The Associated Press, Oct. 24,
2015
SAVANNAH, Ga. — Less than two
years after he was released from prison, Lewis Jackson found authorities
waiting for him as he boarded a ferry boat on remote Sapelo Island while
carrying a cooler full of contraband valued by some as a mythical aphrodisiac.
Inside the cooler investigators
found plastic bags filled with the ping-pong ball-size eggs of loggerhead sea
turtles, reptiles protected by the Endangered Species Act. Stealing eggs of the
threatened species is a federal crime.
Jackson was arrested July 7 in
coastal Georgia with 84 sea turtle eggs swiped from a turtle nest on the
barrier island's unspoiled beach. Authorities knew to look for him because it
wasn't his first offense. He had served six months in federal prison for
pleading guilty to stealing 156 loggerhead eggs in May 2012.
Now Jackson, 60, could return to
prison for up to five years. He's scheduled for sentencing by a U.S. District
Court judge Wednesday after he pleaded guilty in August to what was nearly a
carbon copy of his earlier crime.
“After he was captured the first
time, we thought, ‘What are the chances of that ever happening again?' ” said
Mark Dodd, a wildlife biologist who heads the sea turtle recovery program for
the Georgia Department of Natural Resources.
Sea turtle conservationists say
egg poaching is fairly rare along the beaches where sea turtles dig nests from
the Carolinas to Florida and across the Gulf Coast to Texas. But new cases
every year or two indicate there's still an underground market for the eggs
fueled by folklore that consuming them improves sexual performance.
“Fishermen in the Caribbean would
commonly see mating sea turtles, and often when they mate, they stay together
for a long time — for hours on end,” Dodd said. “So this whole sort of myth
developed that if you eat a turtle egg, you get some of this extra manliness in
your life.”
Dodd said Jackson confessed to
boiling his turtle eggs in water seasoned with cayenne pepper and selling them
at parties and bars as party favors.
It's an illicit novelty that's
more common in Caribbean countries, but has found a small cultural foothold in
the United States, said David Godfrey, executive director of the Florida-based
Sea Turtle Conservancy.
“It clearly exists in places like
Costa Rica and Nicaragua, where you can go into bars and cantinas and there's
someone selling turtle eggs,” Godfrey said. “They'll drop it into a shot or
suck it down and take it with a shot.”
Selling stolen sea turtle eggs
does not appear to be terribly lucrative, though official estimates of their
worth vary wildly. In the Georgia case, federal prosecutors said loggerhead
eggs fetch up to $25 apiece. Prosecutors in a similar case in Florida last year
estimated their value at $3 to $5 per egg.
The federal Fish and Wildlife Service
was unable to say how many turtle egg thefts have been prosecuted in recent
years, but cases are considered rare.
Last year, Kenneth Cornelius
Coleman was sentenced to two years in federal prison for pleading guilty to
stealing 310 sea turtle eggs from nests in Juno Beach, Fla. Authorities in
Folly Beach, S.C., reported more than 100 eggs stolen in the summer of 2012,
but the theft went unsolved.
Godfrey said egg thefts are
infrequent enough that he does not consider them a great threat to sea turtles'
survival. But he said poaching could become more popular if thieves see it as
low-risk.
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!