Tag Archives: Halton

Runcorn, Cheshire: Carrie-Anne Renwick

CONVICTED (2023) | Carrie Anne Renwick, born c. 1970, of Meadow Row, Castlefields, Runcorn WA7 2LN – moved out of her squalid flat, leaving seven cats to starve to death.

RSPCA inspectors found the decomposing bodies of seven cats in Carrie-Anne Renwick's squalid and flea-infested Runcorn flat
RSPCA inspectors found the decomposing bodies of seven cats in Carrie-Anne Renwick’s squalid and flea-infested Runcorn flat

The deceased animals were surrounded by rubbish and overflowing litter trays in a flat that was so cluttered some of the rooms were inaccessible.

The cats’ owner, Carrie-Anne Renwick had vacated the property in Primrose Close, Runcorn, months earlier leaving her abandoned pets behind to die.

The court heard how the deceased animals were removed by RSPCA inspector Nadine Pengilly on July 5, 2023.

In her evidence, Inspector Pengilly said: “As I approached the front door, I was attacked by hundreds of fleas escaping via the letterbox.

“We went to the back of the property and I could clearly see the flat was in a filthy condition, with overflowing litter trays and bags of rubbish all over the floor.

“The place was full of clutter and there was a mass flea infestation.

“The first room on the right was the bathroom which was dirty and cluttered. I found two dead cats on the floor.

“The first room on the left was the main bedroom, where there was a dead cat on the bed, two in the wardrobe, one near the door and one behind the curtains on the floor.

“The bedroom was cluttered with items and made access hard as I had to climb over bags of shopping.

“The black cat found in the wardrobe looked like he hadn’t been dead long as he still had flesh on his body and was being eaten by maggots.”

RSPCA inspectors found the decomposing bodies of seven cats in Carrie-Anne Renwick's squalid and flea-infested Runcorn flat

RSPCA inspector Leanne Cooper, who also attended the address, added: “There was a foul smell coming from the property that I could smell from standing outside the front door.

“I could see live and dead flies on the windows and hundreds of live and dead fleas. These actually jumped on me when I opened the letterbox.”

The deceased animals were taken into possession by police and their bodies examined by a vet.

The cat found in the wardrobe had died at least 36 hours earlier while, the other six carcasses were dried out and rigid, suggesting they had been dead for some time.

“Decomposition was so marked that the bodies were not suitable for a post mortem examination,” Ms Cooper said.

“Reviewing the carcasses along with the environmental evidence, starvation and dehydration cannot be ruled out as potential causes of death due to the lack of water and fresh food.

“I would expect a responsible owner to seek veterinary attention should their pet become underweight.

“Moreover, if their animal became weak or lethargic. Starvation and dehydration cause weakness and debilitation.

“This will have been uncomfortable and severely impacted the cats’ everyday lives and their ability to ambulate, to obtain food or water and even to play.

“Emaciation can cause mental suffering through having a constant hunger that is never fulfilled.

“It is reported to take at least four days for a cat to starve to death – a slow, painful and prolonged process as the body shuts down. This will have been unpleasant.”

Renwick had previously been given advice by the RSPCA about appropriate flea treatment but had turned down offers of help to rehome the cats.

In mitigation, the court heard she had health and alcohol issues.

Before sentencing, deputy district judge Price highlighted that only a custodial sentence was appropriate in this case due to the nature and seriousness of the offences.

However, taking Renwick’s guilty pleas into account, the judge agreed to suspend the sentence.

Sentencing | 16 weeks in prison suspended for 12 months; 20 rehabilitation activity requirement days; alcohol treatment programme; costs and surcharge totalling £354. A 10-year ban on owning or keeping animals (expires December 2033).

CheshireLive
Runcorn and Widnes World

Runcorn, Cheshire: Harry Dunn

Non prosecution case (2023) | Harry Nathaniel Dunn, born January 1995, of 35 Cotton Lane, Halton Lodge Runcorn WA7 5NB – starved a 12-month-old puppy to within days of death.

