Finally, the last of the mopping up of the Phragmipedium Kovachii debacle. Last January I reported that Marie Selby Botanical Gardens and its top horticulturalist, Wesley Higgins (head of the orchid identification center) had to take their licks for their role in smuggling a specimen of this new discovery into the U.S. to be identified. The government of Peru and former Selby employee Eric Christenson, were already in the process of identifying what’s been described as the greatest orchid discovery of the last 100 years. But Selby beat them to it, thereby pissing off a lot of people.
Michael Kovachs actually got off fairly lightly, with two year’s probation and a $1,000 fine.
U.S. District Judge Stephen Merryday, of Tampa, told Kovach, of Goldvein, Va., he narrowly escaped doing prison time.
"I’m resolving some doubts in your favor owing to your status as a
first offender," Merryday said. "But some of your explanations here are
very nearly, ‘The dog ate my homework.’"
Sadly, George Norris — who got caught in the crossfire — did get prison time. Rabid U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service officials, on the hunt for illegal importers of Phrag. Kovachii, caught George in a scheme to fudge paperwork on other, artificially propagated, orchids. They figured he was trading in Phrag. Kovachii because his supplier was one of three growers in Peru with a legal permit to cultivate them. Nope. But he was an easy fall guy — elderly, bellicose, and unable to afford a good lawyer, apparently.
As for the fabulous orchid, it was stripped from the wild by poachers as soon as word got out that it existed.
Eric Hansen, who wrote Orchid Fever, "An extraordinary, well-told tale of botany, obsession, and plant politics" (U.S.A. Today), may want to start thinking about that sequel.
Full article:
United Press International/Washington Times
Dealer sentenced in orchid export scheme
Tampa, FL, Nov. 2 (UPI) —
An orchid dealer has been sentenced to two years probation and a $1,000 fine for smuggling a Peruvian orchid into the Florida.
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Prosecutor Elinor Colbourn said Michael Kovach was part of what
seemed "an awful lot like a conspiracy" to take rare orchids and sell
them to collectors.
Kovach, 49, said that by taking a spectacular orchid out of Peru and
bringing it to a Sarasota, Fla., botanical garden, he guaranteed the
new species would be protected as endangered.
Wild orchids are protected by a treaty that bans collecting endangered
wild plants for export. Trade is permitted only if the exporting
country certifies the plants were gown in a nursery or a laboratory,
the St. Petersburg Times reported.
U.S. District Judge Stephen Merryday, of Tampa, told Kovach, of Goldvein, Va., he narrowly escaped doing prison time.
"I’m resolving some doubts in your favor owing to your status as a
first offender," Merryday said. "But some of your explanations here are
very nearly, ‘The dog ate my homework.’"