Antiques dealer arrested with zoo rhino horn at Manchester airport06/10/2010 15:41:42
The horn was found to be from 'Simba', a rhino that died at Colchester Zoo. October 2010. An illegal rhino horn was confiscated by officers from the UK Border Agency at Manchester Airport in June, 2009. The horn had been hidden in a fake antique figure by antique dealer Donald Allison. Once discovered, investigators contacted wildlife forensic scientists to analyse fragments in order to confirm the species of animal it was from and identify which zoo rhino had been targeted. Horn from Colchester Zoo rhino Essex Police's discovered that the whole of the rhino's head had been stolen from the abattoir and sold for £400. Under government regulations, bodies of protected species must be incinerated after death. As Dr Ross McEwing continued, scientific techniques such as these can provide investigators with crucial evidence; "When dealing with DNA profiles, we can generate very powerful results. Just like with humans, a rhino DNA profile allows trace samples to be matched back to the source individual. So when we were approached to help with this case we were confident that we could provide investigators with the proof they needed. We are delighted that our work has helped lead to a conviction and it proves once again that forensic genetics is an important weapon in the fight against wildlife crime." Scientists from the Royal Zoological Society of Scotland (RZSS) and TRACE Wildlife Forensics Network, based in Edinburgh, helped investigators bring Donals Allison to justice after they provided genetic proof that pinpointed the exact animal in a smuggled rhino horn case. 1 year in prison
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