Tag Archives: pet peddling

Walsall, West Midlands: Kassie Benton

CONVICTED (2023) | Kasandra Benton, born September 1986, of Talke Road, Walsall WS5 4PH – neglected her injured and ailing dogs’ needs.

RSPCA prosecution of Walsall woman Kassie Benton who failed to treat her dogs' injuries

Pet collector Benton left two of her dogs to suffer without seeking vet treatment. They were an Akita named Delta, who was found with injuries from fighting another dog, and a chihuahua called Eddie, who had a huge ulcerated mass on his groin and had to be put to sleep.

RSPCA prosecution of Walsall woman Kassie Benton who failed to treat her dogs' injuries

The dogs were rescued from Benton’s home after concerns for their welfare were raised with the RSPCA.

RSPCA Animal Rescue Officer, Graeme Brookes, described what he saw when he entered Benton’s home.

He said: “As I walked in, the smell was strong. I saw multiple fresh stains of faeces in the living room. There was lots of domestic rubbish on the floor.

“Eddie had a very large growth on the side of his body that due to his size impacted his walk, on top of the growth was a large open wound.

RSPCA prosecution of Walsall woman Kassie Benton who failed to treat her dogs' injuries

“I asked to see Delta, who was kept locked in the kitchen. There was a large amount of faeces and urine in the kitchen. I asked why Delta was in the kitchen, and was told she’d been kept in there since the fight.

“Delta was friendly, however, I could see she couldn’t place her paw on the floor, hobbling significantly also her hair was matted on the back. I then noticed puncture marks on both her legs and the one she couldn’t put down was significantly swollen.”

Both dogs were taken to a vet who examined them and concluded both were suffering.

RSPCA prosecution of Walsall woman Kassie Benton who failed to treat her dogs' injuries

In his report, he said: “The owner was aware that Eddie had a swelling on his side and that it ulcerated a couple of months earlier. This mass was painful due to the damage to the skin over the mass. The lack of treatment and the inaction that in my opinion has led to unnecessary suffering.

“With Delta, once this fight had occurred a reasonable owner would immediately seek veterinary care especially with the number of injuries she sustained.

“She may have been walking initially but as the inflammation and infection worsened the swelling would have become more obvious and she would have become more lame and more painful.

“Many of the puncture wounds are often like the tip of the iceberg for dog bite injuries as the grip of the dog is maintained and the tear and rip the muscle and tissues below.”

RSPCA prosecution of Walsall woman Kassie Benton who failed to treat her dogs' injuries

Eddie had to be put to sleep because of the severity of his condition.
Delta was placed in RSPCA care and can now be rehomed after the court granted a deprivation order.

RSPCA Animal Rescue Officer, Graeme Brookes added: “Our plea to all animal owners is to make sure they always receive care and treatment when they need it.

“Pets are completely reliant on their owners to ensure their needs are met and they are kept safe and healthy. Ensuring appropriate veterinary care is a key part of the responsibility we have towards them.”

Sentencing | 26-week suspended prison sentence; 15 hours of “rehabilitation”; £600 in costs plus a £187 surcharge. 20-year ban on keeping dogs.

BirminghamLive
Express & Star
ITV News

Bexleyheath, South-East London: Amy Byrne and Harry Angell

CONVICTED (2023) | disgraced ex police officer Amy Louise Byrne, born November 1992, and partner Harry Angell, born c. 1991, of Downbank Avenue, Barnehurst, Bexleyheath DA7 6RT – sold sick and dying kittens in £280k scam.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam
RSPCA officers and police raided the Bexleyheath home of Harry Angell and former police officer Amy Byrne following a string of complaints to Trading Standards about sick and dying kittens they’d sold

Former British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and boyfriend Harry Angell pleaded guilty to charges of fraud and breaches of the Animal Welfare Act.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam
A total of 17 kittens were found on the premises on the day of the search, one of which died a short time later

The couple bought and bred kittens for sale but when customers received their new pets many found that they were malnourished, ill and covered in their own urine or faeces.

Sales and complaints stretch back as far as 2015 and in court RSPCA prosecutor Hazel Stevens gave six examples where kittens died soon after being purchased.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam

The couple used at least 33 different fake names in their adverts, including claiming to be from Cat Cuddles Rehoming which is a genuine charity. On another occasion they used the ID of someone who had purchased a cat off them to advertise other kittens.

