Feds lift veil on international turtle smuggling ring

Detroit — A Windsor man busted at the Detroit-Windsor tunnel with 51 live
turtles in his pants is a serial smuggler who shipped thousands of reptiles
to far-flung locales hidden in snow boots and cereal boxes, a federal
prosecutor said Friday.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Sara Woodward gave rare insight into a lucrative,
international smuggling ring headed by Kai Xu that operated in at least
three countries. She described an operation that peddled thousands of
turtles, some endangered and worth $1,800 each, and relied on aliases and
reptile couriers that Xu — aka "Turtle Man" — recruited through online
forums and classified ads.

Woodward lifted the veil Friday on an unusual criminal case that drew
headlines a day earlier as far away as the United Kingdom while successfully
arguing that Xu should be denied bond while awaiting trial on charges that
could send him to prison for 10 years.

Xu, 26, is a liar who kept smuggling after being arrested in early August
after crossing into Canada with 51 turtles taped to his legs and hidden in
his crotch, Woodward said. The scope of his smuggling ring, black market
riches and his Canadian residency demands that he be held in the U.S. until
trial, she argued.

"He is a full-time reptile smuggler," Woodward told U.S. Magistrate Judge
Donald Scheer during a detention hearing in federal court. "All of the
evidence points to Mr. Xu directing others and doing it for a very
considerable time and for an extreme amount of profit."

The boyish-looking Xu, whose black bangs dangled over the tips of his
glasses, sat quietly wearing an orange jailhouse jumper while Woodward spoke
to the judge but started crying after his fiancee entered the courtroom. His
leg chains and handcuffs made a tinkling sound as he tried to stifle tears.

Late Friday afternoon, Scheer ordered the alleged turtle smuggler held
without bond.

He was poised to go home Friday until the prosecutor accused him of lying
about enrolling as an engineering student at the University of Waterloo and
continuing to smuggle turtles and tortoises despite an August arrest in
Canada. There is no guarantee Xu would return to the U.S. to stand trial,
Woodward argued.

Not true, defense lawyer Timothy Debolski responded. The case relies on
liars caught up in the investigation who are seeking leniency, he said.

"My client wants to put this behind him and have his day in court," Debolski
told the judge.

The prosecutor and a federal agent chronicled Xu's years-long involvement in
the turtle smuggling trade that operated online. They also described the
riches involved in mailing live turtles and tortoises to Asia, where certain
species are facing extinction and coveted as pets or food.

Inside the black market, Xu was known as "Turtle Man," according to testimony.

An online reptile seller known as "Turtle Man" used several aliases but one
poster in 2012 said the seller's real name was Xu Kai and operated in the
Waterloo area.

"Turtle Man" received mixed reviews from buyers on the Canadian classified
website Kijiji, according to posts on a second website, faunaclassifieds.com.

Federal agents started investigating Xu in March after a confidential
informant said the Windsor man was smuggling turtles.

Agents soon learned that Xu had entered the U.S. about 30 times since
January to retrieve shipments of turtles from growers and mail reptiles from
Metro Detroit and Buffalo, New York, to Hong Kong, Alaska and beyond.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Special Agent Mona Iannelli detailed Xu's
arrest earlier this week. It was the man's second arrest in as many months.

On Wednesday Xu and a Canadian man, alleged reptile courier Lihua Lin, 30,
were arrested after Lin tried to fly to Shanghai, China, with 970 turtles
hidden in his luggage.

While Chinese names generally are last name first, first name last, the two
were referred to as Xu and Lin, repeatedly, in court Friday.

Xu hired Lin after posting a help wanted ad seeking someone to sell
cosmetics for $4,000 a month. The real job involved smuggling turtles,
Iannelli testified.

On Wednesday, Xu drove his alleged courier to Detroit Metropolitan Airport
with two pieces of luggage. Agents inspected the bags and found almost 1,000
turtles — including 700 diamondback Terrapins and 16 kwangtung river turtles.

The dark brown kwangtung turtles with stripes on its neck are worth up to
$1,800 each in the U.S. — and are three times as valuable in China, Iannelli
said.

"Are they on the verge of extinction in Asia?" Woodward asked the agent.

"Yes," Iannelli said.

The reptile shipment, packed in rubber snow boots and boxes of Kellogg's
Corn Flakes, included wood turtles ($500 each), Blanding's turtles ($300),
and albino red-eared sliders ($650), the agent said.

In all, the turtle shipment was worth more than $30,000 on the black market,
the agent agreed.

Agents arrested Lin at the airport before he could board a plane to
Shanghai. The Toronto-area man told agents Xu paid for the plane ticket,
gave him a $500 down payment for smuggling the turtles and promised $2,000
upon return to the U.S., according to testimony.

The airport arrest came one month after Xu was busted after entering Canada
through the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel. On Aug. 5, agents found 51 turtles taped
to Xu's legs and hidden in his groin, according to a criminal complaint.

The August arrest by Canadian authorities did not stop Xu, the prosecutor said.

Xu was arrested Wednesday after leaving the Detroit airport.

In his pockets, agents didn't find more turtles.

They allegedly found $10,000 cash.


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