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Pair guilty of hunting with dogs Pair guilty of hunting with dogs
(31 minutes later)
Two men have been found guilty of illegally hunting deer with hounds.Two men have been found guilty of illegally hunting deer with hounds.
Huntsman Richard Down, 44, and whipper-in Adrian Pillivant, 36 of the Quantock Staghounds were convicted at Bristol Magistrates' Court.Huntsman Richard Down, 44, and whipper-in Adrian Pillivant, 36 of the Quantock Staghounds were convicted at Bristol Magistrates' Court.
Anti-hunt campaigners filmed two hounds chasing deer on Exmoor. The League Against Cruel Sports (LAC) said the deer were chased for more than an hour.Anti-hunt campaigners filmed two hounds chasing deer on Exmoor. The League Against Cruel Sports (LAC) said the deer were chased for more than an hour.
Both men had denied contravening the Hunting Act, which came into force in February 2005.Both men had denied contravening the Hunting Act, which came into force in February 2005.
The defendants were hunting for sport and recreation to continue their way of life and are disingenuous in attempting to deceive me into believing that they were exempt from hunting District Judge David Parsons
The LAC said it launched the prosecution because no attempt was made to shoot the deer humanely or call off the hounds during the hunt.The LAC said it launched the prosecution because no attempt was made to shoot the deer humanely or call off the hounds during the hunt.
Spokesman Douglas Batchelor, said: "The league is delighted that once again, justice has shown that those extremists who continue to break the law will not be tolerated".Spokesman Douglas Batchelor, said: "The league is delighted that once again, justice has shown that those extremists who continue to break the law will not be tolerated".
Down, 44, of Bagborough, Somerset, and Pillivant, 36, of Willand, Devon had argued throughout the trial that they had been hunting the deer within the law.
District Judge David Parsons said their argument was "disingenuous" and fined both men £500 and ordered them to pay £1,000 each as a contribution towards costs.
He said: "Neither defendant has established on the balance of probability that he reasonably believed the hunting was exempt.
Video evidence
"The defendants were hunting for sport and recreation to continue their way of life and are disingenuous in attempting to deceive me into believing that they were exempt from hunting."
The LAC had played the court video evidence of 20 deer being chased with dogs at a hunt meet at Longstone Hill, Somerset, last February.
Richard Furlong, representing the League, had told the court: "They made no attempt to call the dogs off.
"The facts of this case are that no reasonable person could have believed this was exempt from the Hunting Act.
"They made no attempt to control the dogs."
Robbie Marsland, UK director of the International Fund Against Animal Cruelty (IFAW), welcomed the decision.
He said: "This is the second time that the league has taken and won a private prosecution and IFAW congratulates them for that.
"In the light of this ruling it is very difficult to see how anyone could go out stag hunting in the belief that they are acting lawfully.
"The Hunting Act is showing its teeth. There have been a number of prosecutions under the Act and more are in the pipeline, including one being taken by Avon and Somerset Police against the Devon and Somerset Staghounds, expected later this summer."