Tag Archives: Stockton-on-Tees

Billingham, County Durham: Thomas Hardy

CONVICTED (2024) | Thomas Hardy, born 13 April 1992, of 48 Prior Court, Billingham TS23 3PL – for two counts of animal abuse involving blunt force trauma, physical violence and intimidatory behaviour towards two Cockapoos.

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.

Sickening CCTV footage from Prior Court, Billingham, captured Thomas Hardy inflicting a litany of abuse on two terrified dogs.

One clip showed Hardy repeatedly punching a tan-coloured Cockapoo in the head, before placing her in a stranglehold, compressing her chest between his legs and swinging her around by the neck.

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.

Further footage showed the same dog cowering from Hardy and trying to run before he grabs her by the scruff and lifts her off the floor. He places his free hand around the dog’s throat and carries her swinging in front of him.

She is then thrown into a lift and collides with the back of it before Hardy kicks her under the chin and blocks the security camera.

In a third clip filmed 10 days later Hardy is seen with a brown male Cockapoo. The dog is initially wagging his tail as he follows Hardy. He is grabbed by the neck as the defendant violently puts a lead on him before being dropped to the floor and yanked off his front feet. His tail stops wagging and he is observed acting submissively.

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.

An RSPCA inspector visited Hardy’s flat with police officers on August 2, 2023,. Due to animal welfare concerns, entry to the property was forced after there was no reply.

In written evidence to the court, the RSPCA inspector said: “Inside the property was a light brown Cockapoo type dog, she was very nervous and cowering down.

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.

“The flat the dog was living in was very unkempt and smelt of excrement and had faeces littered around.

“The dog was seized by the police and placed into the care of the RSPCA and I put her in my vehicle.”

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.

In written evidence to the court the vet who examined the female dog and viewed the CCTV footage, said: “The individual in the videos is clearly seen to hit, choke, kick and throw the tan cockapoo.

“There is no reason to treat any animal in this way. The dog will have suffered physical pain and in addition showed clear signs of emotional distress.”

The vet said Hardy had inflicted pain and fear on both dogs and they had suffered unnecessarily as a result.

Hardy pleaded guilty to the charges.

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.

Speaking after the conclusion of the case, RSPCA Chief Inspector Mark Gent said: “The video footage of these dogs being abused by Hardy multiple times was very difficult to watch. It’s hard to understand how someone can treat animals with such contempt and cruelty, and we will never know, as the defendant refused to be interviewed about it. We’d sincerely like to thank the police and the security staff for their assistance in this case which has been upsetting for everyone involved.”

The female cockapoo was looked after at a private boarding facility on behalf of the RSPCA and has since been happily rehomed.

The offence was deemed serious enough to warrant a prison sentence. However, it was suspended given Hardy’s admission of guilt.

Sentencing | twelve-week custodial, suspended for 24 months, for each charge; thinking skills programme; £600 costs and £154 victim surcharge. Disqualified from dealing or participating in keeping any animals for 12 years.

Northern Echo
TeessideLive


Additional Information

Following Hardy’s conviction, the Daily Mail spoke with two of his neighbours with one telling the newspaper that the two dogs he attacked belonged to his boss.

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.

The neighbour added that he had “never seen Thomas fight”.

A second neighbour said he was ‘shocked’ to hear about the case as Hardy is a good neighbour.

Prosecution of violent dog abuser Thomas Hardy from Billingham, County Durham.
“Good neighbour” Thomas Hardy from Billingham

He said: ‘I didn’t hear anything about the attack but I knew that he had a dog at one point.

‘I’m shocked to hear about the attack. I know he has his problems and that he had his problems.

‘He is a little bit anti-authority.

‘But, when you meet him and you know him that isn’t the person I know.

‘He is a good neighbour. He doesn’t have loud parties and barely has anyone over.’

