Tag Archives: Police Crime Sentencing and Courts Act 2022

Hampshire Hare Coursing Ring: Leonard Pinnick, Shane and Lloyd Jefferies, Martin Buckland Jr and Sr

CONVICTED | for hare coursing: Hampshire travellers Leonard Pinnick, born 25 December 1986, of 83 Montgomery Road, Bitterne, Southampton SO18 4RX, Shane Jefferies, born c. 1996, of 3 Hornbeam Close, Botley, Southampton SO30 2SZ, Lloyd Jefferies, born 18 March 1988, of Tanhouse Lane, Botley, Southampton SO30 2SZ, Martin Eli Buckland born c. 1983, and Martin Tony Buckland, born 13 December 2003, of Church Farm, Hound Road, Netley Abbey, Southampton SO31 5JS

Busted: Hampshire hare coursing ring comprising travellers Leonard Pinnick, Shane Jefferies, Lloyd Jeffries, Martin Eli Buckland, Martin Tony Buckland

The five travellers were sentenced for hare coursing offences under sections 63 and 64 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act 2022.

This is the first time Hampshire & Isle of Wight Constabulary has secured charges and convictions under this particular legislation since it was introduced in April 2022.

On the evening of 18 January, 2023, police received a report that a group of people had driven onto farmland in the Itchen Abbas area of Winchester, damaging crops in the process, before they began hare coursing in a field.

Officers were deployed to the area and located the vehicles – a Mercedes and a Jeep – before the Jeep reversed and collided with a police car.

Once police detained the Jeep’s occupants, the vehicle was searched and officers located three lurcher dogs, five dead hares, bolt croppers and a lamp.

The Mercedes meanwhile left the scene and was followed by police to Southampton where the occupants were detained.

Inside the vehicle were two more lurcher dogs, two dead rabbits, a slingshot and a lamp.

Following enquiries, five people were charged with offences and pleaded guilty in Basingstoke Magistrates’ Court on Thursday 3 August:

  • Leonard Pinnick pleaded guilty to trespass with intent to search for or to pursue hares with dogs, and being equipped for searching for or pursuing hares with dogs.
  • Shane Jefferies pleaded guilty to trespass with intent to search for or to pursue hares with dogs, and being equipped for searching for or pursuing hares with dogs.
  • Lloyd Jefferies pleaded guilty to trespass with intent to search for or to pursue hares with dogs, being equipped for searching for or pursuing hares with dogs, criminal damage, and dangerous driving.
  • Martin Tony Buckland pleaded guilty to trespass with intent to search for or to pursue hares with dogs, and being equipped for searching for or pursuing hares with dogs.
  • Martin Eli Buckland pleaded guilty to trespass with intent to search for or to pursue hares with dogs, being equipped for searching for or pursuing hares with dogs, criminal damage, and dangerous driving.

Appearing at the same court on Monday 25 September, 2023, Lloyd Jefferies and Martin Eli Buckland were ordered to pay £550 compensation each to the landowner, covering the full £1,100 worth of damage caused to the crops.

Jefferies was also handed a 12 month driving ban with a requirement to complete an extended retest, a two year ban on owning dogs, a 12 month community order with a requirement to complete 200 hours unpaid work, and was ordered to pay £100 kennelling costs for the seized dogs, £85 court costs and a £114 victim surcharge.

Buckland was subject to the same costs and surcharge, as well as the same driving disqualification and dog ban. He was also handed a 12 month community order with a requirement to complete 50 hours unpaid work.

The vehicles’ passengers were sentenced as follows:

Martin Tony Buckland was handed a 12 month community order with a requirement to complete 40 hours unpaid work, a £40 fine, £100 kennelling costs, £85 court costs, £114 victim surcharge, and banned from owning dogs for two years.

Shane Jefferies was handed a 12 week curfew, a 12 month community order with a requirement to complete 40 hours unpaid work, a £40 fine, £100 kennelling costs, £85 court costs, £114 victim surcharge, and banned from owning dogs for two years.

Leonard Pinnick was handed an 18 month community order with a requirement to complete 60 hours unpaid work and attend a ‘Thinking & Skills Programme’. He was also ordered to pay a £40 fine, £100 kennelling costs, £85 court costs, £114 victim surcharge, and banned from owning dogs for two years.

The kennelling costs were recovered from all the defendants under Section 65 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Courts Act which was introduced last year.

Another passenger, a 17-year-old boy, was also arrested by police, and officers continue to work with the Youth Offending Team to reach a suitable outcome for him.

