Tag Archives: St Helens

St Helens, Merseyside: Phillip Boyer

CONVICTED (2024) | Phillip Boyer, born 4 December 2004, of Waterdale Crescent, St Helens WA9 3PD – left an XL Bully to die in a rubbish and faeces-strewn flat.

RSPCA prosecution of Phillip Boyer from St Helens, Merseyside.
A 2019 image of alcoholic junkie Phil Boyer, who turned a blind eye to his dog’s suffering and left her to die in pain

Police found the female tan and white XL bully, named Cali, lying dead in the filthy living room of Boyer’s flat in Waterdale Crescent, St Helens, on June 15, 2023. She was very thin and suffering from canine parvovirus which had not been treated.

An RSPCA inspector attending the scene described being met with a pungent overpowering smell of urine, faeces and decomposition, and saw no sign of food or water for the dog.

Boyer, who admitted being reliant on alcohol and drugs, pleaded guilty to three offences contrary to the Animal Welfare Act 2006.

He said in an interview that he hadn’t noticed Cali’s weight loss.

The court heard that RSPCA Inspector Leanne Cooper had gone to the property following the police’s request.

RSPCA prosecution of Phillip Boyer from St Helens, Merseyside.

In written evidence she said: “Each room I looked in was filthy and littered with rubbish. In the lounge there was a really pungent overpowering smell of urine, faeces and decomposition. I could see what appeared to be smears of faeces all over the floor and up the walls.

“Over towards the television stand in the corner of the room I could see a dead white bull breed dog that looked to be in very thin bodily condition, with her ribs, hips and backbone prominent.

“Cali’s fur looked to be stained brown on her legs and back end. There was also what looked like a brown dried patch of diarrhoea on the floor underneath her rear end. There was a mop bucket nearby that looked thick, brown and dirty with faeces. The floor was littered with rubbish and hazards such as broken glass. I didn’t see any sign of food or water provided for Cali.”

The inspector also took photographs of a shed in the communal garden where Cali was said to have been kept, sometimes for hours at a time. The wooden door and frame appeared to have been chewed and there were splinters all over the floor.

RSPCA prosecution of Phillip Boyer from St Helens, Merseyside.

A vet from the RSPCA’s Greater Manchester Animal Hospital examined the dog later the same day. She gave Cali a body condition score of two out of nine and said her ribs, lumbar vertebrae and pelvic bones were easily visible and she had no palpable fat.

The result of a faecal sample showed Cali had canine parvovirus, a highly contagious virus that can be fatal to dogs, with puppies and unvaccinated dogs most at risk.

In her evidence to the court, the vet said: “Parvovirus can cause rapid deterioration and suffering if no veterinary intervention is provided. The duration of these failings will be a minimum of several days, the duration of the environmental failings is likely to be for a period of weeks looking at the evidence presented. Regardless of the cause of poor body condition and diarrhoea, the owner should have sought veterinary advice to relieve her suffering.

“Cali will have undoubtedly felt weakness and debilitation having a severe lack of energy, worsened by the haemorrhagic diarrhoea. This will have been uncomfortable and severely impacted her everyday life, ability to move, to obtain food or water and even to play.

“I would expect a responsible owner to seek veterinary attention should their pet become underweight, to a point that they were below point 4 out of 9 on the body condition score, moreover, if their animal became weak or lethargic.”

The court was told that in the weeks that followed Inspector Cooper made repeated attempts to speak to Boyer about potential animal welfare offences, but most of the calls went straight to voicemail or the line would go dead when she said who she was.

With the assistance of police, he was located and finally interviewed in November about what had happened to Cali.

RSPCA prosecution of Phillip Boyer from St Helens, Merseyside.

In interview, Boyer said he was reliant on alcohol and drugs and struggled to buy food for himself and Cali. He said he didn’t notice her weight loss, suggesting that she had always been a lean dog, and he hadn’t taken her to the vet as had no money to do so and didn’t have a phone to call the RSPCA for help.

Speaking after the case Inspector Cooper said: “Going into the property and finding Cali’s body, lying all alone surrounded by piles of rubbish, was an extremely sad and upsetting sight. She was badly let down by the person who should have been caring for her and suffered over a prolonged period because no veterinary assistance or any other sort of help had been sought.”

