Dog-fighting trio found guilty after BBC Panorama investigation

Published by Jon Land for 24dash.com in Communities
Dog-fighting trio found guilty after BBC Panorama investigation
A mother-of-three was found guilty today of being involved in
one of Europe's largest dog-fighting syndicates, the RSPCA
said.
Claire Parker, 44, was convicted alongside Mohammed Farooq, 33, and
a 17-year-old boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, at
Lincoln Magistrates' Court.
The trio, who were involved in a dog-fighting ring which spanned
the country, were found guilty by a district judge after an
investigation by the BBC's Panorama programme.
It found that the syndicate had links to a gang in Northern
Ireland, with paramilitary connections, who supplied illegal
American pit bull dogs.
Members of the ring attended fights as far away as Finland.
Parker, of Kexby Lane, Kexby, Lincolnshire, a mother of three young
children, was found guilty of holding a fight in the garage at her
home, which she shared with her husband, John Parker.
He has since died in prison.
She was found guilty of being present at a dog-fight, keeping a
premises for dog-fighting and possessing three pit bull dogs. She
denied all the charges.
Mohammed Farooq, 33, of Daniels Road, Bordesley Green, Birmingham,
was found guilty on two counts of causing unnecessary suffering to
an animal and possessing training equipment for dog-fighting.
The youth was convicted on two counts of causing unnecessary
suffering to an animal, and keeping dog-fighting equipment.
Both he and Farooq earlier admitted owning banned a pit bull.
They were the time-keepers at the fight at Parker's home.
The RSPCA said it was one of the biggest cases of dog-fighting it
had ever prosecuted.
Chief inspector Ian Briggs, from the RSPCA's special operations
unit, said: "Dog-fighting is a barbaric and cruel so-called sport
which belongs in the Dark Ages and horrific suffering is caused to
the dogs involved.
"Those that continue to pursue this activity should understand that
the RSPCA and the police will continue to bring those responsible
before the courts."
During the trial, the court was shown a video of the BBC
programme Inside Out in which an undercover reporter called Steve
Ibinson can be seen chatting to 38-year-old Gary Adamson, a keen
dog-fighter.
The reporter met Adamson after he started drinking with the Farmers
Boys, a dog-fighting gang based in a small town called Tandragee,
in County Armagh, Northern Ireland.
The reporter has since died in Afghanistan but District Judge
Richard Blake was shown graphic footage of a dog-fight in Finland
attended by Adamson.
Ibinson said: "He (Adamson) sees himself as the Don King
(boxing
promoter) of pit bulls. He was very relaxed in the company of the
Farmers Boys, who made it clear that he was their guy in the North
East of the UK.
"For the Farmers Boys he was part of one of the biggest
dog-fighting syndicates in Europe."
Ibinson went on to describe how one fight left some of the dogs
involved so badly injured that they would have had to be put
down.
He added: "The last dog in that incident was killed by putting on
to its tail a crocodile clip and another one on to its ear and then
connecting it to the main electrical system."
Footage, filmed secretly by Ibinson, also showed Adamson playing
with three of his pit bull dogs.
In one clip Adamson, a part-time odd-job man, said he was looking
for a swimming tank in which he could train his dogs.
He kept them at the side of his house in Yarm, North Yorkshire, in
reinforced pens.
Claire Parker was caught after Adamson told Ibinson about a fight
at the home of John Parker, who was known as "Odd Bodd".
Parker invited Adamson and his dog Pablo for a fight in a garage at
his house after changing the location of the match at the last
minute.
It was at the Parkers' house in Lincolnshire that Farooq and the
youth acted as time-keepers, while Claire Parker was accused of
knowingly letting the fights take place.
Her husband was already banned from keeping dogs and had
convictions for dog-fighting, the court heard during the week-long
trial.
When police officers and RSPCA inspectors raided the Parkers' home
they found treadmills, veterinary equipment and breaking sticks
used to separate dogs during fights.
They also discovered scales and harnesses for the dogs, which were
kept in separate pens to prevent them attacking each other, as well
as a bloodstained dog-fighting pit constructed in the garage of the
house.
Adamson told the reporter that, during the fight in the Parkers'
house, Pablo received a "ragging" during a fight with a dog called
Chief, which was owned by a man called Kenneth King.
Adamson claimed Pablo lost because he was travel-sick on the
journey to Lincolnshire.
He was still badly scarred around the muzzle, head and hind
quarters when Ibinson next visited Adamson's house.
But despite this, Adamson did not seek professional veterinary
help, preferring to treat the animal himself.
In his statement, Ibinson added: "The dog was lethargic and looked
very swollen, dehydrated and did not want to come out of its
kennel. It also had staples over some of its wounds.
"Dog-fighting's greatest myth is that time will heal dogs, but this
dog needed veterinary treatment, which it had been denied."
Gary Adamson, 38, of Ramsey Crescent, Yarm, North Yorkshire,
pleaded guilty to six charges in connection with illegal
dog-fighting last week.
Kenneth King, 35, of Main Street, Ragnall, Newark, Nottinghamshire,
admitted eight charges related to fighting banned pit bull terriers
during the same hearing.
Owen Batey, 40, of Cannock Road, Middlesbrough, admitted setting
two pit bulls on each other, being present at a dog-fight and
owning a pit bull.
Christopher Burgess, 42, of Longstone Way, Ladybrook, Mansfield,
Nottinghamshire, was told he would probably receive a community
sentence during the same hearing after he pleaded guilty to one
charge of keeping a banned dog.
All seven will be sentenced on September 25.
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