Tag Archives: Criminal Behaviour Order (CBO)

Morecambe, Lancashire / Bolton, Greater Manchester: George Miller and Lewis Sheridan

CONVICTED (2024) | hare coursers George William Miller, born July 1991, of Loupsfell Drive, Morecambe LA4 4SB and Lewis Sheridan, born 21 October 1986, of 128 Thicketford Road, Bolton BL2 2LU

Prosecution of hare coursers Lewis Sheridan from Bolton, Greater Manchester, and George Miller from Morecambe, Lancs

The pair were seen hare coursing near the Lincolnshire villages of Twenty and West Pinchbeck on Friday 13 October 2023. They were spotted walking across arable land with their two long dogs. The dogs -one beige in colour and the other black – were seen chasing and catching hares.

Prosecution of hare coursers Lewis Sheridan from Bolton, Greater Manchester, and George Miller from Morecambe, Lancs
Caught red handed: convicted hare courser Lewis Sheridan

The men had arrived in the area in a silver Skoda car which they had left near to a farm in the area. They had tried to hide the car behind some foliage.

On arriving back at the car, the men were challenged by the local farmer who had tried to block the car in with farm machinery. In a bid to escape, the Skoda was driven at speed across grassed areas and onto the A151.

Prosecution of hare coursers Lewis Sheridan from Bolton, Greater Manchester, and George Miller from Morecambe, Lancs

Sheridan and Miller were arrested when their car was seen and stopped by officers from Lincolnshire Police’s Rural Crime Action Team (RCAT), around an hour later.

The men’s car was seized along with the two dogs and equipment including three thermal cameras, a video camera and four mobile phones.

Prosecution of hare coursers Lewis Sheridan from Bolton, Greater Manchester, and George Miller from Morecambe, Lancs

Information obtained from the recording devices and mobile phones pinpointed the men’s unlawful activities and provided evidence of their offending.

During interview the men lied that they had the landowner’s permission to undertake pest control in the area.

On 1 May 2024 Sheridan and Miller pleaded guilty to hunting a wild mammal with a dog, contrary to Schedule 1 of the Hunting Act 2004.

Both men relinquished ownership of their dogs who have subsequently been rehomed.

Sentencing | 10-year Criminal Behaviour Orders banning them from entering onto any private land in Lincolnshire, Derbyshire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire or Nottinghamshire during hare coursing season (31 July to 30 April) with a sighthound, ground, long dog, lurcher type dog or crossbreed or be in the company of any other people with that type of dog. Ordered to pay a total of £4,575.50 in full by 30 May 2024.

Lincs Police
LincolnshireLive


Additional Information

George Miller, who’s originally from Lancaster (Slyne Road) with links to Heysham, has a roofing company called Lancashire and Cumbria Roofing Ltd.

In March 2021 Miller received a three-year ban on breeding and selling dogs after being convicted of illegally trading puppies. He was prosecuted by Animal Protection Services following their investigation into his activities.

Lewis Sheridan is also a roofer. His wife runs a dog grooming company called Your Faithful Friend Limited, which operates from premises on Bury Road, Bolton BL2 6BB.

Doncaster Hare Coursing Gang: Eugene Meenaghan, Joe Murtagh, Jay Poole, Jake Reidy

CONVICTED (2024) | Eugene Meenaghan, born 10 February 2001, of 43 Crabgate Lane, Skellow, Doncaster DN6 8LE, Joseph Murtagh, born December 2001, from Woodlands, Doncaster, Jay Poole born 2 April 2004, of 3 The Circuit, Woodlands, Doncaster DN6 7TE, and Jake Reidy, born 23 May 2005, of 58 Princess Avenue, Stainforth, Doncaster DN7 5QY – for the possession of hare coursing equipment and destroying a farmer’s field.

CPS prosecution of Doncaster hare coursing gang members Eugene Meenaghan, Joe Murtagh,  Jay Poole and Jake Reidy.

The four men, who are all prolific wildlife persecutors, travelled from Doncaster to the hamlet of Apley, near Wragby, East Lindsey, Lincolnshire, in the early hours of 1 October 2023. They then drove through a farmer’s field, damaging the land and destroying crops, before attempting to leave the area.

Eugene Meenaghan

The crime was reported to Lincolnshire Police and patrolling officers from Spec Ops quickly identified the vehicle and stopped the group near Burton Waters.

