logo
'I've lost 4,500 sheep to thieves on Dartmoor'

'I've lost 4,500 sheep to thieves on Dartmoor'

Yahoo28-02-2025

"It's beginning to feel like the Wild West up here when it comes to sheep crime - it's soul-destroying," says farmer Colin Abel, scanning his flock high up on west Dartmoor farmland.
This winter - like most years - Mr Abel is missing more than 400 ewes.
He says in the last decade he has lost nearly £500,000 worth of livestock to sheep rustling, which is pushing some farmers to the brink of quitting or bringing their flocks off the moors.
Devon and Cornwall Police says livestock theft is challenging to police but its officers are "pursuing every line of inquiry" through "forensics, surveillance, tracking and more".
Sheep have grazed on Dartmoor in Devon for centuries but roaming free, they are hard to keep an eye on and the national park is among the five worst areas in the country for sheep rustling.
Mr Abel's family has run Lower Godsworthy Farm in Tavistock since 1888.
He estimates more than 4,500 sheep have gone missing in the last decade and with each ewe worth roughly £120, that is more than £500,000 worth of livestock, he says.
His hardy upland flock of Scotch Blackface and Welsh mountain sheep spend nine-and-a-half months of the year on the moor, where they are most vulnerable to theft.
"It impacts financially and on the viability of the business," he says. "I know farmers who are thinking about whether they want to continue."
Dartmoor's remote landscape makes livestock vulnerable to theft, while also making it challenging to police.
Martin Beck, who was appointed in 2024 as the UK's first national livestock theft specialist police officer, says more than 1,300 sheep were reported stolen in Devon and Cornwall in 2024.
Of those, nearly 800 reports - or 62% - related to west Dartmoor.
According to Mr Beck, more than 10,000 sheep were reported stolen in the UK in 2024, meaning more than 10% of logged thefts were in this region.
Tracking stolen sheep is challenging, he says, adding they can end up on the illegal meat market, in other farmers' flocks, or being sold on the black market, online or at markets.
With ear tags easily removed by criminals, the animals' disease and medicine status are unknown - creating a risk to consumers if they end up in the food chain.
They could also be illegally slaughtered in uncontrolled conditions, he says.
Mr Beck, who is based in Devon, has called for "more investment and training in rural policing and technology" to address the issue.
There have been no prosecutions for sheep theft in the last five years for Devon and Cornwall.
The challenge is complicated by the suspected involvement of people from the farming industry, says PC Julian Fry from Devon and Cornwall Police's Rural Affairs Team.
"The tragedy of this situation is that to steal livestock you have to know livestock and have the networks to shift them on."
PC Fry, who grew up on the edge of Dartmoor and knows the farming community well, says despite the challenges, officers are working with abattoirs, commoners and farmers to build intelligence and employ "lots of tactical options".
"Any report of livestock theft we take seriously, investigate and pursue all lines of inquiry," he adds.
"We hope to make this crime a thing of the past."
Rural insurer NFU Mutual estimates livestock theft cost £2.7m in 2023, although Mr Abel says he quit reporting his losses to avoid higher premiums.
Seven miles east across the moor, dense fog descends as farmer Neil Cole leads the way across a pen at his farm in Princetown.
As he glances through the gloom at his huddle of shuffling and bleating Scottish Blackface sheep, he says: "Imagine you are creating a piece of art and someone sticks their finger nails through it, that's what it's like breeding good sheep for generations and trying to do it well – for someone to nick 50 of them is soul-destroying, all that profit gone.
"It does affect our mental health.
"We turn out 220 lambs expecting to get 160 back - at £150 a lamb we're in the lap of the gods until we gather."
Mr Cole says they lost £7,000 to theft this year, amid existing financial challenges including mortgages and debts.
A report on Dartmoor by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) describes farming on Dartmoor as "economically extremely marginal".
Mr Cole adds: "The economics of keeping sheep on the moor is becoming harder and harder so the younger generation aren't taking it on as much.
"I've heard farmers say they are ready to give up and the sheep are important for the ecology of the moor.
"It's not the sort of thing you can steal if you don't have the knowledge. It is causing divisions in the community."
Mr Abel has trialled satellite trackers from a firm called No Fence on 20 of his sheep.
But at £199 per device plus a monthly subscription, he says it is prohibitively expensive to extend the measure to the rest of his 4,500-strong flock.
"The cost needs to come down so it's more practical to stick on the numbers of sheep that graze the commons but it is a step in the right direction," he says.
The firm says it aims to "drive down" the price of collars in future.
Other advanced technology systems are also being developed and industry and policing leads hope they could provide a future solution to livestock theft.
Australian firm Ceres Tag uses AI machine learning and satellite communications to track sheep with digital ear tags.
"We detect immediately if there's very high activity, so we know that the theft is taking place, and then when they leave the property, we are able to track them to their final destination," says CEO David Smith.
"It's very difficult in a flock of sheep to remove the tag because there's so many of them... Even if (thieves) did remove the tag, which is highly unlikely, it's already too late - we've already recorded the thieves stealing the animals."
Mr Smith says the price of the tech will come down as it is adopted more widely.
Police are also using forensics to track stolen sheep, while Cumbrian sheep and beef farmer Pip Simpson has trialled coded microdots on the sheep's fleece to brand his sheep.
Mr Simpson, based near Windermere in the Lake District, tells the BBC: "I think the answer does lie in technology - what I'd like to see is ultimately a GPS tracker like a microchip in a dog so you can ringfence where it's at and receive a text when it gets stolen."
Back on the moor, where sheep have grazed and shaped the land for more than 6,000 years, Mr Abel hopes a high-tech solution to this ancient crime can be found soon.
"We all know that things are stretched and budgets are tight but we need more to be done - it's affecting a whole community, and it could start to impact Dartmoor itself," he says.
Follow BBC Devon on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@bbc.co.uk.
Sheep horns painted green as thefts rise
Hunt for Dartmoor sheep thieves
Police appeal after lambs stolen from Devon field
Farmers stage beach rally over inheritance tax
Rural crime - Devon and Cornwall Police
National Rural Crime Network

