now be re-homed.

Sentencing: five-year ban on keeping animals (expired December 2023).

Scottish SPCA
Evening Times
GlasgowLive

Duston, Northampton: Brendan Gaughan

CONVICTED (2018) | Brendan Gaughan, born c. 1986, most recently of Mendip Road, Duston, Northampton NN5 – dismembered seven pet cats and left remains in plastic bags on their owners’ driveways

Northampton cat killer Brendan Gaughan and one of his victims, Rusty.
Northampton cat killer and one of his victims, Rusty. A serial arsonist, Gaughan also harboured thoughts of raping and murdering women but the Judge did not label him as ‘dangerous’ ..

Serial arsonist and cat mutilator Brendan Gaughan was sentenced at Northampton Crown Court for a campaign of attacks across the town in the past two years.

Gaughan was caught after an overnight arson spree in June 2018 in which he caused at least £375,000 of damage that destroyed family cafe The Arc, three rough sleepers’ tents and a disused office.

But when he came to court, he asked that 15 other offences were taken into account when he was jailed – namely, a debauched series of cat mutilations and a string of arson attacks in Duston.

The court heard how between August and November 2017 Gaughan targeted and killed seven family pets across Northampton.

He claims the first two were out of ‘spite’ for the owners – but he found the attacks left him ‘satisfied’ and he went on to kill four more in the space of just 10 days.

Nearly every time, Gaughan would set out between 1am and 2am searching for cats, before encouraging them to come near.

He then strangled them, dismembered the bodies and left them on their owner’s driveways or front gardens in plastic bags for them to find.

Cat Deaths

  • The body of Rusty was left in a bag on the owner’s doorstep in Northampton
  • Cat Topsy was left outside the owner’s home in the Kingsley area
  • Dead cat in a plastic bag was found in a garden in Chewton Close Duston
  • Mutilated body of a cat was found in Duston
  • Dismembered cat was discovered in Duston
  • Dismembered cat was found in a plastic bag on a doorstep in Mendip Road
  • Cat mutilated and left on car roof in Northampton

Prosecutor Matthew Rowcliffe QC said: “After doing it, he would feel satisfied for hurting [the families].

“But in November 2017, he ‘got bored of harming animals’ and turned his interests to starting fires.”

During an arson spree, Gaughan destroyed three tents, damaged the Outpost Café and its recycling bins and The Ark floating restaurant, both on Bedford Road, set fire to wheelie bins at the Edward Green Shoe Factory, a Vauxhall van and the Bray Learning and Development Centre at St Andrews Hospital.

In court today, the prosecutor shared something Gaughan said during a psychiatric assessment while he was in custody.

Mr Rowcliffe QC said: “[Gaughan] told his psychiatrist he had had thoughts of other kinds of offending, like entering women’s houses, raping them and killing them. He has never done this, but had had thoughts of doing it.”

Gaughan’s defence barrister, Mr Guy Williamson QC, told the judge: “He has expressed extreme regret and is ashamed of his actions, and understands the psychological, financial and physical harm and distress he has caused.

“This is a case of a man with mental health issues that feels isolated and vulnerable in the community in which he lives.

“He felt nothing towards the cats he was killing and he denies feeling any pleasure derived from these crimes.”

But His Honour Judge Roger Tregilgas-Davey said: “The starting of fires by you was deliberate. And in every case, you did nothing but watch. You failed to help extinguish them or alert emergency services.

“These were deliberate and persistent. When a fire did not take, you would make more effort to relight it.”

However, at sentencing, the judge did not rule Gaughan as ‘dangerous’ – and could only add three months to his jail term for the cat killings.

Judge Tregilgas-Davey said: “Any violence has been towards animals and not towards humans.

“In regard to the cat mutilations… I want to make it clear they are they are distasteful. They are distressing. I do not lose sight of that. But any sentence I can impose is limited no matter how many [you killed].”

Sentencing:
Jailed for 44 months including just three months for killing the seven cats. 

Heart Radio News
ITV News

Portadown, County Armagh: Eamonn Keegan

CONVICTED (2018) | Eamonn Keegan, born c. 1981, of Charles Street, Portadown, Craigavon BT62 – tied up and neglected his dog while he went on an alcohol binge.

Eamonn Keegan pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to animals at Craigavon Magistrates’ Court.

It was heard that on April 22, 2018, a Staffordshire Bull Terrier was found at the back of the defendant’s home in Portadown.

The dog appeared malnourished and had an injury to his left eye.

He was tied by 1.5-metre of chain to a squalid kennel and had no access to food or water.

The Staffy was taken by the local dog warden as he was in need of urgent medical attention.

A veterinarian concluded that the dog had been enduring the ulceration to his left eye for some time and was severely underweight.

When interviewed, Keegan stated that he had been treating the eye ailment himself.

