Eight people, including a Cambodian wildlife official, have been arrested by federal prosecutors for their alleged involvement in a multimillion-dollar smuggling ring to export endangered monkeys for use in medical research in the US.... He was arrested in New York while traveling to CITES, an annual conference dedicated to regulating the global wildlife trade.
Vanny Bio Research Breeding facility in Cambodia. Images
obtained by Species Unite
Eight people, including a Cambodian wildlife official, have been
arrested by federal prosecutors for their alleged involvement in a
multimillion-dollar smuggling ring to export endangered monkeys for
use in medical research in the US.
One of the accused is the deputy director of Cambodia's Department
of Wildlife and Biodiversity, Masphal Kry. He was arrested in New
York while traveling to CITES, an annual conference dedicated to
regulating the global wildlife trade.
Kry, the director-general of Cambodia’s Forestry Administration
(MAFF), and six members of the Hong Kong-based biomedical firm Vanny
Bio Research were allegedly involved in supplying wild long-tailed
macaques to labs in Florida and Texas under the pretense they were
captive-bred.
Wild long-tailed macaques are protected under the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora
(CITES). When the animals are imported into the US, special permits
are required to ensure the trade is legal and does not endanger the
survival of the species. Those involved are accused of illegally
purchasing wild macaques when they did not have enough animals
available in their breeding farms.
“The macaque is already recognized as an endangered species by the
International Union for the Conservation of Nature,” US attorney for
the southern district of Florida Juan Antonio Gonzalez said in a
statement. “The practice of illegally taking them from their habitat
to end up in a lab is something we need to stop. Greed should never
come before responsible conservation.”
The founder and owner of Vanny Bio Research, James Man Sang Lau of
Hong Kong, and the company’s general manager, Dickson Lau, conspired
with black market dealers and the accused Cambodian wildlife
officials to acquire macaques captured from national parks and
protected areas. Since 2017, the group “laundered” as many as 3,000
primates through Vanny’s Cambodian breeding facilities to hide that
the animals were taken from the wild, according to the indictment.
“The fact you have government officials involved surely must raise
question marks as to what could be happening in other facilities in
Cambodia,” said Sarah Kite of Action for Primates. “The irony and
tragedy for the macaques is that the same person supposed to protect
and conserve the species has been indicted for the very opposite –
plundering the wild populations.”
The eight defendants were charged with one count of conspiracy and
seven counts of smuggling each. They face up to five years for the
conspiracy charge, and an additional 20 years for each of the seven
smuggling charges.
Vanny Bio Research Breeding facility in Cambodia. Images
obtained by Species Unite
Recently, the conservation status of long-tailed macaques was
changed from vulnerable to “endangered” for the first time by the
International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) as their
numbers rapidly plummeted. Wild populations are predicted to drop by
another 50 percent over the forty years if the current threats are
not addressed.
“Wild populations of long-tailed macaques, as well as the health and
wellbeing of the American public, are put at risk when these animals
are removed from their natural habitat and illegally sold in the
United States and elsewhere,” said Edward Grace, the assistant
director of US Fish and Wildlife Service Office of Law Enforcement.
The long-tailed macaque is the most commonly used monkey in
laboratories and the demand for the species has only skyrocketed
since the COVID-19 pandemic began. More than 600,000 of the primates
were allegedly born or bred in captivity and exported primarily for
biomedical and toxicology research between 2011 and 2020, according
to the CITES database.