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HSA news release February 2nd 1995

Two hunt saboteurs arrested at the Ashford Valley Foxhunt meet at Chainhurst, Kent, on 12th November 1994 were convited on charges of aggravated trespass at Maidstone Magistrates Court today (2nd February) despite serious flaws in the prosecution case which led defence barristers to ask for the court to rule there was no case to answer.

They were fined £100 and £200 respectively, with costs of £60 awarded against each of them. Both have announced their intention to appeal (which prevents us going into great detail here) and to take the case as far as necessary to protect the right to protest. The Crown Prosecution Service had already dropped all charges against their co-defendant, another saboteur arrested with them, when she agreed to accept a bind-over in January as the evidence against her was so weak.

On Saturday, 33 people were arrested at a demonstration against the Criminal Justice Act in Maidstone in which several protesters were badly beaten by police, including one man who required stitches to a head wound. A phone poll published today in Kent Today , a local newspaper, found 74% of local people thought Kent police overreact to demonstrations about the Criminal Justice Act.

The Crown is not having a happy time so far with the Criminal Justice Act: the cases against saboteurs arrested in the first few weeks of the Act's implementation are dropping like flies:

A timetable of failure:

  • 9th January 1995, Maidstone: charges dropped against Erika Wirrmann in return for her accepting a bind-over . She agreed as she will be leaving the country this month, so the bind-over will be ineffective.
  • 27th January 1995, Hexham: Dermot Morrow, who was arrested while he was being beaten up by hunt supporters at the Tynedale Foxhunt in November 1994. He is given a conditional discharge on charges of aggravated trespass and an anonymous local resident offers to pay all his costs, as a sign of disgust at the fact he was prosecuted.
  • 27th January 1995, Corby: charges of aggravated trespass are dropped against Nick Penn and another saboteur from Leicester. They had been arrested at the Woodland Pytchley Foxhunt on 12th November 1994 in contravention of an agreement with local police. Inspector Nicholls of Kettering police had told saboteurs they would be allowed to video the hunt but when Nick and his fellow saboteur tried to do so they were arrested. They take the view that the police deliberately broke an agreement, entered into in good faith, in order to intimidate saboteurs and are now taking legal action against Northamptonshire Police.

The Criminal Justice Act is simply not working and we anticipate there will be more acquittals, more charges dropped, and that those police forces who seek to use the act in the aggressive and oppressive way that the Kent and Northamptonshire forces have done will be facing a hefty bill for damages with precious little to show in the way of convictions.


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From the archives...

Saboteurs attacked and live fox thrown to hounds

HSA news release 20th September 2003

Saboteurs attacked and live fox thrown to hounds

Hunt saboteurs who had saved a fox from death told how they were attacked and the fox was thrown live to a pack of hounds at a hunt near Pulborough, West Sussex at the weekend (20 September 2003).

Hunt saboteur Paul Loader had managed to intervene when 8 hounds from the Chiddingfold Leconfield and Cowdray Hunt were mauling a fox at Pithingdean Farm. The fox was obviously still alive and traumatised, nipping at Paul as he carried it to a nearby colleague. Their intention was to get the animal emergency veterinary attention and save its life.

Paul was then throttled by a huntsman and his finger lacerated on a barbed wire fence as he held the wire. His colleague (a first time saboteur who comes from the United States) grabbed the fox and was attacked by another member of hunt staff and his mobile phone was broken. Once wrestled from the safety of the saboteur's arms, the fox - still alive - was thrown to the waiting pack of hounds.

The protestors have made formal complaints of assault and given statements at Pulborough police station.

The hunt staff at the Chiddingfold, Leconfield and Cowdray hunt are notorious among hunt saboteurs for their violent behaviour.

A fox rescued from hounds by saboteurs at the same hunt in February 1999, nicknamed Copper, made headlines when a policeman’s helmet was used to block an earth. The vet who subsequently attended Copper confirmed that he was suffering extreme stress from being chased. Copper’s case provided firm evidence that hounds do not kill instantly with a “nip to the back of the neck” as claimed by fox hunters and was submitted to the government’s Burns Inquiry.

HSA spokesperson, Nathan Brown, commented “The hunting fraternity know that their tissue of lies is destroyed every time we save a fox that has been mauled by hounds, or retrieve the carcass. Veterinary examination will show that death by hounds is neither swift nor painless, so huntsmen will use any means to retrieve the animal – including violence.”

The Hunting Bill had its Second Reading in the House of Lords on Tuesday 16th September