Daily Mail

Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham: Raymond Pearce

CONVICTED (2024) | Raymond James Pearce, born c. 1981 , of Brierville Road, Stockton on Tees TS19 0JR – left a pony in great pain with a rope lodged two inches into his neck.

Animal abuser Raymond Pearce from Stockton on Tees, County Durham. Photo: Facebook.

Pearce was found guilty in his absence of animal cruelty offences in relation to a piebald cob named Marshall, who was found covered in dry blood with a tether embedded two inches deep in his flesh.

Raymond Pearce's pony Marshall pony was found covered in dry blood with a tether embedded two inches deep in his flesh.

RSPCA prosecutor Andrew Bousfield said the pony was being tethered with a narrow rope which had worn into his neck causing an infected wound.

Mr Bousfield said veterinary evidence showed the injury had been infected for at least four days and was two inches deep.

Field officer Seema Ritson, from World Horse Welfare, attended a green space in Norton, County Durham, after becoming aware of the pony.

Giving evidence, she told the court Marshall was being kept on poor grazing land and smelt of “rotting flesh”.

She said: “As he walked past me I got a really bad smell. It was a smell of rotting flesh I knew straight away there was something wrong.

“I could see a very thin rope around his neck. I could see straight away there was dried blood and yellow puss. All the mane was matted. The smell was like a dead animal.”

Raymond Pearce's pony Marshall pony was found covered in dry blood with a tether embedded two inches deep in his flesh.
The pony was found covered in dry blood with a tether embedded two inches deep in his flesh

Ms Ritson said she could not see any food or water for Marshall and confirmed there was insufficient grass for the pony to graze on.

She reported the animal to the RSPCA and later that day Marshall’s owner, Raymond Pearce, arrived at the scene.

Ms Ritson said Pearce tried to pull the rope out of the pony’s neck. “I immediately asked him to stop because the rope was embedded into the pony’s neck,” she said.

“Even when I went to touch his neck he moved away so he knew it was sore. I asked him not to touch it because without pain relief that would have been extremely painful.

“He wouldn’t stop.”

She told the court she saw him try and pull the rope out of the pony’s neck at least three or four times.

RSPCA inspector Steph Baines also confirmed she witnessed Pearce do this at the scene and said she could smell the pony’s injury before she got to the animal.

She said: “I smelt the pony before I got to him.

“When the owner first arrived he was quite agitated. He said he was happy for us to get treatment for the horse.”

RSPCA prosecution of Raymond Pearce, a horse abuser from Stockton on Tees.

The court heard Inspector Baines interviewed Pearce and he told her he’d come back from a two-week course in Manchester and left the pony in the care of his former brother-in-law. However, giving evidence in court his ex brother-in-law said this was untrue and branded the allegation a “p*** take”.

He said the last time he looked after Marshall was around three years ago and denied he was asked to care for the horse. Pearce’s sister also gave evidence and said it was untrue that he attended a course in Manchester.

Animal abuser Raymond Pearce from Stockton on Tees, County Durham. Photo: Facebook.

The defendant himself did not show up for the trial and his barrister withdrew from the case.

The hearing went ahead in his absence and he was found guilty of four counts of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal.

He failed to ensure adequate or reasonable daily care or supervision leading to an untreated infected wound of the neck.

He used an unsafe and inappropriate tethering leading to an embedded rope neck wound.

He failed to provide prompt or adequate professional veterinary care and attention.

Finally, he failed to take steps to ensure the needs of the pony were met.

The court heard Marshall is currently in the care of the RSPCA and has made a full recovery.

Sentencing | 12-week prison sentence suspended for 12 months; £780 costs and a £154 victim surcharge. Banned from owning all animals except birds for 10 years.

TeessideLive

Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham: Joe Timbs

CONVICTED (2023) | Joseph Timbs, born May 2003, of Dovecot Street, Stockton-on-Tees TS18 1HN – abandoned a bearded dragon with no heating, light, water or food in a flea-infested flat.