Credit: Warrington Animal Welfare

In 2022, pet rescue Warrington Animal Welfare [WAW] were called by a concerned landlord to report a puppy he had seen in a property he was renting out to professional dog walker and part-time musician Harry Dunn.

WAW visited the property and found three dogs: two adult lurchers of normal weight and a third called Otis, who was skeletal.

Dunn told WAW that Otis had been to the vets but this turned out to be a lie. The rescue later discovered that Dunn had been visited by the RSPCA two weeks earlier and issued with an improvement notice in relation to Otis’s condition.

WAW took Otis to their vet for immediate assessment, during which it was discovered he had open pressure sores on his legs caused by being kept in a dog crate soaked with own urine. The puppy weighed just 4.5kgs, and was days away from dying.

Dunn initially refused to sign over Otis to WAW but was eventually persuaded that it was in the puppy’s best interests to relinquish him.

Further enquiries by WAW determined that Dunn had fed his other two dogs while leaving Otis to slowly starve in his own filth.

While it initially seemed that the RSPCA would prosecute Dunn based on the evidence obtained by WAW, ultimately the charity let him off with a caution.

Cheshire dog abuser Harry Dunn is an aspiring musician and performs under the name Harry Nathaniel
Dunn is an aspiring musician and performs under the name Harry Nathaniel

WAW took to their Facebook page to express their disappointment and anger with the outcome.

Otis remains with WAW and is making good progress in the rescue’s care and with the proper veterinary treatment.

Source: Warrington Animal Welfare Facebook post 19 June 2023.

Runcorn, Cheshire: Mark Bond

CONVICTED (2023) | Mark Bond, born 4 May 1992, of Whitebeam Close, Windmill Hill, Runcorn WA7 6QJ but with links to Widnes – attacked a French bulldog puppy during domestic violence incident.

Runcorn man Mark Bond walked free from court despite being convicted of a litany of violence towards a woman, her new-born baby and her puppy.
Mark Bond walked free from court despite being convicted of a litany of violence towards a woman, her new-born baby and her puppy.

Violent thug Mark Bond, who has a history of domestic abuse from as far back as 2009, targeted French bulldog Reggie during a row with his then girlfriend and mother of his new baby.

French bulldog Reggie was targeted by serial domestic abuser Mark Bond from Runcorn
French bulldog Reggie was targeted by serial domestic abuser Mark Bond from Runcorn
Victim Reggie

When his girlfriend begged him to stop hurting the puppy, Bond turned his attention to her instead, hitting her on the arms and back of the head. Some of the blows landed on his two-week-old baby daughter, causing minor injury, though Bond insisted he hadn’t intended to strike the child.

He also denied attacking Reggie and claimed he had been trying to push the puppy off the bed. There is no indication that the dog was badly injured and Bond wasn’t charged with animal cruelty.

Mark Bond walked free from court despite being convicted of a litany of violence towards a woman, her new-born baby and her puppy.

Bond had attacked the same woman while she was pregnant, at one point pushing his fists into her stomach.

In court, Bond was found guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, while he admitted criminal damage and assault.

Mark Bond walked free from court despite being convicted of a litany of violence towards a woman, her new-born baby and her puppy.

Sentencing Bond, the Honorary Recorder of Liverpool Judge Andrew Menary KC told him he clearly had “a real problem with drink and, as a consequence of that no doubt, a particular issue with violence towards partners with whom you are having an intimate relationship. Your conduct in relation to her was outrageous.

“It was simply arrogant, bullying, drunken behaviour. She was on the receiving end of physical violence from you when you lost your temper.

“For no good reason at all, you began to hit her and punch her to the stomach. That was the way you behaved in drink towards someone who you were meant to care for.

“While on bail, she was then holding this two-week-old child – your child – and you again in temper hit out at her, striking her and at some time striking the baby. It is outrageous behaviour.

“There is a more constructive alternative. It seems to me that this is a situation where you and society would benefit from an alternative to immediate custody.”

Sentencing | 12-month imprisonment suspended for 18 months; 120-day alcohol abstinence monitoring requirement, a relationships programme; 20-day rehabilitation activity requirement. Two-year restraining order. .

