Tag Archives: local authority prosecution

Carnlough, County Antrim: Conor Ward

CONVICTED (2024) | Conor Ward, born c. 1992, of Cranny Avenue, Carnlough, Ballymena BT44 0HA – abandoned five dogs and left them to starve.

Animal abuser Conor Ward from Carnlough, Ballymena, Northern Ireland. Image: Facebook

In an animal cruelty case described in court as “truly harrowing”, Conor Ward admitted causing unnecessary suffering to several unnamed bull terrier-type dogs who fought with each other after he abandoned them. One dog was killed by the others, who then fed on his corpse in desperation.

One of the five dogs abandoned by Conor Ward from Carnlough, Ballymena, Northern Ireland
In April 2020 Ward uploaded this image of one of his dogs to Facebook

Ward’s cruelty came to light in November 2020 when animal welfare officers from Mid and East Antrim Borough Council visited his home after receiving a report about dogs fighting in the back yard.

One of the five dogs abandoned by Conor Ward from Carnlough, Ballymena, Northern Ireland
Ward shared this image of his English bull terrier to his Facebook followers in April 2020

The property was vacant. There was no food and little clothing, but there was post in Ward’s name.

When investigators looked in the rear concrete yard, they discovered the half-eaten dead dog and four other animals.

The dead dog – a Staffy – was found to have numerous puncture wounds on his neck and back. He had died as a result of “significant trauma to the upper respiratory tract” and one of his hind legs had been eaten.

Local authority prosecution of Conor Ward an animal abuser from Carnlough, Ballymena, Northern Ireland.
One female Staffy had to be coaxed from her ramshackle living accommodation

The four living dogs – three Staffies and an English bull terrier – were all underweight and had no access to food or water or clean bedding. All of them had cuts and wounds of varying ages.

One female Staffy was found “hiding in the back of a kennel and took some coaxing and reassurance” to entice her out. When she finally emerged, there were fresh and bleeding wounds to her face and nose.

Another Staffy was observed eating the corpse of the dead dog and was found to be timid and underweight.

Local authority prosecution of Conor Ward an animal abuser from Carnlough, Ballymena, Northern Ireland.

The third living Staffy was given a body score of just 2/9 and had bleeding puncture wounds to her face.

An English bull terrier was found in a pen by herself. Historic scars were found on both front feet, nose, head and carpus regions.

Dog killed and eaten after being abandoned by Conor Ward from Carnlough, Ballymena
Sadly this little dog did not survive with Ward’s other dogs resorting to eating his remains

All surviving dogs were nursed back to health and went on to be rehomed.

Defence counsel Grant Powles told the court his client had asked a relative to look after the dogs as he was dealing with “sensitive” personal issues at the time. He added that as a result, Ward turned to “illicit drugs” including cocaine.

Animal abuser Conor Ward from Carnclough, Ballymena, Northern Ireland. Image: Facebook

Sentencing Ward, District Judge Nigel Broderick told him it was no surprise that having been left with neither food nor water, the dogs began fighting to such an extent that one Staffordshire Bull terrier was killed and the other four, “no doubt starving of food, resorted to eating it”.

Animal abuser Conor Ward from Carnclough, Ballymena, Northern Ireland. Image: Facebook

Revealing how the dog most likely died as a result of “significant trauma to the upper respiratory tract,” the judge told the court “I cannot imagine a more serious and harrowing case of animal cruelty”.

Although he imposed a six month jail sentence in order to both punish Ward and to deter others, the judge freed him on bail pending an appeal of the sentence.

Sentencing | six-month custodial sentence; total costs of £5,486.62 costs. 20-year disqualification order applicable to all animals. Ward lodged an appeal with a hearing set for 12 February 2024.

Ballymena Guardian
BelfastLive


Update | 12 February 2024

The custodial sentence imposed on Conor Ward was overturned and replaced with a combination order of two years on probation and 100 hours of community service.

Judge Gerard McNamara told Antrim County Court of Appeal that while it was a “very distressing case” involving cruelty to “defenceless animals”, he was varying the sentence because Ward’s cruelty was passive rather than active.

He was also taking account of other “personal mitigation” as well as Ward’s guilty pleas and remorse.

The 20-year ban on keeping, owning or transporting any animal was affirmed.

