Avalon
Zappo, Feb 13, 2019, Press of Atlantic City
To
the trained eye, it was clear Kevin Courts and Michael Riff were illegal
terrapin harvesters.
The
Hatboro, Pennsylvania, men, one shirtless, were parked next to a marsh off Sea
Isle Boulevard last July, with six nets and a long pole leaning against their
green truck, the state said. A conservation officer who approached them spotted
a turtle crawling under the driver’s side seat and found a cooler packed with
hatchlings.
“They
were dressed the part and driving the part,” said Jason Snellbaker, captain of
the Division of Fish and Wildlife’s Bureau of Law Enforcement, as he described
the incident Tuesday.
Riff
and Courts, who each pleaded guilty in Upper Township Municipal Court to taking
21 terrapins and paid $2,000 fines, are the only people charged by the state
since a bill banning diamondback terrapin possession went into effect in 2016,
the Department of Environmental Protection said.
Officials
suspected the two planned to sell the turtles on the illegal wildlife market,
which spans the entire U.S. coast and is worth $19 billion annually, according
to a report by TRAFFIC, a nongovernmental organization that monitors the
wildlife trade.
New
Jersey’s terrapins are stolen form marshes to be bought as pets, said Ben
Wurst, habitat program manager for the Conserve Wildlife Foundation of New
Jersey. Smugglers also export them overseas to Asia, where they’re used as
food.
“There’s
always going to be somebody who’s looking to make money by illegally harvesting
a species,” Wurst said. “There’s still a market for them.”
Diamondback
terrapins, abundant in Cape May and Atlantic counties’ coastal marshes, are
sold for anywhere from $8 a piece to hundreds of dollars for more ornate ones,
Snellbaker said. An ex-journalist from Levittown, Pennsylvania, recently
pleaded guilty to trafficking thousands of protected turtles from New Jersey
and selling them for $530,000 over a number of years.
In
2015, the state temporarily ended its harvest season for diamondback terrapins
after a federal investigation revealed a Hamilton Township man, Frank Mazzeo,
allegedly sold more
than 3,000 wild adult terrapins to a Maryland farm using a
dredge, Snellbaker said. People were using loopholes in existing regulations to
catch hundreds of turtles a day. A year later, legislators passed a
law making
the diamondback terrapin a nongame species and essentially ended that
out-in-the-open practice.
“I’ve
never seen a bill get passed that quickly,” Snellbaker said.
But
enforcing the legislation is tough.
There
are only four officers in Atlantic and Cape May counties to police each port
and hundreds of acres of expansive marshes.
Another
issue: Night is when turtle thieves usually come out. Headlights from
conservation officers’ vehicles can be seen from miles away, and alert poachers
to put away their gear, Snellbaker said. Sometimes, officers station themselves
in areas known to be trafficked and simply wait.
Gathering
enough evidence to prove poachers are selling the turtles also takes time, and
court battles can drag out. After four years, Mazzeo only recently settled his
case for $6,000, Snellbaker said. Mazzeo did not admit any wrongdoing as part
of the settlement.
“There
are hundreds of places it could occur,” Snellbaker said. “It’s a matter of
being in the right place at the right time.”
Fines
for skirting the ban can be up to $25,000 per day for each violation, but it is
determined on a case-by-case basis. The state can look at any economic benefits
the poacher gained while assessing penalties, according
to the statute.
The
public can help though, Snellbaker said. It was a concerned citizen who
reported the two Hatboro men who were grabbing terrapins in Upper Township.
“We
get calls from people,” he said. “It’s important the public keep its eyes and
ears open.”
Any
suspicious activity can be reported to the Department of Environmental
Protection’s 24-hour action line at 877-WARN-DEP.
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!