Yeck Art
Switzer Fellowship Essay
February 1, 2009
| My passion for wildlife conservation has only intensified with age. While I loved active duty Naval Intelligence work, targeting terrorists and dismantling international drug trafficking cartels, my heart was in endangered species preservation. Animals have no audible voice. Their lobbying skills need work. They can use a good attorney. I wanted to be their voice, and champion their cause. As an Intelligence
Officer for a squadron of F/A-18 fighter pilots, I prepared their target
folders, enemy air combat tactics briefs, and escape and evade plans.
I became General Wesley Clark’s Daily Briefer, then a Special
Assistant to the Director of Intelligence. I advised ambassadors on
counterdrug strategies, fused intelligence on Al Qaeda detainees and
prepared assessments for the White House Office of General Counsel.
It was exhilarating work, but I always wondered who was looking out
for imperiled species. September 11th introduced a slight detour. I was immediately recalled to active duty military service, analyzing worldwide weapons-for-drugs trafficking routes and methods, exposing increased links between transnational trafficking and terrorism. It was then that I began to notice the nexus between arms traders and black market animal traders. My first published article became the template for follow-on reports in Southern Command’s 33-nation theater of operations. I was selected to run the annual Arms Trafficking Conference, at which the UN Regional Center for Peace, Disarmament, and Development offered me a full-time position. I politely turned them down. When my recall to active duty military service was complete, I was going to become a wildlife law enforcement officer. I accepted
a 65 percent pay cut from my Navy salary and entered the Florida Fish
and Wildlife Conservation Commission’s (FWC) Law Enforcement Training
Academy, one of 43 recruits selected from nearly 1,300 applicants. It
was like being in military boot camp all over again. With no previous
hunting, fishing, or boating experience, I mustered a #3 of 41 ranking
at graduation, based on academic performance, leadership, physical fitness,
marksmanship, and field skills. I was assigned to Marine Patrol in the
Florida Keys Special Conservation Area, and was on my way to catching
poachers. After having been a veterinary technician assistant, land use law office volunteer, wildlife rehabilitation volunteer, and game warden, I had finally winnowed a plethora of possible paths to the practice of law as the most powerful in terms of effecting real change. Upon relocating to California for law school and affiliating with a new Navy Reserve unit, however, I was charged with implementing a classified program in direct support of the National Intelligence Strategy. Though the effort consumed an inordinate amount precious school time, my team did exceptionally well, and our unit won the coveted O’Connell Award in 2008 -- presented to the top Reserve Intelligence Unit in the country. I am now responsible for overseeing and supporting six detachments in the Western US, and continue to confer with national agencies and the Africa Partnership Station on Maritime Domain Awareness in Africa. Sometimes it is difficult to find time for my studies. Several attorneys with whom I have drilled in two different units admitted that they took time off from the Navy Reserve during law school, due its demanding time commitment. Asked to lead the Animal Law Society, I somehow have found time for its important initiatives as well, and those of the Veterans Law and Environmental Law Societies. Committed to finding a holistic solution to the Earth’s species extinction crisis, I flew to Brasilia last year on my spring break to meet with the Brazilian National Police and the in-country head of Interpol, to learn more about the nation's successes and failures in combating the black market trade in animal trafficking. Having traveled to over 60 countries, I have been exposed to the enforcement challenges intrinsic to the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). I am familiar with resource management concerns confronting both the developed and developing world, from urban planning, carbon emissions, and sustainable development, to slash-and-burn farming, the bushmeat crisis, and desertification. Wherever my passions lead me, I endeavor to establish contacts with an eye toward implementing my long term plan: influencing environmental policy on a global scale, authoring stricter wildlife protection legislation, and conducting capacity building exercises with partner nations in order to enforce compliance with such laws. The more dire the predictions become about the future of imperiled flora and fauna on this Earth, the more intensely committed I become to protecting them. I will not be daunted by the sheer magnitude of the predicament our planet faces. The deeper I delve into opportunities available to environmental attorneys to mend the ecological mess, the more excited I am about putting a law degree to use. I would like to parlay the invitation to work with the UN Disarmament Program into a call to lead the UN Environmental Program. I have monitored international elections, been an integral part of petroleum infrastructure security, and collaborated with partner nation militaries on their support for democratic institutions and the rule of law. I joined UCLA’s Leaders In Sustainability program because I intend to translate such experience into fostering a collective commitment to harness alternative energy sources. I would like to capitalize on my experience with unmanned aerial vehicles to detect illicit logging, monitor illegal, unregulated, and unreported (IUU) fishing, and preclude poaching in remote wilderness sanctuaries. I have conferred with the Legal Officer from the UN’s Division of Environmental Policy Implementation about organizing special tribunals for prosecuting wildlife crime in Africa. I have spoken to the Intelligence Officer from the Lusaka Agreement Task Force (an extension of CITES) about training for prosecutors in the Congo and Uganda. I see every interaction and challenge as an opportunity to craft one more piece of the puzzle’s solution. Attorney and former Ambassador to the Soviet Union Robert Strauss likened success to wrestling a gorilla: “You don’t quit when you’re tired. You quit when the gorilla is tired.” There are only a handful of mountain gorillas left on the planet. We must not tire. Never before has conservationists’ endurance meant more to guaranteeing the continued existence of endangered species. I would have liked to have met Robert Switzer. Like him, I suffered permanent eye damage as a youth, a blowout fracture only partially corrected by surgery, entirely terminable with respect to the musings I entertained about becoming an aviator or astronaut. I found comfort in art, and eventually discovered the fluorescent Day-Glo paints Mr. Switzer helped invent. I have used them in some of the conservation art pieces on www.yeckart.com, and will now more fully appreciate their creator and origin. I illustrated a children’s book last year (“Homer, A Baseball’s Life”, still at the publisher) and am discussing similar work and ideas with Giggling Gorilla Productions. Though I was immensely disappointed that, as a finalist for Animal Planet’s King of the Jungle 2 in 2004, I was precluded from attending the final audition due to attendance requirements at the wildlife law enforcement academy, the founder of the World Consciousness Center believes it was for the best. We have now met twice, and she is interested in working with me on a feature film documenting the dangers of undercover wildlife officers’ investigative work in penetrating the black market trade in endangered species. Your guidelines state that "only the most active, committed, and focused individuals" will be competitive Switzer Fellowship candidates. I am not sure it is possible to be more active, committed, or laser-focused than I am regarding worldwide biodiversity conservation. A Switzer Fellowship would help me keep the dream, and vanishing species, alive. I believe that from whom much has been given, much may be expected, and I would relish collaborating with former Fellowship recipients such as Amber Pairis and Emil McCain on their initiatives. I would appreciate taking part in Switzer Affinity Groups, to deliberate and move forward with the conservation finance proposals of Brad Timm and Chris Larson, in accordance with the Switzer vision. I am not sure where my dream will take me, but I know that it is much more important where I take my dream. I would carry Mr. Switzer’s vision with me as a Fellowship recipient, with not only the hope, but the capacity to convert that hope into action, to protect our planet’s precious but imperiled species. Thank you for considering my application. |
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