Sentencing | 17-week prison sentence, suspended for 12 months; 20 days of rehabilitation; 160 hours of unpaid work; victim surcharge of £154. Five-year ban on keeping all animals (expires April 2029).

Liverpool Echo
Planet Radio

St Helens, Merseyside: Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson

CONVICTED (2024) | serial animal abuser Raymond Warren, born c. 1969, and son Reece Williamson, born 26 March 1999, previously of Hildebrand Close, Walton, Liverpool, and now 9 Winter Grove, Parr, St Helens WA9 2JT – allowed a dog to starve to death.

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

The emaciated body of Cassie was found at the Walton home of Raymond Warren and his son Reece Williamson in July 2023. Both men now live together in the Parr area of St Helens.

A post-mortem report said the dog had most likely died of starvation.

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

RSPCA Inspector Lisa Lupson was asked to collect Cassie’s body from a vet on July 24, 2023, after the dog had been taken there by police officers who’d found her deceased in the kitchen of the property the day before.

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death
RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

A post-mortem report carried out for the RSPCA as part of its investigation showed Cassie’s gastrointestinal tract was empty. It concluded that her poor body condition was most likely due to starvation through a lack of access to food, with no pathological cause of emaciation evident.

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

The vet who provided written evidence in the case gave Cassie a body score condition of only one out of nine. They said: “I would expect a responsible owner to seek veterinary attention should their pet become underweight and to protect their animal from ingesting foreign material and seek veterinary advice if this had knowingly occurred.

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

In written evidence to the court the inspector said: “I was shocked to see the condition of the dog inside the bag. Cassie was a brown-coloured, female, bull terrier type dog, she was in an emaciated condition with every bone visible through her fur.”

“Cassie ingested non-food material which shows she still had an appetite, hunger and willingness to eat. This corroborates the post-mortem report which concluded that lack of food was the likely cause of the emaciation and ultimate death.

“She will have felt weakness and debilitation having a severe lack of energy. This will have been uncomfortable and severely impacted her everyday life, ability to ambulate, to obtain food or water, and play. The duration of these failings will be a minimum of several days but is more likely to be for a period of weeks looking at the evidence presented.”

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

In a police interview Williamson claimed Cassie didn’t eat properly and needed medication. He said he was too scared to take her to the vet and admitted he hadn’t done the right thing.

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

Warren, who breached a five-year ban imposed in November 2020 for similar cruelty to a dog, told police that Cassie had only lived with them for a few months but he didn’t know where she had come from.

He said he hadn’t seen the dog for one to two weeks and wasn’t aware of her poor condition.

RSPCA prosecution: Father and son Raymond Warren and Reece Williamson, from St Helens, Merseyside, were handed suspended prison sentences for starving dog to death

Speaking after the case had concluded, Inspector Lupson said: “Cassie’s emaciated body was a sad and shocking sight. She had clearly been neglected for many weeks and veterinary assistance should clearly have been sought.

“Mr Warren also knew he was disqualified from keeping animals and there is a clear reason why breaches are imposed by the courts – they are there to protect animals from people who have been convicted under the Animal Welfare Act.

“We are grateful to the police for their assistance with this case, which was extremely upsetting for everyone involved.”

Another dog at the property, who was not part of the RSPCA investigation, was taken into the care of the police.

Sentencing |
Williamson: 23-week custodial, suspended for two years; 30-day rehabilitation requirement.
Warren: six-week custodial, suspended for 12 months; 25 days of rehabilitation.
£154 surcharge each.
Both defendants were banned from keeping animals for 10 years.

ITV News
Liverpool Echo
St Helens Star

Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside: Alan Mee

CONVICTED (2023) | Alan Mee, born 15 November 1961, of of 63, Larch Avenue, Newton-le-Willows WA12 8JF – took tawny owls from the wild and kept them in filthy cages.

Wild bird trapper Alan Mee from Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside
Alan Mee

Alan Mee was fined and disqualified from keeping birds after officers from Cheshire Police seized wild owls that were being kept in unsuitable conditions at his home.

Mee pleaded guilty to three counts of failing to take reasonable steps to ensure the needs of an animal, and two counts of possessing a wild bird.

The tawny owls had no access to fresh water, an adequate enclosure size, or a clean food ledge.
The tawny owls had no access to fresh water, an adequate enclosure size, or a clean food ledge.

