A taxidermy dealer who illegally traded in critically endangered species has been sentenced to 56 weeks.
In Dec 2017, we launched an investigation into Arron Halstead after being alerted to the fact that he offered to sell a black rhino skull, a sawfish rostrum & a whale tooth.
As a result, in January 2018 officers executed search warrants at the 29-year-old’s home address and business address in Burnley as part of Operation Rambler - a complex two-and-a-half-year investigation.
Officers seized a wide range of taxidermy related items including stuffed tiger cubs, rhino horns, rhino heads and three elephant tusks, which included one in excess of two metres in length that is understood to be one of the largest ever seized in the UK.
Other items included the rhino skull, sperm whale tooth and the sawfish rostrum that Halstead had offered to sell. Officers also seized a mass of paperwork related to his trade in taxidermy.
It was clear to the investigating officers that Halstead was trading legally in taxidermy, but they suspected he was using his trade to front his criminal activity.
Following the warrant, Halstead was arrested but declined to provide explanations for any of the seized items.
Officers undertook a painstaking analysis of the paperwork and the data downloaded from Halstead's IPhone and uncovered WhatsApp messages showing that he had been trading extensively in taxidermy.
Although the majority of his trading had been legal, officers found comprehensive evidence showing that Halstead was also involved in an illicit trade with dealers from around the globe, which he was trying to hide amongst his legal dealing.
Halstead had used contacts in Spain🇪🇸 to broker the sale of rhino horns to buyers from China🇨🇳, falsifying documentation for a cover story, he drove to Calais🇫🇷 twice where he met the buyers and sold four rhino horns for significant amounts of cash.
Halstead was arranging to sell two more horns, which officers found in his freezer. They also uncovered messages indicating that Halstead was actively trying to source further rhino horns, which he intended to sell to his Chinese contacts and find buyers for the elephant tusks.
As the investigation progressed, Halstead’s activities also attracted the attention of Interpol and the Dutch Police. That was after officers found that Halstead had acquired tiger skulls from another dealer based in the Netherlands🇳🇱, which he was selling to other contacts.
This is the third occasion that Halstead has come to the adverse attention of the police and National Wildlife Crime Unit. In December 2015 Halstead was given a 24 week prison sentence for the prohibited trade in other endangered species.
PC Nigel Keates, a Lancashire Constabulary wildlife officer hopes this custodial sentence will deter others from committing crimes of this nature, and urged people to think of the ramifications on wildlife and endangered species.
PC Keates went on to say: “I welcome today’s sentence, which comes at the end of a long and complex investigation. Halstead profited from trading in the world’s critically endangered species and his actions were both selfish and abhorrent."
It is hoped some of the items will now be donated to museums, while others will be used by the Lancashire Constabulary Rural Crime and Wildlife Team during their educational roadshows across the county.
Anyone with information on wildlife crime in their area can call police on 101 or report is online at doitonline.lancashire.police.uk
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Sadly, we are now able to confirm that yesterday we recovered Nicola Bulley from the River Wyre.
Nicola’s family have been informed and are of course devastated. Our thoughts are with them at this time as well as with all her loved ones and the wider community.
We recognise the huge impact that Nicola’s disappearance has had on her family and friends, but also on the people of St Michael’s. We would like to thank all of those who have helped during what has been a hugely complex and highly emotional investigation.
Today’s development is not the outcome any of us would have wanted, but we hope that it can at least start to provide some answers for Nicola’s loved ones, who remain foremost in our thoughts.
Today Andrew Burfield was jailed for life for the murder of Katie Kenyon.
We think it’s important give you an insight into the investigation that led to his conviction and tell Katie’s story.
This is that story ⬇️
Katie was reported missing in April.
Concerned family members had gone to Burfield’s home after they had received cryptic text messages - sent from Katie’s phone - saying she had “gone away to work on herself”. Those messages were from Burfield, purporting to be from Katie.
Our digital forensic experts would later recover drafts of the messages backed up in the notes section on Burfield’s iPhone, which showed he had written them at least three weeks before the day they were sent out.
Katie was a happy, much-loved mother, sister and daughter who was murdered by someone she should have been able to trust.
That someone was 51-year-old Andrew Burfield, who despite initially denying any knowledge of her whereabouts and changing his story throughout, has today pled guilty to her murder.
Burfield premeditated his attack, travelling to Bolton-by-Bowland before the murder to dig a grave
Today, DCI Al Davies was at court as Burfield gave a guilty plea on the 3rd day of his trial.
Andrew Burfield has put Katie’s family through the unimaginable pain of going to trial, only to plead guilty several days in.
Today, the 7 people who each played roles in the planning and execution of a shooting which killed 19-year-old #AyaHachem, have been sentenced for her murder.
One woman was also found guilty of manslaughter.
The 7 were handed respective life sentences totalling 216 years
On Sunday 17th May 2020 #AyaHachem was heading to Lidl to buy food, ready for her family to break their Ramadan fast that evening. She never made it home.
As she walked along Kings Street in Blackburn, she was struck with a single bullet, intended for rival car wash owner Pacha.
Ten members of an organised crime gang who conspired to supply Class A drugs in Burnley and exploit vulnerable children into selling drugs have been jailed for a combined total of nearly 60 years.
In 2019, the our Targeted Crime Unit launched OpCroatia, which specifically looked at disrupting the activities of the gang members associated with the ‘AK line’.
Preston Crown Court heard how the crime group was headed by brothers Junaid Khan and Zain Khan, who directed street dealers, including children, to sell crack cocaine and heroin on their behalf.
A lorry driver, distracted whilst at the wheel, has today been jailed for causing a collision which resulted in the death of a woman.
Leon Stott, 35, of St David’s Road, Leyland (pictured in this video) was sentenced to three years and four months at Preston Crown Court today.
Stott pleaded guilty to causing death by dangerous driving and two counts of causing serious injury by dangerous driving in July.
The incident happened at around 10:10am on Tuesday, January 8th 2019 in queuing traffic on the M58, following a previous collision around an hour before at junction 3, which resulted in the deaths of Joe Cairns, 14, from Radcliffe and Anne Kerr, 50, from Southport.