by Airman 1st Class Tammie Ramsouer
JBER Public Affairs
11/26/2013 - JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska -- Sirens
and emergency vehicles surround a traffic accident on base. As first
responders tend to the motorist and document vehicle damage, a military
conservation agent arrives to assess the condition of an animal just
hit.
A homeowner opens the front door, and is suddenly face-to-face with a
bull moose and it does not want to leave. What do you do? Who can you
call?
On a daily basis, military conservation agents respond anything from
wildlife encounters and vehicle accidents to someone destroying
government property or animal habitats on Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson. MCA agents train to protect animals and humans
from harm in experiences such as these.
These MCAs are volunteers from the base. Any active duty military member
can volunteer in the MCA program by filling out an application at the
Wildlife Conservation Office. Once the application process is complete,
the wildlife conservation officers select participants and plan their
training.
"People go through the interview process," said Tech. Sgt. Andy
Lockhart, noncommissioned officer in charge of military conservation
agents. "If they are selected, we quiz them about wildlife knowledge."
Upon deciding the required amount of volunteers for the current year, training begins for level-one agents.
"Once individuals are selected, usually two to three weeks later we will
have a level-one class in the afternoons," Lockhart said. "It's usually
about three hours each in three consecutive afternoons."
At the end of the third afternoon, the MCA trainees perform scenarios.
Before November, they are required to get 40 hours of on-the-job
training with level-two or level-three agents.
One of the first things they receive training on is dealing with animals
during the summer, Lockhart said. He said moose blocking housing and
dealing with bears in dumpsters are a large part of the job.
"They take a test in November about what we have been training on, which
consists of our regulations, as well as questions from the base map to
make sure they know the area," Lockhart said. "Once they pass the test,
usually the first two weeks of December, we will have a six-day class,
40 hours worth of instruction and usually six to eight hours worth of
real-world scenarios. In that 40 hours of instruction, agents from
Alaska Department of Fish and Game and Alaska State Troopers come in and
talk to the agents."
Once the level-one agents complete the class and pass everything in the
scenarios, they are considered level-two agents. They get to go on two
patrols with other agents on base and qualify on the M870 Remington
pump-action shotgun.
Once they qualify with that weapon and go out on those two patrols with a
law enforcement-qualified agent, they become law enforcement-qualified,
Lockhart said. The agents are trained how to use the shotgun for a last
resort in case of a life-or-death situation with an animal.
"We are trained on shot placement and the steps to take prior to aggression," Lockhart said.
The MCA program is considered a special-duty assignment once the agents reach level two.
After their second year, agents who finish all required courses in time,
become level-three agents, Lockhart said. Level-three agents spend more
time in the training room where they are responsible for making sure
people are getting trained correctly.
The next step is to become a numbered agent.
"A numbered agent is basically in charge of making sure the program is steered in the right direction," Lockhart said.
The numbered agents make needed changes to the program's regulations and
monitor the radio more often than lower-level agents. The numbered
agents listen to the communication from patrol agents to make sure
everything the patrol does is correctly applied.
"It's basically the overall management of the program from the top of the MCA level down," Lockhart said.
Within the numbered agents there is a top numbered agent, the
noncommissioned officer in charge of the whole MCA program. The NCOIC
works with the wildlife conservation officers, Mark Sledge and James
Wendland, to make sure any deficiencies are corrected in a timely
manner.
The MCA program as a whole sets the agents up for the law enforcement
side of wildlife conservation as well as a possible direction they may
want to go when they separate from the military, Lockhart said.
One of the agents accepted in the MCA program in 2012 was Senior Airman Brad Robinson, 381st Intelligence Squadron analyst.
"I've always enjoyed the outdoors, so when I found out that I could get
involved with the wildlife or keep people safe on base, I was happy to
be a part of the experience," Robinson said.
"Just the chance to get out there and interact with wildlife is
rewarding," Robinson said. "I have definitely considered the
possibilities of staying in this career field after I separate. It's
something I enjoy doing."
Security Forces call the MCA agents when there is a call from a resident about wildlife on base.
Tuesday, November 26, 2013
Thursday, November 21, 2013
MAKING THE SAVE
by Senior Master Sgt. Mike Hammond
JBER Public Affairs
11/21/2013 - JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska -- A November hunting trip in the extreme North turned into a lifesaving opportunity in the blink of an eye for two master sergeants from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.
