Tag Archives: Ribble Valley

Great Harwood / Clitheroe, Lancashire: John and Lauran Walker

CONVICTED (2022) | John Walker, born c. 1952, of 27 Greenhill, Great Harwood, Blackburn BB6 7HW, and daughter Lauran Walker, born c. 1992, of Darkwood Crescent, Chatburn, Clitheroe BB7 4AL – convicted of animal welfare offences in relation to their doggy day care centre, Mucky Pups in Rishton.

John and Lauran Walker are now banned from holding animal activity licences for 10 years.
John and Lauran Walker are now banned from holding animal activity licences for 10 years.

Father and daughter John and Lauran Walker were banned from holding animal activity licences for 10 years after pleading guilty to animal welfare charges.

Their prosecution followed the emergence of videos on social media showing John Walker violently abusing a number of dogs at Mucky Pups in December 2019.

One video showed Walker picking a dog up by the scruff of his neck, beating him and throwing him across the floor, while the dog can be heard whimpering and crying.

In another, Walker appeared to hit one dog with a broom, while another video showed him physically smacking a dog with his hand so hard that the connection can be heard on the footage.

Hyndburn Borough Council revoked Mucky Pup’s licence in February 2020, and the RSPCA carried out a full investigation into the abuse.

John Walker returns to the Muck Pups' van after a court appearance.
John Walker, a pet owner himself, was filmed attacking scared dogs on multiple occasions with his abuse the cause of psychological trauma and possibly severe physical injury.

Following months of adjournments, the Walkers were finally sentenced on Tuesday 11 January 2022 after pleading guilty at an early hearing in August 2021.

Text messages between Lauran Walker and her employees proved not only that she was aware of her father’s cruelty to the dogs in their care but was not averse to animal abuse herself.

Lauran Walker pleaded guilty to failing to take steps to ensure the needs of an animal was met by failing to prevent John Walker using inappropriate force.

John Walker pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to seven dogs by the inappropriate use of physical force, between September 10 2019 and November 19 2019 and failing to take reasonable steps to ensure the needs of the animals were met between August 1 2019 and December 18 2019.

Sentencing:
John Walker – community order with 10 days of rehabilitation activity; 26-week electronic curfew; £290 in costs.
Lauran Walker – five-week curfew; 15 days of rehabilitation activity. £290 in costs and fines.
Both – disqualified from holding a licence to work with animals for a period of 10 years but may apply for a variation or termination of the disqualification after five years.

Lancashire Telegraph


Several dog owners spoke to the Lancashire Telegraph when the systematic abuse at Mucky Pups came to light.

Vandalised sign for Mucky Pups
Mucky Pups closed permanently some months ago after its licence was revoked by the local authority. This followed a wave of public anger.

Vikki Martin and her daughter Bethany Banks, from Clitheroe, took their pugs, Dexter and Otis, there in September 2019. Ms Martin said she removed them after only a few weeks.

Ms Martin said: “We sent them to Mucky Pups around September for about seven or eight days, over a period of about four or five weeks.

“Dexter and Otis are only pups and we had to put a stop to them going because their behaviour changed massively and they became two very different pugs.

“I don’t know if they were ever on the receiving end of any abuse, as I haven’t seen any videos that show this, but since we pulled them out of the centre our lives have been a living hell because of their behaviour.

“Before we sent them, they were so well-behaved and mild-mannered but, after a couple of weeks, we noticed they’d become very, very jumpy, cowering and startled all the time, more so around men and at sudden movements, such as turning the volume on the TV up, or the phone ringing.

“And they bark at the slightest thing now, whereas before they didn’t.”

In one video taken by Miss Devine, a man [John Walker] can be seen in a room full of dogs, with what looks to be a broom or a mop in his hand. The footage appears to show the man hitting an English Bulldog puppy with the broom.

A woman, from Accrington, who did not wish to be named, contacted the Telegraph to say she believes the dog in that video was her dog.

She said: “Myrtle attended Mucky Pups a few days a week from September and, in fairness, she seemed to enjoy it and would get excited at first. She’s only five and a half months old. About three weeks ago, she started cowering every time we were telling her off for something, and would back away into a corner.

“My partner and I went to my dad’s with Myrtle and, at one point, he was stood behind her, normally, and she started to cower and then ran away from him.

“In one of the videos that I saw on Facebook, I saw the man hit Myrtle with a broom. It was definitely her. It made me feel sick.”

Michael MacRae, who lives in Langho, said he took his three-and-a-half-year-old German Shepherd, Charlie, to Mucky Pups between September and October 2019.

Mr MacRae said: “Where we live, Charlie doesn’t get much interaction with other dogs so we put him in Mucky Pups for one day a week in September, to see how he would get on, then for two days a week as he seemed to be enjoying it.

“But after a few times, he didn’t seem to be happy about going and one Tuesday when I picked him up he was a mess.

“I had to lift him into the car and when I was showering him, he could hardly stand up.