Belfast Telegraph

Torrington, Devon: Diana Curtis

CONVICTED (2024) | serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis, born c. 1958, of Peters Marland, Torrington EX38 8QD – neglected dozens of animals in her care.

Serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Curtis, a notorious animal hoarder well-known to the RSPCA and courts, was given a suspended custodial sentence and laughable five-year ban after horses, dogs, chickens, ducks and a goat were found in squalor at her home.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

RSPCA inspectors were joined by police, vets, staff from the Dog’s Trust and officers from Torridge District Council, at the address in July 2022. They found a number of animals, some left without food, water or the vet care they needed.

A stallion, named Mid Morning Monkey, was found with an eye ulcer; checks with vets showed he’d been left with no treatment. Two other horses, named Symphonies Secret and Summer’s Place Jessica, were both found to have untreated dental disease.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Summer’s Place Jessica also had deformed legs and swollen knees. She had an uneven gait and was regularly seen tripping – particularly on her right fore leg. A vet later diagnosed chronic arthritis which had been left untreated.

The stables, which also housed a female goat alongside horses, were dirty with faeces and soiled straw. There was no clean bedding and no hay, food or water available.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Poultry, which was found standing in pens thick with faeces and soiled bedding with dirty water and no food, were also found to have untreated scaly leg. Inside the address, rescuers found more unsuitable living conditions for animals.

RSPCA deputy chief inspector Suzy Hannaby said: “The property was filthy and appeared to have been used as a dog kennel rather than for human habitation, the floors were bare and the only furniture present was for storage.

“There were no chairs or human beds. There was a strong smell of ammonia in the downstairs of the property. There were dog faeces and soiled straw and shavings on the floor, pieces of wooden board, dirty dog beds and two empty crates. There was no food or water available.”

Following an RSPCA prosecution Curtis was convicted of eight offences, some after trial.

Sentencing | 16-week custodial, suspended for 12 months; £10,000 towards costs plus £154 victim surcharge. FIVE-year ban (expires December 2028).

DevonLive


In October 2010 Curtis was given an ASBO due to excessive noise from 100 dogs kept at her property. She pleaded guilty to a noise abatement offence. She was also fined £2,000.

Police officers and animal welfare officers were forced to remove all but six of the dogs from Curtis after she failed to adhere to a court order to do so.

Following Curtis’s conviction, Devon & Cornwall Police Inspector Andy Lilburn said there was “no suggestion of cruelty here whatsoever”, adding that the dogs were “healthy, well-cared for, fed and watered”.

Curtis said she intended appealing the decision but said that “most of the dogs will have been destroyed by the time I raise the money”.

Following the appeal hearing in November 2010, she was ultimately given permission to keep 14 animals.


In December 2011 a further 34 dogs as well as 14 horses were seized from Curtis. After pleading guilty to breaching her ASBO, she was told she could only have a maximum of six dogs.

The RSPCA said at the time they were considering if any animal welfare offences had been committed and whether to prosecute.


In June 2013 Curtis was given a community sentence of 240 hours of unpaid work and ordered to pay £27,000 in court costs after keeping 33 horses and 34 dogs in appalling conditions.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Officials from the RSPCA found the premises to be covered in faeces and littered with hazards.

The court heard there was no outside grazing available and virtually no food and animals had to eat part of a stinging nettle bush.

Animals abused and neglected by serial animal hoarder Diana Curtis from Torrington, Devon.

Prosecutor Iain O’Donnell said: ‘Thirty-four dogs were removed from the premises. Photographs show the disgusting conditions in which they were living.’

Curtis was only banned from keeping horses and for a mere 12 months.

Daily Mail

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.

Newtownabbey, County Antrim: Zara Doherty

CONVICTED (2023) | Zara Doherty, born 20 June 1992, of Glenvarna Drive, Newtownabbey, BT36 but with links to West Belfast – left her pet dog and cat unattended in a property for several days.

Animal abuser: heroin addict Zara Doherty from Newtownabbey
Pets belonging to Zara Doherty had to be rescued by local authority animal welfare officers after she abandoned them

Proceedings against Doherty, a heroin addict, were brought by Antrim and Newtownabbey Borough Council under the Welfare of Animals Act (NI) 2011. Doherty was convicted in her absence after failing to attend court.

