A tale of animal lovers:

Stephanie Taylor, 51, and 71-year-old partner John Gooch, of Bingham Drive, Staines, admitted 13 counts of cruelty to animals at Staines Magistrates Court on Wednesday, August 22.

The court heard the creatures, who have all now been destroyed, were so tightly packed into the couple’s former home in Ashford that they were living “on top of each other” as there was not enough floor space.

Prosecutor Chris Simms told the court the smell of urine and faeces in the flat was “unbearable”…

A statement from a police officer called to help deal with the problem said it appeared the rat cages had never been cleaned.

“There were dead rats inside the cages and a number looked like they were dying,” it read.

Defence barrister Lesley Barry said Taylor, who had previously been banned for life from owning animals, had become overwhelmed by the situation after buying two rats from a pet shop which then started to breed. Wild rats had then infiltrated the flat and continued to breed.

“She realised she had a population explosion,” said the barrister.

“Then it escalated and we are in the realms of 316 rats.”

She said Taylor, who viewed the creatures as “my babies”, was an animal lover and had not wilfully neglected her animals.

The court heard how she had tried to self-medicate the rats’ abscesses and tumours with vaseline because she did not trust going to the vets.

Outside the court, RSPCA officer Dave Johnson said he had been shocked by what he saw.

“The smell was unbearable,” he said. “There were rats everywhere, all in cages, and about 100 just running around loose.

“They were in the kitchen, living room and there was a wardrobe full of them. They were even in the walls.”

Cruelty to animals? I mean, with rats, does anyone care? What about firms like Rentokil, who specialise in killing the little buggers? Or Rentokil’s clients, who lay down rat poison? That’s pretty cruel, isn’t it? And I don’t suppose anyone’s shedding any tears about the fate of those 316, all “destroyed” (not even dignified with the phrase “put down”). Not much effort, I should think, went into finding alternative homes for the healthy ones, or releasing them into the wild (ie down the nearest drain).

The sad couple involved aren’t so much cruel as, well, stupid. Still – a wardrobe full of rats!

Posted in

3 responses to “Rats Everywhere”

  1. DaninVan Avatar
    DaninVan

    I’m sort of surprised that they weren’t charged with creating a public nuisance, or some such? You’d think that contributing to the spread of vermin would be unlawful(?).
    Far be it from me to encourage MORE laws (since they can’t enforce the existing ones)but but they really need to come up with anti-moron legislation.

    Like

  2. DaninVan Avatar
  3. Dom Avatar
    Dom

    I think you missed the mark here. Rentokil doesn’t go out into the wild and kill rats, only when they have infected a property. Some pest control companies will capture rats (not insects, obviously) and release them elsewhere, which seems like a more humane idea, but you really can’t compare standard pest control with what these people did.
    Why weren’t the healthy ones released? I assume because with rats you can’t really tell which ones are healthy. Considering the living conditions, the cautious approach is to assume they were carrying disease.
    Here in the states there’s a story of an overpaid professional football player who carried on a dog-fighting ring in his house. Neighbors said he sometimes hung a dog if it didn’t perform cruelly enough. How’s that for stupid.

    Like

Leave a reply to Dom Cancel reply