On 20 June, 2022, Cheshire Police’s Rural Crime Team, Merseyside Police, RSPCA, and Natural England executed a warrant as a result of information relating to wild birds in the Cheshire area.

Cheshire Police led on the warrant at Mee’s address where three tawny owls were located, two of which were suspected to have been taken from the wild.

All three owls were seized due to the conditions they were being kept in, which included having dirty water, no feeding area, and the aviary being too small.

Sentencing | fine and court costs to the value of £823. Disqualified from keeping birds for five years (expires July 2028).

Manchester Evening News
BBC News

Haydock, Merseyside: Craig Lee

CONVICTED (2023) | Craig A Lee, born 20 April 1982, of 376 West End Road, Haydock, St Helens WA11 0AY – fatally injured his elderly dog after kicking and punching her before attacking her with a metal pole

Dog killer Craig Lee from Haydock, St Helens, Merseyside. Image source: Facebook
Dog killer Craig Lee aka “Crazy Craig” from Haydock in the Borough of St Helens, Merseyside

Lee, who calls himself “Crazy Craig”, kicked 12-year-old springer spaniel Carly so hard his shoe came off. He then beat the petrified dog repeatedly around the head and body with the pole, causing unsurvivable injuries. The wounded dog was taken to a vet and put to sleep.

Victim Carly. The elderly dog  suffered catastrophic injuries at the hands of her evil owner, Craig Lee from Haydock, St Helens
Victim Carly. The elderly dog suffered catastrophic injuries at the hands of her evil owner

Lee’s attack on Carly was witnessed by his carer Ceri Pickering.

The court heard that Ms Pickering would regularly see Lee become violent towards Carly, shouting at the dog and raising his fists.

On one visit she watched him punch Carly in the face. She said the dog would urinate in terror any time Lee came towards her.

Dog killer Craig Lee from Haydock, St Helens, Merseyside. Image source: Facebook

On July 10, 2022, police contacted Ms Pickering with welfare concerns for Lee. She arrived at the address to find him in bed. No food or water had been provided for Carly so Ms Pickering tended to her.

Carly urinated as Lee approached her and he reacted by kicking her in the head, losing a shoe in the process.

The dog yelped in pain and urinated again.

Dog killer Craig Lee from Haydock, St Helens, Merseyside. Image source: Facebook

Lee went to the kitchen and returned with a metal pole, saying “watch this now” and thrashed the dog over and over again.

Ms Pickering tried to get between Lee and Carly and was also hit with the pole although she said this had not been deliberate.

She managed to get the pole off Lee and called the police after Lee told her he would “stab” the dog if she left.

Ms Pickering agreed to look after Carly who was described as having “glazed eyes” and being “unable to walk”.

Veterinary examination showed that Carly had suffered internal injuries and brain damage from which she could not recover. There was no other option but to put her to sleep.

Dog killer Craig Lee from Haydock, St Helens, Merseyside. Image source: Facebook

On August 1, 2022, Lee visited Ms Pickering’s address after sending her a series of menacing text messages, one of which said it was “payback time”.

Lee began “violently kicking the door” saying he would “smash up the house” and calling Ms Pickering a “grass”.

She described being so scared that she locked her 11-year-old daughter in the bathroom before contacting the police.

On arrest, Lee was heard to tell officers that he “didn’t care” about going to prison because “Altcourse is like a holiday”.

The court heard that Lee had 13 previous convictions for 16 offences.

Lee pleaded guilty to three counts of causing unnecessary suffering to an animal and one of intimidating a witness,

Dog killer Craig Lee from Haydock, St Helens, Merseyside. Image source: Facebook

In mitigation, Lee’s solicitor told the court that Carly was already poorly with cancer and end-stage kidney disease. He said it had been agreed that her death had not been solely caused by Lee’s vicious assault.

He described Lee as suffering from a “psychotic episode” brought on by “drinking to excess” and added that the defendant had a long history of mental health difficulties.

He added Lee had “felt betrayed” by Ms Pickering contacting the police and that their relationship was “not a supportive one and they were not on the best of terms”.

Recorder Eric Lamb, said the defendant’s behaviour had been “violent and abusive”.

