Friday, October 26, 2012

Raptor persecution

The goverment response to the e-petition advocating the introduction of a vicarious liability offence for raptor persecution in England is given below. Such an offence has been put on the statute book by the Scottish government. The e petition can still be signed:-

As this e-petition has received more than 10 000 signatures, the relevant Government department have provided the following response:
Defra is aware of the Scottish Government's decision to introduce a vicarious liability offence under the Wildlife and Natural Environment Act (Scotland) 2011, which came in to force on 1 January 2012. The new offence is targeted principally at addressing the persecution of raptors. The new offence will mean employers or agents may be prosecuted where an employee is found to have illegally killed a bird of prey (or other wild bird) - in effect they may be prosecuted for the same offence. There is, however, a defence that an employer or agent can rely on, this being that they did not know an offence was being committed and that they took all reasonable steps to prevent an offence being committed.
It is unclear whether in practice the new offence will result in successful prosecutions of employers or agents. There are no immediate plans therefore to introduce a similar offence in England but Defra will look carefully at how the offence works in practice in Scotland. The development of our future wildlife crime policy will include consideration of how effective the new offence in Scotland has been in helping to address raptor persecution.

This e-petition remains open to signatures and will be considered for debate by the Backbench Business Committee should it pass the 100 000 signature threshold.
 
So, nowt's happening for the moment.

3 comments:

Bruce said...

Just my thoughts as well!

AndyC said...

well done Scotland......

Andy Kiz said...

Shame we've only got 10,000 this has been going since before the badger cull one got going which now has over 160k signatures, needs to be put to the forefront by the RPSB and possibly a celebrity ala Brian May!