Tag Archives: indefinite ban

Wigan, Greater Manchester: Steven Corbett

CONVICTED (2023) | Steven Corbett, born 1997, of Meadow Street, Springfield, Wigan – left two cats unattended in an empty property for 12 days.

RSPCA officers came to the rescue of Wigan man Steven Corbett's abandoned pets
RSPCA officers came to the rescue of Wigan man Steven Corbett’s abandoned pets

Corbett, previously of Enid Place, Bamfurlong, Wigan, was prosecuted by the RSPCA after leaving his cats alone in his flat over Christmas.

RSPCA officers first attended on Christmas Day 2023 after receiving a report of concern that cats Snowy and Nestle had been abandoned.

Squalid conditions at the Wigan flat of animal abuser Steven Corbett
Corbett left the ravenous pets unattended in his filthy and messy flat for a prolonged period of time

The officer managed to phone the cats’ owner, Corbett, who confirmed he left on December 23 and would return that evening. But a follow-up visit on December 27 revealed that the owner had not returned as promised.

Squalid conditions at the Wigan flat of animal abuser Steven Corbett
The skinny cats were found abandoned in a scene of chaos and squalor

RSPCA Inspector Rachel Whalley, who investigated for the charity, fed the cats through the letterbox and noted that they frantically pawed at the food. She then contacted a vet and police for assistance in rescuing the cats.

She said: “As soon as I squeezed the food out the cats were ravenous and trying to paw the sachets out of my hands.

“After seeing their behaviour I was extremely concerned for their welfare, especially as I knew they would not have been fed, given water or checked on in days.

“When I got inside, both cats weren’t microchipped and both were underweight.

“The flat had a lot of clutter and hazards on the floor which would not be safe for cats to be around.

“There were lots of scattered empty packets of food on the floor near the kitchen, and two empty food bowls.

“I had a look around the flat to ensure that there were only the two cats. I saw two litter trays in the bedroom which were empty and had black plastic bags covering them.

“These contained cigarette butts and there were also a lot of cigarette butts surrounding the trays. There were also piles of cat faeces in the bathroom.”

Wigan man Steven Corbett's abandoned cat
Snowy

The RSPCA transported Snowy and Nestle to their Greater Manchester Animal Hospital where they received care and treatment..

The court heard how the vet report stated that Snowy weighed just 1.1kg and was covered in flea dirt, whilst Nestle weighed just 1.5kg. The average normal weight for a cat is 3.6-4.5kgs.

Wigan man Steven Corbett's abandoned cat
Nestle

The vet report concluded: “By failing to provide these needs the owner of Snowy and Nestle has allowed them to suffer. Regardless of who cares for them, provisions should be made for alternative carers if their owner was unable to attend the property for a period of time.”

The two cats have since been rehomed by the RSPCA.

Animal abuser Steven Corbett from Wigan, Greater Manchester. Photo: Facebook

Insp Whalley added: “The suffering inflicted on these skinny and terribly hungry cats was completely unnecessary and could have been easily avoided had the owner provided care for them over the festive period. The conditions they were kept in were also totally unacceptable.

“I’m glad that we were able to rescue Snowy and Nestle and they have now found loving forever homes.”

Sentencing | 12-month community order with 100 hours of unpaid work; £400 in costs, £425 legal fees and a £114 victim surcharge to be deducted from benefits. Indefinite ban on keeping all animals with no right of appeal for five years.

Wigan Today

Gleadless, Sheffield: Martin Butlin

CONVICTED (2023) | Martin John Butlin, born c. 1963, of Fleury Road, Gleadless, Sheffield S14 1QW – starved and severely neglected two emaciated greyhounds kept on an allotment.

Martin Butlin from Sheffield kept two starving and neglected former racing dogs on an allotment
Surviving dog Fury was emaciated. The other dog Mick had already succumbed to starvation and was brought into the vet in a builder’s bag by Butlin.

Butlin admitted two animal welfare offences in relation to former racing greyhounds Mick and Fury., whom he kept on an allotment in Wadsley Bridge, Sheffield. He was prosecuted by the RSPCA after a veterinary practice in South Yorkshire contacted the charity over concerns for the dogs’ welfare. The dogs had been brought into them in an emaciated condition.

