
Train police in how pets are used by domestic abusers, says charity
Police should be trained in how pets can be used in coercive control cases, according to a charity that found a 'troubling gap' in awareness about the links between violence against animals and violence against humans.
A report from the Naturewatch Foundation found that only 60% of police forces in England and Wales teach officers about pets being used as tools of coercion, punishment and manipulation, even though more than half of UK households have a pet.
'As a police officer, you're more likely to turn up at a household with an animal than not, and there is a very clear link between abuse against animals and abuse against humans,' said Mark Randell, a former senior detective who is a campaigns manager at Naturewatch.
He said there were many instances of domestic abusers 'manipulating or punishing an animal' in order to exert more control over their victim.
'It could be to say 'if you leave me I will hurt your dog or your cat', for example. Or it could even be setting down the rules about how you're going to treat that animal, telling someone they're not allowed to take it out,' he said.
'Survivors often form deep emotional bonds with their pets, particularly in the context of abusive relationships. So a police officer who turns up at a domestic abuse crime scene needs to know how to link that pet to the relationship.'
He has presented the findings of the report, One Response, to Scotland Yard as part of a call for mandatory training for all frontline officers and for more collaboration between domestic abuse professionals and animal welfare experts.
Samantha Billingham, of the Survivors of Domestic Abuse centre, which runs training and support sessions, said there was not enough awareness among professionals about the importance of pets in coercive control cases.
She said: 'A lot of people are staying in that situation because of their pets, because there are not a lot of refuges you can take your pets to. In some cases these are dogs and cats that have been in the family for many years.
'And these animals are controlled, they're abused, violent things happen to them because the perpetrator has to be in control all the time. So this has got to be in the training of coercive control where police forces are concerned.'
Billingham was in an abusive relationship for many years and witnessed how animals could be used for violence and control. 'I went to bed one night when my partner didn't want me to, and a few minutes later he came into the bedroom and he'd actually killed our pet bird. He brought the bird in on the knife to show me,' she said.
Labour's 2024 election manifesto pledged to halve violence against women and girls in a decade, and a strategy is due to be published this summer. Naturewatch said rolling out mandatory training could be a key component.
'The government really needs to embrace this, it's not new thinking,' Randell said. 'We need to start looking at the whole picture, and that includes animals. It's not going to solve all the problems, but this is happening in case after case after case and opportunities are being missed.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
25 minutes ago
- BBC News
Dog helps police track down illegal vapes in Cambridgeshire
Thousands of illegal vapes, cigarettes and tobacco were seized as part of a multi-agency officers, Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Trading Standards and HMRC were assisted by Wagtail dogs, who were trained to detect tobacco, in the inspections in Ely, Soham and Littleport on Tuesday, 3,171 illegal vapes and 32,000 cigarettes were seized. Some of the vapes had oversized tanks and incorrect labelling, and others had not been notified to the Medicines and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency. There were also tobacco products without the correct warnings and labelling in English. Over the last two years, Trading Standards has seized about 13,000 illegal vapes and more than 100,000 illegal cigarettes across Cambridgeshire and Mat Lupton-Pike, from the East Cambs Neighbourhood Policing Team, said: "Illicit cigarettes, vapes and tobacco pose a serious risk to health as well as fuelling funding for other related criminal activity."We ask the public to continue to report any information or concerns to us."The more information we have, the more efficient we can be at targeting those causing harm to our communities."Peter Gell, service director, regulatory services for Cambridgeshire County Council said: "These ongoing, targeted enforcement operations send a clear message to the organised crime gangs that the sale of illegal tobacco and nicotine products will not be tolerated in Cambridgeshire, and that Trading Standards, the police and HMRC are committed to taking a hard line with anyone we uncover perpetrating these crimes." Follow Cambridgeshire news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X.


The Independent
30 minutes ago
- The Independent
Paramedics attacked by patient throwing bricks
Seiitbek Erkin Uulu trapped paramedics Harvey Jenkins and Tom Pursey inside their ambulance in August 2024, then smashed its windows and threw bricks at them. Video footage released by the London Ambulance Service on Friday shows Uulu stomping on the vehicle's windshield while the medical workers were inside. The paramedics said the situation became 'like a horror movie' after they had initially tried to assist Uulu, who appeared distressed. Uulu pleaded guilty to assault of an emergency worker, criminal damage, and being drunk and disorderly, receiving a fine, a four-month alcohol abstinence order, and 150 hours of community service. Watch the video in full above.


BBC News
35 minutes ago
- BBC News
Body found in River Avon after search for swimmer
The body of a 26-year-old man has been recovered from a river following an extensive search Police said it responded to concerns for a man who had been swimming in the River Avon in Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire, at 17:43 BST on crews from Trowbridge, Chippenham, Bath and Temple Back, along with water rescue units from Trowbridge, Stratton and Bath, attended the scene and later recovered a formal identification has not yet taken place, police said the man's family had been informed.