CPS prosecution of Doncaster hare coursing gang members Eugene Meenaghan, Joe Murtagh,  Jay Poole and Jake Reidy.

Officers found longdogs and equipment such as lamps – used in lamping to stun wild animals before dogs are set loose.

They were arrested and subsequently videos of animal fights were found on their phones.

CPS prosecution of Doncaster hare coursing gang members Eugene Meenaghan, Joe Murtagh,  Jay Poole and Jake Reidy.
Jake Reidy

All four men were charged with being equipped to hare course, breach of section nine of the animal welfare act and criminal damage. They pleaded guilty to these charges.

CPS prosecution of Doncaster hare coursing gang members Eugene Meenaghan, Joe Murtagh,  Jay Poole and Jake Reidy.
Jay Poole with father Craig Poole

On Thursday 25 April 2024 officials at Lincoln Magistrates’ Court told the group to pay out a combined total of £19,791.72 in costs and compensation.

Eugene Meenaghan will pay £5,262,93.
Joseph Murtagh will pay £4,842.93.
Jay Poole will pay £4,842.93.
Jake Reidy will pay £4,842.93.

Magistrates described the crimes as ‘cruel and despicable’ and said the events of that night had ‘caused great distress’.

CPS prosecution of Doncaster hare coursing gang members Eugene Meenaghan, Joe Murtagh,  Jay Poole and Jake Reidy.
Joe Murtagh

This result comes after a lengthy police investigation and PC Karen Irving, who works for the rural crime action team, insists this behaviour won’t be tolerated.

She said: “We are determined to make Lincolnshire the safest place to live, work and visit. This result shows we will use all avenues available to us to bring people to justice and protect our communities and wildlife.

Sentencing | costs and compensation; 10-year criminal behaviour order not to enter Lincolnshire with longdogs; 100 hours of community service. Forfeiture of mobile phones and lamping equipment. Disqualified from keeping dogs for 10 years..

Lincs Police
Lincolnshire World

Bransgore, New Forest: Kristen and Todd Cooper

CONVICTED (2024) | brothers Kristen Christopher Cooper, born 2 May 1999, and Todd James Edward Cooper, born c. 1994, of 24 Westbury Close, Bransgore, Christchurch BH23 8AZ* – tortured wild animals to death and filmed their agonies.

Sadistic animal killers: brothers Kristen Cooper (left) and Todd Cooper from New Forest, Hampshire
Sadistic brothers Kristen Cooper (left) and Todd Cooper

Career criminal brothers Kristen and Todd Cooper, who are gypsies, made a series of sick videos showing hares and deer being abused and mutilated.

During one depraved incident, the pair mutilated the genitalia of a deer – to the extent that officials could not tell if the animal was male and female – and stabbed another in the eye on camera, causing an ‘extreme level of suffering’.

In another twisted video they held a hare by his head and encouraged a dog to bite him.

Sadistic animal killer: Kristen Cooper  from New Forest, Hampshire

A vet reviewing the videos as part of the investigation described the footage, filmed in 2021 and 2022, as the “worst case of animal abuse” he had seen in his 24-year career.

“These images will stay with me forever,” he said.

Sadistic animal killer: Todd Cooper  from New Forest, Hampshire

Other videos showed deer being dragged by their antlers having appeared to have suffered spinal injuries from possibly being hit by a car, with one piece of footage showing a man raising a wooden object above a helpless deer’s head as if he was going to strike it.

The brothers were caught after police seized a phone containing the shocking videos.

Sadistic animal killer: Kristen Cooper  from New Forest, Hampshire

Kristen Cooper was charged with seven counts of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal with Todd Cooper being accused of one count.

But after appearing at the crown court for these offences and being released on bail, just days later the pair were apprehended again after attacking a mother and her son outside a Co-Op in Betsy Lane in Bransgore on March 4, 2023.

In a video shown in court, the pair can be seen with a third unknown man, ramming another car before getting out and attacking the vehicle with a catapult, a crowbar and a baseball bat.

The victims of the attack later gave evidence at trial with the mother saying she “genuinely believed they wanted to kill us”.

During the sentencing hearing, prosecutor Stuart Ellacott said the animal abuse was “sadistic” adding that the animals were in “distress and suffering”.