Police Staff Investigator Andrew Williams, from the Country Watch team, said: “Hare coursing is a scourge on our rural communities. It involves the senseless persecution of wildlife, whilst also making life miserable for innocent farmers and landowners, who suffer trespass and damage to their property which accompanies this type of offending.

“The Country Watch team take a very robust stance against hare coursing, and will do everything in our power to respond to reports, assist landowners and target the criminals responsible.

“Last year new legislation was introduced which is bolstering the police’s efforts to target hare coursers, bring them to justice and recover costs from them. I hope rural communities can be reassured that we are making the most of this legislation.

“We are coming into autumn now where we see the bulk of annual hare coursing reports. Please remain vigilant, and report any suspicious people or vehicles on private land to police. If a crime is in progress, dial 999.”

Hampshire Police

Amersham, Buckinghamshire / Hawkhurst, Kent: Tommy Lee Gray and Joseph Abercrombie

CONVICTED (2023) | Tommy Lee Gray, born 11 July 2004, of 15 Weller Road, Amersham HP6 6LQ and Joseph Abercrombie, born 12 April 2003, of 1 Heartenoak Farm, Heartenoak Road, Hawkhurst, Cranbrook TN18 5EY – for hare coursing.

Hare coursers and gypsy travellers Tommy Lee Gray (left) and Joseph Abercrombie
Tommy Lee Gray (left) and Joseph Abercrombie

Travellers Tommy Lee Gray, offspring of convicted horse abusers James and Julie Cordelia Gray previously of Spindles Farm, and Joseph Abercrombie, a professional boxer, were arrested in Essex by specialist rural engagement officers and subsequently convicted of trespassing with intent to search for, or to pursue, hares with dogs.

Both admitted the offence when they appeared before Basildon magistrates on 13 July 2023.

Hare courser and professional boxer Joseph Abercrombie from Hawkhurst, Kent
Hare courser and professional boxer Joseph Abercrombie from Hawkhurst, Kent

The court was told they had both travelled to Paglesham near Rochford on 6 January 2023, Gray from Buckinghamshire and Abercrombie from Kent.

Hare courser Tommy Lee Gray from Amersham, Bucks

They were spotted by members of the public trespassing on fields with two dogs and reported to Essex Police.

Officers from the Essex Police Rural Engagement Team and Rayleigh Local Policing Team attended and the pair were arrested and charged.

Hare courser Tommy Lee Gray from Amersham, Bucks

Magistrates told them they had travelled a great distance and the offence was ‘planned and deliberate’. They decided against banning either man from driving because it was their first offence and against disqualifying them from owning or keeping dogs because of their family circumstances.

Hare courser and professional boxer Joseph Abercrombie from Hawkhurst, Kent

Sgt Ben Felton, from the Rural Engagement Team, said: “Hare coursing causes landowners, farmers and the rural community a large amount of anxiety because of the damage caused to the land by trespassing.

“We won’t tolerate animal cruelty in any form and will seek to prosecute whenever we have evidence of such crimes because we understand the damage, its cost and the fear this cruel crime can cause in our more isolated communities.

“This prosecution is the first of its kind in Essex, and among the first in the country, and we won’t hesitate to use the legislation to prevent and deter people from poaching game in our county.

“The message is getting out that hare coursers are not welcome in Essex.

Hare courser and professional boxer Joseph Abercrombie from Hawkhurst, Kent

“During the 2022/23 season we reduced hare coursing incidents across the county by 50% working with the CPS, forces across the eastern region and Kent, with help from the National Police Air Service.

“We encourage anyone who sees hare coursing in action to call 999.”

Sentencing | fined £250 and ordered to pay £105 costs and a £100 victim surcharge.

Essex Police
EssexLive

Wisbech / Peterborough / Spalding: Nelson Loveridge, Stacey Smith, Danny Rainford, Terry Smith

CONVICTED (2023) | hare coursing gang members Nelson Loveridge, born c. 1985, of 3 Maltmas Road, Friday Bridge, Wisbech PE14 9HR, Danny Rainford, born c. 1990, of Seadyke Caravan Park, Seadyke Road, Wisbech St Mary, Wisbech PE13 4XF, Stacey Smith, born c. 1984, of Baulkins Drove, Sutton St James, Spalding PE12 0JU and Terry Smith, born c. 1983, of Oxney Road, Peterborough PE1

Hare coursers Stacey Smith, Terry Smith, Danny Rainford, Nelson Loveridge
Hare coursers Stacey Smith, Terry Smith, Danny Rainford, Nelson Loveridge

Travellers Nelson Loveridge, Stacey Smith, Danny Rainford and Terry Smith, who are all well known to police, pleaded guilty to being equipped for hare coursing.

