Could this be the Beginning of the End for out-of-control Hunts? Cheshire Hunt case could set national precedent.
These dogs aren’t just “tools” of the hunt. They’re living, breathing beings—intelligent, loyal animals bred and trained for a brutal purpose, yet left vulnerable and often mistreated by the very people who claim to care for them. The hunt masters—David Woolley, Peter Jones, and John Simpson—face charges under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. This case is significant because it highlights something the hunting world has long tried to avoid: the reality that hunts can be held responsible when their hounds are put at risk.
“Hunts across the country cannot continue.”
Even the defence team acknowledged the stakes. Hunting’s go-to defence lawyer Stephen Welford, representing the three defendants, described the case as being of “national importance”, stating it is the first of its kind. He acknowledged police concerns that the incident “could have caused injury”—a risk both to the hounds themselves and to members of the public. Welford even went as far as to say that a successful prosecution could mean “hunts across the country cannot continue.”
Why? Because uncontrolled hounds are not the exception—they’re the norm.
Footage from Cheshire Monitors recording an uncontrolled Wynnstay hunt hound nearly getting hit by car.
“A deeper, systemic issue”
The problem isn’t limited to the Cheshire Hunt. In fact, this case reflects a much deeper, systemic issue across the hunting world: a routine failure to control hounds in public spaces, and a complete lack of meaningful welfare oversight.
Protect the Wild’s upcoming Foxhound Welfare Report with data from the 2022–2025 hunting seasons, documents over 1000 incidents where hounds were seen out of control. These include packs rampaging across farmland unaccompanied, trespassing into private gardens, and hounds loose on public roads—unsupervised by hunt staff—creating real danger for road users, animals, and the hounds themselves.
This isn’t minor disruption. This is hunt havoc. And it puts more than just the hounds at risk. Week after week, people, pets, livestock, and whole communities are exposed to the fallout from hunts that cannot—or will not—control their animals.
Despite this widespread havoc, hunts are rarely held to account. Consequences, when they come at all, are minimal. That’s why this case matters. It could set a legal precedent that forces the hunting industry to confront its long-standing failures under the Animal Welfare Act 2006. Stephen Welford’s own words reveal the ugly truth: if controlling hounds properly means “hunts across the country cannot continue” then it is clear these dogs have been forced to endure chaos and cruelty as the industry’s dirty secret.

Holderness Hunt hound is hit by car after running out in the road. Thankfully this was not fatal.
Shockwaves
This case shows why we urgently need platforms like Protect the Wild’s Hunt Havoc. The website is a database, updated quarterly, that tracks incidents like this one – offering clear evidence that this isn’t a one-off. The data we collect is heartbreaking and undeniable: Hounds are out of control.

Weymouth Animal Rights show Blackford and Sparkford Vale hunt hounds dangerously running across a road in front of traffic.
These beautiful dogs deserve better. They deserve safety, care, and a life free from fear and pain. The hunting industry has failed them for too long, hiding behind secrecy and tradition while their foxhounds pay the price.
The hunting industry has operated in the shadows for too long. It has failed the foxhounds it claims to care for, putting beautiful, intelligent dogs at risk every time they are sent out without proper supervision or protection. The time for transparency, reform, and real accountability is now.
This trial could be a turning point.
To see the full scale of hunt-related havoc and foxhound suffering, visit https://hunthavoc.info/. It’s time to shine a light on the truth and demand change.
We’ll be watching this case closely. And if this precedent is set, many more hunts will have a lot to answer for.