Can new law beat the crime craze blighting farms?

2 min read

Adam Henson

A view from the farm

Quadbikes are essential kit for many farmers but the search for social media ‘likes’ is making them a target for thieves
Photo: Alamy

If you haven’t heard of dingers, you could be in for a shock. So-called dinger crime is a new internet trend, where quadbikes and off-road motorcycles are stolen before being ridden dangerously to gain hits and likes on social media.

Some riders even provoke police with reckless driving and then upload the videos of their taunting to sites such as TikTok. It’s terrifying stuff. One police force alone has received more than 6,000 complaints about dingers; officers are calling it “a plague on society”.

For farmers, as big owners of quadbikes, the dinger craze is a serious worry and the latest assault in the ongoing war against rural crime. Like most farmers, I have come to realise thieves will try to steal anything that moves and quite a lot of things that don’t: power tools, livestock, tractors, trailers, sat nav units and even diesel.

When criminals break into barns and outbuildings, it leaves farmers feeling angry, violated and vulnerable. Farms aren’t just workplaces, they are also homes. In many cases, the farmhouse is next to other farm buildings, so when thieves strike, the feelings of personal invasion are similar to those felt by victims of domestic burglaries.

But what makes farm thefts doubly devastating is that what is taken is often valuable equipment essential to the running of the business, important in producing the nation’s food, and crucial to the profitability of the farm.

In summer, the delay in replacing a stolen tractor or a GPS receiver could mean the difference between a successful harvest and one ruined by the rain.

PROTECTIVE TECHNOLOGY

Thankfully, there is good news: technology and the law are on the side of farmers. On our farm in the Cotswolds, we protect our vehicles with a sophisticated anti-theft security system. Every piece of kit is given a Datatag ‘fingerprint’ with several unique markings, including forensic liquid DNA that is invisible to the thief. Like similar systems on the m

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