Welcome new laws on hare coursing, but wider rural crime issues need to be addressed in Wales

Tough new measures to tackle the cruel practice of hare coursing have been introduced this week. Persons caught hare coursing could face a prison sentence of up to 6 months and unlimited fines.
Police car, Wales
New laws came into force to tackle hare coursing this week, but we need to focus on other rural crimes too.

“The cruel practise of hare coursing continues to be a blight on rural communities. The new Westminster legislation coming into force this week is something we – the organisation that represents thousands of farms and rural businesses in Wales and England - have been lobbying for. To be effective, it’s vital that our police forces and judicial system have the right level of resources to apply the law. Rural police officers need to be trained and equipped to gather evidence and bring the law into action and the courts need to be effective not only to deal with perpetrators, but to create a sense of deterrent.”

“Hare coursing is not only intensely cruel, but is often associated with other crime, notably illegal gambling on the outcome. CLA Cymru members also report how the crime is usually associated with repeated damage to crops, livestock, farm land farm infrastructure and theft.”

“The hare coursing measures also help to shine a light on other rural crimes which should similarly be addressed.” Robert says, “In Wales we experience other forms of wildlife crime which are equally devastating. It’s important that the focus on one form of crime - which is more prominent in some parts of England – brings attention to wildlife crime which is more common in Wales: badger baiting some forms of lamping and poaching, for example.”

“I am also concerned that fly tipping - the scourge of the Welsh countryside – will slip off the radar-screen for legislators in Cardiff and little resource will be applied to tackle it. Last year the Welsh fly tipping figures demonstrated a dramatic spike in recorded incidents. These figures fail to reveal the full extent of the problem, as incidents on private land are not included. Fly tipping and litter are damaging to wildlife, livestock and the environment. It’s a travesty that private landowners not only bear the cost but can be prosecuted for another person’s crime.”

“The measures at Westminster to tackle hare coursing are welcome and follow tireless lobbying by the CLA and other rural organisations. But it’s important that the work of both the UK Government and the Welsh Government fit together to address the wider scope and intensity of rural crime and to give police forces the tools they need to tackle the job.”

*Notes

.The proposals include:

  • Increasing the maximum penalty for trespassing in pursuit of game under the Game Acts (the Game Act 1831 and the Night Poaching Act 1828) to an unlimited fine and introducing – for the first time – the possibility of up to six months’ imprisonment.
  • Two new criminal offences: firstly, trespass with the intention of using a dog to search for or pursue a hare; and secondly, being equipped to trespass with the intention of using a dog to search for or pursue a hare both punishable on conviction by an unlimited fine and/or up to six months’ imprisonment.
  • New powers for the courts to order, on conviction, the reimbursement of costs incurred by the police in kennelling dogs seized in connection with a hare coursing-related offence.
  • New powers for the courts to make an order, on conviction, disqualifying an offender from owning or keeping a dog.

The CLA has long been calling for specific sentencing guidelines to target criminal gangs betting on the killing of hares with dogs.

Lobbying efforts has also focused on recovering the kennelling costs incurred by police forces from criminals. This costs the police thousands of Pounds a year, or just over £13 per day. The dogs are worth more than the vehicles used to hare course, and hence, it would make sense to seize dogs.

Hare coursing, where dogs compete against each other in pursuit of a hare, was outlawed by the 2004 Hunting Act but now takes place illegally without the permission of the landowner. It has also been reported that the crime sometimes involves live-streaming to another location where bets often worth thousands of pounds are placed on the outcome.

Not only does hare coursing involve cruelty to wild animals, it is also associated with a range of other criminal activities, including theft, criminal damage, violence and intimidation.