Tracks of their Tears

This section contains info from newspapers, online and other sources ... all of which dish the dirt on greyhound tracks in the UK.

26 tracks currently listed

To find out more about a track simply click on it's name.

Wimbledon | Catford | Oxford | Crayford | Portsmouth | Hall Green | Belle Vue| Ellesmere port | Kinsley | Swindon | Perry Barr | Newcastle Stadium | Brighton and Hove | Sittingbourne | Shawfield | Sunderland | Henlow | Yarmouth | Nottingham | Swansea | Glastonbury (Abbey Moor) | Pelaw Grange | Milton Keynes | Ayr | Poole

General Information: 45 articles: updated10/03/08

10/03/08 Press release by Wolverhampton Greyhound Action

MAYOR URGED "DON'T GO TO THE DOGS!"
Widespread public sympathy for Wolverhampton campaign


Wolverhampton Greyhound Action have expressed delight at public sympathy for their campaign to persuade the local Mayor, Councillor Trudy Bowen, to cancel a Night at the Dogs she is planning to host next month at the city's Monmore Green Stadium.

The campaigners staged a two-hour demonstration outside the Wolverhampton Civic Centre on Friday, March 7th and distributed hundreds of leaflets asking members of the public to boycott greyhound racing and to contact the Mayor, requesting that she call off the Monmore Green event.

Amongst the many people who expressed support, were two who'd had personal experience of the greyhound racing industry.

One man told campaigners: "I used to work at Monmore Green Stadium. While I was there I saw many greyhounds 'put down'. There were also a lot of dogs being raced while suffering from injuries. Many dogs just ran once and then you never saw them again. Greyhound racing should be stopped."

Another made the follwing statement: "My mother used to work for one of the country's biggest greyhound trainers. He has as many as 300 dogs in his kennels. Many ended up being shot if they were no good for racing. They were trained by cruel methods, including being hit with sticks. Greyhounds were often fed a big meal before racing, to slow them down, so the odds on them would be better in their next race. My mother was always trying to rescue dogs from being 'put down', but in the end, she left the job because of what she'd witnessed."


Sunday Times, March 2nd

Vets’ secret trade in dog body parts
Sunday Times, March 2nd
By Daniel Foggo


A clinic is killing healthy dogs and secretly selling their body parts to Britain’s most prestigious veterinary college for research, an investigation has found. The Royal Veterinary College (RVC) has a financial agreement with a vet’s practice which provides the organs from dogs on a regular basis.

An undercover reporter posing as an owner found that staff at the Greyhound Clinic in Essex agreed to kill greyhounds for £30 each even though he told them the dogs had “nothing wrong with them”. The clinic is then paid by the college, which specifically insists the dogs must be healthy before being euthanased, for each animal from which it supplies parts.

The RVC, which is the oldest and largest veterinary college in Britain, admitted that it had a number of similar financial agreements with other clinics to provide specimens. The practice has “horrified” the RSPCA and animal welfare campaigners and even one of the heads of the greyhound racing industry itself. The sport has been criticised for failing to explain the fate of thousands of greyhounds which retire from racing each year and then disappear without trace.

Alistair McLean, chief executive of the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC), the industry’s governing body, said he was “flabbergasted” by the trade in body parts. “This is completely and utterly unacceptable,” he said. “It is quite scandalous.”

The RSPCA said: “We are shocked by this evidence which appears to show an opening for greyhounds to be systematically destroyed for profit. We certainly would not like to think that there was a financial incentive to ending a pet’s life.”

Maureen Purvis, of the campaign group Greyhounds UK, compared the practice with that of Burke and Hare, the19th century bodysnatchers who killed people to provide corpses for dissection. “What this clinic is doing is the canine equivalent of that,” she said. “It is just absolute butchery.”

Although the rules governing vets allow them to use their discretion on putting down healthy animals, in practice most are reluctant to do so. The NGRC states that its trainers should put dogs down only as a last resort. “Even a broken leg can often be mended but some trainers see it as simply more cost effective to have it put down,” said a racing insider. It is now apparent, however, that some veterinary practices also have a financial incentive to put dogs down without any medical reason.

The Greyhound Clinic is in an Essex hamlet which is in effect a “greyhound village”. The clinic’s immediate neighbours are the kennels of at least six NGRC-registered trainers, two greyhound retirement homes and a practice racetrack.

The undercover reporter called the clinic and spoke to Donna Atkins, the practice manager, saying he had two greyhounds he wanted putting down because he “had no room for them”. The reporter asked if the clinic ever took blood from the dogs before killing them and Atkins said the Royal Veterinary College sent people once or twice a week to collect blood from dogs being put down, she said. When the reporter called back, Atkins said: “We are going to take the glands as well. Is that okay?” The reporter said it was, but emphasised that his dogs were not old and there was nothing wrong with them. “That’s fair enough; that’s not a problem,” said Atkins. “So it’s 10.15 tomorrow. Bye.”

When the reporter arrived the next day, two students from the RVC, who introduced themselves as Demi and Rick, were waiting. The reporter, who said his dogs would arrive shortly with his brother, explained there was “nothing wrong with them” but the students appeared uninterested. Asked why they wanted the dogs’s lymph glands, Demi said: “We take tissue from healthy dogs and we look at the cells and put them in an artificial environment and use that to further our research.”

The reporter left but not before paying Atkins £60 in advance to have the fictitious dogs put down. He was not asked to sign any forms and was at no time asked his name, phone number, address or any details as to why the dogs should be destroyed.

He also asked Atkins if the RVC was paying the clinic to take body parts. “No, no, we work in conjunction with them. We all work together from all over the place. It’s part of their learning,” she said.
John O’Connor, 65, head vet and director of the clinic, told the undercover reporter, who was now posing as an employee of a company wanting to procure canine organs, that he had an “exclusive” commercial contract with the RVC until November. After that he would review the situation and expected “at least £30 per canine part”.

When contacted later by The Sunday Times O’Connor initially denied a financial agreement with the RVC but subsequently admitted invoicing the college at £10 per dog and being paid. He claimed that he had been paid a few hundred pounds since he began supplying the parts three years ago and that he intended to pay the money to charity. O’Connor said he put down dogs only if they had medical problems or showed aggression and said he would not have euthanased the fictitious dogs.

An RVC spokesman confirmed it had an agreement with the clinic but said owners should be issued with a form “to indicate their acknowledgment” of their pets’ fate. “The decision to euthanase an animal must only be taken when both owner and vet agree and the owner has given written consent.”

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article3466712.ece

Greyhound Action comment:- It is somewhat strange that Alistair McLean, chief executive of the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC), should be “flabbergasted” by the trade in greyhound body parts. He most know it is inevitable that this sort of thing should happen when many thousands of greyhounds are discarded by the British dog racing industry every year. It is hardly surprising that someone is happy to make money by offering a killing service for "unwanted" greyhounds and then selling bits of them for research. Mr McLean, apparently, finds this "completely and utterly unacceptable” and "quite scandalous”. Those two phrases could also be applied to the activities of the NGRC, which oversees an industry responsible for the putting to death, according to our calculations, of approximately 20,000 greyhounds every year. Thankfully, the public can help put an stop to this appalling situation, by not attending or betting on greyhound races, so that commercial dog racing is brought to an end through lack of financial support.

For a related story about the use of greyhounds in vivisection in Australia click here


From Playnoevil.com Sunday, October 14. 2007

http://playnoevil.com:80/serendipity/index.php?/archives/1664-Who-needs-Virtual-Worlds-when-you-can-have-Virtual-RacesUK-revenues-US1.4-Billion-per-Year-from-Virtual-Racing-Games.html

Who needs Virtual Worlds when you can have Virtual Races?

UK revenues US$1.4 Billion per Year from Virtual Racing Games

The ultimate in virtualization is occurring in the racing industry.

