国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Andrea Crosta photographs a totoaba swim bladder, which fishermen sell to traffickers for about $3,500 each.
Andrea Crosta photographs a totoaba swim bladder, which fishermen sell to traffickers for about $3,500 each. (Photo: Terra Mater Factual Studios/Rich)

Cartels, Spies, and the Last Days of the Vaquita

A new documentary, 'Sea of Shadows,' highlights the work of Andrea Crosta, whose team infiltrates cartels and gangs to fight illegal wildlife trafficking around the world

Published: 
Image
(Photo: Terra Mater Factual Studios/Rich)

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

鈥淚t鈥檚 like love,鈥 Andrea Crosta says, looking over the Pacific as an early mist parts and the California sun creeps between clouds. The 49-year-old motions to Argos, his听pit-Lab rescue from Tijuana, Mexico, named after the dog in The Odyssey, and they turn down the jetty. 鈥淲hen people ask why I care [about endangered species], I tell them it鈥檚 like love,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey have a right to exist.鈥

I can鈥檛 say where exactly we are, because Crosta鈥檚 work has made him more than a few enemies. As the founder of the , he鈥檚 spent the last five years infiltrating and surveilling networks in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, where he and a team of , informants, and law-enforcement partners听investigate wildlife crimes. Using hidden cameras and digital eavesdropping, he鈥檚 exposed the link between听 to support jihads, found Chinese , and gathered evidence that influenced how wildlife traffickers are prosecuted听 and .

To say this isn鈥檛 the norm in buttoned-up academia is a colossal understatement. In 2013, after two decades in the shadow world of security鈥攑rotecting ships from Somali pirates and consulting with governments鈥攈e started the EAL. His work eventually caught听the attention of Hollywood heavyweights like Leonardo DiCaprio, who executive produced his 2016 documentary, ,a look inside the world of elephant poaching in East听Africa.Crosta鈥檚 new film, which was financed by听听and听recently debuted at Sundance, is even more ambitious. Sea of Shadows听depicts the last days of the world鈥檚 rarest and smallest dolphin, the vaquita, and the role of Mexican cartels and Chinese mafia in its imminent extinction. Vaquitas happen to live in the same waters as another lucrative and endangered catch, the totoaba. As cartel-supported poachers in the Sea of Cortez hunt totoaba with massive nets, they incidentally catch vaquita, which numbered less than 30 as of 2016. Sea of Shadows听follows Crosta and his team as they go undercover, exposing the corruption throughout Baja California that鈥檚 led to violence and crime beyond wildlife.

Andrea Crosta.
Andrea Crosta. (Terra Mater Factual Studios/Rich)

Crosta takes viewers to Mexico, where we follow a government-supported vaquita rescue that ultimately fails. We learn alongside Crosta鈥檚 team how the totoabatrade mirrors drug networks in sophistication and value. Wildlife crime is often just one touchpoint of organized crime, Crosta says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all about money.鈥

The film centers on the small Mexican town of San Felipe. Since local fishermen cannot legally work due to a government 听to restore marine environments, they鈥檙e forced to do the bidding of , a fish that looks sort of like a bass on steroids. More specifically, the poachers are after the fish鈥檚听swim bladder, the organ that keeps the fish听buoyant. When dried, it sells听for up to $100,000 a kilogram听in China, where it鈥檚 a delicacy for the wealthy, believed to have medicinal qualities.

In this part of northern Mexico, fishermen get around $3,500 per totoaba, which is then sold for $5,000 to traffickers, who resell it听to Chinese traders for $7,000 to $8,000. Traders work in safe houses and often dry听the swim bladders by placing them between laundry-drying machines. When ready for export, the bladders travel听via air routes and transit hubs like Japan, Hong Kong, or Vietnam. Individual smugglers might pack them in checked suitcases to听avoid airport controls听or load them听onto cargo ships, tucked in containers marked as legal seafood.听In 2015, a shipment of 1,200 pounds of totoaba was seized in Venezuela on its way to the States. Over 800 totoaba swim bladders were , valued at $16 million. In December, 听worth of totoaba.

Because fishing nets run $4,000 each, cartels bankroll them, a debt poor fishermen work off by catching totoaba. They know that this work is killing other species, most notably the vaquita, but there are few听economic options and almost zero police intervention. Crosta detailed the whole process in a 100-page , which included video footage of a top poacher killing a Mexican marine with an AK-47 on a San Felipe street. It鈥檚 dangerous territory, and the film reflects that. Groups of locals battle the poachers by cutting their nets and freeing lifeless vaquitas, which generally weigh about 90 pounds and are听so rare that scientists know next to nothing about them.听

Crosta calls his work with vaquitas听鈥渆xtinction in real time. When you have the involvement of Chinese traffickers and narco traffickers, you have much more than a conservation problem.鈥

A vaquita.
A vaquita. (Terra Mater Factual Studios/Rich)

Director Richard Ladkani told me he was nervous for the safety of his 12 filmmakers. 鈥淚 was responsible for the crew, so the hardest part was assessing the daily threat level.鈥澨齃adkani also shot The Ivory Game,听but said听Sea of Shadows听was an even more dangerous experience. While he spent a year embedding with investigators, fishermen, and scientists, he had to hire armed bodyguards听and at one point听was caught in a violent mob between locals and Mexican marines over an arrest of illegal fishermen. The melee became so dangerous鈥攁nd the mob so big, with around 300 people鈥攖hat the marines ended up abandoning their position and their injured colleagues. They freed听prisoners and retreated听as they shot live rounds to disperse the crowd, who were throwing rocks and boarding navy vessels with impunity.

