Cecil the Lion killing investigated by U.S. wildlife agency
Washington — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which enforces the federal endangered species law, says it is investigating the killing of Cecil the Lion in Zimbabwe by an American dentist.
The agency said it's gathering facts, and has asked Walter Palmer, a Minnesota dentist, to contact them.
The "investigation will take us wherever the facts lead," Edward Grace, the agency's deputy chief of law, said Wednesday in a statement. Efforts to reach Palmer have been unsuccessful and agency officials has asked him or his representative to contact the agency.
Cecil was killed this month outside Hwange National Park in Zimbabwe, where he was a star attraction among tourists. A professional hunter in Zimbabwe, Theo Bronkhorst, was granted bail of $1,000 after appearing in a court on Wednesday for allegedly helping Palmer shoot the lion.
Cecil was collared and monitored as part of an Oxford University research project. Palmer said in a statement to the Star Tribune in Minneapolis that he believed he had legally hunted the animal and that he didn't know it was collared.
On a recent trip to Africa, President Barack Obama discussed measures to counter illicit wildlife trafficking, spokesman Josh Earnest said Wednesday. Obama is aware of the killing, the spokesman said.
The wildlife service has proposed listing the African lion as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, a decision that's set to be finalized this year. Under that proposal, the import of lion "trophies" from sporting hunts would be allowed provided that the lions originate from countries that have a scientifically sound management plan.
Because that rule isn't in place, the only restrictions are laws for trade in endangered species. They require lion carcasses imported into the U.S. to have an export permit from the country where the animals were killed. The U.S. is trying to determine if Cecil's body was sent to the U.S., and whether Palmer had the appropriate export permit.
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