Sadistic animal killer: Kristen Cooper  from New Forest, Hampshire

Aleks Lloyd, defending Kristen – who has eight convictions for ten offences – said this is the first time his client has been in custody adding that he “appears to be getting his head down and getting on with it”.

Ruba Huleihel defending Todd, who has 24 convictions for 52 offences, said her client has ADHD and was exposed to violence from a very young age.

Sadistic animal killer: Todd Cooper  from New Forest, Hampshire

Judge Peter Henry sentenced the pair for a variety of offences committed in the New Forest and in Dorset, including actual bodily harm, criminal damage and threatening a person with an offensive weapon.

He said: “One would have thought that both of you being brought up in the New Forest you would have had more respect for such defenceless creatures.

“It was being filmed, other people were present and other people seemed to find it all very amusing.”

Both men were given restraining orders banning them from ever contacting the mother and son they attacked ever again.

This image shows the Cooper brothers and an as yet unidentified accomplice participating in hare coursing, a cruel sport in which dogs are tested on their ability to run, overtake and turn a hare

Police Constable Sebastian Haggett, of Dorset Police’s Rural Crime Team – who led the case alongside Hampshire police – said after the sentencing: “These are without doubt some of the most horrifying offences I have ever investigated.”

Angharad Thomas, Senior Crown Prosecutor with CPS Wessex, said: “The level of cruelty displayed in this case is beyond comprehension and the brothers showed an inexplicable disregard for the welfare of these animals peacefully existing in the wild.

“An expert witness for the prosecution described the actions of Kristen and Todd Cooper as the worst case of animal abuse they had ever come across in their 24-year veterinary career.

“The CPS welcomes today’s sentence and hopes it sends a clear message that we will continue to work with the police to bring offenders of these disturbing crimes to justice.”

Sentencing |
Kristen Cooper: jailed for five years; 10-year criminal behaviour order. Banned from owning a dog for ten years.
Todd Cooper- jailed for three years and eight months.

Daily Echo
Dorset Police
Daily Mail


*alternative addresses per newspaper reports |

Kristen Cooper: Whitelands, Bransgore BH23 8DY
Todd Cooper: Jubilee Court, Sway, Lymington SO41 6HA

Eye, Cambridgeshire: Fred Holmes

CONVICTED (2023) | serial hare courser Fred Holmes, born c. 1963, of Eye View Travellers Site, Thorney Road, Eye, Peterborough PE6 7UA – for trespassing on private land and using dogs to chase and kill hares in Lincolnshire and Northamptonshire.

Traveller Fred Holmes  was fined nearly £20k after being caught in Lincolnshire using dogs to kill hares
Traveller Fred Holmes was fined nearly £20k after being caught in Lincolnshire using dogs to kill hares

Following a report of hare coursing in Low Road, Crowland, on November 13, 2022, officers from Lincolnshire Police’s Rural Crime Action Team attended and located Fred Holmes, who appeared to be equipped with dogs on the land.

Holmes was subsequently charged with trespass in pursuit of hare and going equipped for trespass.

Northamptonshire Police joined the investigation as he was also suspected of hare coursing in Warmington on October 23, 2022.

Holmes was already subject to a community protection notice in Northamptonshire after committing similar offences previously, and his three lurcher-type dogs were seized alongside his mobile phone.

The joint force investigation resulted in Holmes being charged with two counts of trespass in pursuit of game, and two counts of being equipped to trespass in pursuit of hares.

Despite initially denying the Northamptonshire offences, at Boston Magistrates’ Court on November 10, 2023, he entered guilty pleas to all four counts.

Sentencing | ordered to pay £16,783.50 for the kennel costs of keeping the three dogs since their seizure, as well as fines for the two trespass offences and two victim surcharges, making a total of £18,557.50. Three-year criminal behaviour order which prevents him from entering any private land in Lincolnshire, Northamptonshire or Cambridgeshire with a sighthound, greyhound, long dog or lurcher type dog or cross breed, or being in the company of anyone with this kind of dog on private land, during the recognised hare coursing season (July 31 – April 30). Deprivation order for three dogs; forfeiture of thermal imaging equipment and a Citroen car. Banned from keeping dogs for 10 years (expires November 2033).

