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QUEENS — A Guyanese man ruffled some feathers Kennedy airport when authorities found he was trying to smuggle in nine live finches into the country, the Daily News reported.
Marlon Hariram, 30, allegedly had the birds stuffed up his sleeve, the paper said. He was supposedly smuggling them in from Guyana to participate in bird singing contests in Queens parks.

 

The birds were found inside cardboard toilet paper rolls and concealed in netting in his sleeve, the News said.

The singing Finches are prized by Guyanese immigrants for their velvet voices, the New York Times reported. People bet on which of the tiny birds can sing the best.

Other people have also been arrested for trying to smuggle birds through Kennedy Airport.

 

In 2006, hospital worker Terrence McLean was arrested for trying to sneak in 13 live singing Finches into New York to sing for prize money, the Times reported. Those birds were stuffed in hair curlers.

Guyanese law forbids exporting wild birds, the News reported. Hariram was due in court Wednesday.

This is not the first time he's been accused of smuggling birds from Guyana. He was fined earlier in 2005 and 2011 for bringing in live finches, the News said.

 

http://www.dnainfo.com/new-yor...or-smuggling-finches

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I dislike people who take wildlife from their habitat to make profit and caged them. This activity is happening in Smoky Park in RH in the early morning. Some of these guys can't even take care of themselves much less a bird. I ask one of them how he would feel if someone caged him, in like manner. The makachodo cursed at me. BTW, that's Nehru's neighborhood!

FM

By New York Daily News

Accused songbird smuggler Marlon Hariram leaves Brooklyn Federal Court Wednesday with his mother after she bailed him out. (New York Daily News photo by Jesse Ward)

 

A BIRD BRAIN accused of smuggling finches up his sleeve into theU.S.was released on bail Wednesday by a Brooklyn judge who ruled he isn’t a flight risk.

That means Marlon Hariram was not likely to flee to Guyana to avoid prosecution for violating the South American state’s treaty banning the illegal export of the songbirds.

 

Magistrate Judge Viktor Pohorelsky said he doubted Hariram would fly off into the sunset because he faces minimal jail time for the offense.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife agents busted Hariram, 30, ofNew Jersey, on Monday after catching him on May 20 at Kennedy Airport with nine live finches hidden in the sleeve of his shirt. The birds were stuffed inside cardboard toilet paper rolls and wrapped with netting and packaging tape.

Hariram was released at the time he was caught and went back to his nativeGuyana, but returned to answer a summons in Brooklyn Federal Court stemming from a previous bird smuggling attempt.

 

There’s a black market for finches in singing contests popular with the Guyanese community in Queens parks, authorities said. A finch with a winning tune can fetch more than $5,000, according to court papers. Sources said not all of the stowaway birds are still alive, but it was unclear if any died during the trip or whether they were euthanized by authorities to prevent the spread of disease.

 

“There’s no allegation in the complaint that he intended to sell the birds,” Hariram’s lawyer Len Kamdang of the Brooklyn Federal Defenders office told the Daily News. Hariram did not speak as he left the courthouse with his mother, who signed a $50,000 bond for his release
http://www.demerarawaves.com/i...se-bird-brainer.html

Sunil

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