Welcome to RSPB Blogs Sign in | Join
HomeAbout usAdviceBirdsJoinOur workReservesSupport usShopThings to do
  • Overview
  • Awards & recognition
  • Contact us
  • Facts and figures
  • History
  • How we are run
  • Inspiring work
  • Job vacancies
  • Looking to the future
  • Media centre
  • Offices
  • What we do
  • Overview
  • Ask an expert
  • Gardening
  • Green living
  • Helping birds
  • Law
  • Watching birds
  • Overview
  • Birds by name
  • Birds by family
  • Reserves
  • Webcams
  • Wildlife garden guide
  • Overview
  • Campaigns
  • Credit card
  • Donations
  • Fundraising
  • Gift Aid
  • Gifts, birdfood & equipment
  • Green energy
  • Holidays in the UK
  • Join the RSPB
  • Leave a legacy
  • Recycle your mobile phone
  • Sponsorship
  • Vehicle breakdown cover
  • Overview
  • Why join?
  • Membership as a gift
  • Membership benefits
  • Renewals
  • Other ways to support us
  • Overview
  • Great days out
  • By habitat
  • By name
  • By place
  • Shops on reserves
  • Overview
  • Around the UK
  • Conservation
  • Document library
  • Farming
  • International
  • Job vacancies
  • Media centre
  • Policy
  • Reserves
  • Science
  • Teaching
  • Shop homepage
  • Binoculars
  • BirdCare
  • Books, DVDs and CDs
  • Garden
  • Homeware
  • Stationery
  • Toys
  • Virtual gifts
  • Wildlife care
  • Shops on reserves
  • Overview
  • Near you
  • Events
  • E-newsletter
  • Fundraising
  • Local groups
  • Reserves
  • Volunteering
  • Webcams
The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds

Investigations

 

Egg thief collects a six-month prison sentence

He stood in the dock and told the court he was sorry, that the bird breeding season was a stressful time for him and that his problem was that he associated with other collectors, who fuel his obsession for taking eggs.

In life, people have choices and ultimately these choices decide a person’s fate. In Gregory Wheal’s case, his choices have lead to him to become THE most convicted egg collector in the UK.

His previous eight court appearances, dating back to 1987, simply served as no deterrent. Even being sent to jail for four months in January 2006 wasn’t enough. So when the Police and RSPB  knocked at his door in the summer of 2007, it was no surprised that the eggs of peregrine falcons and ravens were found hidden in padded containers in his bedroom.

Wheal’s exploits have seen him appear in an A to Z of Police Stations and courthouses throughout the UK: Shetland for whimbrel eggs, Mull when he was luckily intercepted with equipment used by egg collectors at a time when eagles were nesting, and, of course, back home in Coventry - the egg collecting capital of the UK.

Well, Mr Wheal, the Magistrates have decided your time is up. Whilst we do not wish anyone to spend time in jail, we hope you spend the next six months contemplating your actions and decide to stop collecting eggs and hand over any eggs you may still have to the Police.

At a time when birds are increasingly pressured by habitat loss, climate change and migration-related threats, isn’t the idea of a grown man scaling a tree or abseiling from a crag to take eggs just simply wrong?

Thankfully, recently amended laws - the laws that you as our supporters and members helped us persuade the government to implement - have curtailed the activities of all but the obsessed collectors, who are prepared to risk all.

The idea of jailed collectors being ordered to serve their time to correspond with the bird breeding season would be one way to relieve the self- confessed stress faced by men like Gregory Wheal.

Sadly, this is not practical in legal terms, but yesterday the Crown Prosecution Service appealed to the magistrates to try a new innovative technique – the much-documented ASBO. The passing of this order would have restricted Wheal’s movements by banning him from National Parks, nature reserves and conservation areas during the breeding season and preventing him from associating with other known egg collectors.

The court ruled that egg collecting was anti-social but failed to implement the order on this specific occasion.

Looking on the bright side, at least this year the ravens should have hatched their chicks by the time he is released, hopefully a changed man…

Published 04 January 2008 14:21 by Mark Thomas

Anonymous comments are disabled

This blog

  • About

Syndication

  • RSS 2.0
  • Atom 1.0

Search

Go

Tags

No tags have been created or used yet.

Archives

  • April 2008 (1)
  • February 2008 (1)
  • January 2008 (1)
  • November 2007 (2)
  • October 2007 (1)
  • September 2007 (1)
  • August 2007 (2)
  • July 2007 (2)

Find out more

  • Report a wildlife crime
  • Advice: law
  • Brief guide to wild birds and the law
  • Peak Malpractice report
  • Pledge your support for birds of prey
© 2007 The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds