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Showing posts with label rspca dog prosecution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rspca dog prosecution. Show all posts

Wednesday, 18 March 2009

RSPCA FOUNDER RICHARD MARTIN WILL TURN IN HIS GRAVE

A CURFEW, A 2 YEAR BAN, COMMUNITY SERVICE, THEIR PET TAKEN AWAY AND A FINE, BECAUSE THEIR DOG HAD FLEAS !
WHILST MUGGERS, LOUTS AND HOOLIGANS JUST GET ASBO'S AND ABC'S,
WHATS HAPPENING WITH THIS COUNTRY ?



A mother and son from Conniburrow have been banned from keeping dogs for two years after causing unnecessary suffering to a German Shepherd. Twenty-one-year-old Daniel Ward and his mother Tracey, 40, were sentenced at Milton Keynes Magistrates Court on Friday.
Both pleaded guilty to failing to provide adequate veterinary care to their dog called Brody at an earlier hearing.
Janita Patel, prosecutor, said RSPCA Inspector Dave Braybrooke was called to their address on Tuesday, August 5 last year after receiving allegations in relation to the dog.
He found Brody suffering from a severe flea allergy.
The defendants, who chose to represent themselves, said they had bought products to treat the flea infection.Daniel Ward, said he had used shampoo that takes a month to work. "You can't say I did not try anything," he said. "I had just lost my job and could not afford to take him to the vet."His hair started coming back then went away again. I didn't want to lose him, he was my dog."
Chair of Magistrates Tim Jenn, sentencing the pair, said: "We accept you did make efforts to treat the dog but it was ineffective. You should have taken it to the vet; it was obvious because of the stress it caused."
Daniel Ward was sentenced to 80 hours of community service and must pay £1,233.74 of boarding fees and £600 towards court costs. An order was made for the dog to remain in the RSPCA's care.

Tracey Ward will serve a curfew for eight weeks, during which she must stay at home between 8pm and 7am, and must pay £300 of court costs.Both are disqualified from owning or keeping dogs for two years.
Insp. Braybrooke said: "It goes to show that if you get treatments for your dog that aren't working then you must by all accounts get the animal to the vet.
http://www.mk-news.co.uk/mknews/DisplayArticle.asp?ID=400873

Tuesday, 13 January 2009

RSPCA THREATEN PROSECUTION, IF YOUR DOG WEARS A COAT !

As animal lovers see an increase in the use of dog coats, the RSPCA see an oppourtunity for prosecution.


The RSPCA has compared the practice to leaving dogs in cars during hot weather and warned that if people consistently allow their dogs to get too hot when wearing clothing they could face prosecution.

Owners and experts have also said that the growth of "canine couture" – dressing dogs in "fashionable" clothing – is demeaning to the animals and could even encourage bad behaviour.
Dog clothing has become a big business in recent years. Among the products now available are all-in-one trouser suits, which only leave the head and paws exposed, "jumpers", which cover the body and the front legs, and even "hoodies". Fancy dress designs, such as Elvis Presley-style jumpsuits and pirate costumes, are also available.
Designers, including Vivienne Westwood and Ben de Lisi, have also created dog accessories and clothing, while Harrods holds an annual fashion show for canine clothing, called Pet-a-Porter.
But experts say that, barring a few exceptions – such as very small dogs with short hair, thin breeds like greyhounds, or those bred for much warmer climates, like the Saluki – any form of clothing is unnecessary and impedes a dog's ability to regulate its own temperature.
Mark Johnston, from the British Small Animal Veterinary Association, said: "There are very few occasions when an animal needs a coat, even in the recent cold weather.
"Dogs have developed a very effective coat of their own, which will protect them from the elements. It is adjustable so they can raise the fur to control their temperature. Dressing them in a coat diminishes the animal's ability to regulate their own body temperature and could be detrimental if the animal gets too hot.
"Too high a temperature is more of a risk to the dog's health than too low a temperature. Clothing could also rub and cause sores and if the animal is wearing it for a long time, it could cause skin conditions. Fashion-wise, coats are pointless for dogs."
Helen Briggs, a spokeswoman from the RSPCA, added: "Under the Animal Welfare Act, you are obliged to provide appropriate conditions and environments for your dog. So if you are slapping a great big coat on it when it really doesn't need it, then that could cause it to suffer if it is overheating. It is the same as if you leave a dog in a car in hot weather.
"Some breeds have been bred to have less fur, so in some cases it is quite appropriate for a dog to wear a coat in very cold weather. But if an owner is just doing it for a fashion statement or because they think it is cool, I would question that. If people are worried that their dog might be cold, it is worth getting some advice from their vet to see if it is appropriate or not."


http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/howaboutthat/4214076/Animal-welfare-experts-hot-under-the-collar-over-dogs-in-coats.html

Saturday, 10 January 2009

RSPCA SPEND £12,000 ON PROSECUTION, AND THATS A CHEAP ONE !

