Showing posts with label bloodsports. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bloodsports. Show all posts

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Man killed by fighting rooster

A fighting rooster found during a former bust in Bakersfield is seen in this
November 2010 file photo.
By Eyewitness News
Story Created: Feb 4, 2011 at 1:24 PM PST
Story Updated: Feb 4, 2011 at 2:39 PM PST

EARLIMART, Calif. — A Lamont man was killed earlier this week by a chicken.

Jose Luis Ochoa, 35, was stabbed by a knife attached to the leg of a fighting rooster, the Kern County coroner's office said Friday.

The accidental stab wound to Ochoa's calf, as determined by the autopsy, happened Sunday in Earlimart in Tulare County. He was taken to Delano Regional Medical Center, where he died about two hours later.

The coroner didn't specify what killed Ochoa, whether it was excessive bleeding, infection or something else.

Even though Kern County handled the autopsy, the Tulare County Sheriff's Department is handling the investigation. It's unknown if a cockfight was underway at the time of the accident.

http://www.bakersfieldnow.com/news/local/115315954.html

Monday, December 6, 2010

Crackdown on hare coursing in Welwyn Hatfield

BARBARIC bloodsport hare coursing has been dealt a blow this year thanks to better training and cooperation between police forces.


With the hare coursing ‘season’ about a third of the way through, Hertfordshire Constabulary’s wildlife crime officer Sgt Jamie Bartlett has hailed the decline in the practice in Welwyn Hatfield, which was a threat to the once-common and-now-threatened brown hare.


He said officers had learned from experienced colleagues in Cambridgeshire, which is the UK’s hare coursing hub, thanks largely to the county’s wide open flat expanses.

The combined effort to tackle the menace also involves other forces including Essex and Bedfordshire.

Sgt Bartlett said last year saw an increase in cases in and around Welwyn Hatfield because illegal gamblers who bet on the bloody outcome of the ‘sport’ had been driven out of their usual haunts by concerted police efforts.

But this year, despite “a few glitches around Ayot St Lawrence”, officers were halting the spread of the bloodsport and incidents were “significantly lower”.

Sgt Bartlett put the breakthrough down to training sessions in wildlife crime at police HQ in Stanborough Road, WGC.

He told the WHT: “We’ve had instances in Ayot St Lawrence and more rural areas around Hatfield.

“It used to be mainly in north and east Herts because the flat geography lends itself to dogs chasing hares, but because of operations in those areas, hare coursers have moved to more central areas in smaller fields.

“They gamble on which dog will turn the hare and which one will catch and kill the hare.”

He added: “They’ve come to places like WGC, Hatfield and Potters Bar where we have fields where the brown hare is present.”

Hare coursing was outlawed in 2004 and it is a criminal offence even to attend an event.

And Sgt Bartlett said hare coursing was often linked to other crimes like trespassing, intimidation and threats to landowners and damage to crops.

He said that hare courses often spot where valuables such as diesel and quad bikes are stored and return later to steal them, and urged the public to report wildlife offences “like any other crime”.

Report by Paul Christian, Reporter

http://www.whtimes.co.uk/news/crackdown_on_hare_coursing_in_welwyn_hatfield_1_745490

Crackdown on hare coursing in Welwyn Hatfield

BARBARIC bloodsport hare coursing has been dealt a blow this year thanks to better training and cooperation between police forces.


With the hare coursing ‘season’ about a third of the way through, Hertfordshire Constabulary’s wildlife crime officer Sgt Jamie Bartlett has hailed the decline in the practice in Welwyn Hatfield, which was a threat to the once-common and-now-threatened brown hare.


He said officers had learned from experienced colleagues in Cambridgeshire, which is the UK’s hare coursing hub, thanks largely to the county’s wide open flat expanses.

The combined effort to tackle the menace also involves other forces including Essex and Bedfordshire.

Sgt Bartlett said last year saw an increase in cases in and around Welwyn Hatfield because illegal gamblers who bet on the bloody outcome of the ‘sport’ had been driven out of their usual haunts by concerted police efforts.

But this year, despite “a few glitches around Ayot St Lawrence”, officers were halting the spread of the bloodsport and incidents were “significantly lower”.

Sgt Bartlett put the breakthrough down to training sessions in wildlife crime at police HQ in Stanborough Road, WGC.

He told the WHT: “We’ve had instances in Ayot St Lawrence and more rural areas around Hatfield.

“It used to be mainly in north and east Herts because the flat geography lends itself to dogs chasing hares, but because of operations in those areas, hare coursers have moved to more central areas in smaller fields.

“They gamble on which dog will turn the hare and which one will catch and kill the hare.”

He added: “They’ve come to places like WGC, Hatfield and Potters Bar where we have fields where the brown hare is present.”

Hare coursing was outlawed in 2004 and it is a criminal offence even to attend an event.

And Sgt Bartlett said hare coursing was often linked to other crimes like trespassing, intimidation and threats to landowners and damage to crops.

He said that hare courses often spot where valuables such as diesel and quad bikes are stored and return later to steal them, and urged the public to report wildlife offences “like any other crime”.

Report by Paul Christian, Reporter

http://www.whtimes.co.uk/news/crackdown_on_hare_coursing_in_welwyn_hatfield_1_745490