A PROMINENT huntsman has been ordered to pay £3,500 for giving advice to countrymen about how to covertly carry out illegal fox hunts.

Director of the Masters of Foxhounds Association Mark Hankinson, 60, of Frampton Farm, Sherborne, was found guilty at Westminster Magistrates’ Court of intentionally encouraging huntsmen to use legal trail hunting as “a sham and a fiction” for the unlawful chasing and killing of animals via two webinars held in August 2020.

Hankinson told members of the Hunting Office to use legal trail hunting where horseback riders and hounds follow a previously laid scent, as a “smokescreen” for criminal activity, the court heard.

Trail hunting replicates a traditional hunt without a fox actually being chased, injured or killed, and although there is always a danger that hounds will accidentally come across the scent of a fox, they should then be stopped to avoid this becoming a criminal offence.

The huntsman’s illicit advice was exposed after saboteurs leaked footage of his webinar to police and the media.

Dozens of the huntsman’s supporters and family members, along with a similar number of activists in T-shirts emblazoned with the words “End Hunting”, watched from the public gallery.

Judge Tan Ikram ordered him to pay a £1,000 fine and a £2,500 contribution towards legal costs, and defence lawyer Richard Lissack QC said Hankinson would lose his job as a result.

Speaking about Hankinson’s speech on the incriminating webinars, Judge Ikram said: “He said, ‘we need to have clear, visible and plausible trailing being done throughout the day’.

“He spoke of huntsmen being caught out and the saboteurs could be out there hiding, watching and filming.

“He said, ‘it’s about trying to portray to the people watching that you are going about your legitimate business’ and ‘the people recording must make sure we only record only the legal things that we do, because of course we only do legal things’.

“In my judgment, he was clearly encouraging the mirage of trail laying to act as cover for old fashioned illegal hunting.

“Why would you need to try to portray anything as legitimate if you were in fact engaged in legitimate business?”

The judge added: “Perhaps most incriminating is his direction and advice that trail laying has to be ‘as plausible as possible.’

“The only reasonable interpretation of those words leads to the conclusion that a need to make something plausible is only necessary if it is a sham and a fiction.”

Since the Zoom webinars were leaked, big landowners including the National Trust, Forestry England, Lake District National Park, United Utilities and Natural Resources Wales have suspended licences for trail hunting.