A renowned British crocodile expert has been jailed for 10 years in Australia, after admitting to sexually abusing dozens of dogs, in a case which horrified the nation.
Warning: This story contains distressing details of animal cruelty
Adam Britton, a leading zoologist who has worked on BBC and National Geographic productions, pleaded guilty to 56 charges relating to bestiality and animal cruelty.
He also admitted to four counts of accessing child abuse material.
The Northern Territory (NT) Supreme Court heard the 53-year-old filmed himself torturing the animals until almost all died, and then shared the videos online under pseudonyms.
His abuse went unnoticed for years, until a clue was found in one of his videos. Britton was arrested in April 2022 after a search of his rural Darwin property, which also uncovered child abuse material on his laptop.
Much of the detail of Britton’s crimes are too graphic to publish, and so “grotesque” the judge at times warned people to leave the courtroom.
“Your depravity falls outside any ordinary human conception,” Chief Justice Michael Grant told Britton, according to the Australian Associated Press.
Including time already served, Britton could be eligible for parole in April 2028. He is also banned from owning any mammals for the rest of his life.
Mr Britton’s lawyer argued his offending was driven by a rare disorder causing intense, atypical sexual interests.
Born in West Yorkshire, Britton grew up in the UK before moving to Australia more than 20 years ago to work with crocodiles.
With a PhD in zoology, he had built a global reputation for his expertise, even hosting Sir David Attenborough while the veteran broadcaster filmed part of the Life in Cold Blood docuseries on his property.
Locals have told media he seemed like a quiet but passionate defender of animals.
But he was harbouring a “sadistic sexual interest” in them, court documents say. Exchanges with “like-minded” people in secret online chatrooms detail how Britton began molesting horses at the age of 13.
“I was sadistic as a child to animals, but I had repressed it. In the last few years I let it out again, and now I can’t stop. I don’t want to. :),” he wrote in one message.
For at least the past decade, Britton had exploited his own pets and manipulated other dog owners into giving him theirs.
“My own dogs are family and I have limits,” he explained in a Telegram chat.
“I only badly mistreat other dogs… I have no emotional bond to them, they are toys pure and simple. And [there are] plenty more where they came from.”
He tortured at least 42 dogs, killing 39 of them, according to court documents seen by the BBC. The files only detail his crimes over the 18 months before his arrest, but still fill more than 90 pages.
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