Spalding Voice
Peterborough Telegraph
ITV News

Middlesbrough / Knaresborough, North Yorkshire and Worksop, Notts: John Langan, Shane Hooton, Joe Foster, Dean Adams

CONVICTED (2023) | John Alan Langan, born June 1986, of 12 The Hawthorns Great Ayton, Middlesbrough TS9 6BA, Shane Hooton, born c 1992, of Thistle Hill Caravan Park, Thistle Hill, Knaresborough HG5 8LS and Joseph Foster, born 30 December 1987, of 78 Manton Crescent, Worksop S80 2RG and Dean Thomas Adams, born 27 November1995, of 7 Hebron Court, Stokesley, Middlesbrough TS9 5FD – for hare coursing offences.

Convicted for hare coursing: John Langan, Shane Hooton, Dean Adams, Joe Foster from North Yorkshire / East Midlands
Clockwise from top left: John Langan, Shane Hooton, Dean Adams, Joe Foster

Appearing in court on 9 October 2023 in relation to hare coursing charges were serial offender John Langan with his latest accomplices Shane Hooton and Joseph Foster. Dean Adams failed to appear in court and a warrant for his arrest was issued.

Langan, Hooton and Foster pleaded guilty to the offences of trespass and going equipped to trespass with intent to search for or pursue hares with dogs, under Section 63 and Section 64 Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022.

This was in relation to an incident on 23 December 2022 when four men were stopped by Rural Task Force Officer Rich Fussey as they came off private farmland in Leven in the East Riding of Yorkshire.

They were in possession of running dogs without any permissions to be on the land.

John Langan was sentenced to 12 weeks imprisonment, suspended for 12 months – the court felt the offence was so serious that a custodial sentence could be justified.

He was also given a ten-year Criminal Behaviour Order covering England and Wales with conditions around the control of dogs, not being on private farmland without permission and a complete ban on entering Humberside.

He was also fined £85 costs, £154 victim surcharge, disqualified from driving for 56 days and ordered to complete 80 hours of unpaid supervised work within the next 12 months.

Shane Hooton was sentenced to a £500 fine, £85 costs and £200 victim surcharge and given a three-year Criminal Behaviour Order covering the same conditions as Langan.

Joseph Foster was sentenced to a £500 fine, £85 costs and £200 victim surcharge.

BBC News
North West Hunt Saboteurs (blog)

Thornton, Liverpool: Liam Doherty

CONVICTED (2023) | serial hare courser Liam Doherty, born c 1990, of Ince Road, Thornton, Liverpool L23 4UF – used dogs to hunt wild hares.

Persistent hare courser Liam Doherty from Thornton, Sefton, Liverpool

Doherty, who in January 2016 was convicted of the same offence* alongside Bootle men James Reid, born 1 October 1983, and Neil Walsh, born c. 1985, was convicted of hunting a wild mammal with dog/s under the Hunting Act 2004

He was prosecuted after officers from the South Rural Task Force were called to land near to the Lancashire/Merseyside border. It followed reports that a man had been seen hare coursing by the landowner in February 223.

Officers from Lancashire Constabulary attended and stopped and searched a 4×4 vehicle in a nearby residential street.

In a statement issued on October 9, 2023, South Rural Police Taskforce officer PC Helen Williams said: “Hare coursing can be extremely distressing for our community as offenders commit cruel acts towards our wildlife. It is a misconception for people to think this is a minor crime in the countryside.

“Those involved in hare coursing trespass on land, damaging crops and property. The measures farmers have to put in place to deter these offenders cost considerable amounts of money which in turn is passed onto food consumers.

“The South Rural Task Force is committed to stamping out wildlife crime in Lancashire and we would like to thank local farmers and landowners for reporting these offences.”

Sentencing | ordered to pay £537 in fines and costs. The vehicle used in the offence was also seized.

LancsLive
Liverpool Echo


*Previous Conviction (2016)

In January 2016 Liam Doherty, James Reid and Neil Walsh were all handed Criminal Behaviour Orders after being caught using dogs to poach protected brown hares on Lancashire farmland.

Police mugshots, taken 2016) of persistent hare coursers Liam Doherty, James Reid, Neil Walsh, all from Liverpool
L-R Liam Doherty, James Reid, Neil Walsh

Doherty, at the time living in Crosby and Reid and Walsh, both from Bootle, were caught entering farmland with four dogs with the intent of hunting brown hares.

