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- <text id=89TT0512>
- <title>
- Feb. 20, 1989: Wildlife Cops On A Bust
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Feb. 20, 1989 Betrayal:Marine Spy Scandal
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- AMERICAN SCENE, Page 18
- Gulf Coast Wetlands, Texas
- Wildlife Cops On a Bust
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Covert operations defend waterfowl and other wildlife
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden
- </p>
- <p> It's always a tense moment when Rick Leach breaks the news
- to a suspect that he is not a buddy but rather an undercover
- federal agent. The people whom the dark-haired, soft-spoken cop
- arrests are usually armed, and some take the news badly: at
- different times, men have tried to choke or shoot the agent.
- And so Leach is cautious as he pulls his rented Taurus into the
- driveway of the Friermood hunting lodge in the midst of Texas'
- vast Gulf Coast wetlands one clear morning this winter. Only
- two weeks earlier, Leach went duck hunting with a guide from
- the Friermood lodge, trading lies, and now he is returning as
- part of a 100-agent task force that will arrest 23 hunting
- guides and lodge owners scattered along the Texas coast for
- violation of federal wildlife statutes.
- </p>
- <p> Leach is one of nine full-time undercover wildlife cops
- working for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Special
- Operations branch. At any given time, an undercover agent might
- simultaneously maintain three identities in efforts to deter
- the illegal killing or trafficking in wildlife. While the $130
- million illegal-wildlife market pales in comparison with the
- billions Americans spend on drugs, undercover wildlife cops
- find themselves in equally exotic situations. Undercover stings
- have infiltrated a smuggling ring that exported falcons to
- Saudi royalty; a backwoods guide service that killed black bears
- for their gall bladders, which were then exported to Japan as
- aphrodisiacs; and a renegade group of Native Americans who
- illegally trafficked in eagle feathers. This winter's major
- bust, called "the Texas Waterfowl Operation," climaxed a
- three-year investigation that exposed rampant disregard for laws
- governing the hunting of ducks and geese.
- </p>
- <p> Special Ops, directed by John Gavitt, a former field agent,
- was set up ten years ago in response to increasing illegal
- hunting and trafficking in wildlife. Leach, who headed the
- covert branch for four years before going back into the field,
- came to wildlife enforcement after a stint as an undercover
- narcotics agent. An environmentalist, he says, "I didn't want to
- spend the rest of my life doing drug buys." While wildlife work
- might seem more tranquil than the murderous world of drugs,
- Leach says wildlife cops often find themselves in the
- backcountry on their own, while during undercover drug buys,
- "you generally have lots of backup if things go wrong."
- </p>
- <p> Agents follow common-sense rules. They choose covers as
- close to the truth as possible. In one case, Leach assumed the
- role of a dealer in deer and other exotic meats. When he and
- fellow agents busted his principal supplier, the man grabbed
- his pistol, and Leach found himself wrestling the gun away from
- his head.
- </p>
- <p> Special Ops took on the Texas operation because waterfowl
- numbers have been plummeting in the face of droughts, habitat
- loss and illegal hunting and because a preliminary investigation
- uncovered widespread flouting of the wildlife laws. Leach and
- other investigators simply masqueraded as duck hunters. Of the
- 42 hunting clubs visited, an astonishing 41 violated basic
- waterfowl- protection laws. In the course of the operation,
- agents regularly documented egregious violations. At one posh
- club, for instance, an undercover agent was asked by
- unsuspecting guides to videotape a hunt during which 13 hunters
- slaughtered 204 birds (139 over the limit for that group). When a
- guide yelled to spook hundreds of geese clumped together in a
- pond, hunters fired blindly into the rising cloud of birds.
- After the fusillade, the water was littered with dead and
- wounded snow geese.
- </p>
- <p> At the Friermood lodge, the critical moment comes when
- federal agents converge on a confused Blaien Friermood as he
- turns his truck into the driveway. While one agent tells the
- lodge owner that he is to be arrested, another casually
- positions herself between Friermood and the hunters so that no
- one gets the idea of handing him a weapon. Before being led
- away, Friermood explains to the hunters that one of his guides
- has been caught violating the law by an undercover agent. One
- hunter remarks nervously, "If I were Blaien, I'd get after the
- guide that got him in trouble." Hearing this, Leach tells them,
- "Blaien's got his own problems," and notes that this is only
- part of a big federal bust. Ray Brite, a U.S. deputy marshal,
- eases the tension by telling awful jokes.
- </p>
- <p> With Friermood safely packed off to Houston for arraignment
- on misdemeanor and felony charges, Leach heads down the road to
- check on another bust before returning to Houston to face the
- mountain of paperwork that accompanies an operation of this
- magnitude. Leach, Gavitt and the other agents gravitate to
- their jobs because of the sense of accomplishment they get from
- protecting America's vanishing wildlife. "I used to feel
- uncomfortable about making friends with people and busting
- them, but I'm not out to cause people trouble; I'm here to
- protect wildlife," says Leach. Gavitt notes that many people
- doing the most damage to wildlife use sophisticated scams, not
- easily investigated by overt means. In these cases, says
- Gavitt, "covert operations not only bring such violators to
- justice but have a ripple effect. Commercial duck-hunting
- guides, for instance, will now think twice before breaking the
- law."
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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