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Caviar company, corporate officers sentenced
for illegal trade, fraud scheme;
landmark fine assessed
USA, 21 January 2001: U.S. Caviar & Caviar, Ltd.,
a major American supplier of that high-priced culinary delicacy,
was fined $10.4 million the most ever in a wildlife trafficking
case and Hossein Lolavar, the company's former owner and
president, was sentenced to serve 41 months in prison by Judge
Alexander Williams in federal court in Greenbelt, Maryland, late
yesterday afternoon in connection with a U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service investigation of illegal caviar trade. In July 2000, U.S.
Caviar pleaded guilty to 22 federal charges and Lolavar to 12,
including multiple felony counts of conspiracy, smuggling, making
false statements, submitting false wildlife records, and mail
fraud, as well as violations of the Endangered Species Act and
Lacey Act a federal wildlife protection law that prohibits
the false labeling of fish and wildlife imported, exported, or
transported in interstate and foreign commerce.
Also sentenced yesterday were U.S. Caviar sales manager Faye
Briggs, who also ran a caviar label-making business at the company's
Rockville, Maryland, headquarters, and Ken Noroozi, the president
of a caviar export firm operating out of the United Arab Emirates.
Briggs will serve 21 months in prison and Noroozi 15 for their
participation in a five-year smuggling operation that involved
caviar with a retail value of more than $7.5 million, one of the
largest value wildlife trafficking schemes ever uncovered by the
Service.
"Three years ago, nations around the world took steps to
protect sturgeon and paddlefish because overharvest for the caviar
trade was depleting fish populations," said Acting Service
Director Marshall Jones. "This case shows that some segments
of the caviar industry not only ignored those protections, but
deliberately defrauded the public in the process."
U.S. Caviar, which claimed to one of the Nation's largest importers
of sturgeon roe from the Caspian Sea and counted airlines and
gourmet grocery chains among its customers, admitted importing
tons of black market caviar from the United Arab Emirates using
forged Russian caviar labels. The labels, which caught the eye
of a Service wildlife inspector clearing shipments at Baltimore-Washington
International Airport, made it look as if the roe had been produced
and exported by a large, legitimate Russian caviar supplier. However,
it had actually been smuggled out of Russia or other countries
bordering the Caspian Sea. The forged labels were produced at
U.S. Caviar's Rockville headquarters, where at least 5,000 were
manufactured. They were sent to the United Arab Emirates for use
on shipments destined for the United States.
The company and its co-defendants forged wildlife documents,
including Russian health certificates, to further authenticate
their shipments. The shipments were also accompanied by false
permits, customs documents, invoices, and packing lists. In 1998
alone, U.S. Caviar imported some 18,000 pounds (9 tons) of caviar
from the United Arab Emirates with false labels and documents.
U.S. Caviar smuggled real beluga caviar a Caspian Sea
variety that ranks as the world's most expensive into the
United States by labeling the tins as less valuable caviar, filing
false declarations, and using false invoices understating the
value of the caviar to avoid paying the higher customs duty required.
Lolavar, Briggs, and their company also operated a domestic mail
fraud scheme that sold eggs from domestic paddlefish and shovelnose
sturgeon (commonly called hackleback) to U.S. customers as authentic
Russian sevruga caviar, also a highly prized Caspian Sea roe.
DNA tests conducted by the Service's National Fish and Wildlife
Forensics Laboratory in Ashland, Oregon, showed that the purported
"Russian" caviar sold by the Maryland company did not
contain eggs from Caspian Sea sturgeon species as claimed but
instead originated from paddlefish and hackleback, fish native
only to North America.
Declines in sturgeon and paddlefish populations worldwide prompted
the member nations of the Convention on International Trade in
Endangered Species (CITES) to regulate global commerce in these
fish and products made from them, including caviar. Under trade
controls that went into effect in April 1998, companies dealing
in caviar must obtain export permits from the country of origin
or re-export certifying that the fish were taken legally and that
trade represents no threat to the survival of wild populations.
To be valid, permits must also correctly identify the fish species
from which the roe was harvested as well as the country where
the fish were caught.
"When the permit or label says Russian caviar, that's what
should be inside," said Jones. "Fraudulent trade cheats
the public, circumvents global trade controls that protect sturgeon,
and puts new pressures on U.S. fish species that have already
vanished from many of our rivers."
The United States is one of the world's largest consumers of
caviar. In 1999, the country imported more than 143 tons of the
delicacy. The Service's Division of Law Enforcement monitors this
trade to uphold global safeguards for sturgeon and paddlefish
under the CITES treaty and ensure compliance with federal wildlife
protection laws and import/export regulations.
Although beluga, osetra, and sevruga caviars are the most sought-after
varieties, the three Caspian Sea sturgeon species that yield these
roes the beluga, Russian (or osetra) and stellate (or sevruga)
sturgeons are increasingly rare in the wild. Over the years,
commercial fishing, environmental degradation, and the damming
of rivers have driven down populations of these fish. Most beluga
sturgeon in the Caspian today come from restocking programs and
are not old enough to be harvested for roe. Hatchery production
also accounts for portions of the stellate and Russian sturgeon
populations.
Fisheries management programs and harvest quotas regulate the
legal take of these fish. Conservationists and fishery managers,
however, have long suspected that significant quantities of the
caviar sold around the world under the beluga, osetra, and sevruga
names come either from illegally fished sturgeon or from different
species.
Paddlefish and shovelnose sturgeon are commercially harvested
in parts of this country. States, however, carefully manage populations
to ensure that both commercial use and sportfishing are compatible
with long-term conservation. Large-scale commercial catch early
in the century and loss of habitat have reduced both the numbers
and ranges of these U.S. fish species.
The federal probe of U.S. Caviar & Caviar was conducted by
special agents from the Service's Baltimore, Maryland, law enforcement
office with assistance from the U.S. Customs Service, Federal
Bureau of Investigation, and Food and Drug Administration. The
case was prosecuted by the United States Attorney for the District
of Maryland.
"We applaud our federal law enforcement partners and the
U.S. Attorney's Office for their support of U.S. efforts to protect
sturgeon and paddlefish," Jones said. "Putting a stop
to illegal caviar trade will be crucial to the continued survival
of these fish species."
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal Federal agency
responsible for conserving, protecting and enhancing fish, wildlife
and plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the
American people. The Service manages the 93-million-acre National
Wildlife Refuge System which encompasses more than 530 national
wildlife refuges, thousands of small wetlands and other special
management areas. It also operates 66 national fish hatcheries,
64 fishery resource offices and 78 ecological services field stations.
The agency enforces Federal wildlife laws, administers the Endangered
Species Act, manages migratory bird populations, restores nationally
significant fisheries, conserves and restores wildlife habitat
such as wetlands, and helps foreign governments with their conservation
efforts. It also oversees the Federal Aid program that distributes
hundreds of millions of dollars in excise taxes on fishing and
hunting equipment to state fish and wildlife agencies.
(US Fish and Wildlife Service)
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