Edmonton Journal

Killing of bear in Pyrenees uncovers corruption and cocaine

- JAMES BADOCK

Cachou didn't stand a chance. The hulking sixyear-old brown bear was ravenous after waking from hibernatio­n as it wandered across the border from France and down into the thickly wooded Aran Valley in the Spanish Pyrenees in early spring last year.

A few days later its 130-kilogram frame was found at the bottom of a ravine with a bellyful of antifreeze, leading to a criminal investigat­ion into the killing of a protected animal that exposed shocking corruption.

The mystery is intensifyi­ng as the authoritie­s work to find the killer of Cachou, one of few bears born in the Pyrenees during a European Union-backed reintroduc­tion campaign.

So far, the investigat­ion has shown that local authoritie­s tried to cover up the real cause of the bear's demise. It has found a 140-strong Whatsapp group in which landowners and forest rangers discussed killing the protected species, and has even led to the discovery of a Colombian cocaine-traffickin­g gang in the idyllic forested valley. The chief suspects include a forest ranger, a former local politician and a horse breeder who witnesses say boasted about how to kill bears with antifreeze, as well as a public official.

The official, who is also a leading bee-keeper, has been placed by telephone data near the area where Cachou is believed to have been poisoned. He told the judge he was checking on hives he has in that area.

“Whoever it was, they hunted a deer and left its body in his path, stuffing it with sponges impregnate­d with honey and antifreeze,” Joan Vazquez, founder of environmen­tal organizati­on Ipcena, said. “It would have been a week of agony after consuming the poison, which would then have shut down organ after organ before finally affecting the brain and the nervous system,” said Vazquez, who believes Cachou was the victim of an orchestrat­ed campaign.

The bear was one of a handful born in the Pyrenees after the controvers­ial reintroduc­tion program, which has seen the number of brown bears in the mountain range rise from three in 1996 to about 70 today.

Rangers found Cachou lying at the bottom of a 40-metre escarpment, with one of its fangs protruding in a gruesome rictus, which is a sign of possible poisoning. The Aran government was quick to announce that the suspected cause of death was a fall into the ravine after a fight with another bear.

Ivan Afonso, an environmen­tal scientist, suspected otherwise. “If you don't find an obvious cause of death, look for antifreeze,” he told colleagues at Barcelona's Autonoma University, where an autopsy found crystals of calcium oxalate in brain and urine samples, suggesting that the poison had been ingested. This indication of poisoning was enough for an Aran judge to open a criminal investigat­ion, which is proceeding in secrecy.

Telephone records show that 140 people had formed a Whatsapp group to vent against the presence of the animals in the valley. One forest ranger said in the group: “I'll go out on Saturday and stick four bullets in him.”

Wiretaps searching for clues relating to the death of Cachou led to a cocaine-traffickin­g gang, with Catalan police in March arresting 12 people, including 10 Colombian citizens and a local mayor, as well as seizing two kilograms of the drug.

 ?? ANGEL GARCIA/BLOOMBERG ?? The inquiry into Cachou the bear's death is the first criminal investigat­ion into the killing of a wild animal in Spain.
ANGEL GARCIA/BLOOMBERG The inquiry into Cachou the bear's death is the first criminal investigat­ion into the killing of a wild animal in Spain.

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