Tag Archives: gamekeeper

Ilkley, West Yorkshire: Austin Hawke

CONVICTED (2019) | gamekeeper Austin Hawke, born 23 August 1967, of The Bungalow, Ling Park, Ilkley LS29 0EJ – killed a badger in a trap

Badger killer Austin Hawke, a gamekeeper from Ilkley, Yorkshire, UK
A badger died a cruel and horrible neglect as a result of gamekeeper Austin Hawke’s cavalier attitude towards wildlife management

The badger had been lured to a ‘stink pit’ at High Denton Farm, near Ilkley, where dead and decaying animals are legitimately placed in a pile to lure vermin so they can be destroyed.

Austin Hawke – a head keeper of the Denton Park Estate, had denied failing to inspect a snare every day it remained in position. The offence was contrary to the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

Hawke had set eight wire snares at four entrances to a 25 metre by 25 metre fenced off area of moorland before Easter 2018.

The aim was to lure foxes, the target species which Hawke had a licence from Defra to destroy, to the pit.

The square pit had four entrance holes cut into the fencing mesh with the snares placed nearby.

The pit was around 100 metres away from a footpath.

However, Hawke claimed the snares had been ‘deactivated’ on Good Friday (March 30, 2018) because he was conscious there could be an increase in visitors and walkers to the moorland over the Easter break.

The RSPCA is against the use of snares because they trap animals indiscriminately and cause tremendous suffering. Not that this would faze a gamekeeper like Austin Hawke

He said, generally, deactivating snares involved loosening the wire so the loop part, which the animals are snared by, is made smaller and wrapped around a ‘tealer’, a semi-rigid wire which holds the loop in the air at the correct height, and laying it down in undergrowth nearby.

On this occasion he admitted the snares had been left in situ but said the loops had been loosened and made so small as to prevent hares or badgers getting tangled in them.

He said the idea was to re-set them after a few weeks.

Prosecuting Rob Yates said the badger had been found by walker and bird watcher Andrew Jowett on May 28 last year.

Badger killer Austin Hawke, a gamekeeper from Ilkley, Yorkshire, UK

The police were called to the site. Sergeant Stuart Grainger, of North Yorkshire Police, said he attended the site, one kilometre north of High Denton Farm, on May 29. The dead badger was in one of the snares which was attached to a wooden stake in the ground and “looked as if it had been dead for several days”.

He said it was in such an advanced state of decay that its innards fell away when it was raised from the ground. He said the snare had cut into the badger’s flesh.

Hawke acknowledged legislation required gamekeepers to check snares at least once every 24 hours but he argued that as he had deactivated them there was no reason to check them.

He said he had been a gamekeeper for 35 years.

He said when in use, the traps and snares are checked daily and any non-target species trapped in them, such as hares and badgers, are released.

“We don’t want to cause unnecessary suffering,” Hawke said, stating he regarded the capture of a non-target species as a ‘tragedy’.

He said he had made an inspection of the area prior to setting the snares and he had seen no evidence of badgers being present, which can be seen through their droppings or hair on fences.

Defending, Amber Walker said her client had an exemplary record as a game keeper and was skilled in his job and honest.

“The snares were not left in such a state they posed a threat to non-target species. Mr Hawke has said if he had not been sure of this he would have gone back to check,” she said.

She also claimed there was a possibility that animal rights activists could have been responsible in order to have the blame laid at the feet of the game keeper.

“Removing a head keeper (through conviction) would be quite a scalp (by some activists) even if it meant the death of a badger,” she said.

Mr Yates claimed it was unlikely that animal rights people who campaigned against animal cruelty and disapproved of capturing animals would set snares.

Instead, he said Hawke had left the snares in position and was under a legal obligation to check them every 24 hours.

Magistrates found Hawke guilty of the charge, but stated it was an ‘isolated act of negligence, rather than intent’.

Sergeant Kev Kelly, of North Yorkshire Police’s Rural Task Force, said: “This case was reported following a member of the public who was aware of our proactive work under Operation Owl.

“From the evidence collected, it was apparent that the badger had suffered before it had eventually died after being caught in the snare. Therefore this case was fully investigated to ensure other animals didn’t undergo the same fate.

“If the defendant had been using breakaway snares it is less likely that he would have killed the badger.

“I am disappointed as we have been doing some really good partnership working with local Nidderdale keepers who want to show the public good practice and accountability.

