Dog ban for petting experience owner after deaths

RSPCA A golden retriever looking straight ahead, with two dogs sat and lying down behind it. There are soiled mats behind the animals.RSPCA
The dogs were rescued by the RSPCA
Sarah Turnnidge & Chris Lockyer
BBC News, West of England

The owner of a viral golden retriever petting experience has been banned from keeping dogs for 10 years after some of the animals died in his care.

Nicolas St James, 62, ran the Golden Retriever Experience in Somerset, offering play and petting sessions with around 30 dogs to paying visitors.

But in May 2024, the experience - which garnered millions of views on social media - had its licence revoked by Somerset Council following a police and RSPCA investigation.

The animal charity said the dogs were kept in unclean and overcrowded conditions, with little access to fresh water.

St James, of Carhampton in Minehead, was handed an 18-week prison sentence, suspended for one year, at North Somerset Magistrates' Court in Weston-super-Mare earlier.

He pleaded guilty to animal welfare charges on 19 June.

A number of golden retriever dogs standing, sitting and lying on the floor next to each other.
The court heard the dogs were kept in overcrowded conditions

The court was told a visit to the site by the RSPCA and Somerset Council found conditions were "grossly overcrowded", with 20 of the dogs living in a galley kitchen with a concrete floor and others cramped into a bedroom.

This left the retrievers fighting over limited resources, the court was told.

A local vet said he had dealt with numerous cases of the dogs being admitted for fighting injuries, the court was told, with two of the dogs dying from bite wounds.

Some of the animals were also found to have calluses, the RSPCA said.

District Judge Brereton told St James his attitude "bordered on arrogance" and no changes were made to the animals' welfare despite four warnings.

She said St James was only worried about his financial losses.

Suzanne Norbury stood in a field, looking straight ahead. She can be seen from the chest up and is wearing a blue polo shirt with 'RSPCA' on it. She has a neutral expression.
Suzanne Norbury from the RSPCA said the dogs needed freedom to get away from stressful situations

Speaking about the dogs' time at the Golden Retriever Experience near Minehead, Suzanne Norbury from the RSPCA said: "It was a failure to meet their needs.

"They need the freedom to exhibit natural behaviours and get away from stressful situations."

Following the removal of the licence, the dogs were rescued by the RSPCA, mostly to its facility in Cornwall.

Ms Norbury said the dogs had since been fostered or adopted.

Bridget Dobinson, from Devon, decided to adopt one of the golden retrievers - Molly - after being encouraged to foster an animal by her daughter.

A row of 13 people standing and crouching in a line, with their golden retrievers at their feet.
The dogs have now been adopted or fostered

"Molly was totally shut down when she came to us - she wouldn't walk from one room to another... she wouldn't get in her bed at night.

"A year on, she flops into her bed every night, but she's still anxious about going into rooms.

"She's frightened of noises, of fast movement, or anything I'm carrying - but she's a very loving dog," she said.

Additional reporting by John Danks and Scott Ellis.

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