Animal abuser | Stockton man Joe Timbs left his bearded dragon with no heating, food or water in a filthy, flea-infested flat. Image: Facebook
Stockton man Joe Timbs left his bearded dragon with no heating, food or water in a filthy, flea-infested flat.

The exotic pet known as Spike was emaciated and could have been left for TWO months in the flat after his heartless owner, Joe Timbs, moved out. Spike was “pale and very underweight”. He was in a collapsed state with his muscles “wasting away”.

The RSPCA visited the property in November 2022 to carry out an animal welfare check after receiving a report from a concerned member of the public.

Stockton man Joe Timbs; bearded dragon  was left with no heating, food or water in a filthy, flea-infested flat
Spike’s poor condition suggested he had been suffering for two months. Image: RSPCA

RSPCA inspector Kirsty Keogh-Laws said: “When I arrived at the property, no-one answered the door. I called Mr Timbs who told me that he had moved out a couple of weeks ago, but had left his pet bearded dragon – named Spike – there. I was very concerned for the welfare of the abandoned animal.

“When the landlord’s agent let me into the property to check on the bearded dragon, it seemed darker and colder inside than it was outside as there was no light or heating. Once the power was switched on, I found the little animal in a vivarium.

“There was no food or water available, the flat was infested with fleas and there was an open box of live locusts loose in the property. Poor Spike appeared pale and very underweight – I could easily see his hips, ribs and spine and I could also make out the bone structure of his head. His eyes were almost closed and at that point, I believed he was dead.

“He felt very cold, but miraculously, when I touched him, he did slightly open his eyes, so I rushed him to a vet.”

Animal abuser | Stockton man Joe Timbs left his bearded dragon with no heating, food or water in a filthy, flea-infested flat. Image: Facebook

The vet thoroughly examined Spike and found him in very poor condition; he had collapsed and was emaciated – weighing only 160g (5.6oz). She reported that the animal’s muscles were wasting away with the bones of the skull, spine, pelvis and tail clearly visible and that Spike could have been suffering for two months.

The little reptile was admitted to the veterinary surgery for intensive care and was placed under a heat lamp, rehydrated and fed. After five days, he had improved and his weight had increased to 260g (9.2oz) and after 12 days he had reached a healthy 320g (11.3oz), so Spike was ready to be moved to a rehoming centre.

Stockton man Joe Timbs; bearded dragon  was left with no heating, food or water in a filthy, flea-infested flat

Inspector Keogh-Laws added: “It was touch and go for Spike but he responded well to the expert care he received. Happily, after he was transferred to Reptilia – a specialist exotics rehoming centre – he found his forever home.

“This rescue had a happy ending, but it could have been very different. Abandoning an animal is never acceptable and should never be an option. We do understand that people’s circumstances may change, but if anyone is struggling to cope with their pet, we would urge them to reach out for help from experts, friends or family, or charities.”

In court, Timbs pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to Spike and was given a community sentence and three-year ban on owning any animal.

Sentencing | 18-month community order with 150 hours unpaid work, 20 rehabilitation activity requirement days; £114 victim surcharge cost. Banned from keeping any animal for three years (expires May 2026).

Northern Echo
TeessideLive

Eaglescliffe, County Durham: Scott Marshall

CONVICTED (2022)| Scott Marshall, born c. 1981, of 75 Emsworth Drive, Eaglescliffe, Stockton-on-Tees TS16 0NP – beat a Labrador puppy after sexually assaulting her owner.

Pervert Marshall was handed a community order after pleading guilty to sexually assaulting a woman and causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal. after a night out in Norton in October 2021.

Marshall knew the victim and began chatting to her in a pub before saying he’d walk her home. The prosecution said he then asked if she wanted go back to his flat to see his guitars and she agreed and took her five-month-old Labrador pup.

