If you were to harvest an exportable elephant or rhino, could you sell the horn/tusks when you got them home?
Obviously in states, will depend on regulation.
But must say, internationally is called pseudo hunting.
First it started by sending a fake hunter (non hunter), and client to hunt rhino, all legal costs paid by "third party" to get export permit
Then the horn was shipped to Vietnam or China.This came to light, after a vietnamise girl (I think a prostitute) was issued a permit for rhino hunt, in order to export and sell rhino horn on far east.
This was noticed, and to get permit later (as I understand), to avoid non hunter, hunting rhino like that - when somebody else shoots, before issuing permit, a person had to prove that he is experienced hunter.
So, then, the "third party", just switched to find real hunters to make legal hunt, (it was not that hard to find hunters to go for fully paid rhino hunt), and practise continued.
I think this practise is in decline, but to keep in mind, that going to hunt rhino or ele, predetermined to sell the horns and tusks, may be described as pseudo hunting and is generally discouraged. Informations above I am writing from memory, was reading some book about this, and forgot the title.
I went to look, for some article about pseudo hunting, and found this, and I am sure a better google search will find better results on internet:
South Africa is home to 93% of the rhinos in Africa. At the start of the 20th century there were only 500,000 wild rhinos on earth. By 1970 this number had dropped to 70,000, today the estimated…
medium.com
Pseudo-Hunting
“
’Pseudo-hunting’ is the practice whereby supposed trophy hunters either need to be told how to shoot or leave the actual shooting to an accompanying Professional Hunter or land owner, a practice that is illegal in South Africa.” — Endangered Wildlife Trust
The use of pseudo-hunting as a way to export rhino horns to Vietnam has been used to get horns out of South Africa as far back as 2003. The exporting of rhino horns is illegal, so poaching can be avoided as a way to obtain ‘legal’ rhino horns by using trophy hunting (a ‘legal’ means of rhino trophy/horn export).