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The couple had already been banned for life from keeping animals in 1993 for earlier breaches of welfare regulations. Speaking after a brief hearing at Pontypridd magistrates court, RSPCA inspector Nicola Johnston said: "I have never seen anything like it before in my life. Even before going inside the house, you could sniff the air outside and realise something was wrong.
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"Inside, it was beyond anything I have ever seen, or hope ever to see again." She said the cellar was unlit and covered in a thick layer of animal waste. "You stood there in complete blackness, squishing and squashing underfoot as you walked," she said. "To think that somebody thought it was a fit place to keep animals was incredible."
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The couple, aged 56 and 46, both admitted seven charges – two for breaching previously imposed banning orders and five for causing unnecessary suffering and failing to meet welfare needs of the animals. District judge Jill Watkins said: "You should understand that I believe that this case merits a custodial sentence." The couple will be sentenced next month.
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