The pair arrived at 12.40am and the woman said as soon as she arrived she regretted the decision. A statement heard in court read: “Now I think about it his behaviour was a bit weird and I regretted it straight away but didn’t want to be rude.”

The pair sat on the sofa drinking and chatting before he tried to kiss her but she rejected his advances. The court heard he then grabbed her and put one hand on her breast before she pulled back and pushed him away.

The prosecutor told the court: “She said he then asked her to stay over and she said she didn’t want to. She wanted to escape the situation and went onto the balcony for a cigarette. He jumped up and locked the door behind her. The defendant then sat next to the dog and grabbed it by the throat for 30 to 40 seconds.

“The defendant hit the dog three times with an open palm. He kept saying he was going to steal the dog and keep it. He came to the window screaming and shouting saying he was going to push her over the balcony.”

The woman was screaming as he beat her dog alerting a neighbour who called the police and officers arrived shortly after. The witness described being awoken by someone screaming ‘help’ and ‘call the police’.

She said the screams were so loud she thought someone was planning to jump from the balcony. Following arrest, the defendant was interviewed and made no comment but pleaded guilty at the first hearing.

Neil Taylor, mitigating, said Marshall showed clear remorse and said the offences were not pre-planned but what was a ‘pleasant evening became distressing.’

Mr Taylor also said the puppy did not require veterinary treatment.

He said: “He clearly has a problem with alcohol and it got the better of him. He has shown remorse and is working giving something back to the community. The incident was not pre planned and he accepts what happened was wrong and he shouldn’t have done it. He is currently residing with his parents after threats were made at his home address.”

Sentencing | 18-month community order with 30 rehabilitation activity requirement days. He must also complete the horizon programme – an intervention delivered to men who have a sexual conviction; 30 hours of unpaid work; £285. No mention of a ban.

Gazette Live


Update | October 2023

Animal abuser and paedophile Scott Marshall from Eaglescliffe, County Durham

Marshall was sentenced to 14 months in prison after being caught with nearly 2,500 indecent images of children. The defendant pleaded guilty to the offence and will be placed on the Sex Offender Register.

He was initially charged with four counts of making indecent images of children after the Sex Offender Management Unit (SOMU) seized two devices from his home which contained nearly 2,500 indecent images of children.

Speaking of the sentence, investigating officer, Detective Constable Barbara Johnson from SOMU said: “We welcome the sentence handed to Marshall today, he is an individual who has repeatedly committed offences of this nature and he has now been given a prison sentence to pay for his crimes.

“The images located on his devices are real children who have been subject to horrific abuse, and individuals like Scott Marshall who access disturbing images and videos contribute to the ongoing abuse that these children face, and it is unforgiveable.”

TeessideLive

Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham: Cain Lambert

CONVICTED (2022) | serial wildlife criminal Cain Anthony Lambert, born 23 August 1987 of 5 Dunoon Close, Stockton-on-Tees TS19 0LH – breached a lifetime ban on keeping animals.

In November 2013 Lambert was jailed for 24 weeks and given a lifetime ban after filming two dogs tearing into a fox, which could be heard yelping in pain.

In the sickening footage filmed in March 2011, Lambert was seen pulling one of the dogs off the fox, then allowing both to chase it before they caught and attacked the animal again.

John Ellwood, prosecuting for the RSPCA, said the evidence appeared to show that Lambert was “encouraging the dogs” when the attack happened. At the time Lambert was already subject to a suspended sentence for dealing in Class A drugs.

But Lambert claimed he could not control the dogs – which he had arranged to look at to buy for ferreting.

He said a man from Newcastle had brought the dogs down and they travelled to a farm in Northallerton. It was while they were there that the fox appeared and the attack happened.

Keith Thomas, defending, said Lambert was now a different person – having since become a dad.

“He is a very different young man. He is full of remorse and shame for what happened.”

n October 2I021, however, Lambert was found with three lurcher-type dogs at his home in a blatant breach of his disqualification order. The breaches came to light following a report of noise.

