James Kempster sentenced for possession of dead raptors found impaled on community shop door handle in Broughton, Hampshire

In April this year, James ‘Jimmy’ Kempster, 39, was found guilty of being in possession at some point of a Kestrel and a Barn Owl that had been found impaled on the door handle of a community shop in Broughton, Hampshire, in March 2024. DNA found on the birds was linked to Kempster.

He was found not guilty of criminal damage in relation to the dumping of 50 dead Hares that were strewn around the shop’s courtyard, with blood smeared on the shop windows, as the prosecution could not show beyond reasonable doubt that Kempster was present at the crime scene.

Sentencing was deferred until 23 June 2026 to allow for background reports to be prepared.

Screen grab from the CCTV footage outside Broughton Community Shop on 15 March 2024, showing one of three unidentified individuals throwing dead Hares from a vehicle onto the shop forecourt. (Image via Crown Prosecution Service)

Kemspter, who has a string of at least 13 prior convictions, was given a 15-month community order including 30 days of rehabilitation activity and made subject to being monitored by an electronic tag for six months.

He was also fined £120 and ordered to pay costs of £650 with a £114 court surcharge.

Press release from Hampshire Constabulary (23 June 2026):

MAN SENTENCED FOR WILDLIFE OFFENCES IN BROUGHTON

A man has been sentenced for wildlife offences relating to handling the carcasses of two protected species of bird.

On 15 March 2024, police received multiple reports that a large pile of approximately 50 dead hares had been strewn across the floor outside Broughton Community Shop, and the bodies of a dead barn owl and kestrel were stuffed on to the shop’s door handle.

Local villagers turned up to help clean up the mess prior to police arriving.

Following a number of enquiries, 39-year-old James ‘Jimmy’ Kempster was arrested and subsequently charged with offences, after forensic testing of the carcasses showed that his DNA was present on the owl and the kestrel.

He denied any involvement, and the case went to trial at Southampton Magistrates Court on Tuesday 21 April 2026.

During the trial, the court heard how CCTV showed a Suzuki Grand Vitara turn up at the shop in the early hours of the morning on 15 March 2024. Two men exited the vehicle and began throwing the animal carcasses on the floor, and one of the men attached the dead birds to the shop’s door handle.

The following day, officers were out on patrol in rural Test Valley when they discovered a car similar to that captured on the CCTV burnt out approximately three and a half miles from Broughton.

Magistrates determined that, whilst the evidence was insufficient to place Kempster at the scene when the bodies were dumped, they accepted he had handled the dead birds at some point. Kempster was found guilty of possession of a dead schedule 1 wild bird, and possession of a dead non schedule 1 wild bird under the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

A second man, aged 29 years, was interviewed under caution by police as part of this investigation, but he was later released with no further action being taken.

Kempster, of Marchwood Road in Eling, appeared at Southampton Magistrates Court on Tuesday 23 June where he was sentenced to a community order, rehabilitation activity, and ordered to pay £884 in costs.

ENDS

There’s a bit more detail provided in this article on the BBC News website.

Previous blogs on this case see here, here, here, here, here, here, here and here.

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