Tag Archives: Cumberland

Millom, Cumbria: Reece Robertson

CONVICTED (2024) | Reece Robertson, born 12 November 1997, of 49 Devonshire Road, Millom LA18 4JH* – left multiple dogs in severe pain with untreated animal fighting injuries, starved them and kept them in appalling conditions.

RSPCA prosecution of wildlife criminal Reece Robertson from Millom, Cumbria, who left his dogs with untreated fighting injuries, starved and neglected them.

Ultra-sadistic wildlife persecutor Robertson was investigated by the RSPCA in relation to suspected badger baiting, with the charity’s officers finding eight dogs at his home and a nearby allotment in Lincoln Street, Millom. , Many of the dogs had substantial scarring and untreated wounds, consistent with being forced to fight with wild animals.

RSPCA prosecution of wildlife criminal Reece Robertson from Millom, Cumbria, who left his dogs with untreated fighting injuries, starved and neglected them.

Robertson pleaded guilty to four offences under the Animal Welfare Act 2006.

In October 2023, raids were carried out by RSPCA inspectors and officers from Cumbria Police as part of an investigation codenamed Operation Spike.

The warrants were issued under the Animal Welfare Act 2006 and the Protection of Badgers Act 1992.

RSPCA prosecution of wildlife criminal Reece Robertson from Millom, Cumbria, who left his dogs with untreated fighting injuries, starved and neglected them.

RSPCA Chief Inspector Ian Muttit, of the charity’s SOU (Special Operations Unit), said in a statement presented to the court that three adult dogs and a puppy were being kept in very poor conditions at kennels in Robertson’s back garden.

Chief Inspector Muttit said: “Each kennel had a large build-up of faeces in it. They were small and the run areas had large amounts of faeces built up inside, while the sleeping areas for each were extremely basic and looked inadequate in terms of shelter or bedding.”

RSPCA prosecution of wildlife criminal Reece Robertson from Millom, Cumbria, who left his dogs with untreated fighting injuries, starved and neglected them.

Three dogs, a bull lurcher called Bam, a female bull lurcher called Bella, a Patterdale terrier called Punch and a lurcher puppy, were found at the defendant’s property.

At the allotment, RSPCA officers found five more dogs in five separate kennels, including a female bull lurcher named Jess who had lost part of her nose and had scars all over her face.

There was also a Patterdale terrier called Tilly, a female lurcher called Thorn and two male lurchers named Mash and Bracken, both of whom were also suffering with facial cuts and scars.

RSPCA prosecution of wildlife criminal Reece Robertson from Millom, Cumbria, who left his dogs with untreated fighting injuries, starved and neglected them.

An RSPCA SOU Inspector stated: “The conditions in these kennels were extremely poor. Tilly and Mash had no water in their kennels and all the dogs had very dirty kennels with lots of fresh and mouldy faeces inside them.”

Robertson indicated he had not attended the allotment for two to three days and there were no arrangements made for anyone to attend to the dogs.

All the eight adult dogs were seized and taken into the care of the RSPCA. A vet who examined all the dogs found several were underweight while others had untreated facial wounds.

RSPCA prosecution of wildlife criminal Reece Robertson from Millom, Cumbria, who left his dogs with untreated fighting injuries, starved and neglected them.

Tilly was very thin and scored one out of five on a body condition score. Thorn had a broken tooth and a wound on her front leg which extended into her muscle. Mash’s left eye and chin were inflamed and swollen, while Bracken had a wound to his mouth and to one of his foot pads. Jess was suffering from fur loss and her nasal septum was missing.

Bella had an old scar on her head and her teats were enlarged. There were scabs on Bam’s nose and he had a recent cut to his inner ear. Punch, the second Patterdale, was suffering with crusty skin and there was scabbing on his chin, while he also had a fresh wound to his ear.

Robertson said that none of the dogs were under a vet and he claimed Jess had got her nose stuck in the wire fence of her kennel and part of her nose “ripped off” after he tried to pull her clear.

The vet concluded that Robertson failed to provide a suitable living environment for Tilly, Thorn, Mash, Braken and Jess, while he also failed to provide a suitable diet for Tilly. The defendant also failed to provide for the needs of Bella, Punch and Bam, stated the vet.

RSPCA prosecution of wildlife criminal Reece Robertson from Millom, Cumbria, who left his dogs with untreated fighting injuries, starved and neglected them.

In mitigation, the court heard that Robertson had learning difficulties and was “regarded as a soft touch for animals in the area” with people giving him dogs they couldn’t care for. But it proved too much for him both financially and intellectually and he had tried to administer “self-treatment”.

After being treated for their injuries and ailments, all the dogs have made a good recovery in RSPCA care and will now be rehomed. The defendant later agreed to rehome the lurcher puppy.

