Oddball;4253200; said:The main problem is that so long as a species is listed in CITES Appendix I and II, there's no way it'll be removed from the US Endangered Species Act.
As to filing for a CITES permit, what's the use? Those permits would only allow you to export a CITES species from the country of origin. Those permits are only applicable to licensed animal businesses. A CITES permit does not allow a species automatic entry into the US. For that, you'll have to deal with US Customs. To deal with them, you'll need an import license specific to animals similar to the ones you're trying to import. Said import license is only applicable to an established business.
If you're willing to go through all of that, you're still not completely in the clear. All it takes is for an inspecting agent to interpret the law as being against the type of species you're trying to import for that shipment to be impounded. And, IF it's later determined that the shipment should be allowed, you get to pay the normal import tariffs and can be charged for the holding costs incurred during the legality disposition determination. Of course, that's providing the shipment is still alive at the final disposition.
Oddball;4253200; said:The main problem is that so long as a species is listed in CITES Appendix I and II, there's no way it'll be removed from the US Endangered Species Act.
As to filing for a CITES permit, what's the use? Those permits would only allow you to export a CITES species from the country of origin. Those permits are only applicable to licensed animal businesses. A CITES permit does not allow a species automatic entry into the US. For that, you'll have to deal with US Customs. To deal with them, you'll need an import license specific to animals similar to the ones you're trying to import. Said import license is only applicable to an established business.
If you're willing to go through all of that, you're still not completely in the clear. All it takes is for an inspecting agent to interpret the law as being against the type of species you're trying to import for that shipment to be impounded. And, IF it's later determined that the shipment should be allowed, you get to pay the normal import tariffs and can be charged for the holding costs incurred during the legality disposition determination. Of course, that's providing the shipment is still alive at the final disposition.
busy_kt;4253381; said:Could someone with said permit be able to cross the Canadian border with Aros?