10-YEAR BAN FOR FARMER WHO LEFT LIVESTOCK TO ‘SUFFER AND DIE’
Cows, calves and sheep found dead
FARMER Peter Gorse has been banned from caring, breeding and farming animals for 10 years after livestock became stuck in mud and died on his land.
The 34-year-old failed to seek help after suffering a bereavement which saw his farm suffer.
North Staffordshire Justice Centre heard members of the public spotted dead cows in the fields and Staffordshire County Council’s animals health officers became involved. They found:
■ Animals left in the field which had become stuck in mud and died;
■ A calf which had been eaten by animals;
■ Cattle which had been left with no access to food or shelter;
■ Gorse had failed to dispose of dead carcasses properly.
The court heard Gorse ran Shawwood Farm, in Butterhill
Lane, Sandon. The first complaint was lodged in April, 2019.
Lucy Daniels, prosecuting for the council, said: “Two cattle and a calf had been left in a field and died. He failed to register the birth of calves and failed to register the deaths of cattle within seven days.”
Gorse had been given advice in June 2019 following the complaint. A further complaint was received in November about a dead carcass near a fence. The defendant did not register the death until January 2.
Council investigators visited the farm on December 12.
Miss Daniels added: “They found a dead bovine in a field and a calf had been eaten by other animals. The cattle would not have been able to get into the shelter. A bovine had no access to food, except grass and that was very sparse at the time.”
She added vets stated the cows ‘would have undergone considerable suffering as a result of being stuck in the mud’.
On May 27 the farm’s new owners found the carcasses of eight adult bovines, three calves and two sheep in a pit.
Miss Daniels added: “The prosecution say the care was substandard.”
Gorse, of Jasmine Road, Great Bridgeford, pleaded guilty to six offences of failing to comply with an animal by-product requirement; two charges of failing to keep a register of births, deaths and movements of animals; and four offences of causing unnecessary suffering to a protected animal.
The court heard he is no longer farming. Frances Bennett, mitigating, conceded the offences crossed the custody threshold.
District Judge Kevin Grego said the neglect was ‘prolonged’ and the care ‘incompetent’.
He said: “Animal welfare legislation is there for a purpose. It is there to ensure good husbandry of animals and the welfare of animals.
“The regulations are there to ensure that disease which can enter the food chain can be located and tracked. We are in the middle of a pandemic. The reasons are clear and obvious why we need to know and track where animals have come from and to track disease of animals as well. If that is not done then great social difficulties can arise.
“It was particularly poor care of farmed animals over a period of time where your ability to farm was beyond your capabilities. You should have sought help and did not do so.
“There was prolonged neglect and poor management of those animals and, as a consequence of that, those animals suffered and died.”
Gorse was handed a 12-month community order with 100 hours’ unpaid work. He must pay £1,000 costs and a £90 surcharge.