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Man filmed stamping on defenceless puppy’s head in a lift

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CCTV still of Brunning kicking the dog, next to an image of the dog smiling.
Cameron Brunning, 22, will be allowed to have a pet again in five years (Picture: RSPCA/SWNS)

A man has been banned from keeping pets after he stamped on his puppy’s head because ‘he needed to teach the dog how to behave’.

Cameron Brunning, 22, was caught on CCTV attacking his two-year-old bulldog Biscuit in a lift in the block of flats where he lived.

In the footage, he can be seen dragging the Old Tyme bulldog by the lead before proceeding to stamp on her head, kick her and shout at her once in the lift.

Another clip shows Brunning, from St. Cuthbert’s Court, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, lifting the dog by her throat.

He then dangled her in front of the mirror for roughly ten seconds before dropping her, in an attack believed to have occurred in September or October 2023.

In a statement read out to court, RSPCA Inspector Keogh-Laws: ‘The dog looks terrified and she cowers and tries to move away to the furthest corner of the lift.

‘The dog didn’t appear to be doing anything leading up to or during the beatings which were completely unprovoked.’

Brunning was caught through ‘pure luck’ after CCTV footage was analysed by a concierge trying to identify someone entering the building without a fob.

The bulldog cowers in the corner of a lift.
A vet found evidence of mental and physical trauma after the attacks (Picture: RSPCA / SWNS)

This led to a visit by an RSPCA investigator and two police officers, who who found Biscuit scared of being petted.

Brunning claimed ‘he needed to teach the dog how to behave’, when questioned by the RSPCA investigator.

The dog’s suffering, lasting for at least four weeks, was so severe a vet found signs of muscle trauma and concluded it had ‘taken a mental toll on her as well’.

‘Now Biscuit can look forward to a new life with a new owner’, Keogh-Laws said.

‘She is a really nice dog who settled well in our kennels and she will make someone a lovely pet.’

Cameron Brunning is seen holding bulldog Biscuit by the throat before dropping her in one of the recordings from September 2023. Release date July 28 2024. Cameron Brunning was prosecuted by the RSPCA after CCTV cameras in the lift at the flats in St. Cuthbert???s Court, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear, captured his violent attacks on his Old Tyme bulldog, called Biscuit. In the film the defendant was seen committing a series of assaults, which left the dog in a state of terror. They included aiming kicks and punches at the animal as well as holding her by the throat up against a mirror in the lift and then dropping her. Brunning (D.o.B 16/1/2002), of St. Cuthbert???s Court, Gateshead, pleaded guilty to two offences under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. He admitted causing unnecessary suffering to the bulldog by inflicting physical and mental abuse as well as an offence of failing to meet the needs of the dog. He was sentenced at Gateshead Magistrates??? Court on July 17 when as well as the disqualification he received a 12-month community order.
Brunning dropped Biscuit after she was seen held near his face (Picture: RSPCA/SWNS)

Biscuit has been housed at the RSPCA Felledge Animal Centre while the charity looks for a new home.

Appearing at Gateshead Magistrates’ Court, the 22-year-old pleaded guilty to causing unnecessary suffering to the bulldog by inflicting physical and mental abuse.

He also admitted a separate offence of failing to meet the needs of the dog.

Banned from keeping animals for five years, Brunning was also sentenced to a 12-month rehabilitation order.

Brunning had been ordered to pay a £200 contribution to court costs, along with a £114 victim surcharge.

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