The October 2007 issue of International Gaming and Wagering Business (see page 12) reports that virtual horse races (also called "Plastic Ponies") and virtual greyhound races are generating 700 Million Pounds (US$1.424 Billion) per year in revenue.

Bookies love this, of course, because they don't have to share money with the race tracks and, of course, they don't have to worry about punters actually being able to use skill and knowledge to gain an edge.

They also don't have to worry about races being canceled to weather or disease (the UK suffered an outbreak of foot-and-mouth disease in 2001 and 75 races were canceled this year due to bad weather)............


Postings on the greyhoundscene pro dog racing forum Sunday 11 Nov 07

Richard Newell, a greyhound breeder living in Ireland (Co. Cork), has admitted, in posts made on Sunday 11 Nov 07, on the greyhoundscene pro dog racing forum, that large numbers of greyhounds are put to death before they even reach the UK tracks.

Some of his very revealing statements are below:

"I have two bitches (greyhounds) in my garage outside, some would say that's cruel making them live outside! I wil say go and feckin mind your own business and get a life!

“If I want to have my bitches put down I will, just like the farmer down the road if he has his sheep dog put down or kills one of his pigs, that ain't my business and it ain't no business of any anti.

“I think you all live in cloud cuckoo land if you think there aren't hundreds of greys put to sleep before they even reach the track in the UK. Hundreds of pups are too slow to grade, some don't chase others fight, injuries as pups etc etc. That is a fact, if you don't like it get out of the game.

“I am a realist............ and I am also knowledgeable enough to know that we pander to the anti's to much. Feck em! Let them come to my place here in Cork and see how my pups are reared and how my broods live their lives. I'd love to take out an anti down to the forest I go to every day with my pups in the hope my pups catch sight of something and chase it down and kill it. Sorry if that offends you but my pups are being bred to chase, and hunt and eventually show enough courage on a track to go through the rigours of racing.

“Fecks sake a greyhound is what it is. If you don't like the hard facts of quarry being hunted by greys or any other hunting dog then I think you is in the wrong game.

“I breed my pups If they don't or can't race then they have to go. Hard but true and not easy for me to take that trip to the vets but alas it has to be done otherwise before to long if every breeder were to keep every pup alive there would be thousands more greys being given away to abusers and the like because it would not be possible to rehome every one of them without real retirement options in place.

“Not only that there are still a great number of people, certainly in Ireland that see their greys as livestock and no more than that. A few have them rehomed but the majority are put down after their use is over. Again, hard true fact.

“And don't tell me that the majority of BAGS trainers see their inmates as anything other than livestock? I doubt the majority of BAGS dogs get a daily gallop out in a field or a hunt in a forest, more like 10 minutes emptying out twice a day and a trip to the local track once a week running lame for £15 to line the pocket of a caring Bookmaker

“I'm so glad I moved away from England. Where I live now there are folk out hunting with dogs most night's. Nobody where I live bothers the hunter or his dogs, in fact they are mostly welcomed onto their land to hunt.

“Our vet recognizes and readily accepts that my greys are bred for a purpose and are not pets. Whatever anti thought of the slogan "Greyhounds make great Pets" very clever, it's been dished out to the public so much they only associate the words Greyhound and Pet and there is your problem, the public now see greys as pets!“

Greyhound Action comment:-

Many may feel, from what he has to say, that Newell is a callous and evil animal abuser, but his honesty about the mass-slaughter that lies at the core of commercial greyhound racing has given us another nail to hammer into the coffin of the dog racing industry.

According to our research, about 15,000 greyhounds, bred for the British greyhound racing industry, are put to death before they even reach the tracks. Most of these dogs are bred in Ireland, and many of them are killed there, after being considered unfit for racing in Britain.

Although many of these dogs may never even reach our shores, the British greyhound racing industry is nevertheless responsible for their slaughter, as it is demand coming from the British tracks that has caused them to be bred in the first place.

Newell's comments reveal, once again, the connection between greyhound racing and bloodsports and the fact that many of those involved in the racing industry have little respect or consideration for animals of any kind.

BAGS stands for Bookmakers Afternoon Greyhound Service and applies to dog races run at many stadiums in the afternoon to cater for the needs of the betting shops. Dogs running in BAGS races tend to be slower than those taking part in the traditional evening races and are therefore treated as even more of a disposable commodity by the racing industry.


Daily Mail article 7th July 2007

The sickening side of greyhound racing

Moet and Chandon champagne at £58 a bottle. Sweet cured salmon and lobster on the menu. Punters chewing cigars (the big fat variety) in executive boxes in an air-conditioned grandstand. Welcome to the Derby - the Greyhound Derby, that is, which gets under way at Wimbledon's Plough Lane stadium tonight. Canine stars such as Westmead Lord, Loyal Honcho and Dilemma's Flight will be in action before an expected 6,000 capacity crowd, and the winner will get a cheque for £100,000.

But behind the scenes? Now that's a different story altogether; one the dog racing industry would rather you didn't read about.
We're supposed to be a nation of animal lovers, after all. This "love", it seems, doesn't extend to greyhounds.

The elite - dogs like Westmead Lord, hot favourite for the derby - are the lucky few. At the end of their careers, they'll be put out to stud. As for the rest - the majority - a short, miserable life will be followed by a brutal and needless death. Most will suffer a fate similar to those buried in a "mass grave" next to David Smith's bungalow off a secluded farm track in County Durham. The method of execution for those unfortunate animals was a bolt gun, a weapon that fires a metal bar with enough force to shatter the toughest skull. Smith had been providing a £10-a-time canine killing service for sections of the greyhound racing industry for up to 15 years.

It's easier, and cheaper, to dispose of greyhounds whose careers are curtailed through age - or because they cannot run fast enough to make their owners money - than to re-home them. It's the equivalent of putting down an Afghan Hound or Cocker Spaniel because their coats are no longer shiny enough to compete at shows like Crufts.

The true scale of the scandal came to light when Mr Smith was convicted of breaching Environment Agency regulations and fined £2,000 (with £2,000 costs) earlier this year. It is illegal to bury dead greyhounds in your garden, but not to put a metal bolt through their heads. Hundreds, possibly thousands of carcasses, still lie beneath neatly-planted rows of beans, rhubarb, leeks and onions on Mr Smith's land.

As a symbol of the cruelty inflicted on greyhounds all over Britain, it could not be more chilling. At least a bolt gun is quick - and preferable to being battered to death, killed with rat poison or thrown into a river weighed down with bricks. These are some of the other ways, say animal charities, that unwanted greyhounds are routinely disposed of. There is, undeniably, a ruthless element in greyhound racing. Some dogs are even fed cocaine, preventing them from running on top form: crooked punters, in league with trainers and owners, cash in by betting on the doped dogs to lose.

But it is the slaughter of unwanted animals that is most disturbing. A recent Parliamentary report said that at least 4,700 greyhounds a year are being killed unnecessarily. And the figure, it said, could be a "significant underestimation" of the problem. This is the disturbing background to actress Annette Crosbie's outspoken attack on the industry, reported in the Mail this week.

Miss Crosbie, who played Victor Meldrew's long-suffering wife Margaret in TV's One Foot In The Grave, owns three greyhounds and is a member of the Retired Greyhound Trust. At a public speaking event, she launched a passionate assault on those who she says abuse and murder thousands of dogs every year."Hundreds of greyhounds are bred in the hope of getting a winner," she says. "The remainder are surplus to requirements and have no future. "It is, bluntly, a state of affairs which reflects little glory on Britain as a so-called nation of animal lovers. I have to mention them because no one cares."

The timing of her comments - before an audience who had paid £16 to hear her speak about her illustrious acting career - may be open to question, but surely not her sentiments. They are shared by many both in and outside of dog racing, which generates a colossal £2.3 billion in off-course bets, and more than £87 million in Tote on- course bets at the UK's 29 licensed tracks.