ON THE SAME DAY AS THE RSPCA STATE THAT NO CHARGES WILL BE BROUGHT AGAINST PRINCE EDWARD FOR HITTING HIS DOG WITH A STICK,
THEY CROW ABOUT PROSECUTING MARTIN LIGHTFOOT FOR HITTING HIS DOG WITH HIS CRUTCHES.

DOUBLE STANDARDS OR WHAT !

RSPCA INSP DUNDERDALE

A Shropshire man who beat his dog with crutches has been banned from keeping animals for 10 years.
Martin John Lightfoot, from Whitchurch, was also given a three-year conditional discharge, told to hand over his two dogs to the RSPCA and ordered to pay £1,000 compensation and costs after admitting the offences before Market Drayton magistrates at court yesterday.
Animal welfare officials have welcomed the outcome after spending £12,000 to bring the prosecution.
Their comments come almost a year after 36-year-old Lightfoot was seen beating his dog Poppy, a boxer crossbreed, on January 24 last year at Pepper Street, Whitchurch.

Speaking outside court, RSPCA inspector Nayman Dunderdale (pictured) said: “I’m pleased the magistrates took the case so seriously.
“We’re pleased with the 10-year ban on keeping animals and want to thank the witnesses who helped.”

Lightfoot had been due to stand trial yesterday for causing unnecessary suffering to an animal, but he changed his plea to guilty.
His legal team argued that he was battling alcoholism and had not “seriously injured” Poppy in the incident.

Following the case Mr Dunderdale also hit out at Lightfoot for entering a guilty plea so late in the proceedings - allowing the charity’s costs to mount up.

“For us it’s not a question of the costs because we are prepared to take that on,” he said.
“If someone is cruel to animals it’s worth the cost to see them get a ban like this one.”

Friday, 19 December 2008

THE RSPCA SHOULD BE ASHAMED


I have just finished reading Bleak House. My favourite author is Jane Austen (favourite book, Emma – not Pride and Prejudice) and I am afraid I do not enjoy reading Dickens very much. I know his plots are wonderful and his characterisation incredible and appreciate the sections when the story moves forward but there are just too many unnecessary words. I know the reason for the dense, impenetrable and opaque verbiage (you can tell it is having an effect on my own style)but why did he not have the common sense to edit the novels after their publication in the weekly magazines and before they were published as books. Who has ever actually read the opening chapter of A Tale of Two Cities? It is a mountain of language, piled up into an impassable wall of words which quickly becomes not just futile but meaningless and empty. On the other hand, properly and sensitively edited, his work can be fantastic as can be appreciated in the current radio version of A Christmas Carol being read by David Jason on Radio 4.

However, to return to Bleak House, Angela has always said I should not comment on things I know nothing about and while I have usually replied that there is no point at my age of changing the habits of a lifetime, I did agree that I would stop criticising Charles D until I had actually read a complete book. So now I have and I am pleased to have done so although I found much of it very heavy going. But it was particularly interesting because it is his book that focuses most sharply on the workings of the legal system. It seems to me that there is a great deal in the truism that the more things change the more they stay the same. Both Dickens in Little Dorrit and Trollope in The Way We Live Now, write in considerable detail about the irresponsible activities of banks and bankers and it seems to me that great chunks of their plots and characters are still relevant today as evidenced by the current hedge fund scandal in the Untied States.
The law is no exception to these observations and these thoughts passed through my mind as I sat in a Crown Court this week, the activities of which, other than their length, would have done credit to Jarndyce v Jarndyce, the core of the plot of Beak House, in which a case in Chancery goes on for so long that every last penny of a valuable estate being challenged by competing claimants is absorbed by the lawyers so when it is finally resolved there is nothing left.
The case being heard is one in which I have been involved as an expert witness and was an appeal against a very questionable judgement by a Magistrates Court earlier this year in a case brought by the RSPCA.
I should explain at this point that the RSPCA is not one charity but many and while the small locally based organisations do excellent work in caring for and rescuing animals in their region everyone should be aware although they have ‘the name’ they are independent, separate organisations who have to fund themselves and receive nothing (yes – nothing!) from ‘head office’. If you leave money in your will to ‘the RSPCA’ (and most of its income comes from this source) it automatically goes to headquarters at Horsham when you pop your clogs: your local charity (other than the very few shelters which are directly controlled) will not receive a penny. So when I talk about the RSPCA, I am referring to ‘headquarters’ and their income of around £100m a year. Its main preoccupation seems to me just to generate publicity which will keep the charity in the forefront of the minds of people who love animals so that when their solicitor suggests bequests, they are the organisation which comes to mind.

