Global Times

Rare butterfly killer convicted in Britain

-

A British man has been convicted of capturing and killing two of Britain’s rarest butterflie­s, the endangered Large Blues, which have been a prized collector’s item since the Victorian era.

Judges at the court in the southwest city of Bristol late on Thursday found 57- year- old Philip Cullen guilty of killing the Large Blues, which have protected status, and he faces a possible prison sentence to be decided next month.

“It is a unique case. There has never been a prosecutio­n in terms of capturing and killing in the past,” prosecutor Kevin Withey told the court.

Conservati­on volunteers had spotted Cullen trapping Large Blues with a small net in two protected areas in Gloucester­shire and Somerset in southwest England.

Police then raided his home in Bristol in February last year and found 30 trays of dead moths and butterflie­s, including the Large Blues in question.

Investigat­ors discovered that Cullen was selling the butterflie­s on eBay while he claimed he had bought the Large Blues in his possession from a French farm.

First discovered in Britain in 1795, Large Blues had disappeare­d from the country by 1979. They were re- introduced from Sweden in 1983 at a dozen sites.

Butterfly Conservati­on, a non- government­al group, said there was a black market for mounted Large Blues mocked up to look like Victorian- era specimens that could sell for up to £ 300 ($ 371) each.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China