One of the greyhounds, called Mick, had already died and had been taken to the practice in a builder’s bag in the boot of Butlin’s car.

The court heard how two-year-old Fury had been taken to the veterinary practice on May 13, 2023, for elective euthanasia after Butlin had reported weight loss and diarrhoea over a period of a few weeks. The dog weighed 23.6 kg (52 pounds) and was given a body score condition of just 1/9.

Based on the clinical examination and Fury’s age, trial treatment and/or further diagnostics was advised by the vet before euthanasia, the court was told, but Butlin was adamant that neither would be considered.

However, he did agree to sign the dog over into the care of the vets.

Martin Butlin from Sheffield kept two starving and neglected former racing dogs on an allotment
Butlin took two-year-old Fury to a vet for elective euthanasia but ultimately agreed to sign him over. Fury was nursed back to health and is now in a loving new home.

Ravenous when offered food, Fury began to gain weight over the following weeks and weighed 29.6kg (65.25 pounds) just over three weeks later. He has since been adopted by a veterinary nurse from the practice and renamed Alfie.

The deceased dog Mick was extremely emaciated and had sunken eyes, visible pressure sores and callouses, some of which had appeared to expose the underlying bone.

Butlin had spoken to the vets two days earlier and said Mick had stopped eating over the last few weeks, lost weight, and gone ‘off his feet’. When advised to bring the dog in straight away he had refused and instead booked an appointment for June 1, 2023.

In her evidence to the court, the vet said: “When Fury was initially admitted it was uncertain whether there was a medical cause for his weight loss. Blood tests and faecal samples tested over the next few days were unremarkable. After admission he did not have diarrhoea, and he was ravenous when offered food. Over the next few weeks, he started to gain weight.

“In my professional opinion there was no justification for the animal to be euthanised, and there was no medical problem with Fury other than issues relating to starvation and neglect. We expect the sores on his legs were caused from extended periods laying on a hard surface, and that he had been suffering for a period of several months.

“Subsequently a further greyhound called Mick was presented by Mr Butlin for examination by a colleague on June 1. This dog was dead on arrival and showed signs of neglect and starvation. His body condition score was 1/9 and he had open sores on his legs similar to Fury.

“In my professional opinion Mr Butlin presented one animal for euthanasia for no other reason than mistreatment, followed by a second animal for disposal which also showed clear signs of neglect.”

In mitigation, magistrates were told that Butlin had caring responsibilities. He was said to be ashamed and deeply upset about the suffering he had caused. He was described as a caring man who had had dogs all his life, but he accepted the level of attention and care he had provided to Fury and Mick had broken down.

Other dogs being kept by Butlin were rehomed or signed over into RSPCA care during the course of the investigation. Because of the disqualification order, any that still remain in his care will also have to be rehomed.

RSPCA inspector Ben Cottle-Shaw, who investigated said: “There is never an excuse to allow pets to suffer such wilful neglect and suffering.

This was such a sad case but I do take some comfort in the fact that Fur is now a thriving and healthy much-loved dog enjoying the life he deserves with his new owner.”

Sentencing | 12-month community order with 150 hours of unpaid work; costs of £400 and a victim surcharge of £114. Banned indefinitely from keeping dogs.

The Star
YorkshireLive
Yorkshire Post

Congleton, Cheshire: Gayle McCrea

CONVICTED (2023) | Gayle McCrea, born 4 March 1982, of Park Mill, Park Street, Congleton CW12 1EN – caught on camera hurling a puppy to the floor at a train station.

Animal abuser Gayle McCrea from Congleton, Cheshire. Image: Gayle McCrea / Facebook
Gayle McCrea is banned indefinitely from keeping animals after her vile attack on a helpless young Patterdale. Image: Gayle McCrea, Facebook.

McCrea was about to board a train home at Macclesfield station when she lost her temper and grabbed Patterdale terrier Theo by the neck.

She shouted at the pup before throwing him to the floor in a fit of frustration following a meeting with her ex.

Seven-month-old Theo landed on all fours and was not thought to be injured in the incident – but a passer-by filmed the incident on a mobile phone and immediately posted it to social media.

Animal abuser Gayle McCrea from Congleton, Cheshire.  Image credit: Manchester Evening News
Image credit: Manchester Evening News

Police were alerted to the post and McCrea was arrested at the station just as she was about to get the train back to her home in Congleton.