In this case, a man had collected his two ten year old bitches from a kennel - which I have visited and can confirm is one of the best in the UK. One, it is suggested, may have been lethargic and had been off a food for a day or two. Having actually managed kennels I know that most dogs are healthy and behave normally and consequently you remember very little about them and their stay. If a dog is not behaving normally and/or shows signs of sickness you spot them quickly and do something about it. The kennel’s veterinary surgeon gave clear evidence that the kennel tended, if anything, to be over cautious and that if there was ever a problem dogs were taken in straight away and having been established for twenty years the kennel has an unblemished record. The bitches were brought out of the kennel when their owner came to collect them and one was quieter than usual but not showing any symptoms of illness. It’s hind quarters were wet but it was explained that she had apparently and inadvertently fouled herself and been bathed – entirely reasonably.
On his way home, the owner become concerned and told the Court that he had smelled urine. The dog had not urinated in the car (and I personally wonder whether he smelled the remains of disinfectant) and did not urinate at the veterinary surgery when he took the dog to his own vet two hours later. The young veterinary surgeon examined the bitch and diagnosed a likely pyometra for, by the time it arrived on his table there was some puss seeping from the vulva. The bitch was put on a drip and was successfully operated on the following day.

As you will know, a closed pyometra is extremely difficult to diagnose. It develops slowly, usually a few weeks after a season but shows no symptoms until the final few hours when it advances rapidly and can lead to sudden death. Owners have put their pet to bed last thing at night and come down in the morning to find the dog dead or dying having had no indication that anything was wrong other than, perhaps, she was a bit below par on the preceding day.

Given the quality of care at this establishment I am certain that had the bitch remained in the kennels for a few more hours the discharge would have been noticed and she would have been taken to their vet but the owner reported the matter to the RSPCA saying that the kennels had not properly cared for his dog. An inspector interviewed the owner and then turned up at the kennels, unannounced, and took witness statements from the owners and the manager. The kennels owners wanted to co-operate.
They did not realise that the RSPCA inspector had no rights to take statements and, in fact, the procedure was so poorly prepared that they were not acceptable to the Court. However, despite the facts set out above – an unfortunate coincidence in effect – the RSPCA decided to prosecute.
They got their headlines ‘ XXX kennels to be prosecuted by RSPCA’. On both occasions, had the whole process not been so distressing for those involved in the farce, I could almost feel sorry for the Barrister acting for the society. He had no evidence of any substance and spent hours (and I mean hours) repeating questions over and over again trying to get an admission on which he could hang some sort of case. In my evidence I was asked a number of questions about the 1963 Act, about the Model License Condition (which I helped to write) and the Animal Welfare Act. His point was that kennels had a responsibility to take a dog to a vet if it was ill. I agreed – of course they do. Unfortunately they was no evidence that the dog showed any symptoms of illness.
At the Magistrates Court hearing the kennel owners were exonerated but the kennel manager was found guilty by a magistrate sitting alone who during the two day hearing complained of a headache and insisted that she need to go home early.
Even in my layman’s view there was no case to answer and the evidence presented was both insubstantial and unsatisfactory: how she came to her conclusions is a mystery. Fortunately at the appeal, there was a ‘proper’ judge who was patient and fair, had a grasp of relevant evidence (none), was understanding and sympathetic to the distress of the kennel manager, was unbelievably reasonable in allowing what arguments there were to be put across, sensible in his assessment (although, I felt, was clearly frustrated by the determination of the RSPCA’s barrister to drag inconsequential arguments out until they were stretched beyond reason) and came to the conclusion that was blindingly obvious from the start, ruling that there was, in effect, no evidence of any value. He and his colleagues brought in a verdict of not guilty and awarded costs against the society.
In my view, the RSPCA should be ashamed of themselves, not just because of the misery caused by this action against hard working and innocent people but for the inevitable damage the media inflicted on the business by responding to the Society’s publicity machine as well as the waste of the enormous sum of money expended - which had been collected from ordinary people who believed they were contributing to an organisation which would use it to help animals in real distress.
Be assured this is one of many such actions.

