Has anyone else gotten their ivory without using an importer? It’s hard to make sense of $2500 for filing a simple application. If the PH in Zimbabwe has the license fee records and general conservation plan for the area what does the importer do to justify such a high fee?
Conservation Force isn’t an importer. They’re attorneys who specialize in dealing with/fighting USFWS. They do so on your behalf if/when there are issues. Many times USFWS will come back and ask for additional info, clarification on something, or argue the details and supporting evidence isn’t enough. As lawyers who do this they can then turn around and point out where it was enough on XYZ application, or less was used on ABC application. They’re also the legal entity that successfully sued the Government when USFWS were essentially just sitting on the case by case reviews. You need to remember each application is on an individual Case by Case basis and you’re subject to the standards of the reviewing agent who pulls your application out of the stack. There’s no guarantee you get the same reviewing agent
@Green Chile got or anyone else got. Below are your options
1) File everything and do all of the trophy shipping logistics and customs clearance at the airport yourself. If you’re a lawyer or have experience with these sorts of things you can possibly navigate it.
2) Utilize your import broker (Coppersmith, Trophy Shippers, Flora & Fauna, Safaris Specialty Importers, and any number of others) for the filing in addition to the trophy shipping/customs clearance logistics. Some have recent experience with clearing Elephants, Lions, Leopards, and Marco Polo Sheep while others do not. Some will charge an extra fee and others do not charge anything on top of their standard import fees.
3) Utilize conservation force for the Ivory Import at $3500 and utilize your customs broker to handle all of the trophy shipping/clearance logistics at the airport.
4) Handle all of your own trophy shipping/customs clearance at the airport + pay Conservation Force for the Ivory import filing.
Ultimately, it’s your money and your choice. When you look at the total costs of an Elephant Hunt, $3500 is a single digit percentage of the overall costs involved, but if done incorrectly those storage fees can rapidly start exceeding the Conservation Force Fee.