The 18-month order prohibited the men from entering a large area of West Lancashire with a dog or being in company with anyone with a dog, until June 2017.

Hare courser James Reid from Liverpool
James Reid

PC Ivan Leivers said: “These three men have regularly and routinely entered West Lancashire with the express intent of hunting a protected mammal – the brown hare – with their dogs.

“This order will ensure that if they continue to partake in this barbaric activity, they face the very real possibility of being given a custodial sentence.

“The other offenders who come here to carry out coursing should be warned we will apply for these orders wherever and whenever we can.”

Wisbech / Peterborough / Spalding: Nelson Loveridge, Stacey Smith, Danny Rainford, Terry Smith

CONVICTED (2023) | hare coursing gang members Nelson Loveridge, born c. 1985, of 3 Maltmas Road, Friday Bridge, Wisbech PE14 9HR, Danny Rainford, born c. 1990, of Seadyke Caravan Park, Seadyke Road, Wisbech St Mary, Wisbech PE13 4XF, Stacey Smith, born c. 1984, of Baulkins Drove, Sutton St James, Spalding PE12 0JU and Terry Smith, born c. 1983, of Oxney Road, Peterborough PE1

Hare coursers Stacey Smith, Terry Smith, Danny Rainford, Nelson Loveridge
Hare coursers Stacey Smith, Terry Smith, Danny Rainford, Nelson Loveridge

Travellers Nelson Loveridge, Stacey Smith, Danny Rainford and Terry Smith, who are all well known to police, pleaded guilty to being equipped for hare coursing.

Career crook Terry Smith, a convicted domestic abuser, appeared via video link. .

All four men, who are “landscape gardeners” by trade, had previous convictions for poaching.

They were arrested by Lincolnshire Police Rural Crime officers following a short pursuit for hare coursing in the Eastern Road area of Spalding on 9 November, 2022.

Police had been called to a suspected hare coursing incident nearby. A grey Volkswagen vehicle – which was not insured, had no MOT and was not registered to anyone – made off when officers arrived.

It was later found abandoned in Flag Lane, Whaplode Drove, alongside a number of recently-killed hares, said prosecutor Kate Minihane.

A dog handler traced the men nearby.

“A download from Terry Smith’s phone showed a hare coursing incident on the day of arrest but it couldn’t be pinpointed where that happened,” said the prosecutor.

“Three dogs were kept by police in kennels at large expense to the public purse.”

They belonged to Loveridge, Rainford and Stacey Smith. All of the dogs had been forfeited and rehomed since. A fourth dog was seized but no one accepted ownership.

Sentencing | four months’ imprisonment suspended for 24 months; a five-year criminal behaviour order not to enter Lincolnshire during the hare coursing season and be on land with a sight hound or be in company with any person with such a dog without permission. Six-month driving disqualification. all items used in connection with the offence have been forfeited, including their vehicle and their dogs. Stacy Smith, Nelson Loveridge and Danny Rainford have been required to pay £3,586 to recover the kennelling costs. They have also each received fines of £239. Disqualified from keeping dogs for five years (expires July 2028).

Spalding Today
Lincolnshire Police

Verwood, Dorset: Sonny-Joe Barney

CONVICTED (2023) | Sonny-Joe Barney, born 18 March 2003, of 11 Summer Fields, Verwood BH31 6LG – goaded his dogs into attacking and killing a chicken.

Animal abuser Sonny-Joe Barney from Verwood, Dorset

Barney, a traveller, pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to a chicken by releasing dogs on it.

Animal abuser Sonny-Joe Barney from Verwood, Dorset

Dorset Police’s rural crime team found evidence of a dog being set on a chicken during an investigation into hare coursing. The chicken was killed in the incident, which took place in a field on 7 July 2022.

Sentencing | 12-month community order with 20 days of rehabilitation activity. 12-month disqualification order, which states that he must not transport or arrange transport, own, keep or take part in keeping dogs or chickens.

Dorset Echo


Update | July 2023

Barney was given a criminal behaviour order, banning him from owning wild animals or catapults, as well as to keep off private farmland.

