You would have to contact your local police or animal control service to find out for sure. In the US it is considered poaching and trespassing, and if caught doing it the people will be fined and possibly sent to jail. They will get into even more trouble if they were shooting towards any other people (or house).
2007-01-28 10:10:14
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answer #1
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answered by iluvmyfrenchbulldogs 6
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You need to display notices on the perimeter indicating that it is private land and that shooting is prohibited. This will give you the back-up needed in a court action. Trespass is not a crime in Northern Ireland. It is a tort (private law) .You can ask a trespasser to leave and they must do so by the shortest suitable route. If you live on the 3.5 acre site, it could be argued that their behaviour is dangerous. This is a police matter. Record their registrations and pass them to the police.
2007-02-01 01:17:10
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answer #2
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answered by des c 3
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Any person who discharges a firearm on your land, without your consent may be committing an offence. If they are shooting game birds, animals including bunnies, they are poaching. If they are shooting wild birds it is likely they are committing an offence as nearly every species of bird in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland are protected species. Contact the Constable forthwith.
2007-01-29 01:48:25
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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You have all the rights. It is poaching and tress passing whether they take the birds away or not. also, what type of birds are they shooting because some may be protected. I suggest you try and keep your eyes open for them coming back and ring the police immediately. they may not even have a fire arms licence. Just tell the police "there are guys on my land with guns and i'm not sure what they are doing there" and you might even get the armed responce unit and get them into real bother. I can't stand poachers.
2007-01-28 10:52:34
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answer #4
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answered by Aquila 4
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I am not sure what the law is like in northern Ireland but in british isles i'd say if it were myself I would put up notice boards..that says....private property keep out!! If I already had and they still come I would report it to the law and ask them what should be done. They could co-operate with me and nab them in the act and have them prosecuted with offences like....trespassing...No permission to shoot and if they did'nt have a license for their guns. Whatever I did i'd have to be careful that I did'nt shoot at them or I could be in trouble with the law myself.
2007-01-29 00:58:50
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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I usually send my boyfriend out there with his shotgun and the dogs (who look much fiercer then they are!) and they leave pretty sharpish. Then again he has been shot at once or twice by poachers... ok, don't just walk up there, drive up there (I assume you have a landy that'll go over fields?) the law will only be on your side if they shoot you so there isn't much point getting the police involved. Just use good old fashioned "gerrof my land or oi'll set the dogs on ye"
2007-01-29 11:37:21
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answer #6
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answered by floppity 7
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why do you want to shoot birds even if you don't like them cant you understand they are here for a reason nature put birds on this earth to do a job which they do well and if the birds became extent because of shooting and cats we would be over run with insects and all manner of creepy crawlies
2007-02-01 05:42:22
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answer #7
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answered by top cat 4
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First you can call the local authorities call have the person fined for tress passing on your land, then tell the local authorities that they shot wildlife on your land with out your permission and that you would like to press charges, they will problem bring it to your local wildlife game officers which they will take the wildlife and press charges for poaching.
2007-01-28 11:47:25
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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I don't know about the Laws in Ireland, But here in the South if you shoot on someones property without their permission, they will hogtie you and shoot you full of Buckshot.
2007-01-28 12:47:06
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answer #9
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answered by donna_honeycutt47 6
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As a vast theory it is my information that each and anyone wild birds are initially threat-free. There are some exceptions for 'recreation birds' eg pheasants, wild poultry ie. ducks & ducks, which have an open and closed season even as they're in many cases killed. even if some people would regard particular birds as 'pests' or maybe 'vermin' there is not any customary precise less than uk regulation to kill them. There are licences issued allowing people to kill some species which will properly be recognized as so said as 'pests' yet again, simplified, those are issued to people like farmers or fisheries the position they ought to demonstrate that killing the birds is the only thanks to maintain flowers or different farm animals. different restricted exceptions to taking wild birds must be to assist an injured chook and then it must be released even as in fantastic condition, or to kill an injured chook to stay away from its suffering. hence, leaving aside all the different valid factors about hearth palms, inc. air guns and the prohibitions and hazards of them i imagine i ought to correctly say in the experience that your neighbour is killing wild birds of their backyard they're performing illegally. you should record them to the Police. Edit: I in many cases go back to a Q to work out what perspectives different have. With the remarkable of appreciate, esp Tom Smith's A .. I stand through my answer, that as a beginning factor ALL wild birds are threat-free See flora and fauna & nation-state Act 1981 as amended nation-state & Rights of way Act 2000. you go with to ascertain AND comprehend the law. authorities. depts can, and do concern particular licences upon application allowing particular people to take or kill some wild birds. in addition they concern what's called a 'customary licence' allowing people to kill particular wild birds yet there's a provision which specifically says the killing can only happen even if it is critical to stay away from or take care of serious harm to farm animals, flowers, fruit, fisheries and similar. with the point to recap there ought to exist a serious threat AND it, the probability, can only realistically be solved through killing a wild chook. hence I confidentally say it is totally not likely the killing refered to interior the Q is lawful.
2016-10-16 05:41:58
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answer #10
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answered by ? 4
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