Few "insiders" are prepared to go on the record. But today, two women who worked for trainers between 2004/2005, have come forward to speak to the Mail. Their accounts make uncomfortable reading. The nearest most people get to this world is a TV screen. Greyhounds themselves are just a fleeting blur on the screen in pursuit of an artificial hare. But, unlike horse-racing tracks, dog tracks can be almost gladiatorial.

"It was common to see cut ears, sprains, holes in faces, dropped muscles, ripped claws or toes torn open - all this happens in the race itself," said Louise, 22.

"It was my job to bathe them and treat their wounded claws. The claws could get pulled out as they were running and the dogs would come back in foaming at the mouth."

The attitude of the trainer who employed her was "patch them up and send them back out", rather than pay for a vet to treat injured animals. "He had no respect for his dogs, and he was not alone," says Louise.

"I once saw a dog that had been injured as a puppy being forced to hurdle but it was still not fully recovered.

"As he struggled round the track, he fell badly at the last hurdle and was carried off yelping in pain. I found out the dog was put down the next day.

"Dogs were put down all the time. At least one a week was put down at the stadium because the animal was no longer able to race.

"The vet would come in to put them down. There was a special room with a blue door where they were killed. Everyone knew that if a dog went into that room it wasn't coming back out.

"Every week it was the same thing, another dog gone. It was very common.

"The person I worked for was only interested in making money out of his dogs. Once a dog could no longer race, he wanted rid of it.

"I was very attached to one particular greyhound and walked him for a year. I was hanging on in the job waiting to adopt him when he retired. But it wasn't to be.

"The dog's shoulder was shattered in a race. Afterwards, the head kennel hand came back holding the dog's lead. I asked where the dog was. She just said 'get on with your work;. This became a familiar pattern."

Marie, 30, worked for a different trainer. On one occasion, she says, a dog was put down simply because it hurt its paw. "The dog hadn't been winning races for a while and I think the trainer just wanted to get rid of it," she explains.

She adds: "He only injured his paw - it wasn't even broken. But he was killed regardless. In the end such unnecessary killings were too much for me and I had to leave."

What Louise and Marie describe makes a mockery of National Greyhound Racing Club regulations that dogs should only be put down as a last resort and then only under the supervision of a vet. Indeed, Louise claims her boss sometimes even arranged for dogs to be killed outside the track; on those occasions their ears were cut off because owners can be identified by a serial number tattooed on a greyhound's ears.

"He told me he buried the dogs but I think he just burned them," she said.

This week, the Mail discovered numerous other tales of widespread cruelty; dogs being killed at every stage of their lives, from being drowned as puppies if they don't show signs of being fit to race, or killed when they are adults because they can no longer perform.

We have been told about one man, who collects unwanted dogs in his van from race-tracks all over Ireland and takes them home, where they are shot with a bolt gun.

Those who have attempted to expose the scandal have been thwarted. One is Pauline Harrison, a greyhound owner from Barnsley, who was faced with evasion and lies when she tried to find out what had happened to her race-winning dog, Stormy Silver.

He was five years old when she decided to retire him in 2002. A registered trainer offered to find Stormy Silver a new home for a £10 fee.

"He was a lovely dog but I already had four greyhounds at home so I didn't have room for another," Mrs Harrison told the Mail.

"The trainer told me he would make sure he went to a safe retirement home, so I agreed that was the best thing, but when I tried to find out how Stormy Silver was a few weeks later, he kept avoiding me.

"In fact, the trainer had given him to a woman he knew. Finally I got to speak to this supposed new owner and she said Stormy Silver was doing fine and was curled up on the sofa watching TV.

But Stormy Silver had a toe missing and when I asked her from which foot, she didn't know. "She said she would call back but never did. I kept trying to get through but the number became unobtainable. I contacted the police and RSPCA but they couldn't help."

It doesn't take a genius to work out that Stormy Silver probably went the way of so many other retired racing dogs. Owners of some 52 other dogs entrusted to the same trainer also want to know where they went. The man in question was eventually stripped of his licence, but owners like Mrs Harrison still don't know where their dogs are. The suspicion is that they are now buried under David Smith's vegetable patch in County Durham. Four people have also lost their training licences for using the services of Mr Smith.

Back in Barnsley, the news is little consolation to Mrs Harrison. "I gave up greyhound racing after that," she says. "I have not been back to a race-track since.

"Those poor dogs are just used and abused. I am sure what happened in the North-East is happening elsewhere in the country. I just wish I had kept Stormy Silver myself."

Stephen Rea, spokesman for the Greyhound Racing Association said: "Every greyhound, upon arrival at the track, is thoroughly checked by a veterinary surgeon and then again just before it races.

"To infer that professional trainers who rely upon greyhounds for their livelihood would risk them in this way, and therefore that the owners would also stand buy and allow it, and finally a veterinary surgeon would jeopardise his or her career by condoning this, is quite honestly too ridiculous for words."

Tonight, members of a group called Greyhound Action will be demonstrating outside the Wimbledon stadium with placards saying "You bet, they die" . . ."Say No To Greyhound Racing" . . . "Kill Greyhound Racing, Not Greyhounds" . . . "Dying To Entertain You".

Greyhound Action was among the organisations which gave evidence to the Associate Parliamentary Group for Animal Welfare, which produced that damning report on the dog racing industry. It wants the Government to make it illegal for anyone other than a vet to put down greyhounds, and has called for the sport's governing bodies to incorporate animal welfare groups like the Dogs Trust and the Retired Greyhound Trust, for whom Annette Crosbie is such a passionate campaigner.

As Miss Crosbie says: "Greyhounds usually start racing at 15 months. They will have to run in all weathers and all conditions on tracks that vary from good to disgraceful.

"They will suffer injuries that will go untreated, and in approximately 18 months their career will be over. They will be judged too expensive to 'mend', and the owners will want rid of them.

Some are kept as pets, more are given homes by voluntary helpers, but most will be killed.

"Every year some 30,000 are bred to race, but only 15,000 are registered. No one knows what happens to the other 15,000."

Wales on Sunday July 15th 2007

Healthy dogs are being killed

July 15 2007

by James McCarthy


FIVE ruthless killers in Wales are slaughtering hundreds of healthy racing dogs every year,
according to an animal rights group.

Campaigners at Greyhound Rescue Wales say they know the identity of the executioners and have passed
their names to the RSPCA, which has pledged to investigate the practise of putting down dogs who are
no longer fast enough to compete.

In the big money world of dog racing, bookies annually rake in more than £2bn while the Government’s
coffers benefit from more than £70m. But welfare activists say little goes back into caring for
dogs, many of whom are retired aged four but have another 10 years of active life .

While the killings are widely regarded as immoral, they are not necessarily illegal. Since 1997,
anyone can own a bolt gun to kill animals without a licence but can be prosecuted if the animals are
put down inhumanely.

Alain Thomas, founder of Greyhound Rescue Wales, said: “About 500 dogs are meeting some kind of
unacceptable fate here every year. GRW has been given the names of five individuals who are
responsible for killing the dogs.

These individuals buy large quantities of dogs from the registered sector, trial them discreetly,
then keep the fastest and best one or two dogs in each batch. They dispose of the other three or
four by shooting them and incinerating the bodies.”

The organisation also claims the killers make an extra living out of putting down other people’s
greyhounds and lurchers at around £10 a go.

Mr Thomas said: “They make money from charging other owners to shoot and incinerate their unwanted
dogs. This has led to the establishment of an informal but well organised and commercially-based
system to shoot and incinerate greyhounds.”

A report produced by the Assembly in 2003 found Wales was a dumping ground for dogs no longer fast
enough to race on registered tracks in England.

Lorraine Barrett AM, who chairs the Assembly’s All Party Animal Welfare Group, said: “I have no time
at all for anyone who is prepared to shoot a dog just because it is no longer needed for racing.