Byrne lied to buyers that she was a vet and that the kittens had been wormed and microchipped, but health certificates provided turned out to be fake.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam
Byrne lied to buyers that she was a vet but the health certificates provided turned out to be fake.

One victim told the court that she arranged to buy a male kitten off Byrne and Angell as a surprise for her autistic son who had recently lost his cat.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam

Her son made a thank you card for Bryne which she accepted as she dropped off the kitten.

After Byrne left the mum realised the kitten was female, emaciated and had diarrhoea stuck in her fur. The kitten died a short time later.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam
A number of the kittens were living in hutches in the garden of the property

Ms Stevens told the court: “There were human and animal victims in this. Humans were risk of getting these illnesses from the cat. Children who were excited about a new member of the family including one child who made a card to thank Amy Byrne, only to see them die days later.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam

Another victim of their scam said: “Having recently lost a cat to the road, we were so looking forward to giving a home to a new kitten. We instantly fell in love with Elsa who was so sleepy and cuddly when we got her. For the two precious weeks we had her in our lives, she became part of our family.

“We were just devastated to watch her slowly go downhill, monitoring her eating so little, trying to rid her of the worms she arrived with and taking her to the vet for numerous checks/tests. She spent her last two days in the animal hospital with them trying everything to make her better but she gave up the fight and we began our grieving for little Elsa.”

When owners got back in contact with Byrne and Angell after the sale they were often ignored, Ms Stevens said.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam
Angell and Byrne had a history of kitten sales and complaints stretched back as far as 2015

The court heard that on one occasion a distraught buyer and her boyfriend turned up at their house to ask for their money back. Byrne told them to wait outside until Angell arrived on the scene and shouted:

“You bought the kitten from me not Amy, but I am not giving you a f***ing penny.”

As a result of the volume of complaints that Trading Standards, the RSPCA and the police were receiving, a search was carried out at Byrne and Angell’s home on Downbank Avenue in Barnehurst, Bexleyheath on August 26, 2021.

A total of 17 kittens were found on the premises on the day of the search, with a vet assessing that six of them were suffering. Those six cats were confiscated and one died a short time later.

During the search Byrne and Angell tried to dispose of their mobile phones. Angell jumped out of the window and threw his phone in the front garden and while police were chasing him Byrne carried out a factory reset of hers.

Angell’s phone was recovered and revealed hundreds of images of kittens, enquiries about adverts and complaints from people reporting that their kittens were sick.

Messages also revealed that the couple found adverts for cheap kittens online, gave the cats flea treatments and then sold them on.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam

On one occasion Angell bragged about how he bought two kittens for £75 then sold them on for £600 each the next week.

Analysis carried out by the RSPCA showed that the couple intended to make a gain of £278,870.

During an interview Angell confirmed that the kittens seized had not seen a vet as he does not agree with veterinary practices.

Byrne admitted they breed cats and sell them but said they were not making a profit.

British Transport Police officer Amy Byrne and her boyfriend Harry Angell sold sick and dying kittens to customers in £280,000 scam

Byrne was a British Transport Police (BTP) officer when these crimes were carried out but was the subject of a misconduct investigation relating to serious drug offences which eventually led to her being fired in January 2023.

A BTP misconduct hearing report said a hydroponics tent, two cannabis plants, bag of cannabis, half smoked joint and pack of cannabis seeds were found at her address.

Sentencing | Angell was jailed for three years and four months, while Byrne was jailed for three years and eight months. The couple were also disqualified from owning pets indefinitely and cannot appeal for at least 10 years.

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Daily Mail


Holbrooks, Coventry: Monika Listos

CONVICTED (2021) | Monika Listos aka Moniczka Listos, born 21/09/1994 of 66 Lauderdale Avenue, Coventry CV6 4LL – ran an illegal kitten farm and neglected the animals in her care.

Monika Listos ran an illegal kitten farm from a Coventry house
Monika Listos ran an illegal kitten farm from an unoccupied house in Coventry

Polish national Listos, who traded under the name Cashmere Touch Ragdoll and is a known associate of notorious breeder Lizzie Scarrott, kept a number of very young and sick kittens in a squalid empty house before selling them on the internet.

Listos would purchase the kittens from online adverts before flogging them on Gumtree for a profit.

She was investigated by the RSPCA following 46 complaints about her actions from concerned members of the public.