He added: “The twilight years of that animal were made entirely miserable,”

Sentencing | one-year prison sentence, suspended for two years. Five year restraining order; six months of alcohol treatment; 25 days of rehabilitation activity. No mention of a ban.

St Helens Star

Newton-le-Willows, Merseyside: Anthony Campbell

CONVICTED (2021) | badger baiter Anthony Campbell of Bank Street, Newton-le-Willows WA12 9NS – failed to treat the facial injuries of a dog he forced into vicious animal fights.

Bloodthirsty thug Anthony Campbell made terrier Millie 'fight badgers' and left her in agony with untreated facial injuries.
Bloodthirsty thug Anthony Campbell made terrier Millie ‘fight badgers’ and left her in agony with untreated facial injuries.

Campbell was banned from keeping pets after his dog – a Patterdale terrier named Millie – was found with severe facial injuries and scarring. He had not taken her to the vet for treatment or pain relief.

RSPCA officers joined Merseyside Police who executed a warrant, under the Protection of Badgers Act, at Campbell’s address in Newton-le-Willows on November 13, 2020.

RSPCA inspectors Anthony Joynes and Andrew Harris discovered four dogs on the property, including Millie.

Inspector Joynes told the court: “Millie was quite apprehensive in demeanour but yet pleasant and exhibited no aggressiveness.

“She had severe scars on her face, chin, lower jaw, neck, and front legs, which I noted.

“I could see and feel the remaining traces of scabs on and around the scarred area, indicating that wounds had been there until recently.”

Millie
Millie

Campbell claimed Millie was attacked by another dog while they were out ratting. He stated she’d been given antibiotics, but couldn’t say who had attended to her wounds.

Millie’s injuries were inspected by a member of the RSPCA’s Special Operations Unit, which is responsible for investigating serious and organized animal crime, such as badger baiting and wildlife crimes.

In his statement, the Special Ops investigator said: “The dog was exhibiting injuries to its lower jaw and forelegs.

“These injuries suggested to me that the dog had just been in close combat with a badger. The lower jaw damage was typical of those done by badgers, in my opinion.”

Millie also experienced “degloving injuries,” which are injuries in which a significant chunk of skin and the layer of soft tissue beneath it partially or totally rips from the body.

Campbell was sentenced at Wigan Magistrates’ Court on December 16 and had previously pleaded guilty to cause unnecessary suffering to a protected animal on November 13, 2020.

Millie remained in RSPCA care while the investigation was ongoing but will now look for a loving new home.

Sentencing: community order including an eight-week curfew; £750 in costs and a victim surcharge. Disqualified from keeping all animals for life.

Liverpool Echo

St Helens, Merseyside: Leon Robinson

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Robinson pictured during his appearance at Liverpool Magistrates Court

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

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

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

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

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

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

Liverpool Echo

St Helens, Merseyside: Lisa Walker

CONVICTED (2021) | illegal dog seller Lisa Walker, born c. 1979, of The Caravan Park, Sherdley Road, St Helens WA9 5DH

Lisa walker with husband Jimmy Price

Lisa Walker, a traveller, was estimated to have made £55,000 in just a few months from selling puppies. The mother-of-five admitted carrying out an activity without a licence and also engaging in unfair commercial practice.

Walker sold French bulldogs and Cockapoos for up to £2,800 a puppy after advertising them online. But she didn’t have a licence despite the fact she gave the “false impression” she had a legitimate business.

Walker was prosecuted by Animal Protection Services, after the charity investigated the unlicensed sale of puppies in Wirral.

She was not prosecuted for animal cruelty.

Walker and Price during the former’s recent court appearance

Walker was accompanied to court by husband James ‘Jimboy’ Price, who was prosecuted for animal cruelty in 2019 after ‘accidentally’ dragging a French bulldog to her death behind a trailer.

Animal Protection Services also recently prosecuted Walker’s in-laws and fellow puppy dealers David Price, 33, and Amos Price, 72, for selling puppies without a licence. The pair were fined and given a two-year ban on trading in dogs.

Sentencing | 12-month community order, with a three-month home curfew from 9pm to 6am daily. Banned from dealing in dogs for a year (expired July 2022).

