Jailing of international wildlife crime kingpin Teo Boon Ching is a
body-blow to illegal trade (New York)
Environmental Investigation Agency
September 20, 2023
See link
https://eia-international.org/news/jailing-of-international-wildlife-crime-kingpin-teo-boon-ching-is-a-body-blow-to-illegal-trade/
for photo and video.
Asian illegal wildlife trade kingpin Teo Boon Ching has been sentenced to
18 months in prison by a court in New York for large-scale trafficking of
rhinoceros horns.
The full scope of his criminal activities was exposed five years ago by the
London-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA UK), which supplied a
substantial amount of intelligence on his modus operandi and activities to
US enforcement agents.
Teo, whose nicknames include ‘Godfather’, was extradited from Thailand to
the US last October to face charges of conspiracy to commit wildlife
trafficking, promotion of money laundering and concealment of money
laundering.
Following his sentencing yesterday (19 September) by US District Judge Paul
A. Crotty at the Southern District Court, EIA UK Executive Director Mary
Rice said: “This is a commendable result and takes a key player out of the
hugely profitable wildlife trafficking business.
“Chinese and Vietnamese organised crime networks have long exploited
Malaysia and other South-East Asian countries as transit hubs for smuggling
illegal wildlife commodities from Africa into Asia.
“The jailing of Teo Boon Ching and related US Treasury Department sanctions
against him and his alleged trafficking organisation constitute a body-blow
to their ability to function.”
Based in Asia, with major operations in Malaysia and Thailand, Teo was
directly involved with the large-scale international trafficking and
smuggling of rhinoceros horns, ivory and pangolin scales.
He was arrested following a covert sting operation in which he conspired to
transport, distribute, sell and smuggle at least 219kg of rhinoceros horns
worth more than $2 million.
EIA’s investigations established that Teo has been involved in the
transnational illegal wildlife trade for more than two decades, providing
concealment and packing services to a number of criminal networks involved
in the smuggling of elephant ivory, rhino horns and pangolin scales into
Asia via Malaysian ports.
Teo first appeared on the law enforcement radar in 2015 for ivory
trafficking and the full extent of his activities was revealed in EIA’s
2018 report Exposing the Hydra, after the NGO’s undercover investigators
documented his role as a specialist transporter assisting Vietnamese and
Chinese criminal syndicates.
Teo boasted to them that, as of 2017, he had provided clearance services
for approximately 80 containers, with only one seizure since he started
operations.
He also claimed to have played a significant logistics role in the recovery
of two shipments of pangolin scales linked to the seizure of 7.2 tonnes of
elephant ivory, which occurred in Hong Kong in July 2017.
Based on EIA’s investigations, Teo was believed to have strong connections
to Customs officials at Johor Port, who enabled his customers to enter the
Customs Clearance Warehouse to verify goods once the wildlife shipments had
arrived in Malaysia. Once cleared, the consignments were moved to Teo’s own
warehouse for repacking into multiple standard air cargo packages for
onward transportation.
He had further established strong connections with individuals involved in
the acquisition and distribution of illicit wildlife commodities in
Malaysia, Vietnam, China and Laos.
Rice added: “We applaud the US and other agencies in all relevant countries
for working together in the spirit of international cooperation on this
case in order to achieve a successful outcome.’’
https://eia-international.org/news/jailing-of-international-wildlife-crime-kingpin-teo-boon-ching-is-a-body-blow-to-illegal-trade/
https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2023/09/20/us-court-sentences-malaysian-to-18-months039-jail-for-trafficking-over-200kg-of-rhino-horns
https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/21/world/rhino-horn-teo-boon-ching-jailed-intl-hnk/index.html
Jailing of international wildlife crime kingpin Teo Boon Ching is a
body-blow to illegal trade (New York)
Environmental Investigation Agency
September 20, 2023
See link
<https://eia-international.org/news/jailing-of-international-wildlife-crime-kingpin-teo-boon-ching-is-a-body-blow-to-illegal-trade/>
for photo and video.
Asian illegal wildlife trade kingpin Teo Boon Ching has been sentenced to
18 months in prison by a court in New York for large-scale trafficking of
rhinoceros horns.
The full scope of his criminal activities was exposed five years ago by the
London-based Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA UK), which supplied a
substantial amount of intelligence on his modus operandi and activities to
US enforcement agents.
Teo, whose nicknames include ‘Godfather’, was extradited from Thailand to
the US last October to face charges of conspiracy to commit wildlife
trafficking, promotion of money laundering and concealment of money
laundering.
Following his sentencing yesterday (19 September) by US District Judge Paul
A. Crotty at the Southern District Court, EIA UK Executive Director Mary
Rice said: “This is a commendable result and takes a key player out of the
hugely profitable wildlife trafficking business.
“Chinese and Vietnamese organised crime networks have long exploited
Malaysia and other South-East Asian countries as transit hubs for smuggling
illegal wildlife commodities from Africa into Asia.
“The jailing of Teo Boon Ching and related US Treasury Department sanctions
against him and his alleged trafficking organisation constitute a body-blow
to their ability to function.”
Based in Asia, with major operations in Malaysia and Thailand, Teo was
directly involved with the large-scale international trafficking and
smuggling of rhinoceros horns, ivory and pangolin scales.
He was arrested following a covert sting operation in which he conspired to
transport, distribute, sell and smuggle at least 219kg of rhinoceros horns
worth more than $2 million.
EIA’s investigations established that Teo has been involved in the
transnational illegal wildlife trade for more than two decades, providing
concealment and packing services to a number of criminal networks involved
in the smuggling of elephant ivory, rhino horns and pangolin scales into
Asia via Malaysian ports.
Teo first appeared on the law enforcement radar in 2015 for ivory
trafficking and the full extent of his activities was revealed in EIA’s
2018 report Exposing the Hydra, after the NGO’s undercover investigators
documented his role as a specialist transporter assisting Vietnamese and
Chinese criminal syndicates.
Teo boasted to them that, as of 2017, he had provided clearance services
for approximately 80 containers, with only one seizure since he started
operations.
He also claimed to have played a significant logistics role in the recovery
of two shipments of pangolin scales linked to the seizure of 7.2 tonnes of
elephant ivory, which occurred in Hong Kong in July 2017.
Based on EIA’s investigations, Teo was believed to have strong connections
to Customs officials at Johor Port, who enabled his customers to enter the
Customs Clearance Warehouse to verify goods once the wildlife shipments had
arrived in Malaysia. Once cleared, the consignments were moved to Teo’s own
warehouse for repacking into multiple standard air cargo packages for
onward transportation.
He had further established strong connections with individuals involved in
the acquisition and distribution of illicit wildlife commodities in
Malaysia, Vietnam, China and Laos.
Rice added: “We applaud the US and other agencies in all relevant countries
for working together in the spirit of international cooperation on this
case in order to achieve a successful outcome.’’
https://eia-international.org/news/jailing-of-international-wildlife-crime-kingpin-teo-boon-ching-is-a-body-blow-to-illegal-trade/
https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2023/09/20/us-court-sentences-malaysian-to-18-months039-jail-for-trafficking-over-200kg-of-rhino-horns
https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/21/world/rhino-horn-teo-boon-ching-jailed-intl-hnk/index.html