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Museum owner fined RM300,000 for possessing wildlife parts including orangutan skull, elephant tusks
Museum owner fined RM300,000 for possessing wildlife parts including orangutan skull, elephant tusks

Malay Mail

time5 days ago

  • Malay Mail

Museum owner fined RM300,000 for possessing wildlife parts including orangutan skull, elephant tusks

KUALA LUMPUR, July 26 — An art museum owner was fined RM300,000 by the Sessions Court here yesterday for possessing various protected wildlife parts without a licence or special permit last year. Judge Mohd Zaki Mohd Salleh sentenced Yiu Shoou Rang, 66, after he pleaded guilty to eight amended charges. The court also ordered nine months' imprisonment in default of payment. Yiu subsequently paid the fine. Yiu was charged with four counts of possessing, without a special permit, protected wildlife parts, including an orangutan skull, two estuarine crocodile (Crocodylus porosus) skulls, and seven elephant tusks, all of which are fully protected species under the Second Schedule of the Wildlife Conservation Act 2010 (Act 716). The offences were committed at a business premises in Central Market, Jalan Hang Kasturi, around 3.20pm on January 8, 2024. He was charged under Section 68(1)(b) of the Wildlife Conservation Act 2010, which carries a fine of between RM50,000 and RM500,000, or imprisonment for up to three years, or both. Yiu also faced four additional charges of possessing other wildlife parts without a valid licence at the same time and location. These included 150 parts of wild boar (Sus scrofa), 10 porcupine quills and six parts of sambar deer. These charges were brought under Section 60(1)(a) of the Wildlife Conservation Act 2010 (Act 716), which provides for a maximum fine of RM50,000, imprisonment for up to three years, or both, upon conviction. However, five additional charges previously brought against Yiu were taken into consideration by the court under Section 171A of the Criminal Procedure Code. Deputy public prosecutor Suhaila Rashid urged the court to impose a sentence commensurate with the severity of the offence to serve as a deterrent. In mitigation, defence counsel Teh See Khoon pleaded for a lenient sentence, submitting that the items in question were part of an Orang Asli collection intended for museum display. — Bernama

Watch: Baboons roam freely in Riyadh; Saudi authority addresses situation
Watch: Baboons roam freely in Riyadh; Saudi authority addresses situation

Khaleej Times

time22-07-2025

  • Khaleej Times

Watch: Baboons roam freely in Riyadh; Saudi authority addresses situation

Saudi authorities have released a statement after a social media video showed baboons roaming freely in some areas of Riyadh. The National Centre for Wildlife said it had visited the areas in question after the issue was flagged and most of the problem had been handled, with some more left to finish the process. The authority revealed that the appearance may have resulted from individuals illegally possessing the animals and then releasing them as the number of baboons recorded was not within the natural range of distribution. The video circulated online shows baboons in one of the valleys of Riyadh, as residents witness the unusual sight. It urged the public to report any similar cases via the unified hotline number (19914), while emphasising the dangers of possessing wild animals.

Manitoba man, 57, given 5-year prison sentence after border officers found ghost-gun-making materials
Manitoba man, 57, given 5-year prison sentence after border officers found ghost-gun-making materials

CBC

time30-06-2025

  • CBC

Manitoba man, 57, given 5-year prison sentence after border officers found ghost-gun-making materials

A Manitoba man has been sentenced to five years in prison after border services and police officers found a number of prohibited firearms and tools used to make untraceable firearms. Robert Ripcik, 57, was given a five-year prison sentence on Friday, as well as a 10-year firearms prohibition and an order to provide a DNA sample, the Canada Border Services Agency said in a news release. Ripcik, who lives in Beausejour, Man., has been in custody since he was arrested in March 2024. He pleaded guilty to a number of charges in Selkirk provincial court, including unauthorized possession of firearms, making false statements, and possessing prohibited devices, illegally imported goods and a prohibited firearm with readily accessible ammunition. Investigators began to look into Ripcik in April 2023, after CBSA officers in Winnipeg found a shipment of items used to make firearms without serial numbers, or "ghost guns," which are untraceable. Officers with the CBSA and RCMP searched a rural property near Chatfield, Man., about a year later.

Rays' Wander Franco faces new charge resulting from November gun incident
Rays' Wander Franco faces new charge resulting from November gun incident

Yahoo

time09-06-2025

  • Yahoo

Rays' Wander Franco faces new charge resulting from November gun incident

Prosecutors in the Dominican Republic have filed a formal charge of illegal possession of a firearm against Rays shortstop Wander Franco and requested a trial, several publications reported Sunday. The charge stems from an altercation Franco had in November in San Juan de la Maguana with a man in the parking lot of an apartment building. Police at the time said the incident stemmed from a fight over a woman's attention, describing it as 'a heated dispute of a passionate nature.' In a news release issued Sunday, authorities wrote: 'The prosecution body (...) requests through the instance that the opening of a trial be issued against the accused because there are sufficient elements of relevant and pertinent evidence that demonstrate that the defendant has compromised his criminal responsibility,' authorities wrote in a news release. The charge is not related to the trial currently taking place in Puerto Plata in which Franco faces charges of sexual abuse, sexual exploitation of a minor and human trafficking stemming from a relationship with a then-14-year-old girl that started in December 2022, when Franco was 21. News of the filing of the gun charge in the San Juan de la Maguana Court of Investigation was reported by Dominican newspapers Listin Diario and Diario Libre, along with other outlets. A Glock firearm with its magazine and 15 rounds of ammunition was found in the Mercedes-Benz vehicle in which Franco was traveling, both newspapers reported. Franco did not have documentation for the gun, which was registered to Branly Fernando Lugo Rodríguez. Franco identified the man as his uncle. According to Diario Libre, attorney Teodosio Jáquez said the gun was in the trunk of the car, Franco was unaware it was there, and he never touched it. As soon as Rodriguez became aware of the situation, Jáquez said, per he went voluntarily to the San Juan de la Maguana Prosecutor's Office. There, he produced documents showing his license to carry and possess a firearm, and the current renewal. Franco's trial on the sexual abuse charges is scheduled to resume Monday morning, with the prosecution introducing more witnesses. That trial is expected to last three-four months. Franco on Sunday posted a photo on social media of him playing for the Rays along with a Bible verse, Psalm 97:10, in Spanish. Translated to English, it reads:" Let those who love the Lord hate evil, for he guards the lives of his faithful ones and delivers them from the hand of the wicked." • • • Sign up for our Sports Today newsletter to get daily updates on the Bucs, Rays, Lightning and college football across Florida. Every weekday, tune into our Sports Day Tampa Bay podcast to hear reporter Rick Stroud break down the biggest stories in Tampa Bay sports. Never miss out on the latest with your favorite Tampa Bay sports teams. Follow our coverage on X and Facebook.

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