Theo was seized and placed in kennels.

The court heard in mitigation that McCrea had “significant mental health issues”.

At Crewe Magistrates’ Court, McCrea broke down in tears and said ‘I am losing my baby doggy!’ as magistrates imposed a deprivation order on Theo and banned her from keeping animals indefinitely.

Sentencing | £600 towards kennelling costs. Indefinite ban applicable to all animals.

Manchester Evening News

Hastings, East Sussex: Mark Stables

CONVICTED (2023) | Mark Stables, born 12 October 1981, of Grove Road, Hastings TN35 4JS – left a dog to suffer so much he had to be immediately put to sleep.

Animal abuser Mark Stables from Hastings, East Sussex

Stables let the five-year-old brown Chow dog suffer with open sores, underlying anaemia and fur matted in faeces and urine over the course of a month.

Chow Chase was severely neglected by Mark Stables from Hastings, West Sussex

The dog, named Chase, was put to sleep by a vet to “end his suffering”. The vet said he was lethargic and whimpering.

The RSPCA noticed a “strong foul smell” when they first found Chase in Beauport Caravan Park in St Leonards.

*Stables told the RSPCA he had only owned Case from March 12, 2022 but shared photos of the dog on social media as long ago as 2019

Stables signed the dog over to the charity after claiming to have had him for just under a month between March 12 and April 8, 2022*.

Animal abuser Mark Stables from Hastings, East Sussex

RSPCA inspector Tony Woodley said: “I was taken inside the caravan by Stables where I noticed a strong foul smell.

“I was shown a brown Chow dog lying on the floor in the bathroom. This dog was clearly distressed and unable to stand. The dog was wearing a harness. I could also see and feel that the dog was very underweight. I asked the owner of the dog if it had been treated by a vet and he said it had not.”

“This poor dog had clearly been left to suffer for a number of weeks by his owner.

Animal abuser Mark Stables' dogs Chase and Maisie
Stables had owned Chase and a second chow-type dog called Maisey for several years. This photo was posted to Facebook by Stables’ then partner in October 2018. We are advised that Maisey was rehomed and “living her best life”.

“He must have endured pain throughout this period due to the open sores obvious on his body. It is sad that despite the best attempts of the veterinary team, Chase had to be put to sleep to end his unnecessary suffering.

“Stables seriously failed in his responsibilities towards the animal. Poor Chase couldn’t even stand when I found him, yet Stables hadn’t acted or sought veterinary advice.

“The RSPCA urges anyone struggling to take care of their pet to ask for help, rather than neglecting them and leaving them to suffer.”

Sentencing | 18 weeks’ imprisonment suspended for 12 months; 20 rehabilitation activity requirement days; 200 hours of unpaid work;
ordered to pay £300 costs and a victim surcharge of £128. Indefinite ban on keeping animals.

The Argus

*A reliable source has told us that Stables had owned Chase since he was a puppy.

Biddulph Moor, Staffordshire, Charles Gibson and Alison Bailey

CONVICTED (2023) | Charles W Gibson, born c. 1972, and Alison Bailey, born c. 1979, of Leonards Farm, Hot Lane, Biddulph Moor, Stoke-on-Trent ST8 7HP – for the appalling neglect of dozens of animals found dead and dying on their squalid dairy farm.

Farming couple Charles Gibson and Alison bailey let cows suffer in squalor as multiple dead animals were found dead and dying

The couple, who left livestock to suffer and die in dung and slurry, stood ashen-faced in Telford Magistrates Court as a district judge condemned their “utterly disgraceful” animal neglect.

In a visit to Leonards Farm one officer had described the “stench of rotting animals to be overwhelming” and the scenes they found were appalling.

The court saw shocking videos of rows of dead and emaciated cattle who had been denied even water to drink for long periods. The judge said the videos he had seen showed dung and slurry had been ankle-deep at best.

Farm buildings had holes in the roof and even no roof at all while concrete floors had been covered in slurry and manure because Gibson “could not be bothered” to clean them out.

“It was utterly disgraceful,” said District Judge Kevin Grego. “Animals had died and been left where they lay. Dead animals were left in unguarded open pits which other animals could just walk into.

“Charles Gibson, you ignored any proper view of animal husbandry. All the animals in your care were very badly mistreated.”