Career crook Terry Smith, a convicted domestic abuser, appeared via video link. .

All four men, who are “landscape gardeners” by trade, had previous convictions for poaching.

They were arrested by Lincolnshire Police Rural Crime officers following a short pursuit for hare coursing in the Eastern Road area of Spalding on 9 November, 2022.

Police had been called to a suspected hare coursing incident nearby. A grey Volkswagen vehicle – which was not insured, had no MOT and was not registered to anyone – made off when officers arrived.

It was later found abandoned in Flag Lane, Whaplode Drove, alongside a number of recently-killed hares, said prosecutor Kate Minihane.

A dog handler traced the men nearby.

“A download from Terry Smith’s phone showed a hare coursing incident on the day of arrest but it couldn’t be pinpointed where that happened,” said the prosecutor.

“Three dogs were kept by police in kennels at large expense to the public purse.”

They belonged to Loveridge, Rainford and Stacey Smith. All of the dogs had been forfeited and rehomed since. A fourth dog was seized but no one accepted ownership.

Sentencing | four months’ imprisonment suspended for 24 months; a five-year criminal behaviour order not to enter Lincolnshire during the hare coursing season and be on land with a sight hound or be in company with any person with such a dog without permission. Six-month driving disqualification. all items used in connection with the offence have been forfeited, including their vehicle and their dogs. Stacy Smith, Nelson Loveridge and Danny Rainford have been required to pay £3,586 to recover the kennelling costs. They have also each received fines of £239. Disqualified from keeping dogs for five years (expires July 2028).

Spalding Today
Lincolnshire Police

Telford / Rowley Regis, West Midlands: Kevin Skelding, Craig Richards, Scott Richards

CONVICTED (2023) | Kevin Skelding, born c. 1983, of Liz Clare Court, Donnington, Telford TF2 7RB, Craig John Richards, born 10 August 1974, of 109 Harrold Road, Rowley Regis B65 0RL, and his brother Scott Richards, born c. 1989 and of the same address: caught armed with dogs to hunt hares.

West Midlands hare coursing gang members Scott Richards and Craig Richards from Rowley Regis and Kevin Skelding from Telford
L-R Scott Richards, Craig Richards , Kevin Skelding

Persistent wildlife persecutors Kevin Skelding, Craig Richards (also a convicted benefits fraudster) and Scott Richards, who are all well-known to rural crime police officers, admitted trespassing in pursuit of game and being equipped to hunt hares with dogs.

Hare courser Kevin Skelding from Telford, Shropshire, West Midlands
Image: Facebook – Kevin Skelding
Hare courser Scott Richards from Rowley Regis, West Midlands
Image: Facebook – Scott Richards

The court heard that a member of the public called police on October 28 2022, after spotting the three men with lurcher dogs on land in Market Drayton, north Shropshire.

Police sent an armed response unit and scrambled the force helicopter.

At the scene, officers found an unattended Kia Sportage.

Hare courser Craig Richards from Rowley Regis, West Midlands
Image: Facebook – Craig Richards

Skelding and Craig Richards were found hiding in a wooded area and arrested.

Scott Richards was found in a location away from the other two. The lurcher dogs were found with the vehicle.

The three were found to be in possession of a catapult and ball bearings as well as slip leads. They claimed they were just walking their dogs.

Sentencing | Craig Richards was ordered to carry out 150 hours unpaid work while Scott Richards was ordered to do 120 hours and Skelding 100 hours. All three men were ordered to pay £624 each towards kennelling costs.

Express & Star

Coventry, West Midlands / Rushden, North Northamptonshire: Darren Lee and Ronnie Doherty

CONVICTED (2023) | hare coursers Darren Lee, born c. 1996, of Top Road, Barnacle, Coventry CV7, and Ronnie Doherty, born 28 March 2001, of Newton Road, Rushden NN10.

Ronnie Doherty, a traveller and wildlife criminal based in Rushden, North Northamptonshire
Ronnie Doherty, a traveller and wildlife criminal based in Rushden, North Northamptonshire

Gypsy travellers Lee and Doherty both pleaded guilty to charges of trespass with intent to pursue hares with dogs in August 2022.

