Yorkshire Post

Police on the trail of rural criminals

On the outskirts of Yorkshire’s biggest city, officers in a recently-formed police team are tackling a very different type of crime to their urban counterpar­ts. Georgina Morris went to meet them.

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CRIME: On the outskirts of Yorkshire’s biggest city, officers in a recently-formed police team are tackling a very different type of crime to their urban counterpar­ts.

It is a world away from the city streets where issues like drug dealing and the use of knives are more common concerns.

A LANDROVER bumps along a muddy lane on the outskirts of Leeds, winding its way through woods and farmland that are a prime target for those involved in poaching, hare coursing and other wildlife crimes.

It is only a few miles out of the suburbs but it feels a world away from the city streets where issues like robberies, drug dealing and the use of knives are more common concerns.

The car passes a gate where hay bales have been piled up as a natural defence to prevent the theft of tractors after just such an offence on the nearby farm.

Investigat­ing crimes like these and raising awareness among the farming community are a major focus for the recently formed Leeds District Wildlife and Rural Crime Team. Sergeant David Lund said: “They were having a spate of tractor thefts that we’re looking at. There’s an opportunit­y for us to get in early doors with farmers, tell them this is what’s happened, this is what you can do to prevent it.

“Our team looks at two aspects – wildlife and then the rural crime like tractor thefts, quad bike thefts, thefts from outbuildin­gs. People have got to help themselves though. They leave quad bikes with the keys in. It’s getting people out of that culture of when they were young they didn’t have to think about it.”

Other persistent issues for farmers include people on quad bikes and off-road bikes trespassin­g and leaving valuable agricultur­al land unfit for use. Poachers are a problem too, particular­ly in East Leeds, where calls regularly come in to police as lights are spotted out in the fields at night.

Being able to rapidly share this kind of informatio­n about suspicious activity with both the policing team and local farms is the reason for the creation of new Farm Watch networks for the western and southern areas of the district.

This model was already well establishe­d in the eastern area, where Pc Andy Katkowski has led on this kind of work for a decade now. Sgt Lund said: “Andy has al

People have to help themselves, they leave quad bikes with keys in.

Sergeant David Lund of Leeds District Wildlife and Rural Crime Team.

ways had a core of farmers that he’s worked with, but he’s always working with ones that are a bit harder to reach. The ones who don’t have that confidence in us.”

Building trust among the rural communitie­s in Leeds is crucial to the team’s success, but Sgt Lund is clear that catching those involved in crimes such as burgling farms or poaching has wider benefits.

“What we’ve found statistica­lly is people involved in wildlife crime or rural crime are already known to police either for acquisitiv­e crime or your more serious violent crime,” he said.

The team also works alongside others within the force, North Yorkshire’s Rural Taskforce and the likes of the RSPCA and Angling Trust to investigat­e wildlife crimes such as the killing of red kites, animal cruelty and reports of quail fighting.

Pc Katkowski said: “You’ll have heard of cock fighting and it’s a similar sort of thing. There are certain people from certain ethnic background­s that are interested in it instead of cock fighting. There’s money to be made there as well.

“We’ve also been dealing with 16 Welsh and Dartmoor ponies that had been abandoned on some land. Working with the RSPCA and the Hope Pastures sanctuary, we were able to rehome them. We suspect they belonged to someone who’s been put on a lifetime ban so probably they couldn’t come home forward as the owner.”

The team has picked up on a rising number of badger setts being disturbed too.

“We feel it’s because it’s been under-reported,” Sgt Lund said. “It’s not that the police haven’t taken it seriously over the years, it’s more the fact that it had just been Andy for so long.”

 ?? PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON ?? ON PATROL: Above, Sgt Dave Lund, right, and PC Andy Katkowski part of the Leeds District Wildlife and Rural Crime team; inset, Sgt Lund using night vision binoculars.
PICTURES: TONY JOHNSON ON PATROL: Above, Sgt Dave Lund, right, and PC Andy Katkowski part of the Leeds District Wildlife and Rural Crime team; inset, Sgt Lund using night vision binoculars.

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