FEATURE: County's farmers welcome robust message from Lincolnshire Police
Mr Leggott said: “The illegal hare coursers need the cars to commit the crime, as well as the dogs. They are driving these vehicles across our fields and causing damage to our crops and potentially affecting our livelihoods. We are very pleased to see this action and hope it is the beginning of a long line of cars being crushed because as a farming community we are abolutely at our wits’ end as to how we are going to deal with illegal hare coursing and deer poaching.”
Mr Leggott said increasingly the coursers bring vehicles onto the land to flush the hares out for the dogs, making a lot of mess.
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Hide AdHe said: “It is getting more aggressive. The gangs are getting larger. We understand in one instance they brought a drone with them to film the hare coursing. But to have up to 50 males, possibly most with a criminal record, threatening farmers, their wives and families, it becomes very distressing to have to watch this go on without being able to stop it.”
He said this car being crushed was symbolic of Lincolnshire Police and the courts trying to do more to negate the problem of hare coursing, but he accepted the cars were generally cheap and the gang members would normally all chip in to buy a replacement.
Police wildlife officer Pc Nick Willey said another knock on effect was that farmers, fed up with getting the coursers on their land, were organising hare shoots, dramatically reducing the population of wild brown hares in the country.