Gibson pleaded guilty to 28 charges of causing unnecessary suffering and failing to ensure the welfare of cattle, sheep, goats, a herd of 26 cattle and a flock of 31 sheep including one blind ram.

His co-accused Alison Bailey admitted neglecting a flock of chickens.

She pleaded guilty to one charge of causing unnecessary suffering to an injured young hen, another charge of failing to ensure the needs of an animal were met, and another that she failed to protect a flock of more than 50 young and laying hens from pain, suffering, injury and disease.

The court was told that the number of charges had been reduced from more than 100 to the 28 that Gibson faced and the three against Bailey.

The judge said that the floors of farm buildings had been “unscraped for months” and “living beasts were left to rot and indeed die”.

The offences had been discovered between May and December 2020 by trading standards officers who had received a complaint from a member of the public.

Jane Sarginson KC, prosecuting, had told the court that a council officer had “never seen animals more desperate for water”. An officer was “mugged” by the animals when a bucket of water was taken into one of the pens.

Thirty-five calves on the site drank 75 litres of water in one go, she told the court.

A calf, she said, had a “tennis ball-sized lump on the side of its face” and a bull had been kept “deep in muck and slurry over a foot deep”.

In a visit to the farm one officer had described the “stench of rotting animals to be overwhelming” with five dead and rotting calves covered in fly and maggot infestation.

She added that one poor creature was thought to be pregnant but in fact had a prolapse and had to be put down on the spot.

A large number of animals had to be euthanised by vets, their condition being so poor, including a piglet that had been stuck in the mud. Some 29 calves had to be “humanely dispatched,” said Jane Sarginson.

Two burial pits had been found on the site, despite it being illegal to dispose of creatures in this way.

Adrian Roberts, mitigating for Gibson and Bailey, asked the judge to be as lenient as he could as Gibson was earning £600 per week but had £20,000 in debts. Bailey, he said, had mental health concerns.

He asked the judge to allow them to keep their pets, including cats, dogs, chickens and goats, but this was denied.

They were given 48 hours to arrange for their domestic pets to be taken away from them.

Sentencing |
Gibson: 20-week prison sentence suspended for 12 months; 200 hours of unpaid work over the next 12 months; £4,000 in court costs.
Bailey: 80 hours of unpaid work; £1,000 in court costs.
They were also both disqualified from keeping all animals, including pets, and banned from being party to any control or influence, dealing and transportation of animals, indefinitely.

Stoke Sentinel
BBC News

Kingston upon Thames, South-West London: Garineh Azarian

CONVICTED (2023) | Garineh Azarian, aka Karina Azarian, born c. 1970, of Ridge House, Morecoombe Close, Kingston upon Thames KG2 7JQ – starved a puppy to death.

Garineh Azarian from Kingston upon Thames, London, allowed Havanese Coco to slowly starve to death
Garineh Azarian from Kingston upon Thames, London, allowed Havanese Coco to slowly starve to death

Azarian was convicted of causing unnecessary suffering to her one-year-old Havanese Coco – who an RSPCA inspector said was “the thinnest dog” she’d ever seen.

She initially pleaded not guilty to animal cruelty and did not accept that Coco had suffered – nor did she accept responsibility for his condition.
Wimbledon Magistrates Court heard that Azarian was of previous good character and was a “vulnerable” person. However, she was found guilty of the offence.

Garineh Azarian from Kingston upon Thames, London, allowed Havanese Coco to slowly starve to death

Azarian took Coco to a vet in October 2022 when he became lethargic and started vomiting, but would not let the vets give him antibiotics when they were made aware of his painfully emaciated condition. The vet gave him a body condition score of just one out of nine.

RSPCA inspectors Francesca Tambini and Dale Grant went to the vet practice to try and get Coco seized by police. He died not long after they arrived.

“When we arrived, I thought that the dog looked dead already,” Ms Tambini said: “There was a blanket over him, so that his head was visible and it appeared to be on some sort of drip supplement.”

She said it was upsetting to see his condition. “When the blanket was pulled back, the ribs on the dog were visibly protruding and he was missing quite a lot of fur… The dog looked like a skeleton. A few minutes after we arrived, the dog passed away.