CheshireLive
Liverpool Echo

Widnes, Cheshire: Callum Volter

CONVICTED (2022) | Callum Volter, born c. 2000, of Milton Avenue, Widnes WA8 7BQ – threw his partner’s cat at a moving car during a row.

Volter pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to an animal in addition to charges of assault in relation to his partner and her teenage son and criminal damage to a TV.

Tess Kenyon, prosecuting, said Volter’s partner, Stevie Delaney, had picked him up from Haslingden and they were returning to their address in Crawshawbooth, Rossendale, when he said he wanted to get out of the car and clear his head. About five minutes after she got home he returned.

“There was an incident, during which she was grabbed and pushed, which led to him leaving the house while he was holding the family’s pet cat,” said Miss Kenyon.

“Miss Delaney followed and approached him and he shouted “Watch this” before throwing the cat at a moving car.”

Miss Kenyon said the cat hit the car and bounced into the road.

“Miss Delaney’s immediate thought was that he had killed it,” said Miss Kenyon.

“Her son Cody confronted him and this led to him going for the younger man.”

She showed CCTV footage which showed Volter put Cody to the floor where he repeatedly punched him.

In a victim impact statement Miss Delaney said the defendant’s behaviour had scared her.

“He is nothing more than a bully,” she said.

Daniel Frazer, defending, said his client’s initial decision to leave the house had been a good one.

“What he can’t explain is why he picked up the cat and then why he threw it into oncoming traffic,” said Mr Frazer.

He said the incident involving Cody had initially been his client defending himself.

“He accepts that when he got him on the floor he should have stopped but he didn’t and he went too far,” said Mr Frazer.

The fate of the unnamed cat was not reported.

Sentencing | 18-month community order with 30 days Rehabilitation Activity Requirement and 200 hours unpaid work. He was ordered to pay £100 compensation to Miss Delaney and £100 to her son, £95 victim surcharge and £85 costs. He was banned from keeping any animal for five years.

Lancashire Telegraph

St Helens, Merseyside: Leon Robinson

CONVICTED (2021) | Leon Robinson, born 23 August 2002, of 22 Bell Lane, Sutton Manor, St Helens WA9 4BD – slammed a young puppy to the ground in a drunken rage.

Dog abuser and his victim: Leon Robinson was filmed lifting four-month-old Kyro (pictured) above his head and slamming her to the floor.
Leon Robinson was filmed lifting four-month-old Kyro (pictured) above his head and slamming her to the floor.

Robinson stormed to his ex’s mum’s house and battered the puppy he had bought his daughter for Christmas.

He was caught on camera picking up the four-month-old puppy, named Kyro, lifting her above his head and throwing her to the ground with force.

Dog beater: Leon Robinson from St Helens, Merseyside, UK.

Before he carried out the heartless attack he told a woman “I’m going to boot the dog”.

The puppy can be heard whimpering in pain and was rushed to an animal hospital in Greater Manchester.

Although not seriously injured she showed signs of being in pain when her leg was lifted.

St Helens dog abuser Leon Robinson pictured during his appearance at Liverpool Magistrates Court

Peter Mitchell, prosecuting, said after buying the dog for his daughter for Christmas he had split up with his girlfriend.

Robinson was jailed for 22 weeks in February 2021 for breaching a non-contact order and for also being in possession of an offensive weapon.

Dog beater: Leon Robinson from St Helens, Merseyside, UK.
Leon Robinson pictured in August 2022

Mr Mitchell explained the RSPCA brought a separate charge against Robinson as they felt “animals should be protected from this defendant in the future”.

Robinson pictured during his appearance at Liverpool Magistrates Court

A vet said the puppy would have been in fear, distress and pain as a result of the incident.

Christopher Bivon, defending, said Robinson had “little recollection of the incident” but is “clearly appalled by what he has done”.

Dog beater: Leon Robinson from St Helens, Merseyside, UK.

He said Robinson had been “drinking heavily” and using “a lot of cannabis” but since his release from his custodial sentence had been “trying to keep himself clean”.

Robinson admitted causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal and was given a community sentence.

