A man from Lancashire has been fined for removing deer carcasses from land in Cumbria without the owner’s consent.
51 year old Alan Douglas, of Beech Avenue in Bilsborrow, pleaded guilty to two offences at Lancaster Magistrates’ Court on May 5th.
Lancashire Police were contacted in October 2014 following a report of deer poaching at a farm in Milnthorpe.
Several carcasses had been removed from the land, which borders the two counties, without the landowner’s consent.
Following investigation officers carried out a warrant at Douglas’ address and found animal remains.
Mr Douglas, who had passed his Deer Stalking Certificate Level 1 in May 2014 and Deer Stalking Certificate Level 2 in October 2014, was arrested and charged.
He was given a £250 fine and ordered to pay £275 costs at court. The presiding judge also ordered that his firearms, which had been seized during the investigation, should be sold.
Officers believe he wanted to sell the remains as venison.
PC Andrew Massingham, a wildlife officer at Lancashire Police said: “This is a satisfying result. The area where the offences were committed once held a small population of deer within a delicate habitat.
“The land was managed by legitimate and lawful deer stalkers who conducted selective culling of the herd in accordance of the land owners wishes.
“To have someone who purported to be a highly trained deer stalker take animals without consideration in this manner is completely unacceptable, outside the law and not within the realms of best practice as advised by the Deer Initiative, British Deer Society or British Association for Shooting and Conservation.”