“Hawke’s conviction will no doubt have an impact on how his profession is viewed. I think he has done his wider colleagues a disservice.”

Geoff Edmond, RSPCA National Wildlife Coordinator, said: “The RSPCA continues to work closely with the North Yorkshire Police’s Rural Task Force and this result highlights the strength of partnership working under Operation Owl.

“This badger will have suffered a horrific and prolonged death having been snared in this way.

“The RSPCA is against the use of snares because they are indiscriminate in what they catch and they cause tremendous suffering. But while they remain legal we hope we can work together with the Police and National Gamekeepers’ Organisation to raise awareness of the good practice guide so as to improve accountability.”

Sentencing: 12-month conditional discharge. Costs and charges totalling £645.

Telegraph and Argus

King’s Lynn, Norfolk: Christopher Carter and Luke Byrne

CONVICTED (2012) | Christopher Carter, born c. 1962, of The Burrows, Common Lane, King’s Lynn PE32 1QQ and 22 Daseleys Close, King’s Lynn PE30 3SL and Luke James Byrne, born 22 October 1993, of 22 Daseleys Close, King’s Lynn PE30 3SL – caused animal fights by setting terriers on foxes and a rat caught in traps

Christopher Carter (left) during his court appearance and a recent (2019) Facebook photo of Luke Byrne

Gamekeeper Christopher Carter, who works at the West Acre Estate next to the Queen’s Sandringham estate in Norfolk, was filmed laughing as his dog tore a fox to pieces. In court, he admitted encouraging his dogs to fight with the fox.

Luke Byrne, who at the time was shadowing Carter on school work experience, filmed his terrier Sid ripping apart a trapped fox on the land. He is heard in the footage screaming ‘kill it’.

Jonathan Eales, prosecuting for the RSPCA, showed magistrates video footage, recorded by Byrne, of the fights which saw dogs attacking a rat and foxes animals trapped in snares.

Horrific footage captured Luke Byrne goading his dog into tearing a helpless fox to pieces.

The first clip showed a fight between Byrne’s dog and rat which took place on June 20, 2009.

The other videos showed Carter’s two dogs attacking a fox on July 2, 2009 and a fight between one of Carter’s dogs and a fox on June 15, 2010.

Mr Eales said the offences came to light after a woman bought the phone from Byrne’s parents on Ebay and found one of the video clips.

Both men were raided by the RSPCA and police, who found pictures of three dead birds – a heron, a buzzard and a cormorant – on a laptop at Byrne’s address.

Mr Eales asked magistrates to consider depriving both men of their dogs, who would then be re-homed by the RSPCA, but magistrates refused.

Luke Byrne pictured in 2014. image: Facebook.

James MacWhirter, defending Byrne, said: ‘If there was a case where you ought to temper justice with leniency, in my submission it’s this kind of case.’

Mr MacWhirter said Byrne regretted his actions ‘with every fibre of his body’.

In a letter handed to the bench, Byrne said: ‘The guilt I feel and the shame I have brought to myself and my family is massive.’

Malcolm Savory, representing Carter, said his client had 15 character references and was a man with no previous convictions, who was of exemplary character.

‘He is held in wide regard as a gamekeeper, as a family man, as a conservationist and a countryman,’ he said.

‘An essential part of a gamekeeper’s job is the control of vermin and that includes foxes. It’s an entirely legal procedure if done properly.’

Mr Savory said the offence which Carter had admitted occurred because he had allowed an inexperienced dog off the leash alongside a more experienced animal, which was marking a snared fox.

He said Carter was ‘full off shame and self-disgust’, adding: ‘It goes against everything he knows, everything he believes.’

Chair of the bench Alison Wakes-Miller said of Byrne that the bench did not feel it necessary to ban him from keeping animals because of his previous good character and because it was not likely he would repeat the offence.

Mrs Wakes-Miller told Byrne: ‘We do not believe you should be deprived of your dogs or banned from keeping dogs because this was a one-off and totally out of character.’

Sentencing |
Byrne: four-month prison sentence, suspended for 12 months; 150 hours of unpaid work; £500 costs.

Carter: eight weeks in prison, suspended for 12 months; 150 hours of unpaid work. £1,000 costs.

EDP24
Daily Mail


Additional Information

West Acre is owned and managed by the Trustees of West Acre Estate, which is headed by wealthy Henry Birkbeck and his son Alec Birkbeck. Following Christopher Carter’s conviction, Alec said his family had been stunned by Carter’s ‘out of character’ behaviour but had not fired their disgraced employee.