Coco in healthier times | source: Garineh Azarian, Facebook
Coco in healthier times | source: Garineh Azarian, Facebook

Staff tried to resuscitate Coco, but they were unsuccessful. Ms Tambini said one vet was “extremely upset and crying”.

One of the veterinary staff members that treated Coco said the dog “could not have had appropriate veterinary care in the past” given his extreme condition.

“Despite the investigation and intensive treatment that Coco had with us, I believe that he was suffering prior to arrival and it was far too late to be able to save him.”

When RSPCA inspectors interviewed Azarian she told them she followed a raw and plant-based diet for the dog. She claimed she had been feeding him a normal 3% of his presumed body weight of three kilos since March 2022.

Azarian believed Coco’s scratching had been due to overeating and acid in his diet, and that the hair and weight loss was a normal response to detoxing. She also stated she did not believe in vaccinations, antibiotics or worming.

Garineh Azarian from Kingston upon Thames, London, allowed Havanese Coco to slowly starve to death

Vet experts later said the dog’s post mortem examination showed chronic malnutrition led to his death.

“There was also evidence of a high lungworm burden, which is a preventable disease with the use of routine worming treatments,” they added.

“In my opinion, the dog’s needs were not being met as per the Defra code – the owner failed to recognise signs of malnutrition, weight loss, poor condition, and seek veterinary advice within a reasonable time frame,” the continued, “which allowed their condition to deteriorate, and ultimately caused suffering and death”.

Sentencing | 300 hours of community work; court costs. Banned indefinitely from keeping animals.

Kingston Nub News
My London

Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester: Amy Youll

CONVICTED (2023) | Amy Elizabeth Youll, born 17 February 1992, of Shadowmoss Road, Wythenshawe, Manchester M22 – let nine of her pets live in ‘disgusting squalor’ and left the bodies of five dogs decomposing in the back yard.

Serial animal hoarder and abuser Amy Youll now of Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester. Picture: Facebook

RSPCA officers had to wear face masks to combat the overwhelming smell of rubbish and faeces at a house in Todmorden Road, Bacup, Lancashire, where Youll was living with eight starving dogs and a cat.

The property was so full of waste and debris there were maggots crawling on surfaces in the kitchen, limited space to walk, and rooms so full of junk they were completely inaccessible.

Amy Youll, a serial animal abuser and hoarder from Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester, kept multiple pets in disgusting squalor.

A cat and eight dogs – a mixture of terriers and crossbreeds who were all matted and underweight – were rescued from the house by the RSPCA. Some were so frightened that they had to be carried out to waiting vehicles.

Severed remains of cat carcasses and five badly decomposing dogs were later found by contractors who had been called in to clean up the squalid property.

Following a prosecution by the RSPCA, Youll was banned from keeping all animals indefinitely. She was also handed a 12-week suspended prison sentence.

Amy Youll, a serial animal abuser and hoarder from Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester, kept multiple starving pets in disgusting squalor.

Youll, who is a previous offender, had denied three animal welfare offences but was found guilty at a trial in her absence last October 2022.

Magistrates heard how RSPCA inspectors found the eight dogs and a cat running loose in the house on September 18, 2021.

The decomposing remains of a pet rodent were also found in a cage in an upstairs bedroom.

Amy Youll, a serial animal abuser and hoarder from Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester, kept multiple starving pets in disgusting squalor.

In his evidence to the court, one of the officers, inspector Will Lamping, said: “The property was awful, with rubbish and debris strewn throughout. I struggled to walk through the house as there was waste and rubbish everywhere.

“There were old dog faeces over all the floors and surfaces, including the kitchen worktops. In some areas, particularly the upstairs landing and stairs, the faeces was so thick that it covered the entire floor, forcing the person to have to walk across it.

“The smell of urine and rubbish in the house was terrible and at many times overpowering. On a table in one room I found a large number of maggots. I could not see any food, water or clean rest area provided anywhere in the house for the animals.”

All the dogs were anaemic and extremely thin with their spines, hips and ribs protruding. They smelt strongly of urine and faeces, which was matted in the fur, pads and long, overgrown claws of many of them.

Live fleas were visible, including on a black and white cat called Mortimer, and several of the dogs were scared and needed to be carried to the RSPCA inspectors’ vans. There was no fresh drinking water for any of them in the property.

