Personally I don't care how experienced the outfitter is, or how professional the shipping operator is, all people make 'innocent mistakes' from time to time. Even USFWS, yeah, go figure! To now know that any 'innocent mistake' will lead to a shipment being 'considered contraband' and 'the hunter stripped of all protection of property with no hope of reclaiming his trophies' is flat out horse shit.
Big5 I could not agree with your post more... I must add that in Southern Africa for the most part hunting outfitters are not involved in the shipping process as specialized shipping agents are usually used.
This situation with the US Fish & Wildlife Services (USFWS) has been progressively building over the last several years, getting more strict until now when they finally announce this zero tolerance policy. It's gotten so bad that I had a client a couple of years ago who had saved for years for his dream hunt of a lifetime; plains game and Leopard... He was fortunate enough to take a beautiful Leopard, but had it seized by USFWS due to a minor clerical error of dates being written inaccurately by the Namibian Ministry of Environment & Tourism (MET) and this not being "caught" by the shipping agent.
Here is more of what happened...
His trophies finally made it to San Francisco, but there was a problem with his Leopard import permit from Namibia. Apparently the Namibian Govt forms only had a 2 month expiration date and should have been 6-months, so the USFWS seized his Leopard because the Namibian permit was expired on entry. The Namibian Govt. has recognized this and sent a formal letter to the Washington D.C. Office of USFWS but they refused to recognize as part of the permit. He was told by the expeditor he was using in San Francisco that he would receive an official notice of seizure, and would then have the option of surrendering his trophy or beginning the appeal process. They explained that this can be a long and tedious process which he engaged in aggressively for over a year with the help of an attorney (a fellow hunter who help him generously and did the work pro bono) but to no avail... If this is not a zero tolerance policy I do not know what is.
Here is a letter to USFWS from the shipping agent in Namibia. They are not the company that I recommend however they are considered reputable and have been in this business for a long time...
My name is *****. I am the ***** of ***** in Windhoek, Namibia. I am writing this letter on behalf of my client, *****, in support of his Petition for Remission of the forfeiture of his leopard hide and skull.
\My company handled the export of the leopard hide and skull from Namibia for Mr. *****. Because of the time necessary to prepare the items for shipment and obtain the required documents, Mr. ***** had, of course, returned to the United States prior to the export of his trophies. As is the usual custom and practice for this type of export transaction, he did not personally review and approve the documents prior to export.
My staff was responsible for obtaining the Namibia CITES export permit for Mr. *****’s leopard. I did not realize, until the problems arose with the U.S Fish and Wildlife Service at time of import, that the Namibian CITES authority had made a clerical error and issued the permit with an expiration date of only sixty days, rather than the customary six months. Had my staff caught this error prior to export, we would have contacted the Namibian CITES authority and had the document corrected prior to shipment.
I subsequently (after the import) learned that the Namibian CITES authority had made a clerical error in the expiration date of the permit. Unfortunately, my staff compounded this error by its own mistake in failing to realize the Namibian CITES authority had erred in the expiration date on the face of the export permit. This was an error on the part of my staff.
Please rest assured that my company would never intentionally ship a consignment with an expired CITES export permit. This was totally an innocent mistake and error which arose first because the Namibian CITES authority made a clerical error on the face of the export permit, and then because my staff, assuming the export permit was issued for the customary six month period, did not catch the error on the permit prior to shipment.
In attempting to resolve this problem for Mr. *****, the Namibian CITES authority assured me it was their clerical error, and that they would be happy to resolve this matter by either the U.S. accepting Namibia’s assurance of the propriety of the export and correcting the clerical error of the current permit, or by being allowed to correct this clerical error by the issuance of a replacement permit with the correct expiration date. Apparently, neither of these was acceptable to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
If the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service will not allow this minor error to be corrected, I request that I be allowed to obtain the consent of the Namibian CITES authority for the leopard hide and skull to be returned to Namibia, and then be permitted to have the trophies returned to Namibia.
USFWS ultimately denied his appeal, refused to return the Leopard skin and skull to Namibia, destroying it instead.
Don't think that it cannot happen to you, innocent mistakes can come from any direction, including the CITES permit issued by the country you are hunting in... my advice is read every detail looking for any possible mistakes especially when it is an animal that requires a CITES permit.
I share this story with you because I think that it is important to know what can happen and how easily and innocently minor errors can cost you dearly... I can assure you that this happens sometimes but you will rarely or never hear about it unless it happens to someone you know. This type of situation falls into the dark shadows of the hunting industry that people in this industry don't like to talk about... This is something that has never happen to one of our client's trophies before, however it is a clear example of this zero tolerance policy.
I think that it is really important to share this kind of information with others as it not only empowers hunters but hopefully prevents the same from happening to fellow hunters.