It was a cold night, even by Alaska standards: 7-below temperatures with a 35-below wind chill factor. Air Force master sergeants David Barber and Morgan Cabaniss, 673d Security Forces Squadron, were on the tail end of a long drive up the Dalton Highway - known locally as "Haul Road," to join four friends in a caribou hunt.
By 11 p.m., Nov. 2, the sergeants were about a hundred miles north of the Arctic Circle and a couple of hours from their rendezvous point when Cabaniss noticed something wrong.
"We were going over Atigun Pass when we came up on a trucker. He was going really slowly, and I could see his tail lights reflecting off the road behind him," Cabaniss said. "I had just told Dave [Barber] that the road must be really slick, when the truck started to jackknife. We could see his tail lights and his headlights both pointing back at us!"
Barber explained what happened next.
"There was a turn in the road ahead of him, but he was jackknifed and slid right over the edge of the road and hit a snow bank. The truck came to rest with the cab in the snow bank and the back tires of the trailer on the road," Barber said. "But he was right at the edge of about a 600-foot drop.
"That snow was the only thing between him and the drop."
Barber stopped their vehicle about 80 yards from the wrecked semi, concerned they might join the driver in a long skid down the icy, treacherous road.
While Barber quickly began putting on heavy winter gear that had been too bulky to drive with, Cabaniss sprang into action - running toward the accident.
"I just did it; just went," Cabaniss said. "I didn't really think about it. And when I got to the edge of the road and looked down the embankment, I saw the door of the cab propped open. The trucker was wedged between the door and the side of his vehicle."
Barber said his friend's next words made the danger clear.
"We've gotta get him out of here - the truck may go down!" Cabaniss shouted.
So Cabaniss went over the edge of the road and found himself in waist-deep snow without even hitting a solid surface below. He half-swam his way to the cab and helped the dazed and injured trucker out.
Unfortunately, the trucker had not been fully geared up against the elements while driving, and the violent impact had tossed all the gear around the damaged cab.
"He was freaking out. He only had jeans and a T-shirt on, and had managed to grab a boot and a tennis shoe when he came out of the cab," Cabaniss said. "And he appeared shocked ... he kind of froze up on me."
Aside from the trucker's delayed ability to move, Cabaniss realized he would soon literally freeze up, based on the elements and lack of shoes and proper clothing.
In addition, there was still a very real possibility the truck would slide off the drop - taking them both with it to their doom.
"I told him the truck might go, and that got him moving a bit," Cabaniss said. "So I helped pull him back through that deep snow and then we got him back to our vehicle to warm up. We put a jacket on him and gave him water."
Barber said the pair then drove about 10 miles back down the road, where they'd noticed a highway maintenance station with a pay phone.
Cell phone service was non-existent in the remote area.
The trucker managed to dial a few numbers and they put out some calls on a citizen's band radio, but no one answered in either case.
About 35 minutes later, a Department of Transportation safety official finally came by the station and picked up the driver.
It was the last the master sergeants saw of the man whose life they'd saved, but they contacted his employer and learned the driver is already back out on the road.
"We found out this guy was one of the most experienced truckers operating in the area," Cabaniss said. "That fact, plus the fact that besides us, no one else would have come by for 45 minutes or more, really made me realize that in Alaska, you have to always be ready to take care of yourself.
"You can't always just run outside and yell for help or make a phone call. His truck wasn't running due to the wreck. In those temperatures, he probably wouldn't have lasted the 45 minutes until someone else came by, especially not being dressed for the weather."
Barber said the experience reinforced the need to dress properly, have all emergency supplies, and be ready and able to help yourself or others should a situation take a turn for the worse.
Cabaniss said he's been up that route many times before and has never seen something like this happen, which could lead to a false sense of safety and security.
"You just can't get complacent here," Cabaniss said.
JBER Public Affairs
11/21/2013 - JOINT BASE ELMENDORF-RICHARDSON, Alaska -- A November hunting trip in the extreme North turned into a lifesaving opportunity in the blink of an eye for two master sergeants from Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson.