The council’s animal welfare officer visited the property on the Glenvarna estate in January 2023 and, after ascertaining that no one had tended to the needs of the animals for several days, carried out an abandonment procedure.

Zara Doherty’s pets Bella and Loki. The supposed ex-junkie has a history of pets in her care going ‘missing’

The officer executed a warrant and witnessed an underweight dog, thought to be a German Shepherd/Rottweiler crossbreed named Bella, and a young cat called Loki, locked in a room with no access to food and water. The area was dirty with faeces and urine present on the floors. A council vet advised removal of the animals from the property.

Sentencing | three-month suspended prison sentence; a total of £433.14 towards legal/court costs, vet expenses and boarding fees. Laughable two-year ban on keeping animals (expires November 2025).

South Antrim Vox

Downpatrick, County Down: Jackie Ann Forbes and Kial Leng

CONVICTED (2023) | Jacqueline Forbes and Kial Leng, aka Kial Love, of 16 Struell Avenue Downpatrick BT30 6GP – for the callous mistreatment of a severely underweight Akita who had to be put to sleep

Animal abusers Kial Leng and Jackie Ann Forbes from Downpatrick, County Down, Northern Ireland
Kial Leng aka Kial Love, who is originally from Kingston upon Hull, and partner Jackie Ann Forbes subjected a dog they’d owned since he was a puppy to a miserable existence starved of food and affection

Forbes and Leng, who have four children, were convicted of failing to look after the unnamed male dog, who was said to be “living a miserable, pitiful existence” on a short chain in a faeces-riddled yard.

The pair were prosecuted under Section 4 & 9 of the Welfare of Animals Act (NI) 2011 for causing unnecessary suffering to a dog in their care.

It also included for failing to take reasonable steps to ensure the welfare needs of the animal was being met.

The unnamed Akita-type dog owned by Jackie Ann Forbes and Kial Leng suffered appalling neglect in his short life
The unnamed Akita-type dog suffered appalling neglect in his short life

Forbes was also convicted of failing to comply with an improvement notice under Section 10 of the ‘Act’ by failing to seek veterinary advice and treatment for a dog in her care.

The pair had pleaded not guilty to the charges, but Judge Amanda Brady said she had no hesitation in convicting them.

The unnamed Akita-type dog owned by Jackie Ann Forbes and Kial Leng suffered appalling neglect in his short life
Happier times: this little puppy’s future was to be one blighted by cruelty and severe neglect

The charges were brought by Newry Mourne and Down District Council under the provisions of the Welfare of Animals Act (Northern Ireland) 2011.

The couple were investigated after the local authority received a report of concern for the welfare of a dog on 24 January 2020.

A council Animal Welfare Officer visited four days later and found the dog chained at the front of the property.

The area was mucky and faeces were visible around the kennel.

The dog had a dull and dirty coat and was in poor body condition with his ribs, hip and spine visible.

Animal abuser Jackie Ann Forbes from Downpatrick, County Down, Northern Ireland

Forbes was issued with an Improvement Notice in respect of the dog specifying that veterinary treatment should be sought.

The Council conducted a follow up visit on the 12 February 2020.

The Animal Welfare Officer obtained a search warrant and revisited the property accompanied by a veterinary surgeon.

Following assessment, the vet certified that the dog was to be removed from the property after his body condition was given a rating of just one out of five.

He was subsequently put to sleep after his condition failed to improve.

Addressing self-employed Leng during an earlier hearing Judge Brady told him: “This dog suffered and it is sad and abysmal and you don’t seem to think you have done anything wrong which concerns me greatly.”

Animal abuser Kial Leng from Downpatrick, County Down, Northern Ireland

Leng told the court that his partner and four young children were undergoing “serious trauma” when the dog became ill, stating the house they were renting had been flooded.

He said the dog had “fallen ill” but claimed he was eating and drinking, but failing to put on weight.

When cross-examined, Leng laughed at the description of the conditions as “horrific”.

He also denied the dog was kept tied up on a short lead, insisting it had become twisted.

Leng further disputed the prosecution assertion that a photograph showed the dog in dirty, wet conditions and with “a lot of dog faeces”.

Leng said he took the dog to a vet who was unable to determine what was causing the crossbreed animal to lose weight so rapidly.

