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The Fall of a Predator, 10 years Jail, Horrifying Double Life of Crocodile Expert


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Adam Britton, a once-celebrated British zoologist known for his work with Sir David Attenborough and his appearances in documentaries for the BBC and National Geographic, has been sentenced to over a decade in prison for crimes that have shocked the world. Behind the veneer of a respected academic and wildlife expert lay a man whose private life was marked by acts of unimaginable cruelty and depravity. On Thursday, Britton was sentenced to 10 years and five months in an Australian court after pleading guilty to a staggering 63 charges, including bestiality, the possession of child abuse material, and the torture and killing of dozens of dogs.

 

Crocodilian Blogspot Adam Britton pictured with Sir David Attenborough

 

Chief Justice Michael Grant, presiding over the case at the court in Darwin, did not mince words in his condemnation of Britton's actions. He described Britton's conduct as involving "a degree of depravity and reprehensibility which falls entirely outside any ordinary human conception and comprehension." The judge noted that the sheer brutality and deviance of Britton's actions were so extreme that they defied simple description. "The sheer deviance and brutality of your conduct is not satisfactorily encompassed by the bare description that you killed each animal," he remarked, adding that Britton had used an array of weapons, including knives, wooden clubs, pliers, bolt cutters, hacksaws, and axes, to carry out his horrific acts.

 

Britton's crimes were laid bare through a series of videos uncovered during the investigation, videos that left even seasoned investigators horrified. These videos, the judge said, made it "sickeningly evident" that Britton derived "clear and unalloyed pleasure" from the torture he inflicted on the animals. In addition to his prison sentence, Britton was banned from buying or living with any mammal, although this restriction only applies while he remains in the Northern Territory (NT), as he was charged under local law.

 

The case has sparked outrage and calls for reforms to Australia's animal cruelty laws. Charles Giliam, operations manager at the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (RSPCA), emphasized the urgent need for cross-border legislation to ensure that animal bans are recognized across all states and territories. The current laws, he suggested, are insufficient to prevent repeat offenders from continuing their abuse in different regions.

 

In the courtroom, Britton's lawyer argued that a lifetime ban on all animal contact would be "extreme," given that Britton's offending was "limited to a particular type of animal." However, the sheer scale and severity of his crimes have left many questioning whether any restrictions short of a lifetime ban could adequately protect animals from further harm.

 

Britton, breaking his silence for the first time since his arrest in 2022, expressed shame and a desire to seek treatment for what he described as a sexual interest in dogs. In a letter to the court, he wrote, "I take full responsibility for the demeaning crimes that I perpetrated on dogs. I deeply regret the pain and trauma that I caused to innocent animals and consequently to my family, friends, and members of the community that I affected." He went on to acknowledge that he had been struggling with a "rare paraphilic disorder" for much of his life, and that shame and fear had prevented him from seeking the help he needed. "No amount of words can convey how sorry and ashamed I am," he added, pledging to seek "long-term treatment" on his path to "redemption." He also pleaded for privacy for his family, stating, "Please give my family the space they deserve to heal, they were not aware or involved in any way."

 

Britton's journey from a childhood in West Yorkshire to the halls of academia in Australia paints a stark contrast to the horrors that later emerged. After earning a PhD from the University of Bristol, he moved to Australia, where he met his wife, a fellow scientist, and settled in the Northern Territory. There, he built a reputation as a respected academic at Charles Darwin University, specializing in saltwater crocodiles. His expertise led to collaborations with high-profile figures, including Sir David Attenborough and Bear Grylls.

 

However, this public persona was a carefully constructed facade. Online, Britton adopted the aliases "Monster" and "Cerberus," under which he shared images and videos of his heinous acts with like-minded individuals. These images were so disturbing that they traumatized investigators and led the presiding judge to recommend that clerks and security leave the courtroom to avoid witnessing the "unspeakable" acts.

 

In one chilling online post, Britton wrote about his treatment of dogs and puppies, saying, "I have no emotional bond to them, they are toys pure and simple," before adding, "and plenty more where they came from." These words reveal the cold, calculated nature of his actions. Britton would wait for his wife to be away on field trips before taking dogs and puppies into a "torture room" he had set up in a shipping container next to their rural home near Darwin. There, he filmed himself raping and then beating the animals to death. Most of the 42 animals he abused had been given to him for free through online classifieds, with their previous owners believing they were sending their pets to a good home.

 

In his sentencing remarks, the judge highlighted the "devious and careful premeditation and planning" that characterized Britton's crimes. "Your modus operandi was one of devious and careful premeditation and planning, the individuals from whom you procured these dogs thought they were going to a good home and that they would be protected," he said. Britton's actions were not only acts of cruelty but also productions meticulously staged for his own sexual gratification and that of other deviants. "The fact that you staged each of these remorseless killings as a production further reinforces the meticulous level of your planning," the judge concluded.

 

Two of the dogs Britton attacked were his own pets, Swiss Shepherds named Bolt and Ursa, which he shared with his wife. Understandably, his wife was horrified when the crimes came to light, and she has since moved away, changed her name, and continued her work in promoting animal welfare, seeking to distance herself from any association with the case.

 

Britton's crimes did not stop at torturing and killing animals. He also shared his sickening acts with others online, using messaging services like Telegram to send videos of his crimes. In other instances, he would drive the animals to secluded locations to murder them "for his own sadistic sexual pleasure." His arrest in 2022 came after police pieced together clues from a video sent to an animal welfare agency. A raid on his property uncovered further evidence of his crimes, including severed dog limbs, a dog's head, and a decomposing puppy. A laptop found in his home also contained images of child abuse.

 

While the charges against Britton relate to offenses committed between 2020 and 2022, police believe his offending started much earlier. A message from Britton, using his alias "Monster," chillingly recounted how he "started fence jumping when I was 13 or 14 and molesting horses," suggesting a long history of deviant behavior.

 

Justice Grant expressed doubts about Britton's claims of remorse, noting the "sheer delight" Britton took in torturing animals and the persistence of his conduct. "I'm less ready to accept that you are genuinely remorseful, that is particularly so having regard to the sheer delight you took in the torture of these animals and the persistence of your conduct," the judge said. He also raised concerns about Britton's continued belief that non-sadistic sexual interactions with animals were not harmful. "And what appears to be your continuing view that sexual interactions with animals short of sadism isn’t harmful," Justice Grant added.

 

The case has drawn widespread condemnation, with many expressing disbelief that someone with Britton's background could commit such horrific acts. Mr. Giliam of the RSPCA likened the Northern Territory's animal cruelty laws to "a slap on the wrist with a wet bus ticket," noting that the maximum sentence for each offense was only two years. "Just about everybody knows his name now – the abhorrence and the disgust is just palpable." 

 

Outside the courtroom, protesters holding placards voiced their anger that Britton could be released from jail in as little as four years, given the time he has already served since his arrest. "You’ll be dead before then," they shouted, reflecting the widespread desire for justice to be served in this deeply disturbing case.

 

Credit: Daily Telegraph  2024-08-09

 

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30 minutes ago, parallelman said:

I do not understand what drives people to this level of depravity. '...could be out in four years...' and I don't understand that either. At least make him serve the full ten years.

That's the judicial system. 

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I hope that some of his ( future ) fellow inmates have dogs that they love at home ...

Hopefully he will get some taste of his treatment to the dogs by himself .

 

It is a bit like sadistic pedophiles in prison ... I hope he will get the appropriate treatment and wish that he were dead .

  • Agree 1
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