Aija Cernevica, a 30-year-old from Kilbirnie, North Ayrshire, has been permanently removed from the care register after committing an act of profound violence that shocked the community and led to her incarceration. This decision, finalized by the Scottish Social Services Council (SSSC) in May, underscores the severe breach of trust inherent in her actions. Cernevica, who was employed in a profession founded on compassion and protection, instead inflicted unimaginable suffering, demonstrating a complete inversion of the values her role demanded. Her indefinite removal from the register is not merely an administrative penalty but a necessary safeguard, affirming that such brutality is irreconcilable with the duty of care.
The incident itself, which occurred at Orr’s Trust Public Park in Beith in May of last year, is distressing in its detail. Cernevica, who was on bail at the time, launched a prolonged and frenzied attack on a dog under her care. The court heard how she repeatedly struck the animal with her hands, kicked and stamped on it, and even bit it. The violence escalated as she swung the dog over a fence, dragged it across the ground, and finally pinned it down, using her body weight to straddle it before clasping its throat and strangling it to death. This horrific spectacle unfolded in a public space, witnessed by traumatized children, adding a layer of profound psychological harm to the physical cruelty.
Beyond the immediate atrocity, the SSSC hearing revealed further alarming context: Cernevica possessed five blades during this attack. This detail compounds the sense of a dangerous and unstable pattern of behavior, rather than a single, isolated outburst. The council’s statement explicitly notes that her actions indicate “significant attitudinal and values issues” with the potential to place others at risk of serious harm. Her conduct represented a gross abuse of power and trust, even though the trust violated in this instance was not derived from her professional role as a carer. The very nature of the violence—extreme, prolonged, and public—points to deep-seated issues unfit for any caring profession.
In January, Kilmarnock Sheriff Court sentenced Cernevica to three years in prison for this crime. The SSSC’s subsequent decision to strike her off the register aligns with this judicial outcome, creating a dual barrier against her future participation in social services. The council emphasized that public protection concerns are paramount. Her behavior, they stated, is so serious that it damages public confidence not only in the profession but also in the regulator’s ability to uphold standards. A condition or temporary measure was deemed entirely unworkable; the fundamental values breach cannot be rectified through supervision or training.
The SSSC’s rationale is a sobering reflection on the standards expected of those in care roles. Their statement clarifies that “the type of behaviour at issue is not the type of behaviour which conditions would rectify.” This is a critical distinction. The flaw is not a skill deficiency or a lapse in judgment amenable to correction; it is a fundamental failure of character and empathy. When the core requirements of a profession—to safeguard, to nurture, to do no harm—are so utterly violated, the only proportionate response is permanent exclusion.
This case, therefore, stands as a grim reminder of the vigilance required in professions entrusted with the well-being of others. It highlights the necessary mechanisms—both judicial and regulatory—that exist to respond when that trust is catastrophically broken. The removal of Aija Cernevica from the care register serves to protect potential future victims, to restore public confidence, and to unequivocally affirm that such actions are anathema to the very essence of care.