Sentencing: 12 month community order with 80 hours of unpaid work; £295 costs and charges. Banned from keeping animals for 10 years (expires August 2031).

Liverpool Echo

Runcorn, Cheshire: Adam Routledge

CONVICTED (2021) | Adam Routledge, born 1984, of Stenhills Crescent, Runcorn WA7 5EE, but with links to the city of Salford – threw a six-week-old kitten against a wall in a fit of temper

Police mugshot of Adam Routledge


Adam Routledge was sentenced in his absence to 18 weeks in prison. The father of three pleaded guilty at an earlier hearing to causing unnecessary suffering to an animal, as well as drink-driving while disqualified.

Alison Warburton, prosecuting, said police were called to a house on Stenhills Crescent after reports a man had “thrown a kitten around a house and killed the kitten”.

When officers arrived, a young child who said Routledge had entered her bedroom and “thrown the cat against the wall” – was “cradling the six-week old kitten”.

The stricken pet was “in a lot of pain”.

Routledge was at the scene and said he “was frustrated the cats had fleas and he had been bitten by fleas”.

Adam Routledge

Routledge’s partner, Paula Doolan, took the pet to a local vets where he was treated with painkillers and anti-inflammatory medication and kept in to be observed.

When interviewed by police, Routledge said: “I had a few drinks and had an argument with my partner.

“My temper got the better of me and I picked up the kitten and threw it.
“I’m disgusted with myself.”

The kitten survived but Ms Warburton said his condition indicated the use of a “reasonable amount of force”.

Routledge was charged and bailed, but at 5pm on October 16, 2020, was spotted driving away from his house.

Police followed him and Routledge completed a loop of the street before pulling up.

Officers “could smell alcohol” and a breath test registered 62 micrograms of alcohol per 100 millilitres of breath, above the legal limit in England of 35.

Routledge was arrested by officers from Cheshire police and said he had been drinking the previous night until 4am and “he needed to go to the shop and thought he would be OK”.

He claimed he was “unsure whether his driving licence disqualification had finished”.

It had not.

The court heard Routledge had six previous convictions for eight offences including drink driving and assault.

There was no mitigation for Routledge as he did not attend court and nor did anyone on his behalf.

A letter from his solicitors asked the matter to be adjourned.

Routledge claimed he was self-isolating, but magistrates dismissed the claim after Ms Warburton questioned whether he could be trusted as “genuine”, having avoided several previous court dates for similar reasons without providing the results of tests.

These included on October 1 – just two weeks before he was spotted drink driving – when he claimed he had Covid-19 symptoms.

On October 22, he again claimed he was self-isolating and remotely indicated guilty pleas, but didn’t turn up to be sentenced on November 16, and when he appeared on November 20 he claimed he had “been in hospital with TB”.

Ms Warburton said his latest absence was “the third time we’ve heard he’s self-isolating – I suggest we ask whether that’s genuine”.

Sentencing: 12 weeks in prison for his “deliberate and gratuitous” animal cruelty with six weeks consecutive for drink driving while disqualified. Ordered to pay £278 in prosecution costs and victim surcharge. Banned from driving for 20 months. Banned from keeping animals for 10 years.

Liverpool Echo


Update 4 January 2021

The local newspaper reports that Routledge has had his case reopened after he appeared in court via videolink on December 21, 2020.

Routledge was bailed to return to court on January 13, 2021 in relation to the animal cruelty and driving matters.

Court papers said a pre-sentence report has been ordered.

He was bailed on condition to reside at home.


Update 16 January 2021

Routledge has been resentenced to the following: 14 weeks in prison, suspended for 12 months; 20 rehabilitation activity days. Disqualified from keeping animals for five years.

Warrington Guardian


Update 28 January 2021

Routledge was jailed for three years and nine months for fraud after charging elderly customers for unnecessary building work.

Northwich Guardian
Liverpool Echo


Widnes, Cheshire: Andy Smith

CONVICTED (2020) | Andrew S Smith, born January 1982, of Mottershead Road in Widnes WA8 7LF – punched his American bulldog repeatedly during an attack on his partner

Animal abuser and woman beater Andy Smith from Widnes, Cheshire, UK

Father-of-two Andrew Smith rained down blows on the family dog, punching her 20 times as she barked and growled following a brutal 30-minute attack on his partner.

