
Audio By Carbonatix
A man who left puppies in the worst bodily conditions a vet had ever seen - with four having to be euthanised - has been jailed.
Shaun McCourt, 42, admitted breaching Animal Health and Welfare guidelines in Aberdeen.
The Mastiff-cross puppy offences happened in 2019.
McCourt, from Liverpool, was jailed for five months at Aberdeen Sheriff Court.

McCourt admitted five offences, which happened between July and September 2019 in the city's Ash-Hill Drive.
Three charges were causing unnecessary suffering, and two were failing to provide a suitable environment for a dog and her six puppies by exposing them to urine and faeces.
Fiscal depute Brooklyn Shaw said the Scottish SPCA had raised the alarm, with a dog and six puppies being found in a "neglected state", with obvious swelling on their bodies.
The room they were in had been "destroyed" by the dogs, she told the court, which was far too small with little space to move around in.

They were removed and taken to a vet for examination.
One puppy had to be euthanised straight away on welfare grounds due to swelling, infection and a fracture.
The other dogs had a variety of infections and injuries.
The fiscal depute told the court the vet said that in her 26 years of work she had never seen dogs in "such awful bodily conditions".
In total, four of the six puppies were euthanised, and two were rehomed.

Defence solicitor Debbie Ginniver said McCourt had let his care of the dogs slip but he had not realised how badly.
He insisted what happened was not intentional.
Ms Ginniver said the option of unpaid work was available for sentencing.
Sheriff Rory Bannerman said he had absolutely no doubt there would have been six happy dogs but because of McCourt's actions there were only two.
"It is horrendous what you put these dogs through," he said.
Sheriff Bannerman said there was only one disposal open to him.
He added that despite the offences being five years old he had no doubt McCourt should also be disqualified from keeping animals for five years.
'Terrible consequences'
Alison McKenzie, the procurator fiscal for Aberdeen, said after the case: “This was a shocking case of animal cruelty.
"The pain and mental suffering these dogs endured while in Shaun McCourt’s care is unthinkable.
"These poor animals suffered the terrible consequences of McCourt’s appalling neglect."
She added: "The law protects animals from harm, and the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service will continue to work robustly to ensure anyone who breaks the law faces prosecutorial action."
Latest Stories
-
Volta Lake accident highlights lax safety regulations — Savannah Regional Minister
15 seconds -
UEW Vice-Chancellor calls for rethink of Ghana’s education system at 2026 Public Lecture
7 minutes -
Health expert urges enough sleep, rest to control hypertension
8 minutes -
Foreign Affairs Ministry alerts travellers as EU rolls out new biometric Entry/Exit System
9 minutes -
Publican AI system doesn’t determine values, it flags suspicious transactions – GRA Boss
19 minutes -
Balancing the scales: McDan Aviation, E&P, and politics of opportunity in Ghana’s economy
23 minutes -
GRA credits Publican AI system for exposing GH¢11bn port leakages
27 minutes -
Owabi, Barekese water plants face shutdown threat over pollution and power outages
35 minutes -
Catholic Bishops call for national dialogue on LGBTQ debate
39 minutes -
Softcare FM Manufacturing Ltd backs Consumer Health Week, pushes science-driven care agenda
40 minutes -
The Eyes of Ghana to premiere in April, spotlighting rare Nkrumah-era footage
43 minutes -
$31bn transferred without matching imports in five years — GRA boss
57 minutes -
JoyNews Impact Maker, Williams Akongbabre, presents award to people of Bawku West
57 minutes -
Kenya backs Morocco’s autonomy plan for Western Sahara, signals push for implementation
1 hour -
Hip-hop pioneer, Afrika Bambaataa, dies aged 68
1 hour