Three-year restriction on unnamed
keeper on Philip Astor’s estate after incident with baited trap
Severin
CarrellScotland editor
Mon 2 Apr
2018 17.00 BSTLast modified on Mon 2 Apr 2018 22.00 BST
A head keeper employed on one of
Scotland’s most illustrious grouse moors, Tillypronie in Royal Deeside, has
been banned from controlling birds for three years over an alleged wildlife
crime incident.
He worked on an estate owned by
Philip Astor, a member of the famous Anglo-American dynasty and vice-chairman
of the Game and Wildlife Conservation
Trust, an influential campaigning body which advised Astor on his pheasant
shoots.
The Guardian has established that
the conservation agency Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) imposed the ban on the
head gamekeeper on 15 September last year, after an incident in March 2014
involving a baited trap near a goshawk nest on Astor’s estate. But neither he
nor the estate involved were named.
The incident was filmed by a
covert camera placed near the nest by the Royal Society for the Protection of
Birds as part of a wider investigation into illegal persecution of goshawks
across the surrounding area.
Astor sold Tillypronie – a 50 sq
km estate near Balmoral which boasts grouse and pheasant shoots, deer stalking,
tenant farms, and salmon and trout fishing on the river Don – in various lots
last year. It went on the market for offers over £10.5m.
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