http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2002412336_eagles31m.htmlSunday, July 31, 2005 - Page updated at 12:24 AM
Eagles slaughtered for cherished parts
By Maureen O'Hagan
Seattle Times staff reporter
Evidence used in the case against Terry Antoine included bald-eagle
features, a traditional Indian rattle made from the feet and head of an
eagle, and a collection of eagle beaks.
KEN LAMBERT / THE SEATTLE TIMES
Leonard George, seen in front of an image of his father, Chief Dan George,
said the killing of dozens of eagles is wanton slaughter that has nothing to
do with religion.
E-mail article
Print view
Search Most e-mailed
Most read
RSS
NORTH VANCOUVER, B.C. — Amy Marie George just couldn't catch her breath.
She had walked this short trail near her house hundreds of times, but on
this afternoon in February she had to send her grandchildren ahead to get an
old asthma inhaler she hadn't used in more than a year.
"I heard my granddaughter say, 'There's an eagle here,' " recalled George,
an elder with the Tsleil-Waututh (SLAY wa-tuth) Nation. "I got such a bad
feeling."
Then her grandson Jonas called out. "There's one here!
"And another one here!"
In all, there were 14 dead eagles strewn about the dirt. And it was no
accident.
"They have no feet!" George recalls 10-year-old Jonas saying. Their wings
were lopped off, too.
Under the trees that have stood over this land for generations, where George
lived simply but felt rich walking among the sacred living things all
around, she and the children began to cry.
Jonas, who believed that wherever he went an eagle was watching him, sobbed
until his uncle brushed him with sage and sang an eagle song. George prayed.
"You didn't deserve this," she said.
George and her grandchildren had stumbled upon evidence of an international
black market, one that fuels the illegal slaughter of an estimated 500
eagles each year in southwest British Columbia alone, and an unknown number
in Washington state.
Their discovery brought to at least 50 the total number of dead eagles found
between February and March in and around the Tsleil-Wautuths' tiny Indian
reserve.
The black market begins around the salmon runs, where gorging eagles are
easy prey for poachers; it arrives in the U.S. tucked in the suitcases of
smugglers; and it fans out across America, where investigators sometimes
refer to eagles as "flying $1,000 bills."
Because of the large number of eagles in British Columbia, Washington state
has been a key entry point for smugglers.
According to wildlife officials in Canada and the U.S., the parts find their
way to uses ranging from high-end artwork to wiccan ceremonies. But
officials say the biggest demand is at Native American powwows, where
feathered regalia can help competitive dancers win thousands of dollars in
prizes.
To George, it was simple.
"This," she said, "is murder."
But catching the culprits has proven to be no easy task.
Shrouded investigations
Paul Weyland likes to keep a low profile.
As a U.S. Fish and Wildlife agent who investigates organized poaching rings,
he works in an unmarked office building in a bland business strip on the
outskirts of Bellingham.
Official correspondence carries a P.O. Box address, rather than the street
address, ever since Weyland got a vaguely threatening letter from a
disgruntled hunter. He carries a holstered gun even though much of his work
is at a desk.