Sonny-Joe Barney, a serial animal abuser from Verwood, Dorset
Image: Dorset Police

He appeared at Poole Magistrates Court again on Friday 14 July, 2023, to be handed the criminal behaviour order. That states that for a five-year period, he must not:

  • Be in possession of a wild animal, wild bird or part of a wild animal or bird living or dead
  • Be knowingly in possession of a catapult or shot such as ball bearings or a hunting lamp including in a vehicle with a catapult or such shot in a place to which the public have access or private land as a trespasser
  • Allow a dog under his control off a lead except on private land with the landowners written permission which must be presented to a police officer on request
  • Be on private farmland, agricultural land or forestry land without written permission of the appropriate authority or landowner, this permission must be presented to a police officer on request

If Barney breaches any of the terms of the order, he can be arrested and taken back to court.

Sonny-Joe Barney, a serial animal abuser from Verwood, Dorset

Police Constable Lauren Middleton, of Dorset Police’s Rural Crime Team, said: “Our investigation revealed evidence that Barney was believed to be involved in hare coursing and the offence for which he has been convicted shows that he has little regard for the welfare of animals.

“We have worked hard to compile evidence and secure this order from the court, which we hope will assist in stopping the defendant from reoffending in the future. We would like to send a special thank you to Dorset Council’s Community Safety Team for helping us secure this order.

“We hope this demonstrates to our rural communities that we will take decisive action against those who commit offences of this nature, and we would urge them to work with us by reporting any suspected breaches of the order to police so we can take further steps if necessary.”

Planet Radio

Kingswood, Bristol: Attila Kovacs

CONVICTED (2023|) | repeat offender Attila Kovacs, born c. 1979, of Two Mile Hill Road, Kingswood, Bristol BS15 1BA – for the mistreatment of dogs illegally imported into the UK.

Attila  Kovacs illegally imported pregnant dogs and puppies into the UK and kept them in cramped cages in a house in the Kingswood area of Bristol

Hungarian national Attila Kovacs, head of a notorious Bristol-based Roma gypsy crime family, pleaded guilty to multiple charges of causing an animal to suffer in June 2021. He also admitted failing to ensure the welfare of a French Bulldog called Lola and importing, breeding and selling dogs without a local authority licence.

Prosecutor Lee Reynolds told the court: “The defendant was engaged in an unlawful trade involving the importation and sale of puppies between December 2019 and June 2021. The puppies were transported from abroad in appalling conditions and often at a time when they were heavily pregnant.

“When they reached his home, he would keep them in poor conditions such that they had very little light, kept in small cages in a poor condition with dangers surrounding them. The animals were allowed to develop medical conditions and suffer unnecessarily.

“He did not obtain veterinary advice when he clearly ought to. He attempted to conceal his criminal actions through the use of accounts and addresses held in the name of others. Had he applied for a licence to breed he would not have received one such was his lack of care and the poor conditions.”

Attila  Kovacs illegally imported pregnant dogs and puppies into the UK and kept them in cramped cages in a house in the Kingswood area of Bristol
Attila Kovacs illegally imported pregnant dogs and puppies into the UK and kept them in cramped cages in a house in the Kingswood area of Bristol

Mr Reynolds said the charges related to the unlawful trade over a considerable period and the conditions in which seven animals were found during a visit to an address in Stanley Road, Warmley, Bristol BS15 on June 29, 2021.

He told the court Kovacs’ offending was aggravated because he was the subject of a Criminal Behaviour Order imposed in 2016 following a case involving illegality with regards to the trading and keeping of dogs.

The court heard Kovacs’ activities came to the authorities’ attention when they linked him to the importation of five dogs in poor condition in 2019. A search of the Warmley property linked to him uncovered dogs kept in a shipping container in squalid conditions.

Mr Reynolds said: “Mr Kovacs unlocked the shipping container and the officers and veterinarian entered. Within the locked shipping container were a total of seven dogs in four cages situated at the rear of the container.

“There was also a larger cage just inside the door, which was empty. Attila Kovacs advised that this is where the Rottweiler was kept.

“The cage measured 108cm wide, by 74cm high, by 76cm deep. There was no food, water, or bedding present in the cage.

“When the door was opened it was very dark within the container. Officers tried the light switch, but nothing happened. They were met with a strong smell of stale faeces and urine.

“There were three small windows, two of which were covered with wood panels and one which was very slightly open. These windows provided very little ventilation and very little natural light.