Thursday, 27 November 2008

JUDGE CRITICISES RSPCA PROSECUTION

RSPCA INSPECTOR HAD AN AGGRESSIVE ATTITUDE

A judge has criticised the RSPCA for its handling of the prosecution of a Norwich couple accused of causing unnecessary suffering to their 24-year-old horse.
Gina and Martin Griffin appeared in court on 22 January, but district judge Philip Browning found them innocent, and said the "case could have been dealt with in a better and certainly more sympathetic way".
He ordered the RSPCA to pay the Griffins' costs.
The RSPCA claimed the horse, Florry, was too thin. But when the Griffins tried to explain that the horse had laminitis and was on restricted grazing, as recommended by their vet, the court was told the RSPCA inspector and vet refused to discuss the case with them.
The court heard that Mrs Griffin bought Florry as a three-year-old, but because of injury, the horse was never ridden, living as a companion to her other horses.
The RSPCA seized Florry on 2 October 2006, despite her vet Charlotte Mayers' insistence that the horse was well cared for.
In a statement to the court, Mrs Griffin claimed the RSPCA inspector had an "aggressive attitude".
"I felt extremely distressed and anxious," said Mrs Griffin, who has kept horses for 30 years and has her BHSAI.
Florry was also diagnosed with Cushing's disease while in the RSPCA's care. Cushing's can cause muscle wastage and the Griffins feel this was responsible in part for Florry's lack of condition. Florry is due to be returned to the Griffins.
A spokesman for the RSPCA said: "An independent vet examined the horse and said it was suffering, that is why the RSPCA decided to bring this prosecution."
Anne Kasica, a spokesman for the Self Help Group (SHG), an organisation set up in 1990 to help people who feel they are being unfairly targeted by the RSPCA, said the Griffins' case was typical of many.
"The RSPCA's aims are to promote kindness and stop cruelty to animals," said Mrs Kasica. "How can it be kind to take a horse away from the loving home she had lived in for two decades?"
http://www.horseandhound.co.uk/news/397/178608.html

Thursday, 13 November 2008

RSPCA OVERZEALOUS PROSECUTIONS FAIL

BBC EXPOSE THAT THE APPEAL RATE FOR RSPCA PROSECUTIONS IS 26 TIMES GREATER THAN APPEALS FROM CPS PROSECUTIONS, AND AMAZINGLY THE SUCCESS RATE OF APPEALS AGAINST THE RPSCA IS TWICE AS HIGH AS THE CPS RATE.

The RSPCA is Britain's favourite animal charity, but is it pursuing an
overzealous prosecution policy? Inside Out meets the people found not
guilty of animal cruelty.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b00fj230/?src=a_syn31


http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00fj254

Thursday, 9 October 2008

Dog dies in RSPCA Custody



RSPCA LAWYERS ADMIT DOG DIED IN THEIR CUSTODY !






Animal lover Annette Nally however, believes she received bad treatment at the hands of the RSPCA.


Ms Nally, who looks after rescue dogs, was caring for an Alsatian called Holly which had an incurable gastric problem restricting its diet. This meant the dog would never gain much weight.
The RSPCA seized the dog in January 2006 claiming she was not treating it dog properly and Ms Nally was prosecuted.

Wrangling over the disclosure of prosecution documents delayed the trial and she was not able to discover her pet's fate.

Ms Nally's defence convinced the court that in the time the RSPCA kept Holly, it had not treated the dog any any more effectively than its owner.

She was cleared but only discovered Holly's fate when after an order from the judge, the RSPCA's lawyers admitted the dog had died in their custody.

"I was absolutely devastated, the whole idea of going through this was to get her back," she told the BBC.

EXTRACTS FROM BBC RADIO 4 INTERVIEW

Catch up at Radio 4's Listen Again site