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

He Was Ambushed with Acid and Died After Nearly 3 Agonizing Months. Now, Authorities Say His Ex Was Behind It
He Was Ambushed with Acid and Died After Nearly 3 Agonizing Months. Now, Authorities Say His Ex Was Behind It

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Yahoo

He Was Ambushed with Acid and Died After Nearly 3 Agonizing Months. Now, Authorities Say His Ex Was Behind It

In the early morning hours of February 2025, Danny Cahalane answered the door of his home in Plymouth, England To his horror, the British dad was doused with sulfuric acid After a nearly three-month hospitalization, he died on May 3A British father died after acid was thrown in his face in a horrific, middle-of-the-night ambush and now his ex-girlfriend and five others are facing charges in connection with his death. On Friday, Feb. 21, at about 3:55 a.m., Danny Cahalane, 38, opened the door of his home in Plymouth to a group of people who threw sulfuric acid in his face, according to the Devon & Cornwall Police. Cahalane's young daughter was sleeping during the attack that was allegedly orchestrated by his ex-girlfriend, Paris Wilson, 34, of Plymouth, authorities say, The Times reports. Cahalane was rushed to a local hospital and died on May 3, 'despite the best efforts of medical professionals," the Devon & Cornwall Police said. A mother of two, Wilson is a former probation officer who volunteered as a teacher at a local prison and now works in marketing, The Times reports. In April, Wilson, along with six men from London — Abdulrasheed Adedoja, 22, Jean Mukuna, 23, Isanah Sungum, 21, Ramarnee Bakas, 22, Arrone Mukuna, 24, and Brian Kalemba, 22 — and Jenna Said, 39, of Plymouth, were charged with conspiracy to murder and conspiracy to kidnap, the BBC reports. Additionally, Adedoja, Jean Mukuna, Bakas and Arrone Mukuna each face a charge of conspiring to acquire, use or possess criminal property. Israel Augustus, 25, from London, is charged with applying a corrosive fluid with intent to burn, maim, disfigure or do grievous bodily harm, aggravated burglary, possession of an offensive weapon, and drug offenses. All nine were accused of participating in the criminal activity of an organized crime group to kidnap and murder Cahalane. On Monday, June 2, six of the suspects – Augustus, Adedoja, Bakas-Sithole, Kalemba, Sungum, and Wilson, 34, were charged with murder, according to the Tuesday, June 3, Wilson, Augustus, Sungum, Said and Arrone Mukuna pleaded not guilty to all charges at a hearing at Plymouth Crown Court, Kent Online reports. Jean Mukuna pleaded not guilty to all charges but did not enter a plea for the charge of possessing class A drugs with intent to supply, according to Kent Online. Adedoja, Bakas-Sithole, and Kalemba did not enter any pleas to the charges, Kent Online reports. As the suspects await their next court date, Cahalane's family is mourning his loss. In a tribute issued by police in early May, Cahalane's family said, "As a family, we are struggling to come to terms with Danny's passing," The Times reported. "Danny was an outstanding father and son. Danny and his mum had so much love for each other. He is well loved by his family and friends and as a family we cherish his love and memories.' Read the original article on People

Is It 'Harassment' To Heckle Your Local Politician? A British Court Thinks So.
Is It 'Harassment' To Heckle Your Local Politician? A British Court Thinks So.