Unnamed victim of domestic abuser Andy Smith from Widnes, Cheshire, UK
The unnamed family pet targeted by violent brute Andy Smith

Smith had been on a Christmas night out with his workmates when he returned home drunk in the early hours of the morning.

He was heard shouting loudly by his girlfriend as she tried to sleep upstairs at their Trafford home.

A court was told how she initially left it – hoping he would quieten down.

She eventually ventured downstairs to ask him what the problem was.

Smith then told her to ‘call the police before something happens’, before threatening her.

Telling him to be quiet as she didn’t want their four-year-old daughter to wake up, he said: “I don’t give a f**k.”

His partner then went upstairs to call the police – only to be followed by Smith.

Animal abuser and woman beater Andy Smith from Widnes, Cheshire, UK

He then began hitting her to the face and body, and despite moving downstairs, the attack carried on for 30 minutes.

Their American bulldog was barking and growling at Smith, who then began to punch her ‘around 20 times’.

Smith pleaded guilty to assault by beating and causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal,

Animal abuser and woman beater Andy Smith from Widnes, Cheshire, UK

In a victim personal statement read to the court, his partner said the incident made her feel ‘horrible and really guilty’.

She said: “I feel scared around him when he’s had a drink.

“I don’t want to be in a relationship with him anymore. I feel like a bad mum. I should have ended it a long time ago.”

Smith was said to have three previous convictions for seven offences, including offences of violence dating back to 2007.

Sentencing: 80 hours of unpaid work; 10-day rehabilitation activity requirement; £175 court costs. No ban on keeping animals was imposed by the court.

Mirror
Manchester Evening News

Runcorn, Cheshire: Michelle Baldwin and sons Shaun and Shane Baldwin

CONVICTED (2017) | Michelle Baldwin, aka Michelle Robinson, born 14/08/1976, and Shaun Baldwin, born 26/05/1996, both of Masseyfield Road, Runcorn WA7 6AB and Shane Andrew Baldwin, born 17/11/1997, of Linkway, Runcorn WA7 5EJ – kept their two Staffies in squalid conditions and left one to starve to death

Evil: Michelle Baldwin and sons Shane and Shaun who left two dogs to starve.
Michelle Baldwin and her two evil sons Shaun Baldwin and Shane Baldwin were disqualified from keeping animals for a decade following the animal abuse

The RSPCA said the dogs, Staffies Bruno and Roxy, were so thin their ribs were clearly visible and they were living in ‘atrocious’ conditions.

Bruno had been starved by his cruel owners, the Baldwins from Runcorn, until he was too unwell to be saved
Bruno had been starved until he was too unwell to be saved

Bruno was put to sleep on health grounds despite the charity’s efforts to save him and Roxy has been rehomed.

The foul conditions in which the two emaciated dogs were found
The foul conditions in which the two emaciated dogs were found
The filthy conditions inside the Baldwin family home

The trio each pleaded guilty to two counts of causing unnecessary suffering to the dogs and one of failing to provide a suitable environment at an earlier hearing.

Dog killer Michelle Baldwin, aka Michelle Robinson from Runcorn, Cheshire, UK
Dog killer Michelle Baldwin, aka Michelle Robinson
Dog killers: Shaun Baldwin (left) and Shane Baldwin
Dog killers: Shaun Baldwin (left) and Shane Baldwin. Both thugs are fathers

An RSPCA spokeswoman said the the dogs were discovered by the police on November 17, 2016, when they were carrying out a search at the address on Masseyfield Road, Brookvale, Runcorn on an unrelated matter.

Roxie was nursed back to health by the RSPCA and rehomed

Officers contacted the RSPCA, which led to inspector Lisa Lupson attending the property.

She said: “Both dogs were very thin, particularly Bruno. He was so weak that as soon as I got him to a vet he was put on a drip.

