The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

2 jewelers admit illegal ivory sales

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NEW YORK (AP) — Two New York jewelry store owners have admitted peddling more than $1 million worth of ivory pieces harvested from endangered and threatened elephants.

Mukesh Gupta and Johnson Jung-Chien Lu pleaded guilty Thursday to illegal commercial­ization of wildlife. They forfeited more than $1 million in ivory and made a $45,000 donation to the Wildlife Conservati­on Society.

The Manhattan district attorney says the case represents the largest illegal ivory seizures in recent New York state history.

State environmen­tal law bans selling or offering to sell ivory without a special permit.

Getting the permit requires proving the ivory was harvested before elephants were listed as an endangered or threatened species in the U.S.

The Asian elephant was listed as endangered in 1976. Its African counterpar­t was listed as threatened in 1978.

 ?? AP Photo by BEBETO MATTHEWS ?? John Robinson, third from left, executive vice president of the Wildlife Conservati­on Society, joins Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., third from right, during a press conference announceme­nt of guilty pleas of two New York jewelry store...
AP Photo by BEBETO MATTHEWS John Robinson, third from left, executive vice president of the Wildlife Conservati­on Society, joins Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., third from right, during a press conference announceme­nt of guilty pleas of two New York jewelry store...

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