“I would like to see those people prosecuted.

“The Animal Welfare Act, which will come into effect at the end of the year, will mean that
greyhound tracks will all have to have a vet in attendance. I doubt very much whether they will be
able to survive having to pay to have a vet on site.

“There is an issue about what will happen to greyhound racing in Wales. A lot of people would like
to see an end to it. In a perfect world I would not like to see any animal used for entertainment.
However I would like to see it regulated rather than go underground.”

John Rabaiotti, from Swansea’s Fforestfach greyhound stadium, one of Wales’ two remaining and
unregulated tracks, the other being Valley in Ystrad Mynach, claimed the estimates of dogs killed
were exaggerated.

He said: “Greyhounds tend to be picked on as it is a good story – if you believe the figures, there
are more dogs killed than race.

“I’m not saying killings don’t happen because they do. But I think the figures are distorted. I don’t
think the problem is anything like it is quoted by animal rights organisations.

“The way to deal with it is to hit the perpetrators with a lot harder penalties than have been used
in the past.”

A spokesman for the RSPCA, which says 12,000 greyhounds disappear and are unaccounted for every year
in the UK, said they would be “looking into the matter” of killings in Wales.

james.mccarthy@wme.co.uk

GA comment: As the highlighted sentence above shows ... they aren't even denying that dogs are being slaughtered ... they just dispute the numbers.

Comments left on the BBC One Show website (following an on air article and debate about the greyhound industry)

I am a veterinary nurse and in the last few weeks we have had 6 to 8 greyhounds brought in to be put to sleep. I think more needs to be done within the greyhound industry to stop this appalling treatment of healthy dogs.

Helen, Tees

Greyhound racing is a commercial industry and the dogs are seen as mere tools of the trade.

Cris, Devon

New legislation is all well and good, but would be quite impossible to police. The only way to put an end to this needless slaughter of these gentle loving greyhounds is for a complete ban on this vile industry. The greyhound racing industry has the front to call itself a sport. What kind of sport murders thirty thousand of its competitors every year?

Dave, Wiltshire

Wherever money is made out of using animals, you are sure to find cruelty. These poor dogs are bred, kept in an unnatural environment and when their racing days are over are often discarded like trash. No matter how much the greyound racing fraternity protest their concern and re-homing policies, there are never enough places for the end-of-the-line dogs.

Margaret, Surrey

How can a 'sport' that ends up in the deaths of thousands of greyhounds every year still be an active practice in this country? Greyhound racing should be brought to an end and become at most a distant memory.

James, Devon

We are the South Devon branch of the national Greyhound Action group lobbying for a ban on commercial greyhound racing. Thousands of greyhounds are discarded every year when they are no longer deemed fit for the purpose of racing. This is a throw-away evil industry and we are talking about animals' lives here that obviously do not matter to those that breed and exploit them, as obviously profits come before animal welfare. Greyhounds are often abandoned, ears hacked off to remove identifying tattoos that can originate the owner, puppies drowned and shot if they don't make the grade and serious often fatal injuries are sustained on greyhound tracks throughout the country. There is evidence that this is a dying sport as more and more people boycott greyhound racing due to its inherent cruelty.

Helen, Devon

As one of the thousands of volunteers working to re-home greyhounds I cannot believe Lord Lipsey's attitude. Thousands of hounds are put to sleep every year and the industry has failed to do anything about this until the industry was exposed by the Sunday Times. The industry is unable to self-regulate and independent scrutiny is way overdue.

Dawn, Shropshire

We have a retired greyhound from Ireland - the sweetest animal you could ever meet. The comment I wish to make is that in addition to British greyhounds for re-homing, many are also in the same plight from Ireland - which workers in the UK are trying to save as well.

Gareth, Wales

I re-homed a greyhound last year but after 10 days had to give it back as it bit one of my children. Gorgeous dog, shame she wasn't more humanised as she was very frightened of us and kept barking at us. We would definitely consider re-homing another greyhound once our children get older. So many greyhounds need homes and they are normally very placid and walk fantastically on the lead.

Susan, Essex

I think it's amazing that the greyhound industry is claiming that 7,000 dogs re-homed each year is a good thing. There may be 10,000 dogs who retire each year, but there are approximately 100,000 born each year. What happens to the ones that don't make it to the track?

Phil, Edinburgh & East

My partner had 3 racing greyhounds which won many races. They were great dogs and lived with us until sadly they died at the age of 12. I do think it is cruel that people should be allowed to race dogs and put them down because they can no longer race. I think all greyhounds should be registered when born, and once they have passed on. Maybe then we can find the cruel people that are getting away with putting down healthy young dogs.

Kellie, Suffolk

Greyhound racing should be stopped. Dogs going missing in their thousands is one thing, but some dogs that are re-homed are in a terrible condition when they arrive at the re-homing kennels, having sores, bites and needing tooth extractions. Stop the racing, it's the only way.

John, Birmingham

I recently owned a greyhound, but they need a lot of attention as they are very sensitive dogs.

Lisa, Essex

How come these discussions show only the views of people outside the greyhound racing industry? Why doesn't someone put the real facts forward from the racing kennels?

Karen, Coventry

Racing dogs are not treated well, They are worked very hard and destroyed when they can no longer race. It makes no sense that a nation of dog-lovers should use these poor animals in such a way. They are not here for our entertainment.

Joanna, Essex

I think one of the main stigmas attached to re-homing greyhounds is the popular misconception is that ex-racers do not make good pets. Retired race greyhounds make excellent pets and are very clean in the home environment.

Keith, Kent

July issue of Greyhound Star

Industry Welfare Fight Back is Long Overdue
The BGRB has announced a fight back strategy to take on the animal welfare campaigners, writes Floyd Amphlett.

BGRB Chairman, Lord Lipsey, recently announced that he had changed his view on ignoring extremists’ claims for fear that they would lead to extra publicity.

He also told a meeting of journalists that the negative publicity was having an adverse effect on the industry’s ability to attract major non-bookmaking sponsors.

Now the board have appointed an agency called The Firm to conduct a communications audit within the industry with the aim of correcting many of the unsubstantiated claims made by groups such as Greyhound Action.

A BGRB spokesman said: “If you google ‘greyhound racing’, all you see are extremist views about greyhound welfare. Our hope is that we can redress the problem by presenting an accurate representation of what we do and giving the public the chance to form their own opinion based on fact.”

One of the participants in the study is leading British breeder, Jimmy Fenwick. He said, “I think it is a great idea because a lot of the good work that goes on in the industry doesn’t get publicised. For example, we asked how many greyhounds have been homed by the local homing scheme in the last year and it was 50. Then we calculated that between three locals we have individually rehomed 26 dogs in less than four months. This sort of thing never gets publicity but I know that what we have done is repeated all over the country.”

Where are the figures?

With six months of 2007 already gone, the BGRB are still unable to report the industry tote and attendance figures for 2006.

The Star understands that at least six stadia have failed to file figures and NGRC Racecourse Promoters Limited, the trade association for track owners, are due to announce a crackdown. One track promoter said: “There are big concerns, not just on attendance figures but also on injury data too. Some tracks simply didn’t bother to make returns.

It does not put the industry in a good light given future responsibilities under the Animal Welfare Bill, it cannot be allowed to continue. It seems highly likely that it will become a requirement of membership of the association. Tracks cannot expect to reap the benefits if they are not prepared to take responsibility for their actions.

GA comment: Nice to know we've got them rattled ... for more good news read the story below :-)
July issue of Greyhound Star

Summer depression for tracks

Britain’s NGRC tracks suffered an abysmal second quarter of the year with virtually every stadium bar Yarmouth, who [sic] recently opened a new restaurant, suffering double digit drops in attendance, writes Floyd Amphlett.

