Tag Archives: exposure to drugs/hazardous substance

Clogher, County Tyrone: Liam Swift

CONVICTED (2024) | serial animal abuser Liam Reece Aiden Swift, born c. 2001, of McCrea Park, Clogher BT76 0AE – killed two dogs and is suspected of the brutal slaying of a third.

Serial dog killer Liam Swift from Clogher, County Tyrone. Northern Ireland. Image: Liam Swift / Facebook

Violent career criminal Liam Swift admitted cruelty offences after two dogs were found dead.

He admitted causing unnecessary suffering to a dog on October 5, 2023, then to another dog on November 12, 2023.

Prosecution of  serial dog killer Liam Swift from Clogher, County Tyrone, Swift pictured leaving a prison van.

Swift was under investigation for the death of a third dog who had been found with “horrific injuries” several months beforehand.

Dungannon Magistrates Court heard how Swift was arrested over a bail breach on November 11 and, because police knew he owned a dog, they attended his home to ensure she had food and water.

Officers found faeces everywhere and, when the dog didn’t appear, they began checking rooms.

The dog was discovered dead on a pile of rubbish in a cupboard, a chain tightly wrapped around her neck, cutting into the skin.

Serial dog killer Liam Swift from Clogher, County Tyrone. Northern Ireland. Image: Liam Swift / Facebook

Then on November 15 police learned there was a second dead dog hidden in a hedge near Swift’s home.

A search revealed the decomposing body of a small dog wrapped in a blanket and placed in a bag.

Swift’s partner confirmed the small dog was hers and she had brought her to Swift’s home on September 23 while staying with him.

She claimed on October 5 another male arrived at the property and ecstasy tablets were produced, which fell on the floor, with her unnamed dog ingesting them.

Serial dog killer Liam Swift from Clogher, County Tyrone. Northern Ireland. Image: Liam Swift / Facebook

The dog “became hyper” then fell asleep. However, she later noticed the dog was very wet and asked Swift if he had thrown water over her, which he denied.

The partner left the house for a time but later received a call from Swift claiming he couldn’t waken the dog and she “was in a bad way”.

On return she found the animal “cold and dead”.

She wrapped the dog in a blanket and the pair went outside to bury her. They had no shovel, however, so left the body in the hedge.

Two weeks after the death of this dog, the defendant purchased another dog, but contacted his partner on November 10 claiming he had run away.

The court heard: “This was the death of two dogs killed inside a month and the third dog within a year.

“There is already a live investigation into the death of another dog he allegedly killed in January 2023. Its injuries were horrific.”

Serial dog killer Liam Swift from Clogher, County Tyrone. Northern Ireland. Image: Liam Swift / Facebook

A defence barrister said his client had a troubled and complex background. He said that while Swift had some family support, “that has been significantly displaced, particularly as a result of the visceral reaction from the community to these charges”.

“Those who operate outside the law have indicated to the defendant, in no uncertain terms, that he is not to return to his property in light of the views taken.

“Offending of this type will follow him around for the rest of his life.”

The defence conceded Swift is in breach of two suspended sentences but pointed out that neither relate to animal cruelty.

District Judge Michael Ranaghan remarked: “These dogs died horrible and potentially prolonged deaths. It was extreme cruelty to animals who do not deserve to be treated by anybody like that. Cruelty at its most apparent. It was appalling behaviour.”

The judge concluded: “It is my understanding that I can make the disqualification order banning owning any animal for life and that is what I will do. This man should not be around any animal going forward.”

Sentencing | eight-month custodial for the animal cruelty offences with a further two months added for the previously suspended sentences. Lifetime ban in relation to all animals.

Belfast Telegraph


Facebook animal welfare group Northern Ireland’s Voice for the Voiceless were contacted late last year by a Clogher resident after they published details of the Liam Swift’s prosecution. The resident set out in detail the nature of Swift’s cruelty to dogs.

Prosecution of  serial dog killerLiam Swift from Clogher, County Tyrone, Northern Ireland. Source: Facebook / Northern Ireland's Voice for the Voiceless

Hazel Grove, Stockport: Claire Anderson

CONVICTED (2022) | Claire Anderson, born c. 1988, of Hazelwood Road, Hazel Grove, Stockport SK7 4NA – blew cannabis smoke up her pet dog’s nose to impress her jailbird boyfriend.

Claire Anderson

The court heard that Anderson had been speaking to her partner James Millington, who had called her from prison at 11pm on November 26, 2020. Anderson was smoking a cannabis joint at the time of the phone call, which was recorded.

The court heard that Anderson’s dog, called Benji, could be heard in the background of the call. Millington told Anderson: “Put your hand around his nose, put the joint in your mouth and blow.”

Benji

After confirming to Millington that she had followed his instructions, the dog could be heard ‘making quite a loud groan’ in the recording of the call, the prosecutor told the court. She added: “Mr Millington asked ‘did it go up his nose’. The defendant laughed and said ‘I think so’. She offered to do it again.”

Having heard Benji starting to cough, Millington asked Anderson if the noise was coming from the dog. Anderson replied: “Yeah that’s him. He hates smoking. You know what it’s like when I’m smoking, he starts sneezing.”

James Millington

Before the phone call ended, Millington spoke to Anderson about making Benji ingest cannabis again once he had been released from prison.

A veterinarian’s report read in court stated that dogs can fall over and ‘become unsteady’ from ingesting cannabis, while their pupils dilate similar to humans’.

The court heard Anderson had four previous criminal convictions, with the most recent coming earlier in 2022 for her part in a conspiracy to smuggle drugs into HMP Doncaster, which also involves Millington, 31, of HMP Leeds.

Earlier in April 2022, Anderson was sentenced to two years and six months in prison for being concerned in the supply of Class B and C drugs into prison between 2017 and 2020, conspiring to supply Class B drugs into prison and conspiring to convey List B articles into prison.

Anderson was found guilty of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal following a trial. She appeared at Stockport Magistrates Court via video link from New Hall prison in Wakefield, West Yorkshire.

Sentencing | four-week prison sentence to run concurrently with her existing jail term; ordered to pay a total of £428 in costs and charges. Disqualified from owning or keeping an animal for 10 years.

Manchester Evening News