Ronnie Doherty, a traveller and wildlife criminal based in Rushden, North Northamptonshire

The pair were prosecuted after being caught hare coursing in the South Holland district of Lincolnshire. One incident took place in Gedney Dyke and the other in Whaplode Drove.

Ronnie Doherty, a traveller and wildlife criminal based in Rushden, North Northamptonshire

They were arrested when a witness used binoculars to note a Jaguar’s registration plate as they fled Middle Drove, Gedney Dyke, after being seen bundling sighthounds into the vehicle.

Ronnie Doherty, a traveller and wildlife criminal based in Rushden, North Northamptonshire

Prosecutor Paul Wood said a phone seized from Doherty contained voice messages and conversations about hare coursing as well as photos of leaflets of Lincolnshire Police’s combative Operation Galileo and the new legislation.

There were also 13 videos of hare coursing activity, with at least one filmed that day.

“Mr Doherty narrating ‘this is how me and young Darren goes coursing, boys,’” Mr Wood said.

Ronnie Doherty, a traveller and wildlife criminal based in Rushden, North Northamptonshire

In light of the pleas, the Crown Prosecution Service withdrew a similar charge relating to West Pinchbeck and a charge of hunting a wild mammal elsewhere in South Holland, both on the same date as the offences which they admitted.

Jason Patel, mitigating for both men, said that hare coursing “is an activity which is unfortunately entrenched in their history.”

He added: “These young men will have grown up with this activity around them.”

Ronnie Doherty, a traveller and wildlife criminal based in Rushden, North Northamptonshire

Lee and Doherty were the first in Lincolnshire to be charged under new laws to tackle illegal hare coursing.

The Police Crime Sentencing and Courts Act 2022, which passed into law on 1 August 2022, made it an offence to go equipped for, search for, or pursue hares with dogs, and an offence to trespass with intent to search for or pursue hares with dogs.

Those convicted of doing so face an unlimited fine and up to six months in prison.

It also allows courts to order a reimbursement of the costs of kennelling which is paid for by the police.

Sentencing | Lee and Doherty were each ordered to pay an equal share of £11,144 for kennelling and veterinary costs. They were banned from keeping dogs for five years. The rehoming order was suspended until 31 March 2023 to enable them to rehome their dogs

The court issued an order to Doherty for the forfeiture and destruction of a thermal scope used to detect body heat of hares.

BBC News
Spalding Today

Stourport, Worcestershire / Market Drayton, Shropshire / Ryton, Shropshire: Joseph Smith, Michael Toogood and Ben Evans

CONVICTED (2023) | hare coursing gang Joseph Smith, born c. 1984, of Lower Heath Caravan Park, Watery Lane, Stourport-on-Severn DY13 9PR, Michael Toogood, born c. 1996, of the Paddocks, Warrant Road, Stoke on Tern, Market Drayton TF9 2DZ, and Ben Evans, born c. 1999, of Pigeon Door, Ryton, Shrewsbury SY5 7NQ

Convicted for hare coursing: L-R Ben Evans, Joseph Smith, Michael Toogood, who are all travellers
Convicted for hare coursing: L-R Ben Evans, Joseph Smith, Michael Toogood

Travellers Michael Toogood, Joseph Smith and Ben Evans (who has previous for dog cruelty alongside wife Alexandra Evans) were prosecuted for trespassing with intent to search for or to pursue hares with dogs.

Animal abuser: Joseph Smith from Stourport, Worcestershire, West Midlands
Joseph Smith from Stourport. Worcestershire
Animal abuser: Joseph Smith from Stourport, Worcestershire, West Midlands
Animal abuser: Joseph Smith from Stourport, Worcestershire, West Midlands
Smith and a hare-coursing chum Micheal Mongan share some memories
Animal abuser: Michael Toogood from Market Drayton, Shropshire
Michael Toogood from Market Drayton, Shropshire
Animal abusers Ben and Alexandra Evans from Ryton, near Shrewsbury, Shropshire
Ben and Alexandra Evans from Ryton, near Shrewsbury, Shropshire

The trio pleaded guilty to the offence on 21 February 2023 and were sentenced.

The offence occurred on 28 October 2022, when the three men trespassed onto farmland in Letcombe Bassett, Wantage, Oxfordshire.

They had four lurcher type dogs and were looking for hares.

They were each fined £500, and have to pay £85 in costs and £200 in surcharge.

Thames Valley Police
Express & Star