Heat networks use a centralised source of heat and pipe it to nearby buildings where it is used to heat rooms and water.
They were sentenced at Kidderminster Magistrates' Court on Thursday and each was disqualified from keeping or working with farmed animals for life and ordered to pay costs of £500, plus a £95 victim surcharge.Whittall, of Oaklands Farm, Weston-Under-Redcastle, Challinor, of Offa Street, Wrexham and Arden, of Chester Road, Nomans Health, were also ordered to complete 160 hours of unpaid work over the next 12 months.
They were told they would have to wait five years before they could apply to have their bans amended.The campaign group said the case had been a "groundbreaking legal victory".It said the footage showed calves being thrown down trailer and truck ramps, lifted by their tails, kicked in the head, thrown across pens, punched, slapped, dragged by their ears, and hit with sticks.
It said the recordings were gathered over a five-month period from November 2020 to March 2021 at Oaklands Livestock Centre, in Weston-under-Redcastle.The animals were all male calves which it said the dairy industry viewed as being surplus to requirements.
Claire Palmer, director of Animal Justice Project, said: "The cruelty we exposed is not an isolated incident but part of a broken system that treats animals as disposable commodities."
The group has said it is committed to exposing and dismantling the dairy industry and advocating for veganism.Auctioneer Elizabeth Talbot, a director of TW Gaze, said the movements showed he was "such a master of his craft", despite his young age.
The lot was sold for £190, above the estimated price of between £50 and £70.Mrs Talbot admitted the estimate price was "modest" but explained: "It's not about the money; it's about the light it sheds in terms of East Anglian history."
(1875-1965) and continued by his son Humfrey.Mr Beha was a travelling watchmaker and jeweller who had a shop in St Stephen's Plain, Norwich, at the time of his murder.