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Inspector who tried to rein in illegal logging was fired

HOUSTON (AP) - Rolando Navarro, still in his 30s, had no illusions when he took the top job in Peru's forest inspection agency in 2012. The country's timber industry had long been notoriously corrupt, with a World Bank report that year putting wood exports at 80 percent illegal.

In more than a decade crisscrossing the vast Amazon interior, Navarro had seen officials ignore the scourge and the exploitation of indigenous communities. His team of young, like-minded fellow Amazon natives thought they had the U.S. on their side.

Three years later, Navarro's scrappy inspectors scored a rare victory in the global battle to preserve tropical forests. Customs agents at the Port of Houston used evidence from Navarro's team to impound 1,770 metric tons of Peruvian Amazon wood from a rusty freighter. That's enough to cover three football fields.

But the triumph was short-lived. Navarro was later fired and quickly fled to the United States, hoping his team's work could continue if he kept a low profile.

A monthslong Associated Press investigation found that other government actions further undermined efforts to clean up Peru's timber industry, as required by a 2006 free trade agreement with the U.S.

A month after Navarro's dismissal, Peruvian prosecutors were thwarted trying to offload hundreds of tons of wood from the same freighter, the Yacu Kallpa, on the Amazon in Iquitos.

A forest inspectors' office was firebombed. Protesters set ablaze a coffin bearing Navarro's name. Death threats poured in, forcing Navarro's team to change phone numbers.

"It's organized crime," Navarro said. "I can say that with certainty because we'd been tracking it for years."

Inspections to detect criminal harvesting were scaled back. Prosecutions barely advanced, with only small-time players getting arrested. And officials who signed falsified logging permits remain on the job.

The U.S. government has little to show for more than $90 million in forest-management aid to Peru, which has annually been losing rainforest roughly half the size of Rhode Island.

American officials were hoodwinked into believing Peru was serious about taking down illegal loggers, said Rocky Piaggone, a U.S. attorney for environmental crimes who visited regularly before retiring last year.

"They were expecting to get prosecutions, but they got nothing," he said.

But a bigger loser may be Navarro, now 41, who consults for the Center for International Environmental Law in Washington, D.C., where he's lived while his entire family - including four children - is in Peru.

"I don't know when I'm going to be able to return," he said. "It's something quite powerful and difficult. I really miss my family."

The unassuming son of a civil servant, Navarro is quick to smile and has a quiet passion for social causes including defending indigenous communities and easing poverty.

Raised in the jungle city of Tarapoto, he spent childhood weekends on a patch outside town where the family grew corn and raised hogs.

They sold it in the early 1990s, when Shining Path rebels were terrorizing the nation and Navarro was getting his resource management degree in Tingo Maria near the cradle of the global cocaine trade.

Illegal logging thrives, Navarro said, because most forest-dwellers have no access to credit. Unable to go into business themselves, they are easy pawns in the trade. And resisting illegal loggers rarely ends well.

In September 2014, activist Edwin Chota and three others were killed after trying to expel rogue loggers from their community's lands. The lone imprisoned suspect was released last year.

In Peru, all lumber is supposed to come from approved harvesting areas. But prosecutors say regional forestry officials, for a price, have for years signed off on paperwork that falsely represented wood pilfered from protected lands as coming from legal plots.

On tracts where 95,000 trees worth at least $53 million were supposedly harvested, Navarro's inspectors found virgin forest.

The U.S. has pressed for years for the prompt sanctioning of Peruvian officials who falsify permits - and for an electronic timber tracking system. It's still waiting.

Navarro said he routinely provided Peru's forest service with the names of officials who committed permit fraud, but the agency barely took action.

The forest service's new director, John Leigh, had just received a comprehensive list of more than 100 such officials when the AP interviewed him in February.

He said he was "initiating the process of sanctions."

Enforcement had already eroded.

Aggressive, targeted inspections ended with Navarro's ouster, and a drone fleet was among improvements sidelined. Inspection requirements were eased, making it more complicated for Peruvian customs officials to determine the origin of timber exports.

Peru's government defended the Houston shipment.

In a letter, its foreign trade minister told then-U.S. Trade Representative Michael Froman that the load complied with the country's "formal legal requirements" and neither the government nor the exporters knew more than 95 percent of the wood was of illegal origin until after the Yacu Kallpa set sail.

The last of the lumber impounded in Houston was destroyed in March, bulldozed into a landfill. The seven importers involved reached a no-fault settlement with U.S. customs and had to pay for storage and disposal.