It was a cold night, even by Alaska standards: 7-below temperatures with a 35-below wind chill factor. Air Force master sergeants David Barber and Morgan Cabaniss, 673d Security Forces Squadron, were on the tail end of a long drive up the Dalton Highway - known locally as "Haul Road," to join four friends in a caribou hunt.
By 11 p.m., Nov. 2, the sergeants were about a hundred miles north of the Arctic Circle and a couple of hours from their rendezvous point when Cabaniss noticed something wrong.
"We were going over Atigun Pass when we came up on a trucker. He was going really slowly, and I could see his tail lights reflecting off the road behind him," Cabaniss said. "I had just told Dave [Barber] that the road must be really slick, when the truck started to jackknife. We could see his tail lights and his headlights both pointing back at us!"
Barber explained what happened next.
"There was a turn in the road ahead of him, but he was jackknifed and slid right over the edge of the road and hit a snow bank. The truck came to rest with the cab in the snow bank and the back tires of the trailer on the road," Barber said. "But he was right at the edge of about a 600-foot drop.
"That snow was the only thing between him and the drop."
Barber stopped their vehicle about 80 yards from the wrecked semi, concerned they might join the driver in a long skid down the icy, treacherous road.
While Barber quickly began putting on heavy winter gear that had been too bulky to drive with, Cabaniss sprang into action - running toward the accident.
"I just did it; just went," Cabaniss said. "I didn't really think about it. And when I got to the edge of the road and looked down the embankment, I saw the door of the cab propped open. The trucker was wedged between the door and the side of his vehicle."
Barber said his friend's next words made the danger clear.
"We've gotta get him out of here - the truck may go down!" Cabaniss shouted.
So Cabaniss went over the edge of the road and found himself in waist-deep snow without even hitting a solid surface below. He half-swam his way to the cab and helped the dazed and injured trucker out.
Unfortunately, the trucker had not been fully geared up against the elements while driving, and the violent impact had tossed all the gear around the damaged cab.
"He was freaking out. He only had jeans and a T-shirt on, and had managed to grab a boot and a tennis shoe when he came out of the cab," Cabaniss said. "And he appeared shocked ... he kind of froze up on me."
Aside from the trucker's delayed ability to move, Cabaniss realized he would soon literally freeze up, based on the elements and lack of shoes and proper clothing.
In addition, there was still a very real possibility the truck would slide off the drop - taking them both with it to their doom.
"I told him the truck might go, and that got him moving a bit," Cabaniss said. "So I helped pull him back through that deep snow and then we got him back to our vehicle to warm up. We put a jacket on him and gave him water."
Barber said the pair then drove about 10 miles back down the road, where they'd noticed a highway maintenance station with a pay phone.
Cell phone service was non-existent in the remote area.
The trucker managed to dial a few numbers and they put out some calls on a citizen's band radio, but no one answered in either case.
About 35 minutes later, a Department of Transportation safety official finally came by the station and picked up the driver.
It was the last the master sergeants saw of the man whose life they'd saved, but they contacted his employer and learned the driver is already back out on the road.
"We found out this guy was one of the most experienced truckers operating in the area," Cabaniss said. "That fact, plus the fact that besides us, no one else would have come by for 45 minutes or more, really made me realize that in Alaska, you have to always be ready to take care of yourself.
"You can't always just run outside and yell for help or make a phone call. His truck wasn't running due to the wreck. In those temperatures, he probably wouldn't have lasted the 45 minutes until someone else came by, especially not being dressed for the weather."
Barber said the experience reinforced the need to dress properly, have all emergency supplies, and be ready and able to help yourself or others should a situation take a turn for the worse.
Cabaniss said he's been up that route many times before and has never seen something like this happen, which could lead to a false sense of safety and security.
"You just can't get complacent here," Cabaniss said.
