
Man admits trying to smuggle 850 protected turtles worth £1 million to Hong Kong
Wei Qiang Lin, a Chinese national who lives in Brooklyn, pleaded guilty in federal court in New York on Monday to attempting to export more than 220 parcels containing around 850 eastern box turtles and three-toed box turtles, according to the US justice department.
The turtles, with an estimated market value of 1.4 million dollars (£1 million), were intercepted by law enforcement at a border inspection, prosecutors said. Officers saw them bound and taped inside knotted socks within the shipping boxes.
Eastern box turtles and three-toed box turtles feature colourful markings and are a 'prized feature' in the domestic and foreign pet market, particularly in China and Hong Kong, prosecutors said.
The reptiles are protected by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.
Lin also shipped 11 other parcels filled with reptiles, including venomous snakes, prosecutors said.
He faces up to five years in prison when he is sentenced on December 23.
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Extra.ie
20 minutes ago
- Extra.ie
DNA hopes to solve Sophie Toscan du Plantier murder
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It has worked before and it can work for us on this case as well. 'Once FSI have the details, it could be a case of confronting one of these suspects, that's if they are still alive.' The prime suspect in the case has always been Ian Bailey, an English journalist living in West Cork who died last year aged 66. Although he was convicted of the murder in absentia by a French court in 2019, he never admitted guilt before his death. He was questioned twice by gardaí about her death but was never put on trial in Ireland. The Irish courts repeatedly refused requests from the French authorities seeking his extradition for questioning and to appear before the courts in France. According to Sophie's uncle, Jean-Pierre Gazeau, her parents, Georges and Marguerite, struggled terribly with the way their eldest child died. Their pain was compounded by the lack of answers as to what exactly happened on that fateful morning. Sophie was a mother of one; her first marriage ended in divorce and she remarried. Her last-known conversation was a phone call with her film producer husband Daniel Du Plantier. He too has since died. Mr Gazeau previously told 'What happened between Sunday, December 22, 1996, and the next day of December 23, is completely black. 'It is a black period and we don't know anything that happened for Sophie… We can have assumptions, but we don't really know. We don't know the truth and this of course is very frustrating because when you don't know in which way Sophie died, the way Sophie was killed, it's difficult, it's difficult to deal with the sorrow.' In April of this year, Detective Inspector Des McTiernan told an official Garda podcast that the investigation into the killing was progressing well and that gardaí were availing of new technologies to help solve the crime. 'From a forensic perspective, we're trying to develop it more, because there are now advancements out there on the worldwide scale,' he said on the podcast available on the Garda website. 'We don't just confine ourselves to Ireland and our ability and capacity here. We have gone abroad, and we've done that before. We have close links to the FBI, and that's working quite well. Forensics is advancing all the time. Phone analysis is advancing all the time. 'Phone extractions going back two, three years could be totally different to what you get now, and you have to be very aware of that. So the technical sides of investigations and cold cases are also an opportunity for us.' In a statement on the latest developments, gardaí said that they would not comment on the specifics of the focus of the investigation. A spokesman said: 'An Garda Síochána is not providing any further information on the investigation into the murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier, at this time.'


Irish Independent
4 days ago
- Irish Independent
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Irish Examiner
4 days ago
- Irish Examiner
Four arrested after break-in at home reportedly owned by Brad Pitt, say police
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