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Dear All
I have just checked with the RSPB Investigations Team and they have no record of anyone contacting them about this incident.
So I’m not sure who Annie spoke to – was it someone in the Wildlife Team? Please always do feel free to use me as a contact point, though admittedly I have not been very proactive recently due to my mother being very poorly in hospital for a couple of months.
As we all know, it is extremely hard to get enough evidence for this kind of crime, such that the police can take it further. It was certainly a really useful talk we had from the Wildlife Crime Unit at the Lancaster conference which outlined what might be needed for a successful prosecution, as well as highlighting all the other atrocious wildlife crimes out there (like monkey torturing – still can’t get that out of my head) they have to deal with.
As you can all imagine, the RSPB Investigations team also has a lot of awful crimes to deal with and therefore have to prioritise focusing on cases which have video/other strong evidence to give us a chance of us winning in court or cases involving Schedule 1 birds or raptors, since raptors face a really awful level of sustained and persistent persecution currently. I can assure everyone that my colleagues are very committed and care about all birds, including Swifts, even if they are unable to help in specific cases such as this.
It is of course, deeply frustrating, that the burden of proof is so high and so difficult to obtain for Swifts and I greatly admire any local group willing to pursue a case like this, and get greater understanding and awareness, if nothing else.
We all bear the scars of cases in our own locations, so it’s fantastic that we can all support each other emotionally and with any tactics we have tried.
Laurinda
From: swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com <swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Cally Smith Huntly & District Swift Group
Sent: 23 June 2026 10:58
To: swiftslocalnetwork <swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [SLN] Regent House - 22 swift nests destroyed
Dear Tony & Anne
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Dear Annie
I’m so sorry you still feel unhappy.
In certain cases the RSPB will definitely step in to help, where we feel we can make a difference. For example, in addition to SLN people lobbying Network Rail recently, we were in touch with our contacts at Network Rail behind the scenes to help resolve the blocked nest sites at the viaduct.
However, there are obviously too many local issues for us to get involved in every case. As I said in my personal email to you shortly after the building had tragically come down before the scheduled month of November, sadly the burden of proof needed for the police to take it further is high. Nevertheless, we very much appreciate people on the ground like you trying their local wildlife crime officers anyway, to check nothing can be done and ‘kick the tyres’ of the process, which you clearly have done.
If I’d personally felt we could have gained some traction with this case, though I was deep in my own family issues at the time, I probably would have raised it myself with our Investigations Team and I know our Wildlife team would also have done the same (hence me asking with whom you spoke). So I would like to reiterate once more, that we DO get involved when/where we can and therefore there is no ‘gaslighting’ involved.
Our staff are, naturally, very stretched at this time of year, another reason why they cannot spread too thinly over cases and take on too many battles (no matter how individually important each one is for nature). Otherwise, we run the risk of having no impact and not getting any wins at all.
Please do come back to me if you feel there is anything further I can do personally to help in this case as the RSPB Swift Species lead.
Kind regards
Laurinda
From: swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com <swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com>
On Behalf Of Banstead Swifts
Sent: 25 June 2026 12:30
To: swiftslocalnetwork <swiftsloc...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [SLN] Regent House - 22 swift nests destroyed
Dear Laurinda
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A couple of great emails Laurinda.
You are so good!
Stay strong
Jon and Camilla
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Dear Annie,
It is a safe space and it is important to discuss these things. Your Dorking incident has highlighted the many issues we face when trying to protect swift nesting sites. It is by discussing the problems people encounter that we can work together to improve nest protection.
Jon
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Thank you, Laurinda, for taking the time to reply.
However, your response illustrates exactly why many autistic people do not feel safe enough to unmask, even in communities that they believe are inclusive.
My concern was never about you personally, as I had clearly stated. It was about corporate policy and whether appropriate procedures had been followed and whether it was clear to me and the public what RSPB offer in support to swift wildlife crime. Yet the discussion gradually became about me, my actions and my communication.
For example, your earlier statement that there was "no record of anyone contacting" the Investigations Team gave the impression that I had failed to pursue the matter. The obvious question was never asked: what contact had I actually had with the RSPB? Instead, assumptions were made that undermined my credibility before clarification was sought.
Similarly, I was not asking anyone else to reject the police position. I was questioning whether the correct procedures had been followed before reaching that position. Those are not the same thing. I have seen the evidence of Regent House, I do not believe you have. I do reject the police position based on the evidence I have seen and my experience, because they did fail to follow procedural standards, not once, but twice on two cases.
This is a pattern many autistic people recognise. We communicate directly and factually, yet our communication is often interpreted as confrontation or personal criticism. The discussion shifts away from the issue itself and towards our communication style.
That is what happened here.
Throughout the past two months I have dealt with the destruction of swift nests, intimidation connected to campaigning on a wildlife crime, anonymous malicious letters, and the distress of witnessing swifts trying to reach a nest site that no longer existed or was obstructed. I deliberately chose not to bring my own personal circumstances or health into this group because I wanted the discussion to remain about wildlife, evidence and policy.
Instead, the focus became me.
This is why autistic people often continue to mask. It is not because we cannot communicate clearly. It is because experience teaches us that when we communicate naturally and directly, our motives are questioned, our communication is personalised, and our concerns become secondary to how we expressed them.
That is the double empathy problem in practice. It is not simply that autistic people misunderstand non-autistic communication; it is equally that non-autistic people often misunderstand autistic communication, assigning intent that was never there.
I hope people reading this can understand that my criticism was not directed at an individual, I had made that very clear on previous posts. It has always been about improving systems, accountability and outcomes for swifts.
Unfortunately, this exchange has also become an example of why autistic people so often feel they cannot safely be themselves when difficult conversations arise.
It is all so disappointing that this has gone this way when your RSPB boss Emma Marsh is herself a late diagnosed autistic and has shared her own struggles with exactly the same issues:
https://hidden20.org/podcast/emma-marsh
''They also explore why so many workplaces still unintentionally exclude neurodivergent people - and what it looks like to move beyond awareness into systems that actually support people and their brains'.
Because this is my 'workplace' , or perhaps it is not whilst it remains an unsafe place for autistic individuals like me to unmask and work to help swifts. Emma would have experienced exactly what this discussion became all her life and all autistics would recognise it.
I don't wish to receive any more correspondence on this.
Regards
Annie