Cambodian Wildlife Director Arrested for Monkey Business, in New York, US
Re: Cambodian Wildlife Director Arrested for Monkey Business, in New York, US
The deal could get sweeter if he was privy to some tit-bits of info at the highest levels of Cambodian politics and divulges that information as part of the deal.Doc67 wrote: ↑Thu Apr 27, 2023 10:56 am It's getting very real for him now he's facing the music all alone. I wonder if he will do a deal, name the names, spill the beans and apply for asylum.
What is he looking at, 10 - 15 years? Most people do a deal and get far less, those who go to trial get the lot.
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Re: Cambodian Wildlife Director Arrested for Monkey Business, in New York, US
America has a shortage of lab monkeys
That is bad for biomedical research and encourages smuggling
Jul 6th 2023
AMERICAN AUTHORITIES arrested Masphal Kry, an official in Cambodia’s forestry administration, last November when he was heading to an international meeting about trade regulations for endangered species in Panama. Prosecutors accused him of conspiring with a smuggling ring. The contraband: monkeys, specifically long-tailed macaques. His gang allegedly grabbed wild macaques in Cambodia’s national parks and bribed officials to label them as captive-bred. Fake papers allowed Vanny Bio Research, a Cambodian pharma company, to ship these unfortunate primates to America for use in research. Mr Kry is facing trial in Florida’s Southern District Court.
The federal government funds seven National Primate Research Centres (NPRCs), which house in total around 20,000 primates, macaques but also baboons and marmosets. These centres then award primates to labs across America. NPRCs have fulfilled only a third of requests for untested-on macaques in 2021 and prices have soared. Before the covid-19 pandemic a rhesus macaque cost $8,000; by 2022 they had hit $24,000. Another species, long-tailed macaques, is probably per pound currently the most expensive traded wildlife, says Lisa Jones-Engel, a science adviser at PETA, an animal-rights group.
https://www.economist.com/united-states ... ab-monkeys
That is bad for biomedical research and encourages smuggling
Jul 6th 2023
AMERICAN AUTHORITIES arrested Masphal Kry, an official in Cambodia’s forestry administration, last November when he was heading to an international meeting about trade regulations for endangered species in Panama. Prosecutors accused him of conspiring with a smuggling ring. The contraband: monkeys, specifically long-tailed macaques. His gang allegedly grabbed wild macaques in Cambodia’s national parks and bribed officials to label them as captive-bred. Fake papers allowed Vanny Bio Research, a Cambodian pharma company, to ship these unfortunate primates to America for use in research. Mr Kry is facing trial in Florida’s Southern District Court.
The federal government funds seven National Primate Research Centres (NPRCs), which house in total around 20,000 primates, macaques but also baboons and marmosets. These centres then award primates to labs across America. NPRCs have fulfilled only a third of requests for untested-on macaques in 2021 and prices have soared. Before the covid-19 pandemic a rhesus macaque cost $8,000; by 2022 they had hit $24,000. Another species, long-tailed macaques, is probably per pound currently the most expensive traded wildlife, says Lisa Jones-Engel, a science adviser at PETA, an animal-rights group.
https://www.economist.com/united-states ... ab-monkeys
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Re: Cambodian Wildlife Director Arrested for Monkey Business, in New York, US
Cambodian official acquitted by US jury in 'monkey-smuggling' case
The US District Court for the Southern District of Florida has acquitted Kry Masphal, director of the Forestry Administration’s (FA) Wildlife and Biodiversity Department under the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, of any wrongdoing, for his part in an alleged monkey-smuggling ring.
Masphal was detained in 2022, following a five-year investigation. The Cambodian government then issued frequent denials of the official’s guilt.
“This acquittal represents a fair judgment by a US court, affirming that Cambodian officials have consistently upheld laws, regulations and international conventions,” Im Rachna, spokesperson for the Ministry Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, told The Post on March 25.
The acquittal was first announced by US-based animal activist group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).
“A jury has acquitted Masphal Kry of any wrongdoing in an eye-opening monkey-smuggling trial that offered a rare glimpse into the corrupt and cruel business of monkey importation. The verdict was returned moments ago,” said PETA in a March 22 statement.
Masphal was one of eight individuals indicted by the US court for allegedly violating the Convention of International Trade of Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the US’ Lacey Act and Endangered Species Act.
He was detained at John F Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in New York on November 16, 2022, and indicted by the Florida court for conspiring with a Hong Kong-owned company to smuggle long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) into the US between December 2017 and January 2022.
The agriculture ministry noted that the species, also known as crab-eating macaques, are scattered all across Cambodia and can be found not just in the wilderness,l but in urban areas, including the Wat Phnom national heritage site in central Phnom Penh.
Masphal was released on bail on December 27 that year, following protracted calls for his release by the Cambodian government.
Cambodia is innocent
The US District Court for the Southern District of Florida has acquitted Kry Masphal, director of the Forestry Administration’s (FA) Wildlife and Biodiversity Department under the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, of any wrongdoing, for his part in an alleged monkey-smuggling ring.
Masphal was detained in 2022, following a five-year investigation. The Cambodian government then issued frequent denials of the official’s guilt.
“This acquittal represents a fair judgment by a US court, affirming that Cambodian officials have consistently upheld laws, regulations and international conventions,” Im Rachna, spokesperson for the Ministry Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, told The Post on March 25.
The acquittal was first announced by US-based animal activist group People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA).
“A jury has acquitted Masphal Kry of any wrongdoing in an eye-opening monkey-smuggling trial that offered a rare glimpse into the corrupt and cruel business of monkey importation. The verdict was returned moments ago,” said PETA in a March 22 statement.
Masphal was one of eight individuals indicted by the US court for allegedly violating the Convention of International Trade of Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) and the US’ Lacey Act and Endangered Species Act.
He was detained at John F Kennedy International Airport (JFK) in New York on November 16, 2022, and indicted by the Florida court for conspiring with a Hong Kong-owned company to smuggle long-tailed macaques (Macaca fascicularis) into the US between December 2017 and January 2022.
The agriculture ministry noted that the species, also known as crab-eating macaques, are scattered all across Cambodia and can be found not just in the wilderness,l but in urban areas, including the Wat Phnom national heritage site in central Phnom Penh.
Masphal was released on bail on December 27 that year, following protracted calls for his release by the Cambodian government.
Cambodia is innocent
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