Serial animal hoarder and abuser Amy Youll now of Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester. Picture: Facebook

A vet who examined the animals gave six of them a body score condition of no more than 1 or 1.5 out of 5. He said it was reasonable to conclude, in the absence of any underlying medical condition, that they had all been starved and left to suffer.

The smell of ammonia was also present due to the faeces and contaminated floor surfaces which likely caused the animals to experience distress from which they could not escape.

It is believed the animals suffered for a period of at least three days, if not longer.

The vet said Youll had also failed to meet the needs of the animals by not providing them with a suitable diet and that in the case of six of the dogs, this had been for a ‘prolonged period’ of time.

All nine animals went on to make a full recovery thanks to the RSPCA’s Southport, Ormskirk and District branch, which rehomed them from its animal centre in New Cut Lane, Southport.

However, things didn’t end there as on September 30 2021 the RSPCA was contacted again after private contractors who had been called in to clean up the house, found the badly rotting carcasses of five small to medium-sized dogs in an outside area at the back, as well as severed parts of the remains of ‘many’ cats inside.

The dogs had been placed in carrier bags, boxes and planters and were heavily infested with maggots. Skulls, jaws and teeth were visible, but such was the state of decomposition, it was not possible to tell how the animals had died.

Amy Youll, a serial animal abuser and hoarder from Wythenshawe, Greater Manchester, kept multiple starving pets in disgusting squalor.
Decomposing bodies of multiple dogs were found at the scene

RSPCA inspector Alison Fletcher, who saw the remains, said: “The scene was highly distressing to view and I would have to say one of the worst things I have visited within my 20 years of working with the RSPCA.

“The smell in the area was extremely strong and could be tasted on the throat.

“I instantly recognised the smell of decaying carcasses. I was advised that each of the bodies were exactly as they were found, contained within a bag, box or planter, but that each of them had been found piled under the rubbish and debris.”

The court heard in mitigation that Youll suffered from poor mental health and struggled to look after herself, let alone her pets.

RSPCA chief inspector Nina Small, who led the investigation, said: “The conditions these animals had to endure were some of the worst I’ve seen in my 20-year career and I believe they would have died had they not been found in time.

“The disgusting squalor and the level of suffering and neglect was inexcusable.

“Staff and volunteers at our branch-run animal centre in Southport did a fantastic job to rehabilitate and rehome them all, especially as many of the dogs were nervous when they were rescued from the house. Myself and all my colleagues who were involved in this case are over the moon that they’re now enjoying their lives in loving new homes.”

Another defendant in the case was sentenced in November 2022 (name not reported) after pleading guilty to two animal welfare offences and was banned from keeping all animals for eight years.

Sentencing | 12-week custodial, suspended for 24 months; 25 rehabilitation activity days, Indefinite ban applicable to all animals.

Lancashire Telegraph
RSPCA News
Manchester Evening News

Aylesbury / Chesham: Buckinghamshire: Hammad Javaid and Louise Lane

CONVICTED (2023) | Hammad Javaid, born October 1993, of 32 Charmfield Road, Aylesbury HP21 9QB,and Louise Chrystal Lane, born 12 February (tbc) of Upland Avenue, Chesham HP5 2EA – ran an illegal puppy farm and caused the deaths of several dogs.

Former couple Hammad Javaid and Louise Lane, who now goes by the name Chrystal O’Brien on Facebook, were convicted of numerous animal cruelty charges in relation to an illegal breeding operation located at a house in Bateman Drive, Aylesbury. Twenty-four bull-breed dogs and puppies were involved.

The pair’s offences included the docking of tails involving new-born puppies, not ensuring the animals’ welfare, and failing to obtain a license when selling dogs.

The court heard how the dogs lived in the same house, which was ‘covered in faeces, urine and maggots’. Others were kept in kennels in the property’s garden. Unattended, the dogs fought with each other, leading to the deaths of two of them.

Regular and constant ‘barking, snarling, yapping, and howling’ in the quiet Aylesbury neighbourhood led several members of the public to contact the police and the RSPCA.

Neither Javaid nor Lane lived at the Bateman Drive residence.

Distressing footage shown in the court revealed several animals were left alone for large periods and that the animals would ‘constantly fight each other’.

One video shows a dog lying dead in the back garden following a fight, while some other animals were eating his carcass.