“There were three ‘fly-strips’ hanging from the ceiling, all which were completely covered with dead flies. The floor of the container was scattered with loose rat bait and there were several holes in the floor of the container, where it met the walls.”

Dogs within the container were found to have infections to their ears and eyes, the court heard. Though they had been caused suffering, fortunately all were treatable and survived. Kovacs made no comment when interviewed.

Matthew Comer, defending, said his client – a married father-of-three – had mild learning difficulties and struggled with literacy both in Hungarian and English. Mr Comer said Kovacs had tried to make a legal way of making money for his family and his wife suffered from regular seizures.

All of the dogs rescued were nursed back to health.

Sentencing | 24-month prison sentence suspended for 21 months. 150 hours of unpaid work. Ten-year Criminal Behaviour Order, banning him from any future involvement in the importation, sale, advertising or distribution of animals. He is also limited to two domestic pets which must be photographed and microchipped. He must also tell the local authority if he ever moves house.

Bristol Post


In October 2021, Attila Kovac’s son Antonio Ronaldo Emillio Kovacs, born 17 January 2002, and of 46 Stanley Road, Warmley, Bristol BS15 4NX was convicted of similar charges of cruelty to dogs.

Animal abuser: Antonio Kovacs from Bristol. Picture: Facebook
Antonio Kovacs. Picture: Facebook

He was prosecuted after police found 13 dogs being kept in squalid conditions at the Rangeworthy Court Country House Hotel, Church Lane, Rangeworthy, South Gloucestershire.

In addition to a 15-week suspended jail term, Antonio Kovacs was given a 10-year ban on owning animals.

Full details of the case here.

South Perrott, Northwest Dorset: Peter Edwards

CONVICTED (2022) | zoophile Peter F Edwards, 36, from South Perrott, Beaminster, Dorset – raped his black Labrador and encouraged another pervert to sexually abuse the same dog

Depraved Peter Edwards pictured outside court
Depraved Peter Edwards pictured outside court

Edwards was found to have abused the Labrador, Max, and encouraged or allowed another man, Jonathan Barton from Yeovil, Somerset, to commit bestiality with his pet as well.

Black Lab Max: victim of his owner's twisted sexual predilections, Source: Twitter
Black Lab Max: victim of his owner’s twisted sexual predilections, Source: Twitter

The pair were caught out when police examined Edwards’ mobile and computer devices and found vile videos showing the abuse of the dog.

A court heard that after he was arrested Edwards expressed concern about what would happen to Max, who has since been rehomed.

Edwards with Max as a puppy. Source: Facebook
Edwards with Max as a puppy. Source: Facebook

An investigation was carried out and photos and videos were found on his devices, including child pornography and extreme pornography involving animals. Officers then discovered some of the images were of sexual activity with his own dog.

Edwards with Max as a puppy. Source: Facebook

Edwards pleaded guilty to two offences of sexual intercourse with an animal, one count of encouraging or assisting with the commission of an offence as well as three counts of making indecent image of a child and three counts of possessing extreme pornographic images.

Bournemouth Crown Court heard reports showed Edwards had autistic traits and a high level of intelligence but showed ‘bizarre attitudes and behaviours’.

John Dyer, representing Edwards, said he had become very isolated, was signed off work and suffered with anxiety and depression.

Edwards pictured outside court
Despite being an obvious danger to animals and children Edwards walked free from court with a community sentence

Judge Climie told Edwards: “Concerns were expressed to the police that were proved well-founded. There were extreme pornographic images in relation to animals, some of those proved to be sexual activity involving you and your own dog and also Mr Barton, who had also become involved in that sexual activity.

“You will be subject to a community order for the next three years. That may seem like you have avoided the ultimate punishment of going to prison, but I must consider the extent to which rehabilitation can be achieved in a custodial setting.

“Because of your peculiarities, I don’t mean that in an offensive manner, you would be highly vulnerable as a prisoner. You would be subjected not just to taunting but also some degree of violence from other inmates and that would achieve very little in rehabilitating you.”

Sentencing | three-year community order with up to 60 rehabilitation activity days and a three-month curfew between 8pm and 6am. Five-year criminal behaviour order that Edwards shall not own, possess or look after any dog unless whilst in the company of that dog’s owner. Sexual harm prevention order. Ordered to sign sex offenders’ register for five years.

Dorset Echo
Daily Mail