Montreal woman sentenced to jail time in U.S. for wildlife trafficking

A 27-year-old Montreal woman has been sentenced in New York State following her conviction of "trafficking in protected wildlife," according to the U.S. Attorney's Office.
Vanessa Rondeau was sentenced to time served and one year of supervised release by a judge from the Western District of New York, according to a statement released by the Department of Justice on Wednesday.
She was also ordered to pay restitution of $1,364 and a $40,000 criminal fine.
Rondeau was first arrested in May 2021 after she tried to cross the U.S. border into Canada at Highgate Springs, Vermont, with "numerous undeclared wildlife items," including a three-toed sloth, 18 crocodile skulls and heads and seven crocodile feet, according to documents filed in federal court in Vermont.
All wildlife must be declared to the Fish and Wildlife Service upon import into the United States and before its export from that country, under the Endangered Species Act.
Rondeau, the owner of The Old Cavern Boutique in Montreal, was also alleged at the time to be in possession of two horseshoe crabs, 30 sea stars, 23 raccoon feet, eight African antelope horns, one human skull "with mounted butterflies," four puffer fish and six shark jaws.
The woman's 2021 attempt to cross the border was not her first transgression.
She successfully made the journey 18 times between November 2018 and September 2019, mostly at the Champlain, N.Y. port of entry, including a dozen times between midnight and 2 a.m., according to Ryan Bessey, a special agent with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, who worked undercover on the case.
After Bessey started communicating with Rondeau online in January 2020, the woman agreed to sell him a polar bear skull for $780.
To get it to him, she entered the U.S. at the Champlain, N.Y. border crossing with the skull in her possession – a violation of the Endangered Species Act, and then shipped it to him in Amherst N.Y.
The undercover agent received the package, and then Rondeau agreed online to sell him another polar bear skull for $584.11.
This time she sent it using Canada Post and labelled the package as containing "1 Cadre, which is the French word for frame," the statement reads.
The U.S. Attorney's Office estimated the monetary value of all the protected wildlife Rondeau either shipped or brought across the border to total approximately $37,204.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service had also intercepted packages containing skulls from a bird, a weasel, a bat and the skin from a Hartmann's zebra, another protected species, an affidavit stated.
Environment and Climate Change Canada also assisted with the investigation.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Sellers 'expecting yesterday's prices': Canadians cope with a correcting housing market
After a series of interest rate hikes implemented by the Bank of Canada, housing markets are now facing a 'significant' correction. CTVNews.ca spoke to Canadians who are now struggling to make the goal of purchasing a home, or selling one, a reality.

Power returning in Toronto after hours-long outage likely caused by crane hitting transmission line
Power is slowing coming back to Toronto's downtown core after a widespread outage caused major disruptions in the city Thursday afternoon.
A new virus was found in China, here's what we know
Scientists are keeping an eye on the Langya virus, a new pathogen that appears to have been transmitted from animals to humans in China and causes symptoms similar to COVID-19 or the flu.
U.S. Justice Dept. seeks to unseal search warrant of Trump home
The U.S. Justice Department is asking a federal court to unseal the warrant the FBI used to search the Mar-a-Lago estate of former President Donald Trump, Attorney General Merrick Garland said Thursday, acknowledging extraordinary public interest in the case about classified records.
Armed man tries to breach FBI office, killed after standoff
An armed man clad in body armour who tried to breach the FBI's Cincinnati office on Thursday was shot and killed by police after he fled the scene and engaged in an hours-long standoff in a rural part of the state, the Ohio State Highway Patrol said.
Police investigating attack on Brampton, Ont. media personality as attempted murder
A Brampton, Ont. media personality who was attacked with a machete and axe in his driveway will need months of physical rehabilitation to recover, a close friend says.
Will you be eligible for one of Ontario's new tax credits? Here's the breakdown
The Ontario government is planning to move forward with several tax credits for residents as it formally tabled its 2022-23 budget on Tuesday.
'Devastating': Search continues for Sask. mushroom picker missing for 7 days
It’s been seven days since 74-year-old Lois Chartrand went missing while mushroom picking in the forest north of Smeaton, Sask.
Vegetarian women more likely to suffer hip fractures: study
A study out of the United Kingdom’s University of Leeds reports women who don’t eat meat are 33 per cent more likely to break their hips later in life.