logo
Former Secret Agents Enter the Battle Against Wildlife Smugglers Backed by Drug Cartels

Former Secret Agents Enter the Battle Against Wildlife Smugglers Backed by Drug Cartels

Bloomberg23-05-2025

By
Mark Davis loves to pretend he is a criminal. During a 30-year career working undercover for the FBI as a special agent, Davis posed as a cocaine smuggler, negotiated million-dollar deals with money launderers and showed up at a criminal rendezvous with $200,000 in cash. Davis retired from the FBI in 2016 to work another beat. Today, he runs undercover assignments to help arrest rhino horn smugglers, jaguar skin dealers and spider monkey brokers.
Davis specializes in gathering evidence for international law enforcement agencies, working to take down smugglers profiting from the illegal trade in wildlife and endangered species. In Bolivia, he secretly filmed meetings with jaguar traffickers and, in China, he negotiated the sale price for shark fin. In a McDonald's parking lot in Chula Vista, California, near the border with Tijuana, Davis surveilled the scene as a fellow informant set up a faux deal to sell a quarter of a million dollars worth of organs from the totoaba, an endangered Mexican fish so valuable that traffickers call it 'The Cocaine of the Sea.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Protests erupt over immigration raids in Los Angeles
Protests erupt over immigration raids in Los Angeles

Yahoo

time28 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Protests erupt over immigration raids in Los Angeles

Protests erupted in Los Angeles over ongoing Immigration and Customs Enforcement raids in the city. Federal agents have raided multiple workplaces in the fashion district, a Home Depot and other local areas, according to the American Civil Liberties Union of Southern California. Hundreds of people, including children, were detained by ICE agents on Friday at the Edward Roybal Federal Building in downtown Los Angeles, the ACLU said. ICE Acting Director Todd Lyons said in a statement Saturday, "The brave men and women of ICE were in Los Angeles arresting criminal illegal aliens including gang members, drug traffickers and those with a history of assault, cruelty to children, domestic violence, robbery, and smuggling." Large crowds began gathering near the federal detention center in downtown Los Angeles Friday protesting the immigration raids and leading to some reported clashes with authorities. Lyons said that the "violent rioters will be held accountable" and vowed that ICE will continue to make arrests. "What took place in Los Angeles yesterday was appalling. As rioters attacked federal ICE and law enforcement officers on the LA streets, Mayor Bass took the side of chaos and lawlessness over law enforcement," Lyons said Saturday. Mayor Karen Bass, meanwhile, condemned the ICE raids in a statement. "As Mayor of a proud city of immigrants, who contribute to our city in so many ways, I am deeply angered by what has taken place. These tactics sow terror in our communities and disrupt basic principles of safety in our city. My Office is in close coordination with immigrant rights community organizations. We will not stand for this," Bass said. Bass told KABC that neither she nor the Los Angeles Police Department were aware that the ICE raids were going to happen. Some protesters could be seen throwing objects at vehicles and others tried to block vans from leaving on Friday, KABC reported. Shortly after 7 p.m. the Los Angeles Police Department declared an unlawful assembly, warning protesters they risked being arrested if they remained in the area. LAPD officers were seen lining the streets near the federal building, KABC reported. The LAPD said in a social media post late Friday that officers had reported a "small group of violent individuals" were throwing large pieces of concrete. "Once again, an UNLAWFUL ASSEMBLY has been declared. You must leave the area. The use of less lethal munitions has been authorized by the Incident Commander," the LAPD said in the post. The Department of Homeland Security said the targeting of law enforcement in Los Angeles is "despicable." "Mayor Bass, ICE is not responsible for "sowing a sense of terror" the protestors YOU enabled are," DHS said. FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino said the FBI has already made arrests for "obstructing our operations." Federal law enforcement operations will proceed as planned this weekend in Los Angeles County, U.S. attorney Bill Essayli added. -ABC News' Luke Barr and Vanessa Navarrete contributed to this report.