He also told the court he was unable to return with a stool sample on February 6 as required in order to determine if the dog had an infectious disease.

The prosecution said the dog weighed 20kg compared to a normal weight of between 30kg and 50kgs, with Leng claiming the animal was a pup and that the higher weight was for a fully grown dog.

The lawyer said the the dog was in a very very poor state and had been kept in an unsuitable environment.

Sentencing |
Forbes: £150 for each of the three charges and ordered to pay half of the council’s vet bill of £540, in addition to £150 legal costs.
Leng: three months in custody, suspended for two years for each charge under Section 4 & 9 of the Welfare of Animals Act (NI) 2011, to run concurrently. Ordered to pay the council’s costs of £540 and £150 legal costs.

No mention of a ban.

Down News
Down Recorder

Brompton-on-Swale, North Yorkshire: Linda and John Moran, and Stephen Laidlaw

CONVICTED (2023) | Crufts-winning dog breeder and pet boarder Linda Moran, her husband John Moran, and relative Stephen Laidlaw all of A1 Boarding Kennels and Cattery, Thorpe House, Gatherley Road, Brompton On Swale, Richmond DL10 7JH – kept more than 100 animals in stinking, dirty and inadequate conditions.

Animal abuser Linda Moran of A1 Boarding Kennels and Cattery, Brompton On Swale, Richmond, North Yorkshire. Picture: Facebook

Local authority animal welfare inspectors visiting the premises of Linda and John Moran’s kennels and cattery found scores of dogs and three cats whose care was so poor they immediately revoked the dog breeding and dog and cat boarding licences held for the premises.

Premises of A1 Boarding Kennels and Cattery, in Brompton on Swale, North Yorkshire, where animals suffered horrific neglect.

Amy Wennington, prosecuting for North Yorkshire Council, said its inspectors and a vet found more than 100 dogs at the premises in accommodation reeking of urine, with piles of dog poo, missing or inadequate bedding, and contaminated or no water.

There was no evidence that the dogs had been exercised or groomed or had access to play items.

Some of the dogs had matted and filthy hair.

There were also three cats, two of whom were in such poor medical condition they had to be put down.

Animal abuser Linda Moran of A1 Boarding Kennels and Cattery, Brompton On Swale, Richmond, North Yorkshire. Picture: Facebook

Linda Moran, who bred Dogues de Bordeaux and Lhaso Apsos under the name Aibrean, pleaded guilty to six charges of breaching her licence conditions: two involved having too many dogs without sufficient staff to look after them, two of keeping dogs in unfit accommodation and not caring correctly for them, and two of not providing toys, socialising opportunities and grooming.

York magistrates heard she exhibited her own dogs and won awards at dog shows around the country, including two at Crufts 2022, six months before the first of two inspections.

For Linda Moran, John Goodwin said: “Her whole life centres around the love and care of dogs.”

He said that conditions at the kennels and cattery had deteriorated because she had taken in a lot of rescue dogs after the pandemic.

“She just couldn’t say no and matters overwhelmed her,” he said.

Her husband John Moran, who was also on the dog breeding licence, had moved to Spain for a better climate as he has terminal lung cancer.

Animal abuser Linda Moran of A1 Boarding Kennels and Cattery, Brompton On Swale, Richmond, North Yorkshire. Picture: Facebook

Moran is now working with the RSPCA to reduce the number of dogs on her site and to ensure they are looked after properly, said the solicitor.

She now has 22 dogs and is expecting to reduce the number to 17 in the next six months. She is not taking in rescue dogs, said the solicitor.

He handed in an expert’s report giving details of conditions at the kennels and cattery in July 2023, which concluded that Linda Moran could look after dogs properly.

Magistrates ordered her to pay a total of £3,190, consisting of £2,100 fines, a £840 statutory surcharge and £250 prosecution costs.

They declined a prosecution application to ban her from keeping animals.

They said Moran had taken sufficient action to ensure that she was addressing the issues that had given rise to the prosecution and she was no longer taking in rescue dogs.

John Moran pleaded guilty by letter to three charges of breaching the boarding licence regarding the number of dogs on the premises, their living conditions and their care, was fined £1,050 and ordered to pay a £420 statutory surcharge and £250 prosecution costs.

