CRITICALLY endangered eels recovered from a multi-million pound smuggling ring have found a new home.

Inspectors from Cefas’ Fish Health Inspectorate (FHI) have uncovered and subsequently prosecuted a seafood trader who had smuggled around 5.3 million critically endangered European eels from Spain, through the UK and on to East Asia over a two-year period.

The FHI, based at Cefas’ Weymouth laboratory, are the competent authority for the detection and prevention of serious and notifiable disease in aquatic animals in England and Wales. They also regulate and monitor trade, and through this role first became suspicious of the business practices of Gilbert Khoo.

A three-year investigation saw the FHI working closely with the UK Border Force and National Crime Agency (NCA), which led to the conviction.

On February 15, 2017, specialist Border Force officers seized a consignment of 200kg of juvenile European eels (often known as glass eels), worth at least £5.7 million on the black market, at Heathrow Airport. They were destined for Hong Kong.

Cefas inspectors then took charge of the animals and took them to Weymouth Sea Life Centre, where they were cared for by the aquarists there until the FHI were able to repatriate the eels to Spain for release back into the wild.

Khoo had been importing eels from Spain and repackaging them at a barn in Gloucester before exporting again. Investigators estimate that in two years Khoo exported or had attempted to export 1,775 kilos of eels with an estimated value of £53 million on the East Asian black market, where they are considered a delicacy. These eels are an endangered species and there are strict legal controls on their export.

In the first prosecution of its kind in the UK, Khoo was found guilty on February 7, 2020, at Southwark Crown Court, on six counts under the Trade in Animals and Related Products Regulations 2011 and evasion of a prohibition or restriction on the export of goods.

He was sentenced on Friday to 24 months imprisonment, suspended for two years, and will be required to undertake 240 hours of community service.

The FHI were key in compiling evidence leading to the prosecution with Cefas’ Jon Hulland and Debbie Murphy being cross examined as witnesses during the court case.

Enforcement and Investigations inspector Jon Hulland said: “This is a landmark case for us and will send an extremely strong message to the criminal fraternity that the Fish Health Inspectorate will take action against anyone who is found to have acted in defiance of the law.

"The risk to our country’s aquatic animal health posed by illegal trade such as this cannot be underestimated. In this case the severity of the offence is compounded by the fact that the trade is in a critically endangered species.

“By taking an intelligence led approach to our enforcement work and regularly collaborating with partner agencies such Border Force and the NCA, we have ensured that this environmental crime will not go unpunished.

“It was an added bonus that we were able to repatriate this critically endangered species by working closely with colleagues in the Spanish Authorities and UK Border Force.”