- Joined
- Aug 7, 2002
- Messages
- 665
German Tarantula Breeder, Sven Koppler, sentenced for smuggling tarantulas today.
See new stories about this below:
http://www.sanmarinotribune.com/art..._Smuggler_May_Get_10_Months_Behind_Bars/23401
http://www.bhcourier.com/article/Local/Local/Man_To_Be_Sentenced_In_TarantulaSmuggling_Case/76037
http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/ci_18072415
Some questions to ponder and debate:
1) Rick West states in testimony "Tarantulas also carry bacteria that causes flesh-eating disease in humans." I have not heard of this. Anybody got a link to a study that was concluded about this?
2) West states that all 933 known species of the animal produce venom that can be dangerous to people. We have been told for over 10 years that tarantulas are considered medically insignificant without one single report of a death directly attributed to a tarantula bite. If this has changed, can somebody show me the studies on this?
3) Koppler "met with an associate in Torrance who also deals in the eight-legged arachnids". Who was this U.S. citizen? Torrance, California...hmmm. What major tarantula seller lives in or near Torrance, CA?
4) The 2nd package that was intercepted by USFWS in California had 22 CITES II-listed Brachypelma smithi sold by Koppler to a U.S. buyer in California. That is a CITES violation. Why wasn't/hasn't the U.S. buyer been busted?
Is he still selling stock to U.S. buyers? How much of his price list is now "compromised" with "suspect" stock? Is he still brown boxing on the side since he got immunity?
5) In the court case, it said Kopper sold tarantulas to nine people in the United States. These shipments went undeclared and were smuggled by nine U.S. citizens. Why haven't they been busted?
Koppler obviously violated U.S. law, but the interesting thing about this case is that he is a German citizen. Why were the nine U.S. citizens that did business with him illegally given a "pass"? The concluding message was sent internationally that foreigners should not break U.S. law, but what message was sent to the now numerous U.S. citizens smuggling from other countries?
Why didn't the nine U.S. citizens get busted? That would have sent the strongest message throughout the U.S. hobby/trade to seriously discourage the out of control "brown-boxing" many have done the last few years.
More discussion about this at:
http://invertaforum.tarantulaspiders.com/user/Discussion.aspx?id=290846
See new stories about this below:
http://www.sanmarinotribune.com/art..._Smuggler_May_Get_10_Months_Behind_Bars/23401
http://www.bhcourier.com/article/Local/Local/Man_To_Be_Sentenced_In_TarantulaSmuggling_Case/76037
http://www.dailybreeze.com/news/ci_18072415
Some questions to ponder and debate:
1) Rick West states in testimony "Tarantulas also carry bacteria that causes flesh-eating disease in humans." I have not heard of this. Anybody got a link to a study that was concluded about this?
2) West states that all 933 known species of the animal produce venom that can be dangerous to people. We have been told for over 10 years that tarantulas are considered medically insignificant without one single report of a death directly attributed to a tarantula bite. If this has changed, can somebody show me the studies on this?
3) Koppler "met with an associate in Torrance who also deals in the eight-legged arachnids". Who was this U.S. citizen? Torrance, California...hmmm. What major tarantula seller lives in or near Torrance, CA?
4) The 2nd package that was intercepted by USFWS in California had 22 CITES II-listed Brachypelma smithi sold by Koppler to a U.S. buyer in California. That is a CITES violation. Why wasn't/hasn't the U.S. buyer been busted?
Is he still selling stock to U.S. buyers? How much of his price list is now "compromised" with "suspect" stock? Is he still brown boxing on the side since he got immunity?
5) In the court case, it said Kopper sold tarantulas to nine people in the United States. These shipments went undeclared and were smuggled by nine U.S. citizens. Why haven't they been busted?
Koppler obviously violated U.S. law, but the interesting thing about this case is that he is a German citizen. Why were the nine U.S. citizens that did business with him illegally given a "pass"? The concluding message was sent internationally that foreigners should not break U.S. law, but what message was sent to the now numerous U.S. citizens smuggling from other countries?
Why didn't the nine U.S. citizens get busted? That would have sent the strongest message throughout the U.S. hobby/trade to seriously discourage the out of control "brown-boxing" many have done the last few years.
More discussion about this at:
http://invertaforum.tarantulaspiders.com/user/Discussion.aspx?id=290846
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