S. 4686A: “Cecil’s Law” Banning Certain Wildlife Trophy Imports

in New York

Bill Description:
Bans the importation, transportation and possession of five African wildlife species (elephants, leopards, lions, black rhinoceroses, and white rhinoceroses) or any associated wildlife products.[teaserbreak]

Background:
All five of these species are currently facing severe threats from illegal poaching and sport hunting. You can read more about the elephant poaching crisis here.

Senator Avella made the following statement for the introduction of S. 4686A: “We’re supposed to be the stewards of these species and shame on us if we allow them to become extinct because of sport hunting…If we can stop it here, we can send a message to the entire world that New Yorkers and New York will not tolerate this.”

A recent report from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Agency said New York is the port of entry for much of the illegal animal trade into the country.

This bill is named for Cecil the lion, who was allegedly lured outside of Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe in July and killed by an American hunter. His death was particularly gruesome because he was shot with an arrow, injured, and tracked for 40 hours before finally being shot, beheaded, and skinned. Cecil’s story highlights the importance of cracking down on trophy hunting.

Read the full text here.

Read the next article

World's Last Male Northern White Rhino Under 24-Hour Guard