Prospective buyers reported that kittens were being sold which were too young to be away from their mum and many were gravely ill.

Monika Listos ran an illegal kitten farm from a Coventry house
The Polish national was jailed and banned from keeping all animals for life

Listos was found guilty of two animal welfare offences following a three-day trial and was jailed for 20 weeks. She was also banned from keeping animals for life.

Animal welfare inspectors attended the address where the kittens were being sold from on Lillington Road, Wood End, on April 27, 2019.

Numerous kittens could be seen in the barely furnished living room including one which was very small and was not moving.

Inside there were 18 kittens – believed to be in three separate litters – who were living in poor conditions.

RSPCA Inspector Louise Marston said: “I noticed a very bad smell of illness, diarrhoea and filth.

“There was a small tupperware tub present containing some dry kitten food, an empty plate and an empty plastic double bowl.

“There was no water at all, no bedding and no toys for the kittens to play with. There were no adult cats seen and each room was empty of all furnishings.
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“The smallest kitten was on the couch huddled between two other kittens. She felt very thin and her bottom was very dirty, covered in diarrhoea.

“There was no way that she could physically access food, water and the litter tray without being taken on and off the couch as she was too small and clearly too weak to climb herself.”

The pets were taken to a nearby vets who found the kittens to be in a suffering state so Louise contacted Listos for her to be interviewed under caution.

Sadly, the smallest kitten found at the address died overnight while in veterinary care.

Monika Listos ran an illegal kitten farm from a Coventry house
Listos and her partner are known associates of Lizzie Scarrott, whose illegal breeding operation was exposed by BBC Watchdog in 2018

Some of the other kittens were found to be aged four and five weeks old – which is too young to be away from their mum. This would usually be aged around eight weeks.

Twelve of the 18 were found to be suffering from feline parvovirus and also died.

The other six were rehabilitated and re-homed through the RSPCA’s Coventry and District Branch.

Lizzie Scarrott's comment on LIstos's Facebook profile
The pair have much in common, not least a callous disregard for the kittens they breed

Louise said: “Sadly, kittens infected with feline parvovirus is something we do see, when kittens’ mothers were not vaccinated before becoming pregnant.

“These kittens were found in a house on their own and many were far too young to be away from their mum and were also at risk from the spread feline parvovirus via contact with contaminated faeces.

“Anyone looking for a new kitten should take time to make sure they have been bred responsibly, to avoid health and behavioural issues further down the line.”

Sentencing: jailed for 20 weeks; ordered to pay a total of £10,115. Banned from keeping animals for life.

CoventryLive
Coventry Observer


Additional Information

Monika Listos’s fiancé is Arek ‘Adam’ Palka, also very good friends with Lizzie Scarrott and her husband Chris.

Monika Listos with Arek Palka
Monika Listos with Arek Palka.

Listos also has a pet sitting business (possibly now defunct) aimed at her fellow UK-based Poles. Its name is ‘Opieka nad zwierzętami Anglia’ which translates as Animal Care England.

Galashiels, Scottish Borders: Charlotte Roberts

CONVICTED (2020) known pet peddlers Charlotte Amy Roberts, born 03/03/1991, of 274 Beech Avenue, Galashiels TD1 2LG – severely neglected a lizard

Pet peddlers Charlotte Roberts and Vickie Hay. Roberts was prosecuted for neglecting a lizard in her care
Charlotte Roberts (left) with wife Vickie Hay

Roberts, who together with wife Vickie Roberts (née Hay) is a notorious pet peddler with a history of allegedly selling on poorly kittens riddled with parasites, pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to the pet.

Reptile neglected by Charlotte Roberts from Galashiels, Scottish Borders

Animal welfare officers said the Bosc monitor lizard was close to death when they raided the flat following the tip-off.

In addition to the lizard they found 13 cats, two dogs and a rabbit.

Roberts avoided a ban from owning all animals and has signed over her dogs and cats to the Scottish SPCA.

But there are are still two dogs, five cats and a fish living in the property as they are in the ownership of her 23-year-old wife Vickie Roberts.

Vickie Roberts’ not guilty plea to causing unnecessary suffering to the lizard was accepted by the Crown.

Facebook warning about poorly kittens being sold on Facebook by Charlotte Roberts and Vickie Hay

The court heard was told how a complaint was made to the Scottish SPCA about animal neglect at the property.