RSPCA Inspector Garry Palmer attended Lambert’s address, along with police officers. In the garden he discovered a pen with three male lurcher-type dogs – a dark brindle bull lurcher named Crash, a light brindle bull lurcher called Bully and a grey and white male lurcher called Ted.

Lambert has persecuted wildlife for many years. He is active on several Facebook ‘hunting’ groups where like-minded sickos exchange images of wild animals being hunted down and brutally killed.

The three dogs were taken into RSPCA care due to Lambert being in breach of his disqualification order. Investigations later revealed how he was caring for Bully at the time and the pet was returned to his cousin.

Inspector Palmer said: “I advised at the time that as he was banned from keeping animals the two other dogs would remain with the RSPCA while the animal welfare charity looked at a possible prosecution.”

The court heard how Lambert had owned two of the dogs for 17 months, between May 27, 2020 and October 29, 2021. He was looking after his cousin’s dog on October 28, 2021.

Lambert pleaded guilty to two counts of breaching a disqualification imposed after conviction.

In his defence, the court heard how Lambert found it difficult, after the ban, to not to have dogs.

Crash and Ted were rehabilitated in RSPCA care and have since been rehomed by the charity.

RSPCA Inspector Garry Palmer said: “We rely on the public to notify us of any breach of bans and I would always urge them to report matters like this to us so we can intervene.”

Sentencing | 18-month community order with 30 rehabilitation activity requirement days; 150 hours of unpaid work. £495 costs and charges. Lifetime ban from 2013 still applies.

Gazette Live

Hartlepool, County Durham: Thomas Wade

CONVICTED (2020) | Thomas Andrew Wade, born 02/03/1993, previously of Mellor Street, Stockton-on-Tees, but as of September 2020 living in an NHS care facility in Park Avenue, Hartlepool TS26 0DZ – subjected his pet cat to prolonged torture which included putting her into a hot oven and flushing her down the toilet

Animal torturer Thomas Wade now of Hartlepool
Thomas Wade aka ‘Evil Tom’ most recently of Hartlepool but with links to Stockton on Tees and Grimsby

Wade claimed in court he heard voices from a WWE wrestler named Kane before launching the attack on the cat, known as Sweetie. During her ordeal, which came after she apparently “disobeyed” her twisted owner, Sweetie was put in a hot oven, flushed in a toilet, strangled with a TV cord and thrown against walls.

Wade then made disturbing voice recordings of himself where he spoke in detail about carrying out the horrific abuse and proclaimed: “No one can be more evil than myself.”

Despite the sickening cruelty, Sweetie miraculously survived the ordeal, but was hospitalised with severe third degree burns.

Wade pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to an animal during his appearance at Teesside Magistrates’ Court.

Stuart Haywood, prosecuting, said loner Wade, who has learning difficulties and autism, received Sweetie as a gift from his sister as she thought it would be “good for him”.

The tabby was then given to Wade for a three week trial before possible adoption.

But on October 8, 2019, Wade went to his sister’s home and told her the cat “was not wanted anymore”.

Animal torturer Thomas Wade now of Hartlepool

Mr Haywood said his sister then went to Wade’s home where she “smelled a strong smell of burning”.

“The defendant was sitting on a settee and the cat was wet and breathing rapidly, he refused to say why,” he said.

He added that fur was then found in Wade’s oven. After more questions, Wade finally admitted what he had done, saying that it “felt good”.

His sister immediately notified the RSPCA and Sweetie was taken to a vet where she was found to be in a “terrible condition”.

She had sustained skin damage and “significant” third degree burns before being hospitalised.

The police soon became involved and Wade was arrested.

Rambling voice recordings were later discovered of Wade speaking about the abuse.

In the recordings, one of which was eight minutes long, he spoke in detail about attacking Sweetie.

In one sinister recording he said, “No one can be more evil than myself” and said he wanted to “rip out its tongue” after seeing her struggle while being “choke slammed”.

