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Irishman Charged With Using Fake Papers To Sell Rhino Horns In NYC

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/AP) -- A member of Ireland's nomadic minority used forged documents to sell horns from endangered black rhinos to a Queens collector, prosecutors said.

Michael Slattery was arrested while boarding a flight to London on Saturday at Newark Liberty International Aiport, authorities said.

A judge ordered Slattery held without bail during an appearance Wednesday in federal court in Brooklyn. Slattery's attorney didn't immediately return a message seeking comment.

A criminal complaint alleges that in 2010 Slattery traveled from London to Houston to try to buy two horns at a taxidermy auction house. Learning that he needed to be a resident of Texas to make the purchase, he recruited a day laborer to be a straw buyer, the complaint says.

Slattery and unidentified suspects gave the straw buyer $18,000 in $100 bills to complete the deal, the complaint says.

Later that year, Slattery met with a Chinese buyer in Queens and sold four horns for $50,000 using endangered-species bills of sale with fake Fish and Wildlife Service logos on them, the complaint says. It's unclear where he got the additional two horns, it says.

Three of the five species of rhinoceros in Africa and South Asia have been hunted to the verge of extinction because their horns command exceptionally high prices for use in traditional Asian medicine chiefly in China and Vietnam, where the powdered horn is marketed as an aphrodisiac and even as a cure for cancer. The horns are made of keratin, a fibrous protein that is the building block for skin and hair, and has no documented medicinal value.

In 2011, Europol issued a warning that an Irish Traveller criminal network based in the County Limerick village of Rathkeale was responsible for dozens of thefts of rhino horns across Europe. Europol said the thieves, called the Rathkeale Rovers, had already targeted museums, galleries, zoos, auction houses, antique dealers and private collections in Britain, continental Europe, the United States and South America.

Earlier this year, masked men stole stuffed rhinoceros heads containing eight valuable horns from the warehouse of Ireland's National Museum in a heist being linked to Irish Gypsies, known there as the "travellers."

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