To give some context to previous sheep rustling references in this topic - from
the BBC» :
'I've lost 4,500 sheep to thieves on Dartmoor'
"It's beginning to feel like the Wild West up here when it comes to sheep crime - it's soul-destroying," says farmer Colin Abel, scanning his flock high up on west Dartmoor farmland.
This winter - like most years - Mr Abel is missing more than 400 ewes. He says in the last decade he has lost nearly £500,000 worth of livestock to sheep rustling, which is pushing some farmers to the brink of quitting or bringing their flocks off the moors.
Devon and Cornwall Police says livestock theft is challenging to police but its officers are "pursuing every line of inquiry" through "forensics, surveillance, tracking and more".
Sheep have grazed on Dartmoor in Devon for centuries but roaming free, they are hard to keep an eye on and the national park is among the five worst areas in the country for sheep rustling.
Mr Abel's family has run Lower Godsworthy Farm in Tavistock since 1888. He estimates more than 4,500 sheep have gone missing in the last decade and with each ewe worth roughly £120, that is more than £500,000 worth of livestock, he says.
His hardy upland flock of Scotch Blackface and Welsh mountain sheep spend nine-and-a-half months of the year on the moor, where they are most vulnerable to theft. "It impacts financially and on the viability of the business," he says. "I know farmers who are thinking about whether they want to continue."
There have been no prosecutions for sheep theft in the last five years for Devon and Cornwall.
The challenge is complicated by the suspected involvement of people from the farming industry, says PC Julian Fry from Devon and Cornwall Police's Rural Affairs Team. "The tragedy of this situation is that to steal livestock you have to know livestock and have the networks to shift them on."
PC Fry, who grew up on the edge of Dartmoor and knows the farming community well, says despite the challenges, officers are working with abattoirs, commoners and farmers to build intelligence and employ "lots of tactical options". "Any report of livestock theft we take seriously, investigate and pursue all lines of inquiry," he adds. "We hope to make this crime a thing of the past."
Rural insurer NFU Mutual estimates livestock theft cost £2.7m in 2023, although Mr Abel says he quit reporting his losses to avoid higher premiums.
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