Another dog would later succumb to her injuries in a separate fight, with one of their bodies being disposed of by being put in a bin bag.

In one of the videos the court witnessed, Javaid and Lane were seen trying to separate the fighting dogs by ‘swinging their legs’.

The council had warned Javaid, who had been selling puppies without a valid license between 2012 and 2020, that he needed to obtain such paperwork to which he responded by suggesting we would comply.

However, this never materialised and all the remaining bulldogs were seized from the property in September 2021.

Of the dogs rescued by the council, two were pregnant.

RSPCA investigators found that dogs had been intensively bred and subjected to repeated caesarean sections. There were several cases of dogs having two litters in less than a year.

Javaid admitted to his actions whilst Lane initially denied all wrongdoing and tried to distance herself from the crimes.

However, text messages between the two parties revealed that they were selling puppies for around £5,000 each with the money ‘being put into a Rangy’. This would later be revealed as a Range Rover that Lane drove to and from the property.

Javaid pleaded guilty to charges of unlicensed dog breeding, tail docking, three charges of causing unnecessary suffering and one charge of failing to ensure animal welfare, brought by Buckinghamshire Council. He also pleaded guilty to two further charges of causing unnecessary suffering brought by the RSPCA.

Lane pleaded guilty to charges of unlicensed dog breeding, two charges of causing unnecessary suffering and one charge of failing to ensure animal welfare, brought by Buckinghamshire Council.

The defence had argued in favour of a suspended sentence for both defendants on the grounds that the pair have two children, aged seven and five, and are both due to become parents with their new partners

They also claimed that they were both ‘contributing to society in positive ways’, with company director Javaid running an ironing business called the Ironing Board and a driving school called Revs Driving School. Lane is currently on maternity leave from a job in catering but plans to return.

Sentencing |

Javaid received a total sentence of 20 months’ imprisonment.

Lane was given a six month suspended sentence, together with 100 hours of community service and 25 Rehabilitation Activity Requirement (RAR) days. She was also required to pay £500 towards the council’s costs in bringing the case.

Both have been banned from keeping dogs “in the future”.

ITV News

Upperby / Harraby, City of Carlisle: Nicola Bradley and Tracy Dixon

CONVICTED (2023) | Nicola Bradley, born c. 1988, of Welsh Road, Upperby, Carlisle CA1 3AU and Tracy Dixon, born c. 1976, of Warnell Drive, Harraby, Carlisle CA1 3LR – sadistically tortured and killed a friend’s African grey parrot.

Carlisle women Tracy Dixon and Nicola Bradley were  jailed for the sadistic killing of a friendly African grey parrot called Sparky
Tracy Dixon (left) and Nicola Bradley were  jailed for the sadistic killing of a friendly African grey parrot called Sparky

Friends Bradley and Dixon were collected from a night out by Paul Crooks, who took the women to his home at around 5.30am on July 30, 2022.

As the women carried on drinking, Mr Crooks went to bed. He woke at 8.30am to find his guests had messed around with shaving foam which had gone over the cage of the parrot, Sparky.

This was cleaned and, as he left his house to go shopping, he told the women to leave the bird alone.

Carlisle women Tracy Dixon and Nicola Bradley were  jailed for the sadistic killing of a friendly African grey parrot called Sparky

But on returning home Mr Crooks found the women wearing his clothing with Sparky unresponsive and unrecognisable, her head hanging limply out of a cage.

After confronting the pair, he learned the parrot had been covered with Mr Muscle, Brasso, furniture polish, daubed in gloss paint, and also hit with a tea towel.

Attempts were also made to feed Sparky to Mr Crooks’ dog before the parrot was dumped into a tumble drier which was switched on.

Mr Crooks was told that Bradley had snapped Sparky’s neck with Dixon reporting the bird to be “gasping” when pulled from the drier.

But after police were alerted and the women were interviewed, they sought to blame each other for the shocking cruelty.

Carlisle women Tracy Dixon and Nicola Bradley were  jailed for the sadistic killing of a friendly African grey parrot called Sparky

The women went on trial in July 2023 having denied causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal but were found guilty by magistrates.

Mr Crooks had told the court that singing Sparky was a big hit with his friends, and used to belt out the national anthem plus theme tunes from Coronation Street and Emmerdale.