In another he referred to himself as “evil Tom”.

Animal torturer Thomas Wade now of Hartlepool

In police interview, Wade said he “threw her against four walls” and said he carried out the violence in part because he claimed he heard voice in his head from the WWE wrestling character, Kane, in his head.

Wade was also remorseless, telling officers “she had not suffered enough”.

He said he put the terrified cat in the oven “on high for five minutes” after throwing her against a wall and said he became infuriated at Sweetie for “disobeying” his orders for her not to go under his bed. The court heard that Wade had “no mental health” issues, but did have learning difficulties.

Matthew Agar, defending, said the incident was “shocking”, and said he “did not want to minimise” the offence.

He said it was his view Wade’s learning disability was a “contributing factor” and that he had serious concerns for him.

Mr Agar added that Wade was now aware of the severity of the offence and that he felt Wade had something like a “split-personality”.

He said that Wade had moved to Teesside from Grimsby and would “go weeks” without any other contact with people.

Sentencing Wade, district judge, Helen Cousins called him an “extremely dangerous man” and that she would liked to have “put him in prison for as long as I could”.

Sentencing: 18-week prison sentence, suspended for two years. Six months of mental health treatment. 30 rehabilitation activity days and 18-week hospital curfew. £440 costs. Banned from keeping pets for 10 years (expires 2030).

GazetteLive

Ingleby Barwick, Stockton-on-Tees: Kelly Henry

CONVICTED (2020) | Kelly Henry, born 10/01/1984 of Hatchlands Park, Ingleby Barwick TS17 5GT – for the prolonged ill-treatment of her elderly Labrador

Pictured is convicted animal abuser Kelly Henry from Ingleby Barwick, Stockton on Tees
Personal trainer Kelly Henry is banned from keeping animals for just five years

Self-employed fitness instructor Kelly Henry, who traded under the name Kelly Henry Signature Personal Training, pleaded guilty to cruelty towards her emaciated black Labrador, known as Shadow.

The ten-year-old dog, whom Henry had owned since she was a puppy, was found by the RSPCA in a “dreadful condition”, weighing just 16kg and having no body fat.

Police were called to Henry’s previous address in Eaglescliffe, Stockton, after an RSPCA inspector saw Shadow looking starved in the garden through slots in the fence. The inspector found two empty dog bowls.

Stuart Bennett, prosecuting, told the court the dog would have been “in pain and suffering weakness” due to malnutrition.

Mr Bennett estimated that this suffering would have lasted around four weeks but “only occurred due to neglect which had obviously been far longer”.

Henry claimed she had fed Shadow but admitted it “probably wasn’t enough”.

Pictured is convicted animal abuser Kelly Henry from Ingleby Barwick, Stockton on Tees

Shadow was also found to have cataracts, which Henry had dismissed as “glazed eyes” due to her age. Henry agreed that she should have taken the dog to the vet and said she hadn’t done so as she “didn’t want to look like a bad person”.

The prosecution said that Henry had bought two kittens whom she had taken to the vet regularly, adding that this was “difficult to comprehend”.

The court was shown a series of photographs as evidence of Henry’s neglect. These included photos of Shadow with a protruding rib cage and spine.

A probation service report described how Henry’s personal circumstances had changed after the collapse of her marriage. They said that her neglect of Shadow was “a result of her burying her head in the sand with everything else going on in her life”.

Henry expressed remorse for her actions and agreed that she could have cared for Shadow “a lot better”.

Danielle Hewitt, defending, said that Henry’s two children would “suffer if a custodial sentence were to be imposed”.

Sentencing: 12 weeks in custody suspended for 12 months. 25 days of rehabilitation activity. Ordered to pay £522 costs. Banned from keeping animals for five years. Deprivation order on Shadow and her two kittens.