Four Commercial Fishermen Indicted in Maryland for Illegal Harvest and Interstate Sale of Striped Bass from Chesapeake Bay
One Charged with Threatening Retaliation and Witnesses Tampering During Investigation
Four commercial fishermen and one company were indicted yesterday by a
federal grand jury in Baltimore for a criminal conspiracy involving the
illegal harvesting and interstate sale of striped bass on the Chesapeake
Bay, announced Robert G. Dreher, Assistant Attorney General for the
Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division, and Rod
J. Rosenstein, U.S. Attorney for the District of Maryland.
According to court documents, Michael D. Hayden Jr., his company, William J. Lednum, Kent Sadler and Daniel Murphy engaged in a multi-year conspiracy during which time they harvested tens of thousands of pounds of striped bass on the Chesapeake Bay in violation of Maryland fishing regulations, falsified documents filed with the State of Maryland, and then transported and sold those poached fish in interstate commerce. In addition, after the investigation of these crimes began, it is alleged that Hayden attempted to manipulate some witnesses’ testimony while trying to outright prevent the testimony and cooperation of others. In addition, it is alleged that in at least one incident, Hayden threatened to retaliate against another potential witness he believed to be cooperating with investigators. Hayden was arrested on Sept. 17, 2013, having been charged in a criminal complaint with several counts of witness intimidation and retaliation.
The 26-count indictment charges the defendants with conspiracy, and Lacey Act violations.
These charges carry possible terms of incarceration of five years.
In addition, the witness intimidation/retaliation charges against Mr. Hayden each carry a maximum-term of 20 years in prison.
An indictment is a charging document and all defendants are innocent until proven guilty.
Friday, November 15, 2013
A Hunter's Mark: Grand Forks AFB Airmen treat Wounded Warrior to first ever deer hunt
by Staff Sgt. Luis Loza Gutierrez
319th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
11/14/2013 - WARREN, MINN. -- This year's Veterans Day was marked with several opportunities to honor U.S. military veterans and while some may have been treated to a meal or a drink on the house, one Airman from Grand Forks Air Force Base, N.D., was treated to an outdoorsman experience that would leave him a marked man.
Tech. Sgt. Joshua Robistow, a water and fuel systems technician with the 319th Civil Engineer Squadron, bagged and tagged his first white tail deer Nov. 11 on a farm just a few miles from the town of Warren, Minn.
"This was my first time hunting wild game," said Robistow. "That's if you don't count squirrels during Cool School, he added jokingly referring to the course that teaches Airmen at Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, how to survive brutal Arctic elements.
Sergeant Robistow became a wounded warrior while deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. In November 2005, an improvised explosive device detonated and struck his Humvee while he and his team drove through the streets of Taji, a town approximately 20 miles north of Baghdad.
The explosion forced shrapnel into his back and destroyed one of the vertebrae in the lower part of this spinal column.
"Doctors used four screws on this part here," said Robistow pointing to the eight-inch long scar on his lower back. "Yeah it sucked, but it's the stuff that comes afterwards that's worse sometimes."
Robistow was referring to the chronic back pain and post-traumatic stress disorder that resulted from his injuries, two things he quickly praised the Air Force and his family for helping him manage.
In addition to the PTSD and injury to his spine, the attack also left Robistow partially deaf.
"The pressure of the explosion was so great that I lost seventy percent of my hearing in my left ear and forty percent in my right, and that's why I have to wear this hearing aid," said Robistow.
Robistow wasn't complaining about his deafness during the hunt, especially not after firing a .330 caliber rifle on his first attempt at a buck from about 280 yards.
"I remembered to take the hearing aid off, but I forgot to not to put my eye so close to the scope. Man that gun had some kick to it! Anyone who doesn't think so can just look at my face," said Robistow once again with a small grin on his face while pointing to the half circle scar around the bridge of his nose and right eye.
"The purpose of this is to say thank you, for the sacrifice this Airman and his family made to our country and Air Force by getting him out for an enjoyable day of hunting -not to wound the wounded warrior," said Master Sgt. Keelan Rasmusson, the 319th Communications Squadron first sergeant, who helped coordinate the event with the help of Maj. James Oberg, who recently retired from the Air Force and whose property provided the site for Robistow's first real hunt.
"I have to admit, I was a very concerned when I saw the blood. Rasmusson and I were ready to take him to a hospital, but Sergeant Robistow was determined to stay and have a successful hunt," said Oberg.
After tending to the wound with some anti-bacterial cream and duct tape for a bandage, Robistow showed the can-do, not-till-the-mission-is-done attitude that service members are known for.
Hours went by with no deer in sight, but around 4 p.m. with the setting sun's light illuminating the woods, Robistow would literally get his second shot, only this time the only blood spilled would be that of a 80- to 90-pound, six-point buck shot down with a .223 rifle at an approximate range of 260 yards.