鈥淚t was a real clusterfuck,鈥 remembers Marc Davis, a former FBI agent with 30 years of undercover experience, a key to Crosta鈥檚 operational safety and strategy. 鈥淥ne thing I鈥檝e found dealing with civilians, I think some people don鈥檛 realize the 鈥極h shit鈥 situations.鈥

Many times during the shoot, Ladkani told me, he didn鈥檛 think he could听pull off the film. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 sure if we were ever going to see a vaquita.鈥澨齌hat was in question because vaquitas have never before been filmed in the wild, and, until now, they鈥檝e听only been found dead. But before San Felipe became untenable, Ladkani did manage to film what he claims is the first video of a living vaquita. Sadly, that animal suddenly died during a failed capture, an emotional moment caught on celluloid.

That鈥檚 the kind of film this is鈥攐ne step forward, three back鈥攁 documentary-cum-spy flick with handheld point-of-view shots听that make you feel like you鈥檙e there. The team is听onboard a 听boat when activists are chased by poachers as apathetic armed marines look on; they鈥檙e with destitute pescaderos speaking in hushed tones about the cartel;听they鈥檙e reporting with Mexican journalist , a premier听reporter for Televisa who has spent the last few years asking authorities hard questions.听鈥淭he movie is going to be a boost to the issue,鈥 reckons Loret, who told me he received so many death threats that he had to travel by bulletproof car.听

With at least 42 journalists killed in Mexico in 2017, it鈥檚 one of the most dangerous countries for the press. Like Crosta, Loret took a major risk to get the story to his viewers, which number 35 million daily. His role in the film, he said, was to find out听鈥淲ho is the El Chapo of totoaba?鈥澨鼿e traveled听to San Felipe, sparring with locals who question the existence of vaquitas and deplore the fact that they can鈥檛 legally work. It鈥檚 this very irony that Loret calls a solvable problem鈥攊f there鈥檚 political will. 鈥淭he University of Baja has totaba farms. If you provide totoabas legally, you can control the whole thing and create a legal market. That would be an easy way out.鈥

But the only way to get this issue to the fore, Crosta and his team contend, is by taking major risks themselves.听听听

鈥淪cientists cannot do law enforcement,鈥 Crosta states over a double espresso back in Southern California. 鈥淚f you give responsibility to scientists, of course they cannot do much. For the government, it鈥檚 an environmental problem, but it鈥檚 not anymore. The problem is criminal in nature.鈥

Crosta calls this a conservation failure that even , with implications beyond Mexico.听If you can make 100 times what you would fishing legally, and you can鈥檛 fish legally, what would you do?听鈥淭hey keep hitting and hitting the fishermen, and most of them are very poor people, so they鈥檙e almost being forced to become poachers,鈥 he says. 鈥淭his is the last chance we have. I don鈥檛 think the vaquita will last another totoaba season.鈥

The world鈥檚 population of vaquitas听has dropped 40 percent听annually since the 2016 official count of 30. By that math, there could be fewer than ten left. Mexico鈥檚 government 听in late 2017. In December 2018, to the new president to ban the possession of illegal gill nets but enforcement remains scant.

, who leads marine-mammal conservation for Mexico鈥檚 听and appears in the film, confirmed there could be as few as seven听to ten. But he wouldn鈥檛 give me a number as an assessment is ongoing.听Formally , he adds, takes years. 鈥淚f they stop killing vaquitas, they will recover. Here we are at the last minute, a quarter to midnight, trying to do everything possible.鈥

Back in California, Crosta gets me up to speed where the film leaves off: his scope has expanded to Hong Kong and China, while the Sea Shepherd crew听and some听 are still pulling illegal totoaba听nets, removing 800 to date. But as in the film, there have been other steps in the wrong direction: a fishermen who was interviewed was murdered for not paying debts, he says soberly. And in Crosta鈥檚 own personal life鈥攎oney, marriages, friends鈥攖here have听been many sacrifices.听

Recently there鈥檚 of听, the El Chapo听of totoaba听who听Loret听and Crosta听were looking for, and Mexico has opened a criminal investigation against the Chinese traffickers cited. But听with totoaba season beginning now and lasting into the spring, by the time the film reaches audiences, it may be too late to rally the international community, Crosta says grimly. 鈥淭he problem is that this story takes too long. The right time is now, but it will take months for distribution. We鈥檒l broadcast at the end of the totaba season, and by then, there may be no vaquita left. It鈥檚 a pity.鈥

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online