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US court convicts Irish man of rhino horn trafficking
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Nov 15, 2017


A US court has sentenced an Irish national to 18 months in prison for trafficking a cup made from the horn of an endangered rhinoceros, in the latest case linked to an illicit global trade.

At the end of his sentence, Michael Hegarty will be on supervised release for three years, the Department of Justice said in a statement.

He was convicted in Florida of buying a "libation cup" of carved rhinoceros horn from a North Carolina auction house and then falsifying documents to smuggle it out of the United States.

Prices for ornate rhinoceros horn cups have exploded on Asian art markets in recent years.

Hegarty was the subject of an Interpol Red Notice requested by US authorities. He was arrested last January in Belgium and then extradited to the United States to face the charges from 2014.

Investigators linked him to the Rathkeale Rovers, a transnational organized crime syndicate responsible for trafficking rhino products worldwide, the Department of Justice said in the statement late Tuesday.

Another Irish national was sentenced in January 2016, in Texas, to 12 months in prison for his role in the rhino horn trade.

Patrick Sheridan and his accomplices bought a rhinoceros head from a taxidermist, then resold the two severed horns of the African black rhino, a critically endangered sub-species.

US authorities have carried out a years-long crackdown on criminal trafficking in rhino horns, dubbed "Operation Crash."

Despite such efforts, there is persistent demand for products derived from rhino horn in China and Vietnam, where they are coveted as a traditional medicine and aphrodisiac.

According to the International Union for Conservation of Nature, some rhino sub-species are already extinct.

The Javan rhino is among those critically endangered, with about 60 left in the world.

FLORA AND FAUNA
New type of cell has been found in the eye of a deep-sea fish
Brisbane, Australia (SPX) Nov 14, 2017
A new type of cell has been found in the eye of a deep-sea fish, and scientists say the discovery opens a new world of understanding about vision in a variety of light conditions. University of Queensland scientists found the new cell type in the deep-sea pearlside fish (Maurolicus spp.), which have an unusual visual system adapted for twilight conditions. Dr Fanny de Busserolles at ... read more

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