"My heart was racing the whole time," said Robistow in excitement while holding his chest with one hand and raising the other for high fives from Rasmusson, Oberg and Maj. Frank Burks, the commander of the 319th Comptroller Squadron, who joined the hunting group after being the guest speaker at a Veterans Day observance hosted by the American Legion in Warren, Minn.
"That was a text book shot. He shot it right behind the shoulder to hit the lungs or heart," said Burks. "It's a heck of a shot for a first-time hunter."
Burks and the other experience outdoorsmen guiding Robistow also pointed out that a shot to vital organs such as the lungs or heart is also more humane as it lessens the animal's suffering because it brings about a quicker death.
With the day drawing to a close, the veteran being thanked gave a thank you of his own.
"I just want to thank everyone who helped make this possible," said Robistow. "I want to thank Major Oberg for being a wonderful host and letting us hunt on this beautiful piece of land. I also want to thank the Grand Forks Air Force Base First Sergeants Council for providing the money to process the meat and the Top III for helping purchase the hunting clothes required and for picking up the tab for that hearty breakfast to start the day. This has been an awesome experience and I think it's both funny and fitting that as a wounded warrior I should reach my sixteen-year mark of military service, with a new wound. "
The appreciative NCO went further by humorously saying that although the experience of hunting had literally left him a marked man, he said he couldn't wait to tell the story about how he got his new wound. He later admitted it hasn't always been easy to talk about his personal wounds, whether they'd happen on or off the battlefield.
"Even though I will have to deal with the pain of my war wounds for the rest of my life, today, even just for one moment, I felt as if I had no more pain to take pills for, or therapy to go to," said Robistow. "I once again felt like I was that eighteen-year old kid from Boston, excited to serve and defend his country. I felt just like my old self before the wounds."
319th Air Base Wing Public Affairs
11/14/2013 - WARREN, MINN. -- This year's Veterans Day was marked with several opportunities to honor U.S. military veterans and while some may have been treated to a meal or a drink on the house, one Airman from Grand Forks Air Force Base, N.D., was treated to an outdoorsman experience that would leave him a marked man.
Tech. Sgt. Joshua Robistow, a water and fuel systems technician with the 319th Civil Engineer Squadron, bagged and tagged his first white tail deer Nov. 11 on a farm just a few miles from the town of Warren, Minn.
"This was my first time hunting wild game," said Robistow. "That's if you don't count squirrels during Cool School, he added jokingly referring to the course that teaches Airmen at Eielson Air Force Base, Alaska, how to survive brutal Arctic elements.
Sergeant Robistow became a wounded warrior while deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom. In November 2005, an improvised explosive device detonated and struck his Humvee while he and his team drove through the streets of Taji, a town approximately 20 miles north of Baghdad.
The explosion forced shrapnel into his back and destroyed one of the vertebrae in the lower part of this spinal column.
"Doctors used four screws on this part here," said Robistow pointing to the eight-inch long scar on his lower back. "Yeah it sucked, but it's the stuff that comes afterwards that's worse sometimes."
Robistow was referring to the chronic back pain and post-traumatic stress disorder that resulted from his injuries, two things he quickly praised the Air Force and his family for helping him manage.
In addition to the PTSD and injury to his spine, the attack also left Robistow partially deaf.
"The pressure of the explosion was so great that I lost seventy percent of my hearing in my left ear and forty percent in my right, and that's why I have to wear this hearing aid," said Robistow.
Robistow wasn't complaining about his deafness during the hunt, especially not after firing a .330 caliber rifle on his first attempt at a buck from about 280 yards.
"I remembered to take the hearing aid off, but I forgot to not to put my eye so close to the scope. Man that gun had some kick to it! Anyone who doesn't think so can just look at my face," said Robistow once again with a small grin on his face while pointing to the half circle scar around the bridge of his nose and right eye.
"The purpose of this is to say thank you, for the sacrifice this Airman and his family made to our country and Air Force by getting him out for an enjoyable day of hunting -not to wound the wounded warrior," said Master Sgt. Keelan Rasmusson, the 319th Communications Squadron first sergeant, who helped coordinate the event with the help of Maj. James Oberg, who recently retired from the Air Force and whose property provided the site for Robistow's first real hunt.