“I phoned Lauren [Lauran], the owner of Mucky Pups, the day after and she said maybe he had been playing a bit too roughly with other dogs.

“I didn’t think much of it but he came back another time and started grunting out of his nose and making strange noises, which he’d never done before.”

He took Charlie to the vets, who did tests and a scan which revealed the animal’s insides were inflamed and swollen.

He added: “Charlie is still undergoing treatment at the vets, and so far it’s cost over £2,000.”

Source: Lancashire Telegraph 01/01/2020

Blackpool, Lancashire: Natasha Jolly

CONVICTED (2021) | Natasha Ivy Jolly, born 29 December 1990, of 105 Ribble Road, Blackpool FY1 4AA – locked her dog in a dark stairs cupboard to starve to death

Natasha Jolly
Natasha Jolly


Natasha Jolly, who has links to Preston, Blackburn, Clitheroe and Leigh in Wigan, was disqualified from keeping animals for life after she shut her dog in an understairs cupboard and left her to die.

The RSPCA said a neighbour who was concerned about the smell coming from the flat found the female tan coloured terrier type dog, whose name was not known, deceased and covered by a sheet.

The unnamed female tan terrier was found dead covered by a sheet at Jolly's previous address in Grasmere Road, Blackpool
The unnamed female tan terrier was found dead covered by a sheet at Jolly’s previous address in Grasmere Road, Blackpool

The floor of the cupboard was covered in old dog faeces and there was no natural light or any form of appropriate bedding.

The dog was in an emaciated state with all of her bones visible and protruding.

Inspector Will Lamping, who led the investigation for the animal welfare charity, took the dog’s body to a veterinary surgeon to be examined.

The vet found no evidence of underlying disease conditions suggesting she died of starvation.

The unnamed female tan terrier was found dead covered by a sheet at Jolly's previous address in Grasmere Road, Blackpool

The post mortem revealed that the dog’s stomach contained faeces and plastic clothing tags, suggesting that she was so hungry she was eating anything she could find. The vet confirmed the dog would have suffered for a number of months.

The court heard how a witness who found the dog had been affected by their tragic discovery.

They said: “This whole incident has left me shocked and disgusted.

“I can’t imagine how this poor dog felt starving to death.

” I just can’t seem to get it out of my head”.

In passing sentence, magistrates commented: “We found this case quite distressing, involving a prolonged and deliberate act resulting in a dog starved to death”.

Inspector Lamping said: “This was a truly shocking case to investigate. It is difficult to think of the suffering that this dog went through as she laid hungry and alone in a tiny cupboard with no light until her death.

“I would urge anyone who ever finds themselves in a situation where they are struggling to feed or care for their animal, to call the RSPCA emergency line on 0300 1234 999 and we will always do our best to get help to the animal in need.”

Sentencing: 14 weeks in custody, suspended for two years; 30-day Rehabilitation Activity Requirement; £150 costs. Lifetime disqualification order (but can appeal after 10 years).

LancashireLive
Blackpool Gazette

Padiham, Lancashire: John Burnside

CONVICTED (2016) | John-Mark Caleb Burnside, born 12 January 1994, originally from Clitheroe, Lancashire, but as of March 2021 of Church Street, Padiham BB12 8JH – punched his pet whippet and throttled her.

Violent dog abuser John-Mark Burnside from Burnley, Lancashire

Burnside, who has several convictions for violence towards humans, punched the dog and then throttled her in front of people enjoying a night out in the Rose and Crown pub in Clitheroe.

He then approached a group of males and swung a stool at them before punching one and grabbing another by the throat.

The court was told that all the time Burnside was “muttering” to himself and ignored efforts to calm him down.

Burnside pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to a dog, being drunk and disorderly in the Rose and Crown, and using threatening behaviour. He also pleaded guilty to being drunk and disorderly on a separate occasion.

Sentencing was adjourned for administrative reasons and no update is available.

Violent dog abuser John-Mark Burnside from Burnley, Lancashire

Catherine Allan, prosecuting, said Burnside walked into the Rose and Crown at 10.15pm and the barman described him as looking “drunk and angry”.

“He sat at the bar, picked up the dog, lifted it to head height and then, without warning, threw it down onto the floor,” said Miss Allan. “He walked across the pub and with both hands began to squeeze the dogs neck before hitting it three or four times. The dog didn’t cry out but witnesses said it looked really scared.”

Miss Allan applied for an order disqualifying Burnside from keeping any animal and an exclusion order from public houses in the Clitheroe area.

She said the second drunk and disorderly, in Station Road, put Burnside in breach of a suspended prison sentence imposed for assaults on two people in a Clitheroe social club.

Geoffrey Ireland, defending, said he couldn’t say too much about the offences because his client had no recollection due the amount he had to drink combined with medication he took for mental health issues.

“He accepts he behaved very badly towards the dog which his parents have since given to someone else,” said Mr Ireland.

Lancashire Telegraph