The Star understands that the figures for April show Perry Barr with a 33% drop in crowds, only narrowly better than Wimbledon with a 28% drop. [how can a 33% drop – from Mr Amphlett’s viewpoint – be better than a 28%? Does he mean worse?]

Other figures revealed to the Star include: Hall Green – 20%, Belle Vue – 17%, Hove – 16%, Monmore – 10%, Oxford – 15%, Peterborough – 12%, Portsmouth – 10%, Romford – 11%, Walthamstow – 10%.

An industry source told us: “The May figures are apparently even worse, though there is some suggestion that things are easing for June. There is also a feeling that this isn’t just greyhound related because those figures include some traditionally strong tracks and other sectors including pubs appear to be affected too. Quite what the effect of the ban on smoking starting on July 1 will be, we can only imagine”.


Financial Times September 1st 2007 http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/-dog-racing-gra-put-up-sale-/2007/09/01/2904376.htm

Dog Racing: GRA put up for sale

(The Racing Post Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge) THE Greyhound Racing Association (GRA) has been officially put up for sale. Risk Capital Partners (RCP), owners of the six-track group since March 2005, apparently hope to double the pounds 50.3 million they paid at that time to Wembley plc for the acquisition.

Such figures clearly put into doubt the long-term future of the sport at some of the venues due to their land value.

The decision by RCP is not unexpected, although the timing has come as something of a surprise.

It apparently has been made after the venture capitalists, the investment vehicle of Channel 4's non-executive chairman Luke Johnson, received "unsolicited approaches regarding potential redevelopment on the six innercity brownfield sites, which total around 55 acres," according to Fergal O'Reilly of property consultants King Sturge Financial Services, which has been appointed as advisers in the sale.

Mention of the word redevelopment will send a shiver down the spine of anyone connected with the GRA tracks, of which Wimbledon, home of the Blue Square Greyhound Derby, is the flagship, albeit a somewhat dated one in desperate need of investment.

However, O'Reilly did also point to the financial well-being of the business, stating: "This instruction represents a rare opportunity for a buyer to acquire a profitable business supported by a significant upside from the underlying land values."

Tim Wright, a partner in King Sturge's residential team, said: "I anticipate a considerable amount of interest when this portfolio is brought to the market - likely to be during this month and with a price tag of in excess of pounds 100 million."

Such an estimate, even if an optimistic opening gambit, may make it unlikely that the GRA will be sold intact simply as a going greyhound concern, although there are complications in redeveloping the prime site of Wimbledon, where the local council has long been opposed to such a move, while there are also questions about the suitability of the land.

One of the issues facing RCP regarding the decision to dispose of the GRA at this time will undoubtedly have been the increase in interest rates since they made the acquisition some 30 months ago, meaning the debt taken on board then now requires more servicing, although the company was not expected to be long-term owners of the group in any case.

In the time of RCP's ownership, it is understood that profit figures for the GRA have remained at similar levels to before, with the generally depressed state of the greyhound racing market offset by some fairly severe cost-cutting, which has seen many departures from the company.

Stephen Rea, publicity spokesman for the GRA, said: "Staff have been informed of the situation, but there is no need to panic as this could take an awful long time and business will continue as normal."

In addition to Wimbledon, the GRA owns the freehold to Belle Vue (Manchester), Hall Green (Birmingham), Oxford and Portsmouth, and has a long-term leasehold with the local council at Perry Barr in Birmingham.

GA comment: This means 6 tracks are likely to be sold for property development. Affected tracks could be: Wimbledon, Belle Vue (Manchester) Hall Green (Birmingham) Oxford, Portsmouth and Perry Barr (Birmingham). Please see link below for full news report (if asked, skip intro screen to go directly to the story)

http://www.tmcnet.com/usubmit/-dog-racing-gra-put-up-sale-/2007/09/01/2904376.htm

Please read the next story for more background information.

Unknown source

Odds-on for £190m greyhound race


Samantha McClary 11/06/2007

Around 55 acres of prime brownfield land could come to market if Channel 4 chairman Luke Johnson bows to pressure and puts his six greyhound tracks up for sale.

The serial entrepreneur’s private equity fund, Risk Capital Partners, has received several unsolicited bids from residential and commercial developers for its six freehold stadiums in Wimbledon, SW19; Portsmouth; Oxford; Manchester; and Birmingham sites in Perry Barr and Hall Green.

Although no figures have been disclosed, the tracks could sell for around £3.5m an acre, valuing the portfolio at more than £190m.

In 2005, the Chandler family put its 11.2-acre Walthamstow Stadium in Chingford, E4, on the market for £40m.

The track attracted bids from several residential developers, including George Wimpey, but was not sold.

Ben Redmond, director at Risk Capital Partners, said: “The land is not on the market and we have not sought offers, but we have been studying the unsolicited bids carefully and will give them due consideration.”

The greyhound racing business has been in steady decline since the 1980s.

Despite investment in the sector, the growing choice of ways to gamble has meant greyhound tracks have been fighting a losing battle for custom.

GA comment: Fingers crossed!

Wales On Sunday July 15 2007

FIVE ruthless killers in Wales are slaughtering hundreds of healthy racing dogs every year,
according to an animal rights group.

Campaigners at Greyhound Rescue Wales say they know the identity of the executioners and have passed
their names to the RSPCA, which has pledged to investigate the practise of putting down dogs who are
no longer fast enough to compete.

In the big money world of dog racing, bookies annually rake in more than £2bn while the Government’s
coffers benefit from more than £70m. But welfare activists say little goes back into caring for
dogs, many of whom are retired aged four but have another 10 years of active life .

While the killings are widely regarded as immoral, they are not necessarily illegal. Since 1997,
anyone can own a bolt gun to kill animals without a licence but can be prosecuted if the animals are
put down inhumanely.

Alain Thomas, founder of Greyhound Rescue Wales, said: “About 500 dogs are meeting some kind of
unacceptable fate here every year. GRW has been given the names of five individuals who are
responsible for killing the dogs.

These individuals buy large quantities of dogs from the registered sector, trial them discreetly,
then keep the fastest and best one or two dogs in each batch. They dispose of the other three or
four by shooting them and incinerating the bodies.”

The organisation also claims the killers make an extra living out of putting down other people’s
greyhounds and lurchers at around £10 a go.

Mr Thomas said: “They make money from charging other owners to shoot and incinerate their unwanted
dogs. This has led to the establishment of an informal but well organised and commercially-based
system to shoot and incinerate greyhounds.”

A report produced by the Assembly in 2003 found Wales was a dumping ground for dogs no longer fast
enough to race on registered tracks in England.

Lorraine Barrett AM, who chairs the Assembly’s All Party Animal Welfare Group, said: “I have no time
at all for anyone who is prepared to shoot a dog just because it is no longer needed for racing.

“I would like to see those people prosecuted.

“The Animal Welfare Act, which will come into effect at the end of the year, will mean that
greyhound tracks will all have to have a vet in attendance. I doubt very much whether they will be
able to survive having to pay to have a vet on site.

“There is an issue about what will happen to greyhound racing in Wales. A lot of people would like
to see an end to it. In a perfect world I would not like to see any animal used for entertainment.
However I would like to see it regulated rather than go underground.”

John Rabaiotti, from Swansea’s Fforestfach greyhound stadium, one of Wales’ two remaining and
unregulated tracks, the other being Valley in Ystrad Mynach, claimed the estimates of dogs killed
were exaggerated.

He said: “Greyhounds tend to be picked on as it is a good story – if you believe the figures, there
are more dogs killed than race.

“I’m not saying killings don’t happen because they do. But I think the figures are distorted. I don’t
think the problem is anything like it is quoted by animal rights organisations.

“The way to deal with it is to hit the perpetrators with a lot harder penalties than have been used
in the past.”