Stephen Laidlaw was not present in court and did not enter a plea to three charges of breaching the breeding licence. The court heard that although he jointly held the breeding licence with Linda Moran, the council’s inspectors had never seen him on the site. He was convicted in his absence and was ordered to pay a £1,500 fine, a £600 statutory surcharge and £250 prosecution costs.

In April 2023 North Yorkshire Council announced that A1 Boarding Kennels and Cattery was no longer licenced either for the breeding of dogs or kennelling of cats. It was also reported that the business is the subject of an investigation into suspected modern slavery. offences

York Press


Additional Information

In 2005 the same premises was raided by RSPCA officers and 70 animals taken from the centre while investigations were carried out.

Ultimately the RSPCA decided not to prosecute the Morans with the couple going on to take legal action against the animal charity on the grounds that they lost business and suffered emotional trauma.

The RSPCA was called to the kennels by police on December 15, 2005, after a customer who called in to pick up their cat failed to find anyone on the premises.

Police found Linda Moran collapsed in the house and she was taken to hospital by ambulance.

Police officers then called in the RSPCA, whose inspectors said the conditions they found many of the animals in were “deplorable”.

Speaking at the time, Gerry Palmer, of the RSPCA, said: “It’s poor quality, dirty conditions that we found the dogs in. There were dogs running all over the place.”

In an exclusive interview with local newspaper The Northern Echo the Morans claimed the dogs had only been left unattended for one night.

A spokeswoman for the RSPCA said: “We are not pursuing a prosecution. Officers worked extremely hard at the scene in a bid to safeguard the welfare of those animals in very trying circumstances.

The outcome of the Morans’ case against the RSPCA is not known but recent anecdotal evidence on social media points to animal welfare being of very low priority at A1 Boarding Kennels and Cattery with many former customers raising concerns about the treatment of their pets .

Bream, Forest of Dean, Gloucestershire: Jon and Stacey McDermott

CONVICTED (2023) | Jon McDermott, born 4 October (year tbc), and wife Stacey McDermott née Stacey Avery, born 14 August 1969, of New Road, Bream, near Lydney GL15 – kept six badly neglected dogs and a bearded dragon in poor conditions.

Convicted animal abusers Jon McDermott and Stacey McDermott from Bream, near Lydney, Gloucestershire. Picture: Facebook
Six dogs and bearded dragon found ‘living in faeces’ at the home of Stacey and Jon McDermott

A warrant was executed on Thursday, February 9, 2023, by Forest of Dean District Council animal welfare officials with the assistance of the Rural Crime Team and Local Policing Team from Gloucestershire Constabulary at the home of Jon and Stacey McDermott.

Six dogs and bearded dragon found 'living in faeces' at the home of Stacey and Jon McDermott

Four cavapoo-type dogs were found in an upstairs bedroom in squalid conditions. The wooden bedroom floor and en-suite floor was covered in dog faeces and urine, and the dogs were unkempt with long claws and matted fur. Two further dogs of similar breed were kept in the downstairs kitchen, with the floor of the kitchen containing dog faeces and all dogs having very little bedding.

The dogs were seized and rushed for treatment at a local vet practice. They were found to have various health conditions, badly matted coats, and were covered in fleas.

Meanwhile, the bearded dragon was found in the conservatory area in an appropriately-sized vivarium. However, he had no heat or lighting, and the substrate was full of faeces and there appeared to be no fresh food or water.

Stacey McDermott and Jon McDermott appeared at Cheltenham Magistrates Court on October 16, 2023.

Six dogs and bearded dragon found 'living in faeces' at the home of Stacey and Jon McDermott

Prosecutor Alex Kirk described the scene to the court describing the master bedroom in which the six dogs were kept as being “in a shocking state”.

He continued: “The quantity of faeces was overwhelming and the amount of it showed that the room hadn’t been cleaned for a number of months.

“The dogs were seized and were found to be suffering from a number of conditions.

“One had an infection in its eye which had to be removed by a vet while another was significantly smaller than the others.

“Another three dogs had otitis (a middle ear infection) in both ears while the remainder were suffering from long-term skin inflammations causing them animal’s pain, itching and overall long-term suffering.”

Mr Kirk explained that the house was in a cluttered state with an “overwhelming stench of ammonia and fleas”, while the garden, which was mostly concreted over, was full of building materials and trailers.