Liverpool Echo

St Helens, Merseyside: Rachel Young

CONVICTED (2021) | illegal puppy trader Rachel Price Young, born 22 October 2001, of 93 Newton Road, St Helens WA9 2HZ

Illegal puppy dealer Rachel Young

Young, who has links to the travellers site in Sherdley Road, St Helens, was prosecuted following investigations into the unlicensed sale of puppies across Merseyside.

The proceedings against her were brought by Animal Protection Services, a charity which investigates and prosecutes organised animal cruelty.

Young admitted carrying out an activity without a licence and also engaging in unfair commercial practice .

Illegal puppy dealer Rachel Young

She was fined £300 and ordered to pay a £250 contribution to prosecution costs. She also received a two-year ban on dealing in dogs (expires April 2023).

Liverpool Echo

St Helens, Merseyside: Daryn Devine

CONVICTED (2021) | Daryn Devine, who is also known as Daryn Davies, born 30 November 1992, of Drybeck Grove, St Helens WA9 3WG – left a dog suffering in pain for six years with a severe ear infection

Dog abuser Daryn Devine from St Helens, Merseyside, UK
Daryn Devine failed to get veterinary attention for his dog which left her suffering with a chronic ear infection for SIX years.

Daryn Devine’s dog Angel needed urgent medical treatment after he neglected her and left her in a sorry state.

A senior clinician at Greater Manchester Animal Hospital who examined the American bulldog described her ears as “the most severe examples of chronic pinnal thickening and narrowing of the ear canals I have seen in my 10 years as a veterinary surgeon”.

Angel was in pain while living in filthy surroundings (bottom right) but has recovered well in the RSPCA'S care
Angel was in pain while living in filthy surroundings (bottom right) but has recovered well in the RSPCA’S care

She added: “I imagine the dog had been suffering with ear pain for years, on and off due to repeated flare ups, which were either not reported to a vet in a timely manner or left to continue when veterinary advice was frankly ignored.”

Devine, who lived in Liverpool for a time, pleaded guilty to one animal welfare offence when he appeared before magistrates.

Angel's ear infection
Angel was suffering a painful ear infection which went untreated for several years

RSPCA Inspector Caren Goodman-James went to Devine’s home address on October 30 and was invited into the property by a woman who said she was looking after the dog while Devine was in prison.

When Caren arrived the garden was covered in rubbish and faces, and Devine’s home was strewn with litter.

While there she observed Angel and could see how she regularly shook her head and would rub her head against the sofa.

Her right ear was inflamed and looked hard and solid. Her other ear was inflamed and red, she also had red around her muzzle. Her claws were long, overgrown and folding back under her foot with all four of her feet inflamed and red.

She told the woman that the dog was in need of urgent veterinary attention and the woman agreed to allow Caren to take Angel for treatment at the RSPCA’s Greater Manchester Animal Hospital.

Staff at the hospital were very concerned for Angels’ poor health but in their care she responded well to treatment.

They were also able to access her clinical records from a vet she was registered with in Liverpool and found she had a long history of ear and skin infections which were first noted six years before in 2014.

The notes also showed how Angel had a stent placed in her badly infected ears to open them up for medication two weeks later.

Dog abuser Daryn Devine from St Helens, Merseyside, UK

But Angel was not presented at the vets again until three months later causing her ear canal to be more thickened. Leaving the stents in place for that length of time would also have caused her severe discomfort.

Her clinical notes show follow-up veterinary appointments were also ignored.

Caren said: “The owner was aware that Angel had severe ear problems but left her with the worsening condition rather than taking her for treatment. There is never an excuse not to seek veterinary help for a pet.

“Sadly she was left in this suffering state for six years and it must have been awful for her to have this constant aggravation.

“She was really subdued and very sorry for herself when we first took her on but now she is really happy and bouncy – it just goes to show how a bit of TLC can make all the difference.”

Sentencing: jailed for 12 weeks. 10-year ban on keeping dogs.

Liverpool Echo

St Helens, Merseyside: Ryan Barr

CONVICTED (2021) | serial domestic abuser Ryan Stephen Barr, born 26 March 1996, of Four Acre Lane, Clock Face, St Helens, an unemployed actor using the stage name Romeo Barr – forced his girlfriend to watch as he beat her dog

Serial domestic abuser and dog beater Ryan/Romeo Barr

Out-of-work actor Barr, who claims (falsely) to have appeared in TV shows Hollyoaks and Waterloo Road, subjected a young Liverpool student to “disgusting” abuse during which he attacked her beloved pet dog while forcing her to watch.