Charlotte Roberts' sells kittens on Facebook

Charlotte Roberts admitted the lizard was in a “very bad” condition.

The court heard how it was motionless and in a state of collapse and had no access to water. The water dish was dry and was full of wood shavings.

Officers immediately removed the lizard for veterinary attention and it was found to be very weak and emaciated.

Its weight was 1.68 kilogrammes when it should be a healthy weight of between 2.5 and three kilogrammes.

The lizard had seven days of treatment which proved to be successful as the lizard was “fed back to life”. It has now been signed over to the Scottish SPCA.

Vickie Hay sells kittens on Facebook

The Crown had originally called for a ban on Charlotte Roberts owning all animals.

But after consulting the Scottish SPCA – who told them Roberts had been engaging well with them and also Lothian Cat Rescue – the motion was restricted to reptiles.

Depute fiscal Anna Robertson told the latest hearing the Scottish SPCA had spoken highly of Roberts’ attitude and that she had understood their stance over the lizard.

Ms Robertson said that as a result Charlotte Roberts had signed over her cats and one dog to the Scottish SPCA but said there were still animals in the Beech Avenue flat that had not been signed over as they belonged to Vickie Roberts.

She said there were still concerns as all the animals in the house had to be treated for fleas, the landlords Waverley Housing had a policy on the number of pets in their property and all vets in the area had indicated there were outstanding bills to be paid.

The fiscal added that it was understood there was a Go Fund Me page for a dog which had an ear infection.

Defence lawyer Colin Severin said that there were now two dogs, five cats and a fish in the property but added: “All remaining animals are in the ownership of her partner.”

Vickie Hay trawls Facebook looking for animals to sell on
Charlotte Roberts and Vickie Hay have been trawling Facebook for animals to buy and sell on for years. This post was from 2015.

As regards Charlotte Roberts he said, ‘she had taken on more than she could handle’, and there had been no malice involved.

He said a ban on keeping all animals would not be appropriate.

Sheriff Peter Paterson fined Charlotte Roberts £200 for causing unnecessary suffering to the lizard and banned her from keeping reptiles for two years.

But after hearing Charlotte Roberts has a joint Employment Support Allowance of £275 per fortnight with her partner, the sheriff said he found it “difficult to comprehend” how they could afford to keep the amount of cats and dogs they have.

Sentencing: fined £200. Banned from keeping reptiles for two years (expired 2022).

Border Telegraph

Clifton, Nottingham: Faye Clayton and Lee Wilson

CONVICTED (2016) | prolific pet peddlers and backyard breeders Lee Antony Wilson, born 12 December 1984, and Faye Margaret Clayton, born 20 September 1988, both previously of Southchurch Drive, Clifton, Nottingham – kept “severely underweight” puppies and their mothers in their flat.

Pet peddlars and backyard breeders Faye Clayton and Lee Wilson from Nottingham

The RSPCA seized four dogs from Clayton and Wilson after concerns were raised by a woman who had agreed to pay the pair £400 for a young cross-bred Akita.

The pups were being kept in a flat above a shop.

Meanwhile two adult dogs used for breeding – a husky and an Akita – lived in a poorly maintained outhouse.

The court heard that inspectors found the puppies in a “kitchen which was cluttered”, while urine and faeces were on the floor when the customer arrived.

Lee Wilson social media image

Paul Wright, prosecuting, said: “There was nowhere dry for the dogs to rest on.

“Two dogs were lethargic and thin. She could feel their bones and spine and picked one puppy she wanted to buy.”

When the RSPCA arrived, they found two adult dogs which were “severely underweight with bones and spine visible”.

“A husky was in a particularly bad condition with gums looking yellow,” said Mr Wright.

Faye Clayton social media image

The two puppies were taken to a vet and were treated for diarrhoea, which had caused them to lose weight.

“This would cause them to lose weight drastically and it would be apparent for at least a week before,” Mr Wright said.

“It is a question whether they would survive without treatment. The adult husky was the worst and was severely underweight. Blood tests on the husky showed a liver disorder through lack of nutrition. It would not have survived without intervention and would have suffered for a number of weeks.”

He said the four animals were signed over to the RSPCA. All have made good recoveries and found new homes.