Carlisle women Tracy Dixon and Nicola Bradley were  jailed for the sadistic killing of a friendly African grey parrot called Sparky

Sentencing them, Judge Richard Archer said “You, together, sadistically tortured and essentially killed Sparky. It is frankly beyond comprehension how anyone could treat an animal in his way.”

Sentencing | 25-month custodial. Both were banned from owning or keeping animals indefinitely.

Cumbria Crack
Daily Mail
BBC News

Newmains, North Lanarkshire: Grant and David Campbell

CONVICTED (2023) | hillbilly brothers Grant Stuart Campbell and David Campbell of 74 Woodside Crescent, Newmains, Wishaw ML2 9NA – for appalling cruelty to multiple dogs in their care.

Animal abuser Grant Campbell from Newmains, Wishaw, North Lanarkshire, Scotland. Image: Daily Record.
Grant Campbell received an indefinite ban on owning animals while David Campbell is only disqualified for five years.
Photo: Daily Record

Self-styled ‘rat-catcher‘ Grant Campbell pleaded guilty to seven charges of causing unnecessary suffering by failing to provide veterinary treatment for various conditions and injuries affecting six dogs in his care, including a broken leg.

Injured dogs were kept in shocking conditions at the family home brothers Grant and David Campbell share with their mother Mary
The Campbells’ home in Woodside Crescent, Newmains, viewed from above

His brother David Campbell pleaded guilty to one charge of failing to provide a suitable environment for two of the dogs and failing to keep them free from suffering, injury or disease as their clinical condition strongly displayed signs of neglect and failure to seek veterinary care.

Dog neglected by hillybilly brothers Grant Campbell and David Campbell from Newmains, Wishaw, North Lanarkshire, Scotland. Image: SSPCA

Scottish SPCA inspector, Dawn Murrie, said: “We had several dealings with Grant and David Campbell from March 2021 in regard to the conditions dogs were being kept in and traps Grant Campbell had around the Newmains area.

“Advice was given on the conditions the dogs were being kept in on several occasions and we issued an animal welfare notice that the Campbells complied with. Advice was also given to Grant Campbell on the operation of his traps and the requirements for their appropriate use.

Dog neglected by hillybilly brothers Grant Campbell and David Campbell from Newmains, Wishaw, North Lanarkshire, Scotland. Image: SSPCA
Tara’s painful arthritis went untreated by her heartless owners

“On 19 October 2021 we received another complaint to our animal helpline about the conditions at the property.

“We attended and it was immediately clear that there were issues throughout. There was a strong foul odour as we entered, and the pathway into the garden and dog kennels was covered in faeces, hazards and rubbish.

“The kennels themselves were full of urine and faeces with a complete lack of suitable, dry bedding available for the dogs.

“One kennel was so full of faeces that no part of the flooring was visible. The door to this kennel was closed over and, at first, we assumed this to be a dumping ground for all of the faeces accumulated from the other dogs. Further examination revealed two large, adult deerhound type dogs, lying in the back compartment of the kennel.

“We had immediate concerns for the welfare of all of the animals on the premises and removed them for veterinary examination.

“Lass, one of the deerhounds, was found to have pressure sores and a fracture in her leg that the vet estimated would have been present for around three to four weeks. The break had been left untreated for so long that she had to have her leg amputated.

Dog neglected by hillybilly brothers Grant Campbell and David Campbell from Newmains, Wishaw, North Lanarkshire, Scotland. Image: SSPCA

“Boy, another deerhound, only had three legs and was suffering from a displaced toe. Not only would this have caused him pain but the extra stress on them due to his missing leg would have been more than a normal limb usually supports.

“Gibbs, a pug, was suffering from a severe bacterial skin infection. Pinky, another pug, had an extremely infected and swollen toe.

“Tara, a Staffordshire bull terrier, and Buffy, a lurcher, were found to have arthritis, an extremely painful condition when left untreated.

“All of the dogs were suffering from dental disease to some extent.

“We are pleased that both brothers have received bans on keeping animals.”

Sentencing |

Grant Campbell: two year supervision order and six month restriction of liberty order. Banned from keeping any animal indefinitely.

David Campbell: community payback order of 300 hours to be completed over three years. Banned from keeping any animal for five years (expires July 2028).

Daily Record
Scottish SPCA