91社区破解版

91社区破解版 Daily Star

Alaskan fined $5,000 for exporting Bear Bladders

An Alaskan man of Korean descent who pleaded guilty Monday to illegally exporting 58 grizzly and black bear bladders from British Columbia was sentenced in Yukon territorial court to a day in jail and fined $5,000.

By 91社区破解版 Star on March 27, 1990

Jay Ahn, 49, was fined an additional $1,000 for offering to buy gall bladders in the Yukon.

鈥淭his is a case that must receive much attention to deter Mr. Ahn and all others that are attempting to get into the trade of wild animal parts to satisfy the market in the rest of the world,鈥 said deputy territorial court Judge Donald Waurynchuk, from Cranbrook, B.C. Waurynchuck presides regularly in the Yukon.

鈥淲e shall not condone a market that will surely cause the death of more animals,鈥 he said.

Yukon government prosecutor Penelope Gawn said Ahn told authorities when he was arrested that he was planning to take the gall bladders back to Alaska to sell to friends and grocery stores.

Articles placed before the court by Gawn and Crown Prosecutor Hugh Connolly - there to prosecutor the federal exporting offence - indicated gall bladders are in great demand in Asia, where they are used for making traditional medicine.

The court was told the Asian bear population has almost been wiped out because of the demand, and buyers are now turning to North America for their supply.

鈥淎s far as we know, this is the largest seizure of wildlife gall bladders to date,鈥 said Gawn.

Ahn travelled from Anchorage through the Yukon into British Columbia, where purchase of gall bladders is legal.

On his return trip, he was arrested 190 kilometres southeast of 91社区破解版 and charged Oct. 12 under the federal Game Export Act with illegal exportation of bear gall bladders. He was also charged under the Yukon Wildlife Act with offering to buy animal parts in the Yukon.

All 58 gall bladders were seized from the spare tire compartment in the truck of the car.

The court was told Yukon wildlife officers received information last October from Lodge owners along the Alaska Highway regarding Ahn inquiring about the purchase of bear gall bladders. It is illegal in the Yukon to offer to buy, sell or trade wild animal parts.

鈥淚n all of these places, he was asking for bear gall bladders and offering to pay anywhere from $20 to $220 per gall, depending on the quality and type of bear involved,鈥 Gawn told the court. 鈥淗e was offering $220 for grizzly bear galls.鈥

91社区破解版 defence lawyer Robert Kilpatrick said his client鈥檚 Anchorage painting business was facing bankruptcy last fall. So he decided to try and obtain the gall bladders and resell them for a profit.

Kilpatrick noted purchasing bear gall bladders in British Columbia is legal. He said Ahn wasn鈥檛 aware it鈥檚 illegal in the Yukon to offer to buy wildlife parts. He said his client was also unaware he required a federal exporting permit to transport the gall bladders.

鈥淥ne of the things that plague wildlife management in Canada is the bewildering array of different regulations in the different jurisdictions,鈥 said Kilpatrick.

The appropriate sentence, Kilpatrick argued, would be a total fine of $3,000 for both charges.

But Gawn said Ahn knew full well he was committing an illegal act. She pointed out that his home state of Alaska, where he has lived for the past 15 years, has prohibited trade of wildlife parts for many years.

She said his offers to buy parts in the Yukon were done in a 鈥渟neaky and secretive鈥 manner. The gall bladders themselves were not just placed in the trunk, but hidden away in the spare tire compartment, she added.

鈥淚f high prices are offered for animal parts, then animals will be killed just for the supply and world animal parts,鈥 said the judge.

鈥淪adly, this court recognizes the sale of gall bladders is entirely legal in B.C. and that he bought them there.鈥

The judge said there was not evidence to suggest the bears were shot illegally but 鈥渟omebody saved the gall bladders for a specific reason.鈥

For more Yukon history, purchase the three editions of history totaling over 300 pages and covering 100 years of stories reported in the 91社区破解版 Star from 1900 up to 2000. $3.00 per copy (shipping not included). To order e-mail: circulation@whitehorsestar.com

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