Game Keepers Convicted of Trapping Birds of Prey02/04/2008 13:26:09In May 2007, following allegations of traps being set to catch birds of prey, the North Yorkshire Police, supported by the RSPB and RSPCA, visited the Snilesworth Estate, owned by Mr Mark Osborne, of Banbury in Oxfordshire. The estate is part of a network of shooting estates managed by Mr Mark Osborne. James Benjamin Shuttlewood, the headkeeper of the Snilesworth Estate with 20 years experience, pleaded guilty to five offences, relating to the setting of illegal traps by his subordinates. He was fined £250 for each offence. Charles Lambert Woof pleaded guilty to one offence of mis-using a cage trap. He was fined £100. Eighteen-year old David George Cook pleaded guilty to two offences of setting cage traps. Cook, who was 17 at the time the offences were commited, was given a conditional discharge for 12 months. Additionally, the three convicted keepers have each been asked to pay £43 costs. Ian West added: ‘As a major manager of shooting estates Mr Osborne has a real opportunity to show leadership and signal an end to the Victorian tradition of intolerance towards birds of prey.’ The illegal killing of birds of prey is a major factor limiting the range and populations of many species across the UK.
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