In December 2022 a local farmer alleged that Robertson and accomplice Kian Rowe set their dogs on a helpless sheep
Reece Robertson's usual alleged partner in wildlife crime Kian Rowe 0not yet charged)
Kian Rowe also has an interest in hunting with dogs

Speaking after the case, Chief Inspector Muttit said: “We discovered these dogs in a pretty bleak environment. Those at the allotment were being kept in really poor conditions and the defendant had left them unattended for three days in their own mess.

“A number of them were suffering with injuries, including one who had lost part of her nose. It was important that we investigated the welfare of these dogs and removed them to a place of safety.”

Sentencing | 12-month community order with 200 hours of unpaid work; costs of £500. Banned from keeping animals for 10 years.

Times & Star


*alternative address for Reece Robertson: Cook Road, Millom LA18 4JH.

Brampton, Cumbria: Virgina Nelson

CONVICTED (2023) | puppy farmer Virginia Nelson aka Virginia Mahon, born 30 October 1978, a traveller from Hallbankgate, Brampton CA8* – for animal welfare and fraud offences relating to unlicensed breeding.

Puppy farmer Virginia Nelson aka Virginia Mahon, a traveller from Brampton, near Carlisle, Cumbria. Images: Facebook
Greedy, cruel and dishonest puppy farmer Virginia Nelson, who is better known by the name Virginia Mahon, is disqualified in dealing in animals until November 2026.

Nelson admitted failing to be licenced for the activity of selling animals as pets in the course of a business.

Investigations into Nelson started in August 2022, following a report of the sale of a six-year-old dog, who was advertised as a one-year-old.
The buyer also reported that the dog had ear and skin infections. A vet later concluded that the animal could have avoided unnecessary suffering with timely vet treatment.

A separate report was made after Nelson sold a five-week-old puppy that was too young to be away from her mother and did not have the appropriate vaccinations.

This activity is a breach of Lucy’s Law, legislation which prohibits the sale of animals without a licence.

Sentencing | fined £140, ordered to pay £2,500 costs and a £56 surcharge. Disqualified from dealing in animals for three years (expires November 2026).

Cumbria Crack


*alternative address: 5 Gelt Rise, Brampton CA8 1PN.

Cleator Moor, West Cumbria: Nathan Thompson

CONVICTED (2023) | Nathan Thompson, born 1994, of Melbreak Avenue, Cleator Moor CA25 – killed a young border collie after weeks of systematic abuse.

Dog killer: West Cumbrian man Nathan Thompson subjected a border collie puppy to regular beatings in the run-up to her death.
Neighbours heard Nathan Thompson beat his dog, causing her distress and to yelp in pain and cry.

Thompson mistreated the puppy, known as Daisy, so badly that she eventually died. He then tried to cover his tracks by setting a fierce fire, inside a metal bin.

Carlisle Crown Court heard Thompson had brought home the dog shortly after moving into the terraced property in 2022.

But throughout the late summer, neighbours heard sounds of the puppy being abused.

Neighbours reported Thompson had regularly beaten Daisy causing her distress and to yelp in pain and cry.

Dog killer: West Cumbrian man Nathan Thompson subjected a border collie puppy to regular beatings in the run-up to her death.

This included incidents of grabbing her by the scruff and banging her against the cage causing injury. These assaults increased in frequency in the lead up to her death.

“Thuds and crashes followed by the distressing noises of the animal crying in pain. This went on for night after night,” said prosecutor Andrew Evans.

Neighbours had described their deep distress at hearing banging, shouting and hearing the dog cry in pain “all the time”.

One woman would sit on her back doorstep crying because the dog was being beaten.

Thompson was seen to grab the puppy around her neck before dragging and pushing her head down into the grass, and also to hose her down while she was tied up.

The noises of beating became more frequent and “most days” there would be a “bang and a yelp”.

“It is the Crown’s case that the defendant, in rage and anger, repeatedly beat Daisy over the final few months of her life, and that the beatings she received, either with punches, kicks or the use of the metal cage door, caused the puppy distress and injury,” said Mr Evans.

Dog killer: West Cumbrian man Nathan Thompson subjected a border collie puppy to regular beatings in the run-up to her death.

Daisy had died at an unknown time on September 5, 20222, the court heard.

“Later that day the defendant placed her corpse into a large metal bin in his back garden,” added the prosecutor.

“Using an unknown accelerant he set a fierce fire which destroyed the body to such an extent that the veterinary post-mortem was unable to determine the exact cause of her death when, two days later, neighbours found the remains of the body and alerted the police.”

Thompson admitted causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal.

He had claimed that Daisy escaped and war un over but this version of events was dismissed by a judge who heard evidence, including harrowing accounts from neighbours who had sought to intervene.

Recorder Julian Shaw imposed an immediate 27-month jail term, describing Thompson’s criminal conduct as “cruelty” and “sadistic” having used “significant force.

“What greater harm could there be to that animal than you killed it?” he wondered.

And of the brutal treatment meted out by Thompson, Recorder Shaw said to him: “You must have known, day after day after day what you were doing was grotesque.”

Sentencing | 27-month custodial. Lifetime ban.

Cumbria Crack
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