He said: ‘It’s been horrible.’

He added: ‘We’re just so glad it’s over, it’s such an unfortunate incident.’

Henry Birkbeck said: ‘The taking of his [Carter’s] own two dogs has caused great stress and trauma for the family.’

The landowner said he intended to stick by his gamekeeper.
He said: ‘My faith may be shattered but not lost.’

Luke Byrne has a business named LJB Stoves.

Despite being directly involved in at least two animal fights, Luke Byrne was described in court as “of good character” with magistrates thinking it unlikely he would repeat his “one-off” acts of animal cruelty. More than three years after his conviction Byrne posted this advert for cruel animal trapping devices on a local Facebook selling site.

Hexham, Northumberland: Wayne Lumsdon and Connor Patterson

CONVICTED (2011) | barbaric wildlife criminals Wayne “Podge” Lumsdon, born 8 December 1987, of 53 Park Road, Lynemouth, Morpeth NE61 5XJ and Connor Charles Patterson, born 18 June 1987, formerly of The Hope, Whitfield, Hexham, but as of April 2020 residing at Little Kenny Farm, Lintrathen, Kirriemuir, Angus DD8 5JD – forced animals to fight to the death and posted the footage on the internet

Wildlife criminals Wayne Lumsdon and Connor Patterson
Wayne Lumsdon (left) and Connor Patterson got their kicks from watching animals tearing each other apart

Wayne Lumsdon and Connor Patterson were jailed for offences relating to badgers, foxes, dogs, cats and cockerels. The pair were also banned from keeping animals for 15 and eight years respectively after boasting about their antics in text messages and keeping photos.

Lumsdon pleaded guilty to willfully killing a badger and two counts of causing an animal fight to take place.

Apprentice gamekeeper Patterson pleaded guilty to two counts of causing an animal fight to take place.

Wildlife criminal Wayne Lumsdon
Lumsdon is banned from keeping animals until 2026

Magistrates were read a series of texts exchanged by the pair in which Lumsdon bragged of “killing a badger” with his and another dog – something he described as “mint”.

The court was then shown a video of the badger being attacked by the two dogs, then footage of cocks fighting and again men’s voices could be heard encouraging them.

Magistrates heard clothes seen in the video were later traced to Lumsdon and that a text message of his referred to spurs used in cock fighting.

2022 image of Wayne Lumsdon with partner Madison Armstrong

Further footage was shown to the court of a fox which had been snared being attacked by a dog. A stick was thrust into the fox’s mouth and a boot – which was later traced to Patterson – was shown on its neck. Again, men could be heard laughing and encouraging the dog with cries of “kill it”.

In the final bit of footage, a fox was shown in a cage with a dog. The animals are seen fighting with men’s voices encouraging them and hands shown holding the fox’s ears through the cage.

In interview, Patterson admitted he had been an apprentice gamekeeper and had a national diploma in countryside and game management. While studying for this, he had learnt how to use snares and traps.

On 25 March 2011 Wayne Lumsdon and Connor Patterson had their jail sentences cut because of a legal technicality. Judges at Newcastle Crown Court were forced to cut their prison sentences because the pair had not been given credit for pleading guilty at an earlier hearing. Patterson had his sentence reduced to 16 weeks. Lumsdon’s 26 weeks was cut to 21 by a judge at a separate hearing.

ChronicleLive 17/02/2011
ChronicleLive 25/03/2011


Updates

In November 2012 Connor Patterson was convicted of further cruelty to animals alongside wife Caroline Patterson (aka Caroline Jordan) after a search warrant was executed at their cottage in Whitfield by Northumbria Police and RSPCA inspectors. A total of 55 animals including dogs, rabbits, guinea pigs, turkeys, ducks and chickens were seized from the couple.

Animal abusers Connor Patterson and ex wife Caroline Patterson outside court
Connor Patterson and now ex-wife Caroline Patterson (now Caroline Jordan) outside court

The court heard animals had been left without a constant supply of fresh drinking water and some were underweight.

Dogs at the property were suffering from dental disease, while a turkey was left with an untreated lump in its ear.

Patterson was found to be in breach of his disqualification order although this and the cruelty charge were later overturned on appeal on the grounds that the animals were the responsibility of his wife.

Caroline Patterson was given a conditional discharge and was not banned from keeping animals.

Source: The Journal (article removed)