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

Is It 'Harassment' To Heckle Your Local Politician? A British Court Thinks So.

A court in Cardiff convicted two Welsh protesters on Tuesday of "harassment" for causing "alarm and distress" to Alex Davies-Jones, the member of Parliament for Pontypridd and the undersecretary of state for victims. Local citizens Ayeshah Behit and Hiba Ahmed had been out pamphleting against the war in Gaza last June when they ran into Davies-Jones on the street. They asked Davies-Jones why she abstained on a ceasefire vote—she says she was out of the country during the vote—and Behit posted a short Instagram video of the interaction, calling Davies-Jones a liar. "It was escalating in terms of passion and intensity. We walked off in the opposite direction. We felt scared and intimidated, and we wanted to leave the situation," Davies-Jones told the court, adding that Behit and Ahmed were "shouting and bellowing down the street." Just two hours after the video was posted, "over a dozen police officers swarmed my door and windows, with several male officers trying to climb in through open windows," Behit told the Network for Police Monitoring, a British civil libertarian nonprofit. She was let out on bail, with the condition that she refrain from posting about Davies-Jones or the case on social media. At Tuesday's trial, Judge Paul Goldspring sentenced Behit and Ahmed to a 650 pound ($880) fine as well as 18 months parole for Behit and 12 months for Ahmed. He said that their actions went "beyond the boundaries" of free speech and were a "deliberate and sustained campaign" to get Davies-Jones to stop canvassing. "I would love to say you are remorseful. I suspect you are not," Goldspring added. "I suspect your views will be held until something happens very differently in that area of the world." The British idea of free speech is at odds with the democratic tradition in a lot of the world, including the United States, where political debate is supposed to be rowdy and personal. U.S. Vice President J.D. Vance gave a speech in February condemning British authorities for arresting a man who prayed outside an abortion clinic, and the U.S. State Department recently published an article pointing out that over 12,000 British citizens were arrested for online posts in 2023. British authorities are especially sensitive about threats to politicians because of two political assassinations in recent memory. A white nationalist killed Member of Parliament Jo Cox in 2016, and an Islamic State supporter killed Member of Parliament David Amess in 2021. But there's a big difference between threatening someone and simply making them feel uncomfortable. Ahmed claimed in court that running into Davies-Jones while pamphleting was completely unplanned, "like seeing a celebrity almost, like a unicorn in the wild." And being a celebrity means having to deal with the public—whether you like it or not. The post Is It 'Harassment' To Heckle Your Local Politician? A British Court Thinks So. appeared first on

Police crack down on 'incredibly dangerous' U-turns
Police crack down on 'incredibly dangerous' U-turns

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Yahoo

Police crack down on 'incredibly dangerous' U-turns

Devon and Cornwall Police is targeting drivers carrying out U-turn manoeuvres at a collision hotspot in Cornwall. Vision Zero South West and National Highways have installed signs along the Hayle bypass section of the A30, where "dangerous U-turns" have led to multiple crashes and one death. It said the signs would encourage drivers to report U-turns to police as part of its Operation Snap initiative. National Highways senior road safety engineer, Oliver Dash, said: "Carrying out U-turn manoeuvres on a road such as the Hayle bypass is incredibly dangerous. Although we've installed a U-turn ban, it doesn't appear to be a sufficient deterrent." A U-turn ban and associated signage was implemented in the area in 2021, after a study identified eight collisions in the area since 2014 as a result of U-turns. The collisions resulted in one death, with five people seriously injured and 12 with minor injuries. "We're working with Vision Zero South West and Devon and Cornwall Police's Operation Snap initiative to raise awareness of the risks and encourage responsible road users to report any drivers undertaking these manoeuvres," Mr Dash said. Motorists with dashcam footage of drivers carrying out the manoeuvres have been urged to submit it to the police to "make the A30 safer for everyone". More news stories for Cornwall Listen to the latest news for Cornwall Follow BBC Cornwall on X, Facebook and Instagram. Send your story ideas to spotlight@ Traffic worse since A30 upgrade, residents say Devon and Cornwall Police Vision Zero South West

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store