Defence solicitor John McAtamney said: “Mr Keegan has no relevant previous offences, he does have a considerable record but other than a speeding offence in 2015 he has not been before the court since 2005”.

He stated: “This was a case of passive neglect through there not being adequate water and food for the dog, rather than active mistreatment”.

Mr McAtamney explained that Keegan had been drinking for four or five days and had left the dog in a “poor state”.

Adding: “Mr Keegan had been on a binge and had neglected his responsibilities”.

Addressing the eye ulceration, Mr McAtamney stated that the infection dated back to October of 2017.

He commented that the defendant had not been able to afford to take the dog to the vet and so treated it himself with saline drops.

District Judge Bernie Kelly stated: “Whilst I accept that this was a case of passive neglect, I also accept that Mr Keegan deliberately chose to buy alcohol over taking his dog to a vet.

“Anyone who wants to have animals as pets has to be responsible for them.

“Until society recognises this importance, it will not encourage proper responsible pet owners”.

Judge Kelly added: “Animals can’t ring up 999 and ask for help, all they can do is suffer”.

She said that there was only one penalty she could impose as the defendant was sentenced to two months in prison.

Keegan was also told that a lifelong ban was being placed on him keeping animals as pets.

Sentencing: two months in jail (later reduced to probation on appeal). A lifetime ban on keeping animals.

armaghi.com

Mallow, County Cork, Ireland: Declan Hogan

CONVICTED (2018) | Declan Hogan, born 26/08/1980, of 22 Powers Court, Mallow, Co Cork, Ireland – kept two dogs in deplorable conditions at his home.

Photo shows convicted dog abuser Declan Hogan and the dogs he left to suffer in appalling conditions.

Declan Hogan pleaded guilty to two counts of animal cruelty at Mallow District Court.

Animal welfare inspector Lisa O’Donovan said she found a two-year-old Labrador-type dog and a one-year-old terrier in “a critical condition” in February 2018.

Animal abuser Declan Hogan from County Cork in Ireland

Ms O’Donovan took the dogs to a local vet who said that they “endured unnecessary suffering and that without immediate intervention, it would not have been a good outcome for these dogs, and one would most definitely have died.”

Ms O’Donovan said: “I was shocked to discover a Labrador type cross dog huddled inside a shed, he was very nervous and would not move,” she said.

“Upon closer inspection, I noticed multiple open infected sores behind his ear, left shoulder, on his head and eye. Weeping wounds were visible on his legs and his paws were also swollen and badly inflamed.

“A strong pungent odour was coming from his coat later confirmed to be a mix of ectoparasites and severe bacterial and yeast infection all over the dog’s body. He was anaemic and a mild heart murmur was also present.”

She said the young terrier was also underweight adding that his “coat was greasy to the touch and was suffering from a skin infection.”

Both dogs have since made full recoveries and have been responsibly rehomed by the ISPCA.

Sentencing: Fined €800 and given a two year ban from owning an animal (expired 2020).

Newstalk

Wakefield, West Yorkshire: Stephen Gill

CONVICTED (2018) | Stephen Gill, born 18/08/1982 (since deceased), of Bevan Avenue, Normanton, Wakefield WF6 1PL – killed his girlfriend’s cat with a crossbow

Mugshot of domestic abuser Stephen Gill, who killed his former partner's pet cat with a crossbow

Stephen Gill was found guilty of engaging in a controlling or coercive relationship. 

Magistrates heard how Gill subjected his former partner to a catalogue of violence and abuse over four years.  In an act of despicable cruelty Gill  killed the woman’s pet cat with a crossbow by shooting him to the stomach and then to the throat.  Gill gloated as he told the woman that cat was dead and she later found her pet’s body dumped in a neighbour’s bin.

Gill also took control of the victim’s finances so he could spend money on spice and other drugs. He stopped the woman from seeing friends and denied her access to Facebook and social media.

Gill tried to force the victim into changing the tenancy details on her home in Bramley, Leeds, so he could also live there.

He also threatened to burn her house down.

Alisha Kaye, prosecuting, said the woman took Gill’s threats seriously because he has convictions for arson.

Miss Kaye said: “If affected her self-esteem and some mornings she could not get up.

“She was diagnosed with depression and stayed with him because she felt no one else would have her.”

The court also heard Gill would not allow the woman to get a job and and threatened to “dismantle” her face if she did not do as she was told.

The woman contacted police in July 2018 after Gill assaulted her.

Gill has previous convictions for robbery and arson.

Sentencing Gill Judge Robin Mairs said: “In a particularly cruel act you killed her cat with a crossbow and expressed some joy at having done so.

“You caused as much emotional pain as you could.”

Sentencing: jailed for a pitiful 31 months.

Daily Record
Leeds Live