Mass. man pleads guilty to wildlife trafficking
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Mass. man pleads guilty to wildlife trafficking
""The wildlife that Bied unlawfully imported and conspired to import was protected by the Endangered Species Act as well as [CITES]," the office of U.S. Attorney for Massachusetts Leah B. Foley said. Adam Bied, 40, bought, sold, and traded the endangered animal parts from 2018 to 2021, knowing his transactions violated U.S. laws and regulations, according to federal prosecutors. The Reading resident worked with other traffickers based in Cameroon and Indonesia to obtain the parts, and neither sought nor obtained the proper USDWS licenses or CITES permits, Foley's office said."
"The ESA, the Lacey Act, and CITES prohibit the import, export, possession, transport, purchase and sale of protected species dead or alive, including the skins, parts, and products, according to the release. "The lawful importation of vulnerable wildlife species requires a CITES permit. The lawful importation of any foreign species requires a USFWS wildlife declaration. Individuals are also required to have a USFWS import/export license to import wildlife for commercial purposes," prosecutors said. "Bied and his co-conspirators took steps to conceal the wildlife parts from U.S. authorities by falsely labeling them as 'decorative masks' and 'rodents,' among other things," wrote Foley's office."
Adam Bied, 40, pleaded guilty to federal charges of trafficking wildlife parts from endangered and protected species. Bied bought, sold, and traded the endangered animal parts from 2018 to 2021 and worked with traffickers in Cameroon and Indonesia to obtain the parts. The transactions occurred without required USFWS licenses or CITES permits. The Endangered Species Act, the Lacey Act, and CITES prohibit the import, export, possession, transport, purchase, and sale of protected species or their parts. Bied consented to civil forfeiture of more than 100 wildlife parts. He was charged in June 2024 and faces prison, supervised release, and fines.
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