Seventy percent of the lumber belonged to Mexican-owned Global Plywood and Lumber Trading LLC, which had its San Diego County offices searched last year as part of a criminal investigation for possibly violating a 2008 federal law that makes trafficking in illegally harvested timber a felony. Its U.S. representative refused comment.

Another importer, Jim Reader of Downes & Reader Hardwood Co. of Stoughton, Massachusetts, said his company only bought wood from legal sources in Peru. He said the business lost $250,000 on the deal.

"I'm all done with Peru."

___

Follow Frank Bajak on Twitter: http://twitter.com/fbajak .

FILE - In this March 17, 2015 file photo, Ashaninka Indian men, identified by locals as illegal loggers, tie tree trunks together to move them along the Putaya River near the hamlet of Saweto, Peru. Ashaninka activist Edwin Chota, a vocal foe of illegal logging, and three other men were slain nearby in 2014. Prosecutors blame rogue lumberjacks but the lone suspect arrested was released in 2016. The World Bank says some 80 percent of Peru’s timber exports are illegally harvested. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia) The Associated Press
In this Wednesday, Sept. 21, 2016 photo, nearly 1,770 tons of Peruvian wood, nearly all of it found to have been illegally harvested in the Amazon rainforest, sits under tarps dockside at The Port of Houston. It was denied entry by U.S. Customs in October 2015 and was destroyed more than a year later in a non-fault administrative settlement. At least one importer fell under federal criminal investigation. The lumber is Exhibit A in the fight to preserve tropical forests, a vital buffer against climate change. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip) The Associated Press
In this Feb. 20, 2017 photo, a Peruvian forest service agent looks at documentation for wood from the Amazon arriving at the port of Callao, Peru. For years, the U.S. has been pressing for an electronic timber tracking system and for prompt sanctions for illegal logging. U.S. and Peruvian customs and law enforcement officials say real reform can begin only by purging officials who have falsified permits _ a task that’s up to the forest service. But inspections to detect criminal timber harvesting operations were scaled back. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia) The Associated Press
This 1993 photo provided by Rolando Navarro shows him as a student at the Agricultural National University of the Jungle of Tingo Maria, carrying samples for a project funded by the Peruvian Amazon Investigation Institute. Navarro was raised in the Amazon city of Tarapoto and got his renewable resource management degree in the early 1990s in the eastern Andean foothills at Tingo Maria, the cradle of the cocaine trade, during the country’s vicious conflict with fanatical Shining Path rebels. (Courtesy Rolando Navarro via AP) The Associated Press
This 2013 photo provided by Rolando Navarro, the ousted former director of Peru’s forest inspection service, shows him at the Jenaro Herrera Center for Investigations in Iquitos, Peru, leading a training session. An Amazon native, Navaro had, when named to the job a year earlier, criss-crossed the vast region for more than a decade, observing extensive illegal logging. (Courtesy Rolando Navarro via AP) The Associated Press
Former Peruvian Forest inspection agency chief Rolando Navarro poses for a photo at the Mall in Washington, Saturday, April 1, 2017. Navarro attained a rare victory against illegal logging _ the world’s No. 1 environmental crime, according to the U.N. _ only to be summarily dismissed in January 2016, when he fled for safety reasons into U.S. exile. He has applied for political asylum. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) The Associated Press
Former Peruvian Forest inspection agency chief Rolando Navarro poses for a photo near the Capitol building in Washington on Saturday, April 1, 2017. Navarro attained a rare victory against illegal logging _ the world’s No. 1 environmental crime, according to the U.N. _ only to be summarily dismissed in January 2016, when he fled for safety reasons into U.S. exile. He has applied for political asylum. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana) The Associated Press
FILE - This March 16, 2015 file photo shows where Ashaninka Indians live in hamlets, along the Putaya River, in Peru's Ucayali department. Ashaninka activist Edwin Chota, a strident foe of illegal logging, was among four men slain in September 2014, in a crime prosecutors blame on rogue loggers who invaded their community. The World Bank says 80 percent of Peru’s timber exports are illegal. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia) The Associated Press
In this Dec. 15, 2016 photo provided by Immigration and Customs Enforcement, U.S. customs officials destroy a batch of tropical lumber at a landfill in Houston, after 1,770 metric tons of it was held at docks for more than a year on evidence it was illegally harvested in Peru. The amount in the seizure was enough to cover three football fields. The importers paid the storage and disposal fees as part of a no-fault administrative settlement. The wood's impoundment was a pyrrhic victory in Washington's efforts to get Peru to clean up its notoriously corrupt timber industry. (ICE via AP) The Associated Press
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