Tattooist 'Dr Evil' jailed for performing ear and nipple removals | Wolverhampton

Brendan McCarthy, who also carried out a tongue-splitting procedure, was jailed for 40 months A tattooist known as Dr Evil has been handed a 40-month jail sentence after carrying out ear and nipple removals at the request of two of his customers.

This article is more than 4 years old

Tattooist 'Dr Evil' jailed for performing ear and nipple removals

This article is more than 4 years old

Brendan McCarthy, who also carried out a tongue-splitting procedure, was jailed for 40 months


A tattooist known as Dr Evil has been handed a 40-month jail sentence after carrying out ear and nipple removals at the request of two of his customers.

Brendan McCarthy, who also carried out a tongue-splitting procedure at his studio in Wolverhampton, pleaded guilty last month to three counts of causing grievous bodily harm with intent.

Sentencing the 50-year-old, from Bushbury, Wolverhampton, at the city’s crown court on Thursday, Judge Amjad Nawaz said McCarthy had no qualifications to carry out surgical procedures or to deal with any adverse consequences which could have arisen.

The judge told the body modification artist: “There is a clear public interest element. There is also a need for deterrent.”

Several friends of McCarthy cried and comforted each other as he was led away, while he could be heard howling after he was taken from the dock.

McCarthy, who ran Dr Evil’s Body Modification Emporium in Princess Alley, Wolverhampton, admitted the charges after the court of appeal said his customers’ written consent to the procedures did not amount to a defence.

Opening the case, prosecutor Peter Grieves-Smith QC said: “The prosecution have accepted that the customers in this case consented to the procedures performed by the defendant. That involved the removal of an ear, secondly the division of a tongue to create a forked tongue, and thirdly the removal of a nipple.”

Ezechiel Lott, whose ear was removed in 2015, had been contacted by police after McCarthy pleaded guilty, the court heard.

Grieves-Smith, reading out comments made to the police by Lott, said he “felt like he had been deceived” as he believed at the time that the procedure was legal.

Grieves-Smith said: “He stated that had he known it was illegal, he would never have had the procedure because he certainly was not that desperate to have his ear removed.”

Smith said: “I accept that the conduct Mr McCarthy has pleaded guilty to must cross the custodial threshold. But nevertheless in the exceptional circumstances of this case, the court could properly suspend any such sentence.”

He added: “Each individual actively sought the procedures. It came about as an extension of the work he had historically undertaken in respect of body-piercing and tattooing.”

Earlier, the court was told the ear removal was performed in 2015 without anaesthetic, three years after McCarthy split a woman’s tongue with a scalpel.

McCarthy first appeared at Wolverhampton crown court in 2017, when he initially denied six counts relating to the three procedures.

Following a failed bid to convince a crown court judge, McCarthy took his case to the court of appeal, contending that the procedures should be regarded as lawful to protect the “personal autonomy” of his customers.

Three court of appeal judges, who noted that McCarthy had divided a customer’s tongue “to produce an effect similar to that enjoyed by reptiles”, said the procedures were not comparable to tattoos and piercings.

Though they accepted evidence that the ear removal had been “done quite well” the judges said it was not in the public interest that a person could wound another for no good reason.

In a statement issued after McCarthy pleaded guilty, Wolverhampton city council said public protection officers had served a notice preventing him from carrying out extreme procedures.

An online petition set up to support the “knowledgeable, skilful and hygienic” body-piercer, who was refused permission to appeal to the supreme court, attracted around 13,000 signatures.

Councillor Steve Evans, Wolverhampton’s cabinet member for city environment, said it exposed the need for national regulations protecting members of the public against the risks of extreme body modification.

“Whilst I’m sure Mr McCarthy considers himself an artist, providing a service removing and cutting people’s body parts without adequate medical training from unsuitable retail premises, presents a risk to the public that we are not prepared to accept,” Evans said.

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