Colorado attorney mistaken for lawyer of Boulder terror attack suspect's family, receives death threats
Colorado attorney mistaken for lawyer of Boulder terror attack suspect's family, receives death threats

CBS News

time32 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Colorado attorney mistaken for lawyer of Boulder terror attack suspect's family, receives death threats

A construction law attorney in Colorado has been receiving death threats due to being mistaken as the immigration attorney representing the family of Mohamed Soliman, the suspect of the Boulder terror attack. The Colorado attorney has received threats of harm from persons confusing him with a Michigan attorney of the same name, who is representing Soliman's wife and children in federal immigration proceedings. That Michigan attorney, too, has received threats, including one that suggested he be set on fire. A court sketch shows Mohamed Soliman in Denver federal court on June, 6, 2025. Robyn Cochran-Ragland Soliman has been charged with 118 state criminal charges, including 28 counts of attempted murder, and a federal hate crime charge after authorities said he attacked a peaceful walk by Run for Their Lives with Molotov cocktails, leaving 15 people and one dog injured. The group walks each week to bring awareness to Israeli hostages held by Hamas in Gaza. Several days after the attack, Soliman's wife and five children were taken into ICE custody. Authorities said Soliman is an Egyptian national who arrived in the United States on a non-immigrant visa in 2022. He filed for asylum in 2022, said officials, and his visa expired in 2023. The family has been living in Colorado Springs. Mike Michalek, FBI special agent in charge of the Denver field office, said the family has been cooperative with the investigation, and Soliman's wife took her husband's iPhone to the Colorado Springs Police Department. Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem said the family would be processed under expedited removal, a move a federal judge blocked this week. The family is being held in an ICE facility in Dilley, Texas. Media walk past classrooms during a tour of ICE's South Texas Family Residential Center, Friday, Aug. 23, 2019, in Dilley, Texas. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement hosted a media tour of the center that houses families who are pending disposition of their immigration cases. Eric Gay / AP Many state and local officials, faith leaders and community members publicly denounced the violent terror attack and stressed the dangers of antisemitism, but some people have been directing their anger towards Soliman's family. Michigan-based lawyer Eric Lee, who is representing Soliman's wife and children in immigration court pro bono, said there has been a "substantial influx" of criticism and death threats both to him and his former employers. He shared a recent voicemail with CBS Colorado, in which a person claiming to be a former Colorado police officer threatened him. "Yeah, uh, two hostages, Americans, rescued dead in Israel," the message began, referencing the recovery of the bodies of two Israeli-American hostages earlier this week. The speaker continued, "If you're representing a terrorist family, I hope somebody pours gas on you and burns you, because you're a scumbag and you're anti-American. And as a retired Colorado cop who had to leave there after 23 years of service in the Denver metro area, some Park Counties people like you are a reason I had to leave because you're a [expletive] scumbag and you love terrorists. So, I hope they pour gas on you and burn you somewhere along the line in life, and if not that, you go to hell and burn in fire forever you [expletive] scumbag." In a statement to CBS Colorado, Lee denounced the "atmosphere of violence" and said he will not be intimidated. "In the past 24-hours, I have received a substantial number of threats, including death threats, because I represent a wife and five children (ages 4 to 17) who were arrested, shipped to a detention center in the dark of night and slated for deportation. Another attorney representing the family has also received threats, my former employer's office has faced harassment, and attorneys who share my name have reported receiving death threats as well. The president is responsible for creating an atmosphere of violence by repeatedly dehumanizing immigrants and disparaging their rights. Attorneys representing non-citizens are fulfilling our responsibility to ensure that everyone in this country—citizen and non-citizen alike—obtains the protection of the Constitution. Our legal team will not be intimidated." Colorado-based attorney Eric Lee, who specializes in construction law and works with the Decker & Murphy law firm, has nothing to do with the case. Yet, he's been mistaken for the Soliman family's lawyer due to his name and has also received numerous death threats, his law firm confirmed. CBS Colorado has inquired if either attorney has reported these threats to federal officials, but has not yet received a response. In a recent case involving interstate threats, a Colorado man was sentenced to three years and one month in prison for making violent threats towards election officials in Colorado and Arizona. In 2024, a man in New York pleaded guilty to federal charges of making interstate threats to congressional offices and was sentenced to 13 months in prison. The problem is continuing to grow. In February, the American Bar Association published an article on the increasing threats to judges, civil servants and other public officials, addressing rising safety concerns of those who work in public service and the negative impact it has on those professions. Threats to federal judges alone have risen every year since 2019.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store