"I have to admit, I was a very concerned when I saw the blood. Rasmusson and I were ready to take him to a hospital, but Sergeant Robistow was determined to stay and have a successful hunt," said Oberg.
After tending to the wound with some anti-bacterial cream and duct tape for a bandage, Robistow showed the can-do, not-till-the-mission-is-done attitude that service members are known for.
Hours went by with no deer in sight, but around 4 p.m. with the setting sun's light illuminating the woods, Robistow would literally get his second shot, only this time the only blood spilled would be that of a 80- to 90-pound, six-point buck shot down with a .223 rifle at an approximate range of 260 yards.
"My heart was racing the whole time," said Robistow in excitement while holding his chest with one hand and raising the other for high fives from Rasmusson, Oberg and Maj. Frank Burks, the commander of the 319th Comptroller Squadron, who joined the hunting group after being the guest speaker at a Veterans Day observance hosted by the American Legion in Warren, Minn.
"That was a text book shot. He shot it right behind the shoulder to hit the lungs or heart," said Burks. "It's a heck of a shot for a first-time hunter."
Burks and the other experience outdoorsmen guiding Robistow also pointed out that a shot to vital organs such as the lungs or heart is also more humane as it lessens the animal's suffering because it brings about a quicker death.
With the day drawing to a close, the veteran being thanked gave a thank you of his own.
"I just want to thank everyone who helped make this possible," said Robistow. "I want to thank Major Oberg for being a wonderful host and letting us hunt on this beautiful piece of land. I also want to thank the Grand Forks Air Force Base First Sergeants Council for providing the money to process the meat and the Top III for helping purchase the hunting clothes required and for picking up the tab for that hearty breakfast to start the day. This has been an awesome experience and I think it's both funny and fitting that as a wounded warrior I should reach my sixteen-year mark of military service, with a new wound. "
The appreciative NCO went further by humorously saying that although the experience of hunting had literally left him a marked man, he said he couldn't wait to tell the story about how he got his new wound. He later admitted it hasn't always been easy to talk about his personal wounds, whether they'd happen on or off the battlefield.
"Even though I will have to deal with the pain of my war wounds for the rest of my life, today, even just for one moment, I felt as if I had no more pain to take pills for, or therapy to go to," said Robistow. "I once again felt like I was that eighteen-year old kid from Boston, excited to serve and defend his country. I felt just like my old self before the wounds."
Two Florida Men Convicted in Philadelphia of Conspiring and Trafficking in Protected Reptiles
A federal jury today found Robroy MacInnes, 54, of
Inverness, Fla., and Robert Keszey, 47, of Bushnell, Fla., guilty of conspiracy
to traffic in state and federally protected reptiles. MacInnes also was
convicted of trafficking in protected timber rattlesnakes in violation of the
Lacey Act.
Between 2007 and 2008, the defendants, who own the reptile
wholesaler Glades Herp Farm Inc., collected protected snakes from the wild in
Pennsylvania and New Jersey, purchased protected eastern timber rattlesnakes
that had been illegally collected from the wild in violation of New York law,
and transported federally threatened eastern indigo snakes from Florida to
Pennsylvania. MacInnes also violated the Lacey Act by purchasing illegal
eastern timber rattlesnakes and having the snakes transported from Pennsylvania
to Florida. The evidence at trial showed that the protected species were
destined for sale at reptile shows in Europe, where a single timber rattlesnake
can sell for up to $800. Snakes that were not sold in Europe were sold
through the defendants’ business in the United States.
“These defendants broke numerous wildlife laws seeking to
profit from an illegal trade in threatened species,” said Robert G. Dreher,
Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural Resources
Division. “The Justice Department is committed to enforcing wildlife laws
like the Endangered Species Act and the Lacey Act that protect our environment
and these threatened species from a destructive and dangerous black market
trade.”
The eastern timber rattlesnake is a species of venomous pit
viper native to the eastern United States, and is listed as threatened in New
York. It is also illegal to possess an eastern timber rattlesnake without
a permit in Pennsylvania. The eastern indigo snake, the longest native
North American snake species, is listed as threatened by both Florida and
federal law.
