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The Lizard King: The True Crimes and Passions of the World's Greatest Reptile Smugglers

Product ID : 19057228


Galleon Product ID 19057228
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About The Lizard King: The True Crimes And Passions Of

Product Description Imagine The Sopranos, with snakes! The Lizard King is a fascinating account of a father and son family business suspected of smuggling reptiles, and the federal agent who tried to take them down. When Bryan Christy began to investigate the world of reptile smuggling, he had no idea what he would be in for. In the course of his research, he was bitten between the eyes by a blood python, chased by a mother alligator, and sprayed by a bird-eating tarantula. But perhaps more dangerous was coming face to face with Michael J. Van Nostrand, owner of Strictly Reptiles, a thriving family business in Hollywood, Florida. Van Nostrand imports as many as 300,000 iguanas each year (over half the total of America's most popular imported reptile), as well as hundreds of thousands of snakes, lizards, frogs, spiders, and scorpions. Van Nostrand was suspected of being a reptile smuggler by Special Agent Chip Bepler of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, who devoted years of his life in an obsessive quest to expose The Lizard King's cold-blooded crimes. How this cat-and-mouse game ended is engrossing and surprising. Amazon.com Review Reptile smuggling is big business, and in his book debut, Brian Christy mounts an intense and highly readable investigation into this unique black market's surprising depths. Besides the reptiles themselves, this exciting narrative investigation focuses on two main protagonists: Michael Van Nostrand, a notorious dealer; and Chip Bepler, the Fish and Wildlife Service agent whose single-minded aim was to bring the former to justice. -- Jason Kirk From Publishers Weekly Albino pythons, endangered lizards and other reptiles are the currency of an underworld as dangerous and lucrative as the drug trade. Freelance writer Christy's debut is an enthusiastic but scattered chronicle of the rise and fall of a lizard kingpin and the federal agent who pursued him. Mike Van Nostrand inherited Strictly Reptiles, an import-export business in Florida, from his father, Ray, turning it into a multimillion-dollar smuggling operation. Van Nostrand imported reptiles of all shapes and sizes, usually concealed in the suitcases or clothing of his mules, and sold them to collectors and pet stores. He exploited loopholes in the international treaty on endangered-species trade and paid off corrupt officials. In the early 1990s, Fish and Wildlife Services agent Chip Bepler set his sights on Van Nostrand. After Bepler's years of surveillance and hard work, Van Nostrand was sentenced to eight months in prison, his export license revoked, and Strictly Reptiles was forced to pay $250,000 in fines to a wildlife fund. Christy's frenetic approach—bouncing from Mike's smuggling to young Ray catching snakes to the neglect of wildlife crime prosecution—is disorienting in what could have been a fascinating tale. (Aug. 1) "" Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved." From Booklist Who knew the world of reptile smuggling was so poisonous? In his first book, freelance magazine writer Christy focuses on one smuggler, Miami’s notorious Michael Van Nostrand (and his father, Raymond), and one lawman, Chip Bepler, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service special agent who dedicated his career to putting Van Nostrand away. Set in the mid-1990s, the story is reminiscent of the film version of Frank W. Abagnale’s Catch Me if You Can: the determined lawman, the flamboyant scofflaw (although Van Nostrand, unlike Abagnale, is thoroughly unlikable), the eventual showdown. Christy, a reptile aficionado who apparently did a lot of hands-on research for the book, takes us deep inside the world of the smuggler, laying out just how a Miami pet-shop owner gets his hands on rare and protected species and explaining the intricacies of U.S. and international laws that provide the smuggler with plenty of loopholes (you couldn’t prosecute someone merely for having smuggled animals, for example; you h