A spokesman for the RSPCA, which says 12,000 greyhounds disappear and are unaccounted for every year
in the UK, said they would be “looking into the matter” of killings in Wales.

james.mccarthy@wme.co.uk

Racing Post April 28th 1999 (an older but none the less revealling letter)


WITH regard to the recent letters from Annette Crosbie, T Hughes and others, I would like to make a few points about greyhound ownership in general and dogs that have finished racing in particular.

I am a greyhound owner, primarily involved for the selfish pleasure of seeing my dogs race and win. I buy and sell dogs regularly, hoping to get one that turns out to be a prolific winner, or is a good gambling dog. This is how I've been for the past 20 years (since I was 18). I've always owned three or four dogs at any one time and have always passed them on to somebody before retirement was upon them, found them homes or had them killed.

I use the word killed not because I had them disposed of in a sinister way; they were all put down by vets in the proper manner. I use the word because it is more accurate and descriptive and honest. I can admit I've had my dogs killed, and although it is a last resort, it is an option I have used purely for practical and financial reasons.

I think it is a fair assumption that some of the racers I have passed on to people, those that have not actually been homed, have ended up abused or neglected or killed when their racing careers had finished.
I console myself that it was not actually me who was responsible for them, because as soon as I handed the dogs over I sent a letter to the NGRC informing them of a change of ownership (many dogs that are sold remain registered in the original name for years later) absolving myself from any further responsibility.

A lot of owners love their dogs and are devoted to them, be they bottom grade or top open class. But how often have we all heard the phrase "I could never have him/her put down, there's a place ready in front of the fireplace." Invariably this is said about dogs that have achieved more for the owner, the same owner that would freely let go of a dog that achieved less.
We must remember that every time a dog goes in to traps for a race we are exposing it to the possibility of horrific injury. If owners loved their dogs so much, would they take a chance like that?
I think it is time the greyhound industry was honest with itself. Greyhound racing is an industry based on exploiting animals, just the same as horseracing, and ultimately the same as pet shops and breeders exploiting domestic and show dogs.

Unfortunately there is not enough money in the sport to care for every dog once its racing career is over. If there was I would not advocate putting dogs down. Anybody who buys a greyhound to race must realise they are exploiting the dog for their own pleasure.

A lot of sentimentality is heard among owners, but at the end of the day the dog exists for their pleasure. The Retired Greyhound Trust does its best, and there is also a lot of hard work done by individual trainers when it comes to homing ex-racers, all of it woefully inadequate to deal with the scale of the problem.

It is the responsibility of an individual owner and ultimately their choice what happens to a greyhound after it has finished racing.
The fact is that ex-racers with no traceable owners, and owners unwilling to pay for them, are a strain on the sport and are the cause of much financial pressure among trainers. I can see the sense of T Hughes' argument and I believe it is sound.

Euthanasia or culling might seem wicked and downright cruel but we must remember that the whole sport is based on finance, and if it becomes financially unviable it will disappear.

STUART J ALLEN
London E17

GA comment: This last line says it all ... we couldn't have summed it up better ourselves! Greyhound racing is a business, re-homing the dogs properly is too expensive and would reduce profits ... therefore a large number of "Greyhound trainers" choose to kill their dogs instead. To reduce costs, many don't even use a vet, but instead either mutilate and abandon them or get an unlicensed person to kill them ... often in a truly horrific manner. For more actual examples of what happens to greyhounds once they are too old to race or just aren't fast enough click here

The Sunday Times September 17, 2006 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2361517,00.html

Pet home 'a conveyor belt of killing'

Daniel Foggo

AT FIRST glance the white-washed single-storey building could pass for a holiday chalet. Tucked away among Leigh Animal Sanctuary’s complex of kennels, the bland exterior of “Block 8” gives nothing away.
But anyone venturing inside encounters a sinister scene: a stuffy boxroom in which thousands of dogs have allegedly met their deaths.

“It stinks of dead dogs in there,” said Jane, a former staff member who worked at the site in Greater Manchester for years. “It is a sickening smell.”

The dominant features of the white-walled and red-floored room are two industrial-sized freezers.

They are the last stop on what former staff and greyhound trainers say is a conveyor belt of killing, starting with dogs being delivered at the sanctuary’s front desk on an almost daily basis; leading to lethal drugs fired directly into their chests; and ending with the bodies dumped in the freezers.

Ostensibly the sanctuary, which has been open since 1975 to rehome unwanted animals, is offering succour to dogs found wandering the streets by council dog wardens or brought in by owners who no longer feel able to look after their pets.

But the reality behind the facade is that, according to the testimony of former staff members, about half of all the dogs entering will be killed, often within days or even hours.

The testimony is backed by interviews with three greyhound trainers who said the sanctuary had long been used to dispose of unwanted dogs.

The question of what happens to greyhounds after their racing careers are finished has become a scandal following revelations in July by The Sunday Times that one man in Seaham, Co Durham, had acted as an unofficial “executioner” for the industry for at least 15 years, killing and burying dogs in his one-acre allotment.

The resulting outcry provoked inquiries by the government, Inland Revenue, Environment Agency, RSPCA and the authorities governing greyhound racing.

The Labour peer Lord Lipsey, who is chairman of the British Greyhound Racing Board which represents many of the country’s dog tracks, said that while the killing of dogs was “abhorrent”, it was restricted to the “odd bad penny”.

However, trainers who frequent Leigh Animal Sanctuary disagree. Three greyhound trainers gave interviews, on condition of anonymity, stating that the facility has been the killing ground of choice for the industry in the northwest for many years.

All said that it came down to a matter of cost, with the sanctuary considerably undercutting vets’ prices. One said: “It’s £35 at Leigh Animal Sanctuary but if the vet put them down at the track it’s £65. Every track uses it, they come from all over, Belle Vue [Manchester], Kinsley [West Yorkshire] and Doncaster [South Yorkshire].”

Vets in the vicinity charge up to £70 to put down a dog and are likely to ask the owner why they want the animal put to sleep.
The trainer, who admitted taking greyhounds to be put down at the sanctuary, said: “The majority of registered trainers take them there. They have put down thousands.

“I’ve seen loads of dogs going there [just because they] have not turned out to be any good for racing.”

Greyhounds are the breed most likely to be summarily put down since they are seen as difficult to rehome and therefore of no profit to the owners, claim ex-employees of the sanctuary. Many greyhounds are brought by their owners or trainers when their racing careers are curtailed through lameness, age or lack of speed.

Most of these will specifically ask for their dogs to be put down. The sanctuary is happy to oblige with no questions asked. While killing dogs humanely, such as with lethal injections, is not illegal, trainers belonging to the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC) are required to put dogs down only as a last resort and then only under the supervision of a vet.

But according to former staff at the sanctuary, a vet was rarely present when dogs were killed. “The drill was for the dogs to be kept in an isolation block until they can be checked over by a vet but many greyhounds didn’t even make it that far, they just went straight to Block 8,” said a former employee who asked for her name to be withheld.

“It was the same with any dog which was considered to be ugly or otherwise unlikely to sell,” she said. “If anyone rang back later to ask about a dog we always said it had been rehomed rather than admit it had been put down. The sanctuary is run in a very commercially minded way.

“If it is something pedigree or attractive, it might sell to a member of the public for up to £250, which is a big profit.

“But dogs like greyhounds are considered a burden since they are thought to be difficult to rehome; so instead they just tend to put them down straight away.”

One trainer said: “They can take £35 for rehoming, put them to sleep and then they’ve got £35. They don’t have to feed the animal, they just put it to sleep. It’s money for old rope.”

A reporter posing as a greyhound owner contacted the sanctuary by telephone last week, seeking to have some greyhounds put down. After being told it was £35 per dog he asked if he needed to make an appointment.

Receptionist: “Just turn up any time.”

Reporter: “I’ve got three greyhounds [to put down], is that a problem?”

Receptionist: “No, that’s fine, you can bring them down any time . . . Just remember it’s £35 each.”