The Lacey Act, one of the oldest statutes in the United
States, prohibits interstate trafficking in wildlife known to be illegally
obtained. The maximum penalty for conspiring to commit offenses and for
violations of the Lacey Act is up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine
for each violation.
This case was investigated by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service, Office of Law Enforcement, with assistance from the New York
Department of Environmental Conservation. The case was prosecuted by
Trial Attorney Patrick M. Duggan and paralegal Ashleigh Nye of the
Environmental Crimes Section of the Justice Department’s Environment and
Natural Resources Division and Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Kay Costello of the
U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
Thursday, November 7, 2013
South Carolina Army National Guard pilots help save gravely wounded hunter
By Staff Sgt. Tracci Dorgan
South Carolina National Guard
WALHALLA, S.C. (11/7/13) - The South Carolina Army National Guard's 2-151st Aviation and South Carolina Helicopter Aquatic Rescue Team (SCHART) teamed up to rescue a hunter Tuesday in Walhalla, S.C.
The hunter suffered a gunshot wound and needed to be airlifted to medical treatment.
"It was a successful mission. The crew did an awesome job. We had the hunter hoisted out and on his way to the hospital quickly," said Chief Warrant Officer 4 Mark Shuford, Black Hawk pilot for the South Carolina Army National Guard.
"He was already in shock and had lost a lot of blood," said Dan McMannis, SCHART team member.
The SCHART recovered the patient and dropped him off at the Mountain Rest Fire Department where he received medical attention and was taken to the hospital.
"I spoke to the medic who was the primary care giver and he could not say enough how we saved this man's life," said Scott Krein, Oconee County emergency management director.
"This quick response and transport of the injured hunter speaks to the professionalism and dedication of our air crews and first responders who train together," said Maj. Gen. Robert E. Livingston Jr., the adjutant general for South Carolina. "Congratulations to the SCHART for a job well done in answering the call to save this man's life."
The South Carolina Helicopter Aquatic Rescue Team is a collaborative effort between the State Urban Search and Rescue Task Force and highly trained pilots and crew members from the South Carolina Army National Guard. Together they make a cohesive unit capable of performing helicopter rescue.
Tuesday, November 5, 2013
Irish National Pleads Guilty in New York to Crimes Relating to Illegal Trafficking of Endangered Rhinoceros Horns
Michael Slattery Jr., 25, an Irish national, pleaded guilty
today in federal court in Brooklyn, N.Y., to conspiracy to violate the Lacey
Act in relation to illegal rhinoceros horn trafficking, announced Robert G.
Dreher, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural
Resources Division of the Department of Justice, and Loretta E. Lynch, U.S.
Attorney for the Eastern District of New York.
Slattery pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to
violate the Lacey Act, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in
prison. Under the terms of the plea
agreement, any proceeds from the illegal trafficking that remain in the United
States will be forfeited or put toward the criminal fine. Slattery is scheduled to be sentenced by U.S.
District Judge John Gleeson in the Eastern District of New York on Jan. 10,
2014.
In the plea agreement, Slattery admitted that he, along with
others, traveled throughout the United States to illegally purchase and sell
endangered rhinoceros horns. Slattery
was arrested in September as part of “Operation Crash,” a nationwide,
multi-agency crackdown on those involved in the black market trade of
endangered rhinoceros horn.
“Slattery and his co-conspirators traveled to the United
States to profit from the illegal trade in black rhinoceros horns,” said Acting
Assistant Attorney General Dreher. “The
black rhino is a species that, without our protection, could be headed for
extinction in our own time. Rhino horn trafficking is a violation of the laws
enacted by Congress to protect endangered species from extinction and the
Justice Department will aggressively prosecute those who engage in this
egregious market.”
“Today’s guilty plea highlights our commitment to protect
endangered species, like the black rhinoceros, by prosecuting those who would
profit from the rhinos’ extinction,” said U.S. Attorney Lynch. “Michael Slattery traveled the world in
pursuit of illicit profit from the sale of blank rhino horns. But instead of gaining a windfall by
contributing to the demise of an age-old species, Slattery now faces up to five
years in prison for his illegal conduct.”
“The involvement of an alleged member of an organized
criminal group in rhino horn trafficking speaks to the scope, scale, and
lawlessness of this problem,” said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan
Ashe. “We will continue to work closely with the Department of Justice to crack
down on profiteers whose crimes are pushing rhinos to the brink of extinction.”