“He was very lethargic and subdued, and wasn’t responding to us at all. As well as being underfed, the dogs were living in horrific conditions.

“Upstairs of the house was atrocious, there was rubbish absolutely everywhere and dog poo all over the floor.

“It was in no way the best environment for dogs to live in. The message is clear – if you decide to take animals on then you must be able to meet their needs and provide them with the kind of life they deserve.”

Court papers said Michelle Baldwin had entrusted the care of the dogs to two young adults without taking responsibility for them herself.

Sentence: Michelle Baldwin was given an eight-week prison sentence suspended for six months and her sons Shaun and Shane Baldwin were both given a 12-month community order and told to carry out 200 hours of unpaid work. All three were told to pay costs of £100 and an £85 victim surcharge each. A 10-year ban on keeping animals was imposed on the trio (expires July 2027). 

Liverpool Echo
Metro

Runcorn, Cheshire: Charles Smith

CONVICTED (2016) | Charles Smith, born November 1972, of Bigfield Lodge travellers site, Warrington Road, Runcorn WA7 1RD – neglected five horses, with two having to be put down.

Malnourished and distressed horses found on Charles Smith's premises in Runcorn.

RSPCA inspectors who visited Charles Smith’s stables on Chester Road Daresbury, Warrington WA4 4AL on more than a dozen occasions found that the recycling and skip hire company owner often failed to provide horses on the land with food and water and left them in a field with barbed wire in it.

Officers concerned about the welfare of horses at Ponderosa Stables visited the property a total of 14 times between July and October 2015. They found as many as eight horses, including one that was heavily pregnant, on the land and on occasions discovered that no food or water had been provided to them.

Animals were described as looking underweight and lethargic, while on one occasion a worried member of the public had taken the step of putting hay on Smith’s land for the horses.

Horses were found to be eating ragwort, which could cause them chronic liver damage, during several visits due to the lack of food provided.

Malnourished and distressed horses found on Charles Smith's premises in Runcorn.

The environment the animals were living in was also described as poor, with the field containing barbed and broken wood while concerns were raised about a hole in a hedge that could have led to the horses escaping onto the road.

Smith, who owns Runcorn Recycling Scrap Metal Limited, shouted at officers and claimed that there was nothing wrong with the animals.

Two emaciated mares were described a having ‘suffered unnecessarily’ due to an ‘inadequate’ food supply. Both were later put down, with one having behavioural problems and the other suffering from persistent swelling of the legs.

Smith admitted one count of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal and another charge of not fulfilling duties as a person responsible for the welfare of animals.

Sentence: 300 hours of unpaid work; fines of £1,240.80. Banned from keeping animals for a five years (expired 2021).

Runcorn and Widnes World
Warrington Guardian

Runcorn, Cheshire: Tony Astles

CONVICTED (2015) | gypsy traveller Anthony Barnett Astles, born 10/06/1973, of  Holt Lane, Halton, Runcorn WA6 2AY – left a Great Dane to starve to death in a caravan toilet.

Dog killer Tony Astles, a traveller from Runcorn, Cheshire

The caravan was kept on a pallet yard and it was only after a recently recruited worker stumbled upon it that the dog’s emaciated corpse was found.

Tony Astles locked Great Dane Neo in a caravan toilet and left him there to die

The Great Dane, known as Neo, had been locked in a tiny caravan toilet and starved and the floor was covered in excrement.

Inspector Nadine Pengilly said: “In ten years of being an inspector this is the saddest thing I have ever seen. He was such a big dog and he was just shut in that tiny room, it was filthy and full of excrement.

“He had starved to death and he must have spent four to six weeks waiting for someone to come and rescue him.

“Thinking about how Neo must have suffered is incredibly sad.”

Dog killer Tony Astles, a traveller from Runcorn, Cheshire

Unemployed Astles – a member of the travelling community – pleaded guilty  to one charge of causing unnecessary suffering to Neo between January 31 and February 28, 2014.

Sentence: Astles was sentenced to a 14-week custodial sentence and a lifetime ban on keeping animals as well as an £85 surcharge.

Liverpool Echo 07/01/2015