Two days later the reporter walked into the reception block and spoke to a member of staff named David. During a perfunctory exchange the reporter told David he had two young greyhounds to be brought in the next day that he wanted putting down because they were “past it”.

David, who declined to ask why he wanted them dead, charged the “trainer” £70 and gave him a receipt. The blue slip included the “trainer’s” name and address and telephone number, but no details about the dogs except that they were greyhounds.
David simply pencilled in the words “For P.T.S” [put to sleep] on the line headed “reason for rehoming”.

When asked if he would lie to the “trainer’s” wife if she called by telling her the dogs had been rehomed, David agreed he would.

All three former staff said dogs were put down by other employees rather than vets. One said: “The dogs would be injected in the chest because that was the quickest way, though vets usually put the needle in a vein in a paw.

“When the bodies were collected by a company to take them for cremation they would write down a figure only about half the actual number we were taking. I suppose that was to make it look as if they weren’t putting that many down.”

Yesterday Linda Buxton, 48, the woman in charge of the sanctuary, refused to comment.

Others are also seeking to speak to Buxton. Alistair McLean, chief executive of the NGRC, said: “Following the Seaham exposé we have had information about a number of places, one of which was Leigh Animal Sanctuary, and we are now investigating to identify those trainers using it.”

Trio banned

Three leading figures in greyhound racing have been banned from the sport for life following The Sunday Times’s exposure of the Seaham scandal.

At a stewards’ inquiry last week at the National Greyhound Racing Club, Gillian Young and her father Sid Fenwick, both licensed trainers, were “warned off” the sport, an effective ban. Young was fined £1,500 and Fenwick £1,000.

Both had been pictured in July delivering two young greyhounds to David Smith in Seaham, Co Durham, to be put down. Smith could face two years in prison and a £20,000 fine.

Young’s husband Graeme, an assistant track manager, also received a life ban and was fined £2,000. Trio banned

GA comment : This comes as no suprise (read the stories below for more information about this), we have known for years that 1000's of dogs were just disappearing after they "retired" from racing and 1000's more before they even got to the track ... deemed too slow to even bother training. It is great news to see that more and more of these secret killing fields are being discovered and the true callous and murderous nature of the greyhound racing industry is being revealed.

We also note with interest that 3 people have been banned for life by the racing authorities ... these are the 3 people who were caught in the Times' previous expose of the Seaham killing ground ... the particularly interesting point is that they were randomly caught because they just happened to bring dogs on the day when the newspaper was there ... if every trainer/owner who had had a dog killed at Seaham or similar places around the country was banned for life ... there wouldn't be many left to carry on racing.

Take Action: Please take the time to write or email your local paper about this ... we must keep the pressure on and keep the issue in peoples minds while it is still fresh. Today is the day to act!

For an extended GA press release on this topic click here

Sunderland Today July 18th 2006 http://www.sunderlandtoday.co.uk/ViewArticle2.aspx?SectionID=1107&ArticleID=1634846


'We knew nothing about killing fields'


SUNDERLAND Greyhound Stadium owners today denied claims they knew thousands of healthy racing dogs were being secretly slaughtered in Seaham.

The racing industry has been thrown into turmoil after David Smith was accused of killing up to 10,000 dogs and burying them near his £220,000 detached house in Northdene Terrace.

The dad-of-three, who runs a builder's merchant and newsagent's in Lord Street, charged £10 a time to shoot dogs, allegedly for 40 trainers, because they were too old to race and too expensive to home.

Animal rights campaigners said they believe most of the slaughtered dogs would have been raced at Sunderland and Brough Park stadiums ­ both owned by bookmaking giant William Hill.

"William Hill knew about this," said Tony Peters, of Greyhound Action. "They've know for years this guy Smith has been killing dogs that come from their tracks."


The firm denied the allegations.


A spokesman said: "William Hill stadia hosts a responsible and regulated sport and has no reason to believe that any owners or trainers from our tracks have been involved with this activity.

"We find the revelations abhorrent and will welcome and support any investigation into the activity to identify any miscreants who may have chosen to euthanase their greyhounds by these means.

"Should an investigation identify any individuals have raced greyhounds at our tracks and who have then engaged in this activity, these individuals will be banned from having any further association with our tracks immediately and will be reported to the NGRC (National Greyhound Racing Club, which regulates 31 licensed tracks)."

Durham police have twice spoken to Mr Smith since revelations of his activities came to light over the weekend

A spokesman said: "We have received no specific complaints about Mr Smith's activities and we have no concerns about the bolt gun and we have now established it is quite legitimately held."

On whether the alleged mass dog grave posed a public health hazard, District of Easington Council said: "We will be working with the Environment Agency to ensure there will be no long-term contamination of the land at Mr Smith's home.

"There are potential health issues surrounding the disposal of animal carcasses and we would therefore strongly advise people to use pet crematoriums or contact the council for further advice."

The NGRC said its North East stipendiary steward Eric Vose would investigate.

But Greyhound Action fears any investigation may be worthless unless the one-acre plot where Mr Smith allegedly buried 10,000 dogs is dug up.


Death threats to dog killer


DOG killer David Smith has been forced to boost security at his Seaham home after receiving death threats.

Since the allegations were made against the businessman, malicious phone calls have been made to his businesses and Northdene Terrace home.

Some of the sinister calls were answered by Mr Smith's wife Maureen and his daughter.

To protect his property and family, Mr Smith hurriedly installed CCTV, floodlights and other security measures after the allegations received national attention.

"I am devastated by all of this," said the East Durham builder's merchant.

Durham police said they were not aware of any death threats, but confirmed the Smiths had received a number of malicious phone calls.


Killings 'common knowledge'


PEOPLE in Seaham have backed David Smith, who has received death threats for allegedly killing thousands of greyhounds.

Many people said it was common knowledge dogs were being put down.

"Everybody in Seaham knows what he does" said Frank Prest, of Seaham Pet and Garden Centre. "And have done for a long time.

"As long as he's doing it humanely, he's providing a service. If he didn't do that, they would just smack them over the head with a brick."

Deborah Rochester, 29, from Ropery Walk, said: "I don't agree with the methods he's using but I can't see why everyone is putting up a fuss about it now because he's been doing it for years."

Her friend Angela Peel, 30, from Dawdon, said: "He's not doing anything illegal and people have been using him for years."

They both said greyhound owners should take more responsibility for their dogs.

Pauline Yates, 41, from Seaham, agreed. "It's up to the owners to look after them until they die," she said.

Fifty-year-old Alan Savage, from Parkside, also said blame for the situation should lie with the owners. "It should be the owners held up as well, not just Dave Smith. They're the ones making money off the dogs then just getting rid of them."


Racing told to clean up its act


THE greyhound industry has been told to "clean its act up" by the Government.

Animal Welfare Minister Ben Bradshaw said killing a dog with a bolt gun breached the rules of the National Greyhound Racing Club.

"The National Greyhound Racing Club must launch an immediate investigation," he said. "It must discipline or expel any members who have broken its rules by disposing of their dogs in this way."

"The Government believes racing greyhounds should only be put down by a vet.

"We have long felt self-regulation within the greyhound industry is the most effective way of policing animal welfare.

"If they can't clean up their act, Government will intervene."

Meanwhile, campaigners have called for commercial greyhound racing at stadiums such as Sunderland and Easington to be scrapped.

Greyhound Action says replacing real dogs with computer-generated virtual racing is the only way to ensure thousands of greyhounds a year do not end up prematurely killed.

Read on for more on this story:

The Sunday Times July 16, 2006 http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2272307,00.html

Killing field of the dog racing industry



Another day, another death: this man slaughters greyhounds on an industrial scale

Daniel Foggo
DAVID SMITH met the owners of the two greyhounds at his garden gate and pocketed £10 from each as he took hold of the makeshift leads.

