The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Lakeville man pleads guilty to smuggling whale teeth

- STAFF REPORTS

A Lakeville man pleaded guilty this week to illegally traffickin­g teeth from endangered sperm whales.

John “Jake” Bell’s guilty plea was announced in a release by Acting Assistant Attorney General Jeffrey H. Wood for the Department of Justice’s Environmen­t and Natural Resources Division.

Bell pleaded guilty in Boston before U.S. District Judge Mark L. Wolf, for the District of Massachuse­tts, to one count of wildlife traffickin­g in violation of the Lacey Act. As part of his plea, Bell admitted that in November 2004, while in the Ukraine, he sold 34 sperm whale teeth to a co-conspirato­r who lived in Nantucket, Mass., for $11,600.

Bell shipped the 34 teeth in multiple boxes from the Ukraine to an associate in Connecticu­t, where his co-conspirato­r retrieved them, officials said. Bell’s co-conspirato­r was convicted in 2010, after a jury trial, and sentenced to a 33 months in prison.

According to the indictment, Bell acquired the teeth and smuggled them into the United States. Bell, who was an artist and scrimshand­er, carved some of the teeth he sold, and sold uncarved teeth to customers.

According to papers filed in federal court, between July 2005 and June 2006, Bell smuggled in excess of 49 pounds of sperm whale teeth into the United States, valued at more than $26,000. Also, according to these filings, between June 2007 and April 2008, Bell sold nine carved teeth to customers in the United States, with a total value of $20,300.

“Sperm whale teeth can weigh over two pounds each and are alluring to many collectors. But gone are the days when people can buy, sell and trade parts harvested from protected creatures like the sperm whale. This amazing creature is safeguarde­d from exploitati­on by federal laws like the Endangered Species Act and Marine Mammal Protection Act as well as internatio­nal treaties,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Wood. “Today’s guilty plea demonstrat­es that those who attempt to profit from the illegal trade of endangered species will face the consequenc­es for their actions under law.”

“Federal law provides great protection to the marine mammals that live in our waters,” Director James Landon for NOAA’s Office of Law Enforcemen­t said in the release. “OLE is dedicated to enforcing those laws and seeing that those who violate them are held accountabl­e for their illegal actions.”

The Marine Mammal Protection Act and Endangered Species Act protect sperm whales and, among other things, prohibits their parts from being sold in interstate or foreign commerce or imported into the United States without a permit. In addition, the Lacey Act creates penalties for knowingly traffickin­g or importing wildlife and parts from wildlife like sperm whales, and United States customs laws prohibit importing merchandis­e like sperm whale parts knowingly in violation of the law or federal regulation­s.

The investigat­ion was handled by the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion’s Office of Law Enforcemen­t and the Justice Department’s Environmen­tal Crimes Section. The government is represente­d by Trial Attorneys Erica Pencak and Gary N. Donner of the Justice Department’s Environmen­tal Crimes Section of the Environmen­t and Natural Resources Division.

 ?? Alma E. Hernandez / For the San Antonio Express News ?? A juvenile male sperm whale at the Witte Museum in San Antonio, Texas.
Alma E. Hernandez / For the San Antonio Express News A juvenile male sperm whale at the Witte Museum in San Antonio, Texas.
 ?? Alma E. Hernandez / For the San Antonio Express News ?? The jaws of a juvenile male sperm whale were on display at the Witte Museum as part of the “Whales: Giants of the Deep” exhibition in San Antonio, Texas.
Alma E. Hernandez / For the San Antonio Express News The jaws of a juvenile male sperm whale were on display at the Witte Museum as part of the “Whales: Giants of the Deep” exhibition in San Antonio, Texas.
 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Three Japanese women scrimshawe­d on a sperm whale’s teeth.
Contribute­d photo Three Japanese women scrimshawe­d on a sperm whale’s teeth.

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