TeessideLive

Stockton-On-Tees, County Durham: Nicola Poppleton

CONVICTED (2019) | Nicola Poppleton, born 26 March 1981, of Bridge House, Bridge Road, Stockton-on-Tees TS18 3AX – for the severe neglect of her pet dog, who was found with injuries including cigarette burns.

Vile animal abuser and perpetual drunk Nicola Poppleton from Stockton on Tees

Mother-of-six Nicola Poppleton, was drinking up to eight litres of cider a day while her cross-breed terrier named Buster suffered skin lesions, a severe ear infection and a jaw muscle condition.

Buster, victim of vile animal abuser and perpetual drunk Nicola Poppleton from Stockton on Tees

The dog was found by an RSPCA inspector in a flat in Hartington Road, in central Stockton, while Poppleton was “fighting in a drunken state” outside.

Poppleton had faced four separate charges relating to causing suffering to an animal which were found proved in absence when she failed to attend Teesside Magistrates’ Court the previous month.

Buster, victim of vile animal abuser and perpetual drunk Nicola Poppleton from Stockton on Tees

Stewart Haywood, prosecuting, told the court that the 10-year-old dog was found with a number of lesions consistent with cigarette burns.

He also stated that there was “muscle wastage to his head and he could barely open his jaw.”

The inspector was unable to speak to Poppleton at length as she “got into a fight with a group of people who were in a similar state.”

After further talks, Poppleton finally allowed Buster to be taken in by the RSPCA.

He was immediately taken to see a vet, who carried out tests and estimated Buster had been suffering for around three months.

The court heard Buster couldn’t fully open his mouth, meaning he could not regulate his body temperature correctly.

The vet gave him treatment, including pain killers but he was still only able to open his mouth about “three centimetres”.

He also had an ear infection, with the vet also believing he had injuries consistent with “cigarette burns.”

Despite the findings, it could not be determined if the burns were deliberate or accidental, Mr Haywood said.

Vile animal abuser and perpetual drunk Nicola Poppleton from Stockton on Tees

The court heard that Poppleton had “accepted ownership” of Buster and that she “didn’t know he was suffering.”

A probation report stated that Poppleton was “too drunk” to notice anything was wrong with her dog who she claimed she “loved.”

Neil Douglas, defending, told how his defendant acknowledged that she was not capable of caring for the animal at the time.

He said: “This was a lady of good character who had clearly looked after the dog in reasonable state for a number years.

“However it was her alcohol misuse which essentially caused her to lose the ability to look after the dog and very nearly herself.”

Sentencing | 12-month community order with an alcohol rehabilitation requirement; £480 in costs. Banned from owning animals for just five years (expires September 2024).

TeessideLive

Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham: Tom Black

CONVICTED (2019) | Thomas John Black, born 13 January 1995, of Laurel Road, Eaglescliffe, Stockton-on-Tees TS16 0BD – moved out of his house, leaving his pet cat behind

Tom Black from Stockton on Tees, County Durham abandoned his pet cat. Pic: Facebook

Black pleaded guilty to three offences under the Animal Welfare Act 2006 in a prosecution case brought by the RSPCA.

Black left a helpless cat alone in his filthy abandoned flat with no food or water

RSPCA inspector Clare Wilson said: “The house was filthy, with faeces and urine everywhere and rubbish strewn across every room.

“Cass had no access to food or water and, on top of both of these things, Cass had serious veterinary needs.

“Cass had previously suffered with seizures, which Black was aware of and was told needed treatment, but he moved out and left him behind in the property.”

Heartless Thomas John Black from Stockton-on-Tees has been banned from keeping animals for 10 years after abandoning his pet cat, Cass.
Thomas John Black abandoned Cass in an empty property, leaving her to starve to death.

In mitigation the court heard Black had been going through a difficult time and had moved back in with family.

Cass has now been signed over to the RSPCA and hopefully will now be able to be rehomed.