With his chained-up rottweilers looking on, the bearded and bespectacled Smith led the lithe racing dogs — one a fawn- coloured brindle and the other black with white markings — across his plot and into a breeze-block shed.

The animals appeared sprightly and alert as if they hoped they might soon be allowed off the lead for a run. But seconds later two sharp reports rang out. They had been killed.

Anyone who had worked in an abattoir would have recognised the sounds as the discharging of a bolt gun, a weapon that fires a metal bar with enough force to smash the toughest skull.

The dogs emerged lifeless and limp in Smith’s bloodied wheelbarrow. He dumped them in a freshly dug hole on one side of his one-acre garden before covering the grave with earth using a mechanical digger.

Smith contemplated his garden for a moment with a look of satisfaction. On the other side of his plot his lettuces were coming up nicely.

The episode, on Wednesday, was captured on film by a photographer for The Sunday Times. It was repeated again the next day, this time with greyhounds emerging from a white van and a silver Ford Mondeo before disappearing into Smith’s killing shed.

It was a scene that has been repeated regularly in this secluded corner of the seaside town of Seaham, in Co Durham — a slaughter business that can be exposed for the first time today after a Sunday Times investigation.

Smith’s unofficial abattoir and graveyard have quietly serviced the greyhound racing industry in the north of Britain for about 15 years. Calculations by this newspaper suggest that over that period at least 10,000 dogs have been killed and buried in the plot at the back of his house. Before Smith, his father, now 81, provided a similar service.

According to a dog track insider, the trade has been a secret that greyhound trainers and owners have been keen to keep. “Only doing two dogs a day is a bad day for him. It is not unheard of for him to do around 40 a day and if anyone ever digs up that garden it will be like the killing fields,” we were told. “He has made a mint out of it.

“This service is for the licensed trainers who have 50 or 60 dogs in their kennels. The greyhounds are used for the afternoon races that appear on television. These dogs have made a lot of people a lot of money and they don’t deserve to be shot in the head. It is a scandal that the industry should be ashamed of.”

Campaigners have long suspected that such an operation was being run somewhere in Britain but have never been able to pinpoint its location. The RSPCA says about 12,000 greyhounds a year disappear and are unaccounted for.

Greyhounds have only a short racing life. Once they reach 3½ to 5 years old — out of a natural lifespan of about 12 to 14 years — they are considered too slow to compete. Some go to new homes as pets, in accordance with the official policy of the National Greyhound Racing Club (NGRC), the industry’s governing body. Many others simply vanish.

Debbie Rothery, who runs a greyhound sanctuary in West Yorkshire, said thousands of greyhounds were disposed of each year under the noses of the NGRC. “It is a sordid secret but nobody wants to know and it is about time it was exposed,” she said. “The RSPCA have told me they have not got time to pursue greyhound abusers and parliament does not do anything because they are making too much money from the industry.”

Greyhound racing is big business, attracting 3.5m people to its tracks each year, with millions more watching races on television. Every year £2.5 billion is bet on the sport and about £70m goes to the government in tax.

In recent years greyhound racing has upgraded its public image, helped by regular television coverage of meetings and by celebrity owners such as Freddie Flintoff, the England cricketer.

The scandal of the disappearing dogs has, however, remained hidden and even those within the racing world who have attempted to expose it have been thwarted.

One is Pauline Harrison, a greyhound owner from Barnsley, who met evasion and lies when she tried to find out what had happened to her race- winning dog, Stormy Silver. He was five years old when she decided to retire him in 2002. Terry Dee, a registered trainer attached to Kinsley stadium, a licensed track near Pontefract, West Yorkshire, offered to find him a new home.

“He took him off me but when I tried to find out how Stormy Silver was doing in his new home a few weeks later Dee kept putting me off. In the end I rang the retirement home and they said they hadn’t had any dogs from Kinsley.

“Then Dee said he’d lied and in fact he’d given him to a woman but it took weeks to get the number. In the end, I spoke to this supposed new owner and she said he was doing fine. But Stormy Silver had a toe missing and when I asked her which foot it was on she didn’t know. She said she would call back but after that the number became unobtainable.”

The owners of some of the 52 other dogs entrusted to Dee also want to know where they went. After they complained, Dee was brought before the NGRC and said he had given the dogs away at motorway service stations but had not kept records.

He was stripped of his trainer’s licence but the former owners still did not know what had happened to their dogs. The suspicion is that Dee, who died several months ago, took them to Smith. The industry insider said: “Everyone knows the dogs went there. The inquiry swept it under the table; once Dee was no longer a licensed trainer they had effectively washed their hands of him.”

When informed of her dog’s fate by The Sunday Times last week, Harrison said: “It is horrific but I had come to suspect that something like this had happened.”

The Sunday Times began its investigation after a tip-off from a racing insider who also felt it was time to expose and end the practice. A reporter, posing as a greyhound owner who wanted to dispose of his dogs, rang Smith, whose wife Maureen answered the phone and asked what he wanted.

“It’s about some dogs,” said the reporter and offered to call back. She interrupted and said in a matter-of-fact tone: “You want to put some dogs down, do you? Half past nine in the morning, down by the garden gate.” Every morning? “Every morning, barring a Sunday,” she said.

Last week the reporter turned up at the Smiths’ business just as two other dog owners, a man in jeans and a baseball cap and a woman in a quilted waistcoat were leaving together in a powder-blue van.

The plot of land where the slaughtered greyhounds are buried is on a secluded plateau just below the Smiths’ large redbrick dormer bungalow. Nearby is a stream into which the residues of decaying dogs could leach, although it was dried up last week.

As Smith emerged from the shed where he had just ended the lives of the two dogs, the reporter told him that he had eight greyhounds he wanted put down. Smith, who at no point asked why he wanted them dead, indicated that that was no problem as long as he hurried up as he had to get back to his work as a builders’ merchant.

He bemoaned the fact that many of his customers balked at paying his £10-per-death fee. “When you think it’s 60 or 70 quid at the vet, what am I gonna do? I’ll be honest with you, I was thinking of putting it up,” he said.

“If some hassle us (over) 10 quid I am gonna put it up to £15. Don’t hassle us for a discount — at 10 quid I’m doing it for nothing.

“I am doing a service because the council and everyone who comes here, the RSPCA . . . begged us not to pack in because if I pack in there will be dogs all over the streets.

“People are not going to pay 50, 60 or 70 quid at the vets, they will just let them loose. That’s what they said to me.”

He continued complaining, saying that he found the endless killing “a hassle”.

“I’ve done it for that many years, and my father done it before me and I’ve done it and I’m not really bothered. If I had to pack in tomorrow I’d pack in. It’s the hassle. For what? For what I make out of it?” When the reporter suggested that he might run out of room to bury the dogs, Smith pointed towards the far corner of the plot and said: “It takes me about three years to get across there and by the time I get across I can start here again and there’s only a few bones left so it doesn’t worry us.”

The RSPCA denied having any record of meeting Smith.

A spokesman said that such killing was unjustified and unnecessary, although not necessarily illegal.

Since 1997, anyone can own a bolt gun to kill animals without a licence but can be prosecuted if the animals are put down inhumanely.

The RSPCA put down 1,045 dogs last year for non-medical reasons but insists that it is done only as a last resort once all other options have been exhausted. “This is a sad reflection on the greyhound racing industry, which should be cleaning up its act,” said Steve Cheetham, the RSPCA’s veterinary spokesman.

“It is imperative that the industry finally admits there is a problem and works with welfare organisations to look at ways of tackling this as a matter of urgency.”

Alistair McLean, chief executive of the NGRC, said that the industry helped to fund the retirement of about 3,000 of the 10,000 dogs that stop racing at its 30 registered tracks each year. But although they ask their trainers to confirm what happens to dogs after they retire, making exacting checks is difficult.

“Our policy is clear, which is that we would wish the greyhound to be suitably rehomed. Greyhounds make great pets. It is absolutely against our rules to use