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Home International Customs

Floridian snakes smuggling pair sent to jail in US

byMonitoring Report
09/12/2014
in International Customs
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NEW YORK: A pair of Florida sentenced federal prison for illegally smuggling snakes, prosecutors said.

Robert Keszey, a star of the erstwhile Discovery Channel show Swamp Brothers, was sentenced to a year behind bars for trafficking in protected snakes captured in the wilds of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York. His business partner, Robroy MacInnes, received 18 months in prison at a hearing before U.S. District Judge Juan R. Sanchez.

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The men co-owned Glades Herp Farm, a five-acre Tampa ranch that doubled as home base to one of the largest mail-order reptile retailers in the United States. It was there that Keszey based his cable show.

But even as they held themselves out as conservationists, prosecutors said, Keszey, 48, and MacInnes, 55, arranged for the capture and shipment of dozens of endangered snakes, hoping to sell them domestically and abroad.

At the men’s trial last year, witnesses detailed a 2008 sale involving 20 Eastern Timber rattlers they hoped to sell in Germany – a market where buyers, in the words of one witness, “go nuts” for North American species and pay up to $800 for a single snake.

Keszey and MacInnes later sent a pair of nonvenomous Eastern Indigo snakes from Florida to a contact in Sellersville for domestic sale. U.S. Fish and Wildlife agents estimate that the species can fetch as much as $1,000 a piece at reptile shows such as the annual one in Hammond, Pa.

Despite their convictions, Keszey and MacInnes maintain their innocence, saying they fell victim to a onetime business associate turned government witness named Loren Zuck, whom they describe as – well, a snake.

Zuck worked as Glades Herp Farm’s representative at snake sales such as the Hammond show and was never charged in the case.

But when federal agents turned their attention toward the business, a panicked Zuck took two adult Timber snakes he had on hand and froze them to death. He flushed several baby snakes down the toilet, lawyers for the farm’s co-owners alleged in recent court filings.

“This case . . . does not involve the injury, killing or inhumane treatment of a single animal on . . . anyone’s part,” wrote Keszey’s lawyer Felicia Sarner, “except for the government’s principal witness, Loren Zuck, who callously killed numerous snakes to save himself.”

Zuck did not respond to requests for comment Monday. Prosecutors say MacInnes did his best to make sure Zuck kept his mouth shut.

In addition to their prison terms, Sanchez also ordered MacInnes to pay a $4,000 fine and Keszey to pay $2,000.

Tags: Discovery Channelpair of Floridasentenced federal prisonsmuggling snakes

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