Inside the bizarre case that led the DOJ to repatriate seven boa constrictors to Brazil
On Wednesday, the United States Department of Justice announced that a “years-long international saga” has finally come to a close, with the repatriation of seven Brazilian boa constrictors to their home country. Let me repeat: a “years-long international saga.”
This particular boa constrictor saga began with the discovery of a rare snake, a wild, leucistic (nearly albino) boa constrictor, in the forests of Brazil. That snake was taken to the Brazilian Niterói Zoo, and dubbed “Diamond Princess,” or just “Lucy.”
Fast forward to 2009. A number of animal deaths at the privately-owned zoo prompt an investigation. Laurel Neme wrote in National Geographic last year that when the zoo was subsequently shuttered by the country’s National Environment Agency (IBAMA) in 2011, the rare snake was nowhere to be found:
IBAMA agents questioned the zoo’s administrator, Giselda Candiotto, who said she’d taken the boa home and that it had died. IBAMA agents doubted her claims… Niterói Zoo’s veterinarian confirmed that he’d cared for the snake for a year at Candiotto’s house but that one day she said not to come because it had died. He said he should have done a necropsy, but he never saw the dead snake’s body.
Brazilian officials doubted that the snake was actually dead. It made more sense to them that Lucy was instead in the U.S., in the hands one Jeremy Stone — a snake breeder who was lovingly showcasing a suspiciously-similar looking snake on YouTube:
Stone wanted to use the snake to breed others that would carry the leucism gene, and appear as unique as the Brazilian boa constrictor. He said on his website that the rare snake he’d gotten hold of was not the same as the one that had disappeared from the Niterói Zoo.