Sentence: Wilson was ordered to pay £425 in costs, fines and charges while Clayton was given a financial penalty of just £170. Both were banned from keeping any animals for five years (expired April 2021).

Original source: Nottingham Post (article removed).


Update May 2021

Wilson and Clayton are no longer together. While we believe Wilson is still in the Clifton area where he lives with a new partner, Clayton may have moved to a different part of Nottingham.

Aside from backyard breeding, Clayton was a notorious pet peddler and was continuously buying and selling dogs, cats and other animals including rats and guinea pigs via Facebook.

Their ban expired in April 2021 and they are free to have animals once more.


Update December 2021

Current address for Lee Wilson:

Manesty Crescent
Clifton
NOTTINGHAM
NG11 9DT

Burnley, Lancashire: Linda Winter

CONVICTED (2010) | internet animal trader Linda Winter (aka Linda Jayne Leaf), born c. 1969, of Wycoller Avenue, Burnley BB10 4LF – kept dogs, cats and guinea pigs in freezing and filthy conditions in a series of stables and a caravan

Linda / Lynda Winter aka Linda Leaf pictured outside court in 2010, and one of the many animals rescued from the miserable conditions in which she kept them
Linda / Lynda Winter aka Linda Leaf pictured outside court in 2010, and one of the dogs rescued from the miserable conditions in which she kept them

An investigation was launched into the activities of puppy and horse trader Linda Winter by the RSPCA after police found a variety of animals in squalid conditions at a freezing-cold farm near Lennox Street, Worsthorne.

Several dogs, cats and guinea pigs were found in caravans and a nearby stable block by officers, who were conducting a stakeout as part of an unrelated criminal operation, and the RSPCA was alerted.

The conditions in the caravan were said to be filthy and often the animals had not been given adequate food or water despite the temperature barely being above zero degrees centigrade.

Two rabbits and a guinea pig, left in cages by Winter at the Lennox Street paddock, were found to be dead by police.

2019 social media photo of Linda Winter
2019 social media photo of Linda Winter

Vet Peter O’Hagen was called in to examine the animals and they were removed at the RSPCA’s request.

RSPCA inspector Jason Bowles and Mr O’Hagen also made a video of the caravan and stables noting that, at the time, New Year’s Day, the temperature was zero degrees centigrade.

Mr Bowles told the court said there was a strong smell of urine in the dirty caravan and he could see no food or water left for a Rottweiler puppy and a small Border terrier he found inside.

He then moved to a stable block, where he found the dead rabbits and guinea pig, and a cage containing three cats, which had apparently been left with dry food but no water. The litter tray was full and the cats were sitting in their own filth.

The next stable inspected had three dogs, two Bedlington terriers and a small black spaniel, the court heard.

Mr Bowles said no water had been left for the dogs. The terriers’ coats were matted and the spaniel’s was ‘dirty’.

Finally two Sharpei dogs, with bad skin conditions, were discovered in a third stable.

These dogs had been left water but it had frozen because of the conditions.

Winter, who advertises puppies for sale on the internet, was questioned by PC Mark Jenkinson when she arrived at the scene.

She was alleged to have told PC Jenkinson that the animals at the compound were hers and she was looking after them “because no-one else would”.

Winter was questioned about the discovery and later charged with 18 offences of failing to provide adequate care and diets for 13 animals found by the authorities.

She denied the charges during a two-day trial but was convicted of all the offences.

In her defence, Winter said her car had been impounded and she was unable to attend to care for the animals daily. Her daughter and a family friend had been given the responsibility instead and had not done a good job.

Magistrates banned Winter from keeping dogs and all other animals for six years and to pay costs to the RSPCA of £260.

The court heard that the disqualification may prove difficult to enforce as his client’s 17-year-old daughter had pets of her own.

But the bench told Winter she must make provisions to ensure she complied with the ban or face further court action.

The trial was told that Winter’s details had been found on various trading websites, advertising puppies and ponies for sale.

Following the case RSPCA inspector Jason Bowles, who investigated Winter, said: “She left these animals to live in freezing and squalid conditions and some suffered and others died as a result.

“She was caught out though as the result of a joint operation between the RSPCA and Burnley Police.

“I would like to make a plea to people to be aware when you are buying an animal, without researching its history properly, then you could be funding misery for more animals in future.”

Sentencing: costs of £260. Six-year ban on keeping animals (expired 2016).

Lancashire Telegraph