Arab News

Ex-Mountie headed to US prison for smuggling narwhal tusks

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BANGOR: A retired Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer accused of smuggling narwhal tusks was sentenced Wednesday to five years, two months in a US prison for related money laundering counts. Gregory Logan, 60, of St. John, New Brunswick, smuggled about 300 tusks valued at $1.5 million to $3 million into Maine in false compartmen­ts in his vehicle, federal prosecutor­s said. They were shipped from Ellsworth, Maine, to buyers across the country. Narwhals are protected in the United States and Canada. The medium-sized whales are known for their spiral tusks that can grow longer than 8 feet. “Unlawful wildlife trade like this undermines efforts by federal, state, and foreign government­s to protect and restore population­s of species like the narwhal, a majestic creature of the sea,” said acting Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey H. Wood of the Department of Justice’s Environmen­t and Natural Resources Division. Logan was sentenced by a federal judge in US District Court on money-laundering and conspiracy counts to which he pleaded guilty under an agreement in which smuggling charges were dropped. He has already served four months of home detention and paid a $350,000 fine in Canada after pleading guilty to a related wildlife-smuggling crime. Logan was charged along with two US residents. Andrew Zarauskas, of Union, New Jersey, was convicted and sentenced to 33 months. Charges against a Tennessee man were dismissed.

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