Barr was not prosecuted for animal cruelty and the fate or condition of the dog was not reported.

Liverpool Crown Court heard the pair’s relationship developed quickly but things soon “deteriorated”.

The prosecutor told the court: “The defendant would become aggressive in drink, call her names such as ‘slag’, spit on her and throw things around. This behaviour then began to develop even when the defendant was not in drink.”

Failed actor Ryan 'Romeo' Barr subjected a young woman and her dog to horrific violence

The court heard he was “jealous and controlling”, didn’t want her to go out with friends or attend university, became “angry and moody”, monitored her phone calls and sometimes “took her phone off her, smashing it”.

The victim recalled Barr kicking her to the face as she bent to pick up a towel, after ice cold water was thrown over her while she took a shower, and when she became distressed, he said: “I don’t even feel bad for you crying.”

The prosecutor said the victim described being “hit with a hairbrush or remote control, having her hair pulled, him stubbing out cigarettes on her back or her neck when she was asleep, and an occasion when bleach was poured on her and she described it taking days to remove the smell from her body”.

Failed actor Ryan 'Romeo' Barr subjected a young woman and her dog to horrific violence
Failed actor Ryan ‘Romeo’ Barr subjected a young woman and her dog to horrific violence

The prosecutor added: “He would also hit their dog that they shared and make her watch.”

The final attack came on July 4, 2018, when the victim went to a nightclub in Liverpool.

The prosecutor said: “The defendant saw her, spat at her and bit her jaw, followed the complainant back to the flat where she was staying at university and security staff made him leave.”

She said Barr also “made her take out a number of loans” and after the relationship ended, “bombarded” her with texts and calls, “some apologetic declaring his love for her, others abusive, using words regularly like slut”.

Barr, who admitted controlling and coercive behaviour, was previously convicted of common assault against the same victim.

He received a community order on May 17, 2018 and was then twice convicted of failing to comply with its requirements.

Serial domestic abuser and dog beater Ryan/Romeo Barr pictured in December 2022. Picture: Facebook.
Ryan/Romeo Barr pictured in December 2022

Barr’s lawyer told the court her client realised he needed help and his guilty pleas spared his victim having to give evidence at a trial.

She said jailing him would “do nothing to address the risk of future offending” and the report found his community order had a “positive effect” in the two years since, meaning there was “a realistic prospect of rehabilitation”.

She said Barr was awaiting a DBS check to start a new job with Amazon.

The lawyer said he lived with his nan due to “trauma” experienced as a child and she was dependent on his care.

Serial domestic abuser and dog beater Ryan/Romeo Barr

Judge Menary said some of the violence was “particularly nasty” and Barr was “jealous for no good reason”.

He said: “Much of the relationship was marked by appalling and disgraceful behaviour on your part.

“You were overbearing towards her, abusive, threatening, violent.

“You abused her financially in terms of taking out unnecessary and excessive loans, which plainly she has now been saddled with.

“The aggression and violence towards her was at times particularly unpleasant, involving for example stubbing a cigarette on her neck, or pouring bleach on her.”

He told Barr it wasn’t surprising “she is a changed person because of her experience with you”.

However, the judge said Barr hadn’t offended since, was still young, had a new job and his nan relied on his support.

Failed actor Ryan 'Romeo' Barr subjected a young woman and her dog to horrific violence

Judge Menary said Barr’s behaviour needed to be further addressed by the Probation Service, adding: “What they’ve done is already bearing fruit. I hope that carries on.”

He handed Barr 15 months in jail, suspended for 18 months, a 20-day Rehabilitation Activity Requirement and 150 hours of unpaid work.

The judge ordered him to pay £500 in compensation to the victim and imposed a two-year restraining order.

Liverpool Echo


Additional Information

Barr’s online bio describes him as ‘CEO’ of a clothing company called MUSÉ London. The business’s now defunct Instagram page, which had just four followers, hadn’t been updated for several months. Its website has also disappeared and Facebook profile deactivated.

On 26 January 2021 national newspaper The Daily Star revealed that Ryan Barr is a fantasist whose entire acting career was fabricated.