Mr Kirk added: “Inside an outbuilding there was a cage that contained a bearded dragon lizard which, because of the lack of ultraviolet light, was not the sandy-yellow colour it would normally be.

“When the cage was opened the lizard did not move or react. The lizard was seized and ultimately taken to a reptile sanctuary.”

Six dogs and bearded dragon found 'living in faeces' at the home of Stacey and Jon McDermott

Mr Kirk added: “This was a long-standing period of neglect where the animals suffered badly, contracting severe eye and ear conditions along with skin inflammation. The amount of faeces discovered showed this was not a recent occurrence but had been going on for some time.”

Stacey McDermott pleaded guilty to two counts of causing unnecessary suffering to dogs in her care and two counts of failing to meet the needs of the dogs and a bearded dragon in her care.

Jon McDermott pleaded guilty to two counts of failing to meet an animal’s needs for the bearded dragon and all six dogs.

Prosecutor Alex Kirk said: “The master bedroom was in a shocking state as six crossbreed adult cavapoo dogs were kept inside.

“The quantity of faeces was overwhelming and the amount of it showed that the room hadn’t been cleaned for a number of months.
“The dogs were seized and were found to be suffering from a number of conditions.

“One had an infection in its eye which had to be removed by a vet while another was significantly smaller than the others.
"Another three dogs had otitis (a middle ear infection) in both ears while the remainder were suffering from long-term skin inflammations causing them animal’s pain, itching and overall long-term suffering."

Mr Kirk explained that the house was in a cluttered state with an "overwhelming stench of ammonia and fleas", while the garden, which was mostly concreted over, was full of building materials and trailers.

Mr Kirk added: “Inside an outbuilding there was a cage that contained a bearded dragon lizard which, because of the lack of ultraviolet light, was not the sandy-yellow colour it would normally be.
“When the cage was opened the lizard did not move or react. The lizard was seized and ultimately taken to a reptile sanctuary.”
Mr Kirk added: “This was a long-standing period of neglect where the animals suffered badly, contracting severe eye and ear conditions along with skin inflammation. The amount of faeces discovered showed this was not a recent occurrence but had been going on for some time."

In mitigation Holly Burton told the court the couple were in financial dire straits and owed more than £10,000 in various debts.

She added: “Both of them have mental health difficulties and were living themselves among these poor living conditions.

“The couple did not deliberately mistreat the animals, but had become neglectful, mainly due to the deterioration of their mental health.”

The prosecution was brought by the Street Warden Team at The Forest of Dean District Council with the assistance of the Counter Fraud and Enforcement Unit.

Sentencing | eight weeks in prison each, suspended for 12 months; contribution of £750 each towards the council’s costs; victim surcharge of £154. Disqualified from keeping dogs for five years (expires October 2028).

GloucestershireLive
ITV 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

Banbridge, County Down: Stephanie McLoughlin

CONVICTED (2023) | Stephanie Denise McLoughlin, born 8 December 1969, formerly of Barcroft Park, Drumalane, Newry BT35 8ES and now Church Street, Banbridge BT32 4AA – kept eight dogs in such an appalling condition six of them had to be put to sleep.

Animal hoarder Stephanie McLoughlin  previously of Newry, now Banbridge, County Down. Image: Facebook.

McLoughlin, whose previous convictions include criminal damage and drink-driving, pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to dogs in her care and for failing to take reasonable steps to ensure the welfare needs of the animals were being met.

The charges were brought by Newry, Mourne and Down District Council under the provisions of the Welfare of Animals Act (Northern Ireland) 2011 after a report concerning the welfare of dogs kept at the property.

Six of Stephanie McLoughlin's eight dogs were put to sleep on humane grounds
Six of Stephanie McLoughlin’s eight dogs were put to sleep on humane grounds

An Animal Welfare Officer visited the property on June 28, 2021 observing one terrier type dog at the rear and three terrier type dogs on the living room windowsill.

All animals appeared to be in poor condition displaying obvious chronic skin conditions.

McLoughlin became abusive, refused to allow the officer access, and proceeded to remove three dogs from the property. PSNI officers had to be called to assist and facilitate the investigation to continue.