“The black rhinoceros has been driven to the brink of
extinction by this illicit trade,” said Special Agent in Charge James T. Hayes
of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security
Investigations (ICE-HSI) in New York. “HSI, along with our partners at the U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service and the Department of Justice, stand ready to protect
these beautiful creatures from the villains who would trade the rhino’s
continued existence on this planet for a quick buck.”
Rhinoceros are a herbivore species of prehistoric origin and
one of the largest remaining mega-fauna on earth. They have no known predators other than
humans. All species of rhinoceros are
protected under United States and international law, and all black rhinoceros
species are endangered.
Since 1976, trade in rhinoceros horn has been regulated
under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna
and Flora (CITES), a treaty signed by over 170 countries around the world to
protect fish, wildlife and plants that are or may become imperiled due to the
demands of international markets.
Nevertheless, the demand for rhinoceros horn and black market prices
have skyrocketed in recent years due to the value that some cultures have
placed on ornamental carvings, good luck charms or alleged medicinal purposes,
leading to a decimation of the global rhinoceros population.
Operation Crash is a continuing investigation being
conducted by the Department of the Interior’s U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in
coordination with other federal and local law enforcement agencies including
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security
Investigations. A “crash” is the term
for a herd of rhinoceros. Operation
Crash is an ongoing effort to detect, deter and prosecute those engaged in the
illegal killing of rhinoceros and the unlawful trafficking of rhinoceros
horns. The investigation is being led by
the Special Investigations Unit of the FWS Office of Law Enforcement and
involves a nationwide task force of agents focused on rhino trafficking.
According to the information, plea agreement and statements
made during court proceedings:
Beginning in May 2010 and continuing until April 2011,
Slattery, along with others, traveled within the United States to purchase
rhinoceros horns, which he, along with others, then resold to private
individuals or consigned to auction houses in the United States. The profits from the sale of the rhinoceros
horns were distributed via cashier’s checks made out to Slattery and
others. Slattery used a fictitious
“Endangered Species Bill of Sale” in connection with the purchase and sale of
rhinoceros horns.
In September 2010, Slattery, along with others, traveled
from London to Houston, where they attempted to purchase a taxidermied black
rhinoceros mount with two horns from a business in Austin, Texas. The manager of the business refused to sell
the mount to the defendant because Slattery and the others did not have proof
that they resided in the State of Texas.
Within days of being refused, Slattery returned to the establishment in
Austin, where, with the assistance of a “straw buyer” that Slattery and his
co-conspirators hired, the group purchased the mount for $18,000. At the time of the sale, the purchasers were
given an “Endangered Species Bill of Sale” that stated “[s]eller expressly
states that the described taxidermy is an endangered species and that
interstate or foreign sales, barter and trade are strictly prohibited ….
[p]ursuant to [the Endangered Species Act].
Buyer has expressly stated that he/she is a current resident of the
State of Texas and has no intention of participating in any form of interstate
commerce involving the described taxidermy.”
Following the purchase of the mount, Slattery and his
co-conspirators traveled to Flushing, N.Y., where they sold the horns from the
mount and other horns they had acquired to an individual for $50,000. At the time of the sale, Slattery and his
co-conspirators provided the purchaser with a false and fictitious “Endangered
Species Bill of Sale.” The “Endangered
Species Bill of Sale” stated that the two pair of black rhinoceros horns were
purchased in August 2010. The falsified
document also included a false and fictitious FWS emblem, which it did not have
at the time of purchase from the establishment in Texas. Pursuant to instructions from Slattery and
his co-conspirators, the purchaser paid for the horns with cashier’s
checks. One check in the amount of
$12,500 was made payable to Michael Slattery Jr.
U.S. Attorney Lynch and Acting Assistant Attorney General
Dreher commended FWS and ICE-HSI for their outstanding work in this
investigation.
The case is being handled by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for
the Eastern District of New York and the Environmental Crimes Section of the
U.S. Department of Justice’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. Assistant U.S. Attorney Julia Nestor and
Trial Attorney Gary N. Donner of the Justice Department’s Environmental Crimes
Section are in charge of the prosecution.
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