Man kept animals in squalor to feed 50 pet snakes
Steven Riddell is to be been banned from keeping animals at the property he shares in Park Green, Erskine, with his wife and four children after Paisley Sheriff Court heard of the conditions the animals had to endure.
Scottish SPCA inspectors found it was stifling inside the greenhouse as a tarpaulin had been used to cover it. One of the inspectors could only remain inside for a brief moment as she had difficulty breathing in the oxygen-starved interior, which stank of stale ammonia from droppings and urine that filled the cages and containers.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide AdOne cage, which weighed 2kg when clean and empty, was caked with a solid mass of droppings mixed with bedding that weighed almost 14kg.
Riddell, 43, admitted he had seen the animals as a cheap source of food for his snakes and did not care that some of them were dead and dying.
By comparison, the snakes he kept inside his home appeared well cared for.
Inside the greenhouse, rats and mice, some with young which were lying on top of faeces, and one half-entrapped in compacted droppings, were kept in squalor in cages stacked from floor to ceiling.
Two mice were alive but paralysed. In some of the cages, faeces and urine was found to be six to eight inches in depth.
The only traces of drinking water found was coated in green algae. Some of the rats and mice were found to have bite and scratch marks and others had parts of their tails missing.
Riddell admitted the catalogue of neglect and pleaded guilty to two contraventions of the Animal Health & Welfare (Scotland) Act of causing unnecessary suffering by failing to provide adequate care, nutrition, water and clean bedding.
He agreed to hand over ownership of all the animals, many of which were put down, although some were nursed back to health and re-homed.
Advertisement
Hide Ad