The goals of this organisation are simple. To carry out investigation into the reports of big cats living and breeding in the Sussex countryside and therefore the British countryside. There are many ways to go about this but the way that we believe is correct for the purpose of official Government recognition is good photographic proof, still and movie. Evidence such as paw prints, droppings, fur, are all important. Sightings are very important because they are considered as evidence but also allow us to follow up and hopefully get that vital photographic evidence. Whilst tantalising snippets of footage captured on a mobile phone are useful it is unlikely to be considered as conclusive proof. Only by producing evidence that leaves no one in any doubt can the Government be expected to accept that big cats are at large in the countryside. And that is just the beginning. Then there would need to be systematic study of the subject and that opens up all sorts of possibilities for amateur and professional. The main television companies would become interested and the subject would no longer be left to the occasional dramatic headline in a local or national newspaper, for instance 'The Beast Of Bodmin Moor' and such like. Many people think that big cats if they really are living and breeding in the British countryside should be left alone. What if it were proved conclusively that big cats were living and breeding in the British countryside, what would be the Government response ? Would the Government feel compelled to have the cats hunted down and captured or killed ? Or would the Government seek to reassure the general public about safety issues and farmers about cattle kills,etc, and accept the big cats as part of the natural environment like many other Countries do such as the USA. These questions can only be addressed if the Government first admits to the big cats presence. Despite a mass of sightings over the years this of itself is not proof enough for our Government ! The worst thing any one of us can do is to pretend that they are not out there when we know that they probably are out there somewhere.