Tom Black from Stockton on Tees, County Durham abandoned his pet cat. Pic: Facebook

Inspector Wilson said: “I’m dealing with more and more abandonment cases like this one.

“Abandoning an animal in this way is completely unacceptable.

“If you cannot attend to your pet for whatever reason, you must make arrangements for a responsible person to care for them in your absence.”

Sentencing:
12-month community order, 25 rehabilitation days, ordered to pay £300 costs and an £85 victim surcharge. Disqualified from keeping animals for ten years.

Northern Echo

Stockton-on-Tees, County Durham: Courtney Layton and Ian Tait

CONVICTED (2018) | Courtney Marie Layton, born 15/04/1999, of Stockton-on-Tees TS19, and Ian David Tait, born 06/06/1973, of Dover Road, Stockton-on-Tees TS19 0JT –  left horses starving in deplorable conditions

Animal abusers: travellers Courtney Layton and Ian Tait from Stockton on Tees

Travellers Layton and Tait both pleaded guilty to animal neglect charges between March 11 and April 1, 2018.

Horses starved and neglected by travellers Courtney Layton and Ian Tait from Stockton on Tees

Their horses had been kept in shocking conditions at an allotments in Port Clarence, with one horse laying in thick mud and another so skinny an RSPCA inspector could feel his spine, ribs, pelvic bones and shoulder blades through his thick coat.

Horses were kept in hazaradous conditions by travellers Courtney Layton and Ian Tait from Stockton on Tees

John Ellwood, prosecuting on behalf of the RSPCA,  outlined the squalid conditions inspectors saw when they visited the allotment where the animals were found.

He said: “In the gaps and at the entrance to the make-shift stable there were exposed nails and wire which would present a hazard to the horses.

“While the inspector was on site Harley got his feet caught in a pallet and had to be released. There were no dry areas, no grass, no hay, no adequate shelter and no bedding.”

He added: “The entire allotment was thick with wet mud and faeces. There was lots of rubble, broken glass, wire and a long piece of barbed wire on the floor.”

All the animals were later seen by a vet who confirmed that the conditions the animals had been kept in were totally unsuitable for horses.

Horses starved and neglected by travellers Courtney Layton and Ian Tait from Stockton on Tees

“The vet’s opinion is that Blaze and Little Man had been starved to the point of emaciation and were clearly suffering,” Mr Ellwood added.

Blaze and Little Man belonged to Layton, while Dinky and Harley were Tait’s horses.

The court heard how attention was first drawn to the allotment when the pony Blaze was seen to be collapsed on the floor.

Horses starved and neglected by travellers Courtney Layton and Ian Tait from Stockton on Tees

Members of the public had been feeding him and alerted the RSPCA.

An inspector later found the pony lying in thick wet mud on his right side, making no effort to lift his head or stand up.

The court was told in mitigation that Layton had been heavily pregnant when the offence occurred and had struggled to go up to look after the horses each day.

Ian Tait and Courtney Layton leave Teesside Magistrates' Court after an appearance in connection with animal cruelty charges
Tait and Layton outside court

Danielle Hewitt, defending, said Layton, a mother-of-two, is a “vulnerable person” and “remorseful” for her actions.

The court was told she had been dealing with “a number of issues in her personal life” and that she has suffered with depression for as long as she can remember.

She added that the horses had only been kept at the allotments “temporarily”.

Discussing Tait, Ms Hewitt said he had only kept his horses at the allotment for one night.

After care from the RSPCA, the horses have made a full recovery and are now free from parasites. The two starved horses – Blaze and Little Man – have now reached a normal weight.

Sentencing: 
Layton was jailed for 18 weeks for causing unnecessary suffering to an animal.  She was also given a 12-week jail sentence for failing to meet the needs of the horses, which will run concurrently.

Tait was given a 12-week jail term for failing to meet the needs of the horses.

The pair were also disqualified from keeping animals for 10 years (expires August 2028).

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