All dogs were kept in atrocious conditions by Newry woman Stephanie McLoughlin

Upon gaining entry to the property, the Council’s Animal Welfare Officer found extremely unhygienic conditions, floors littered with canine faecal matter, discarded waste materials, tin cans displaying evidence of canine bite marks and a strong smell of ammonia gas associated with canine urine and excrement.

The Council’s contracted vet assessed the animals and the environment they were being kept in and determined that all dogs were to be removed from the property.

The vet certified a total of eight dogs to be taken into the Council’s possession. The dogs required immediate veterinary attention.

Six dogs were found to be suffering from severe inflammatory parasitic skin disease which had been ongoing for a long period, the severity of which led to the dogs having to be humanely destroyed for their own welfare.

The remaining two dogs were able to be rehomed by the Council.

Sentencing | two-year conditional discharge; fined £250 and ordered to pay £176 legal costs and £15 offenders levy. 10-year disqualification order applicable to all animals.

ArmaghI

Armagh, County Armagh: Patrick Finn

CONVICTED (2023) | illegal puppy farmer Patrick Terrence Finn, born April 1983, of 103 Ennislare Road, Armagh BT60 2AX – kept 49 dogs in ‘inadequate, unsuitable and squalid conditions’

Illegal puppy farmer Patrick Finn from Armagh, Northern Ireland. Image: Facebook

Finn was given a total of 80 hours community service for keeping 49 dogs, including 17 puppies, in atrocious conditions.

The local authority, Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon Borough Council, described Finn’s shoddy business as “one of the most serious cases of illegal puppy farming and neglect that we have come across”.

The illegal puppy farm operation was exposed in November 2021 when Animal Welfare Officers and Dog Wardens from the council carried out a joint investigation at the defendant’s property.

Inspectors searched a shed and discovered 29 dogs of mixed breeds kept in foul-smelling and filthy conditions with no water or food.

Some were found in pens with heavily soiled bedding while others were kept in pens with bare concrete slabs. There were obvious signs of neglect, with the majority presenting with severely matted hair and overgrown nails.

As the investigation continued, a further three bitches and 17 pups were discovered in a separate poorly-ventilated outbuilding containing heat lamps with no natural light and no food and water. They too were found in appalling conditions, which exposed them to high levels of infectious and parasitic disease.

All dogs were immediately removed from the property after a vet assessed them to be suffering and in need of proper treatment and care. All dogs were subsequently rehomed with loving families.

Illegal puppy farmer Patrick Finn from Armagh, Northern Ireland. Image: Facebook

Finn pleaded guilty to operating a breeding establishment without a licence contrary to Regulation 4 of The Welfare of Animals (Dog Breeding Establishments and Miscellaneous Amendments) Regulations (Northern Ireland) 2013. He also pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering and failing to ensure the welfare of animals under Sections 4 and 9 of the Welfare of Animals Act (NI) 2011.

Finn could have faced imprisonment for a period of up to six months and a fine of up to £5,000 for operating a dog breeding establishment without a licence. Instead he was ordered to cover the cost of the dogs’ care in rescue, a sum of £2,560, and was given no jail time.

Speaking after the court ruling, USPCA Chief Executive Nora Smith said: “We have strong custodial legislation available to the courts yet this individual walks away with a slap on the wrist. It is deeply frustrating and concerning.

“We need to give harsher sentences to send out a clear message, that as a society we will not tolerate or stand for animal cruelty enforcement and strong sentences are the only things that will stop and deter individuals who are inflicting the worst levels of animal cruelty.

“This was a case the USPCA had been closely investigating and it was great to see the response from the Council. In order to catch and stop more of these puppy farmers we would ultimately like to see better partnership working between the USPCA and our local Councils.”

Illegal puppy farmer Patrick Finn from Armagh, Northern Ireland. Image: Facebook

A council spokesperson said: “This is one of the most serious cases of illegal puppy farming and neglect that we have come across in this council area to date. Hopefully this case brings into sharp focus the need for the public to work closely with the council to take action to stop animal abuse and combat the cruel trade of puppy farming.

“Anyone who truly loves dogs or animals in general needs to understand that using an unlicensed breeder to purchase a pet is effectively supporting an illegal business, often without any consideration of the welfare and environmental needs of the animals being sold.

Sentencing | 80 hours of community service; total of £2,890 in costs. Disqualified from owning animals for five years (expires July 2028).

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