“The rocky highlands of Central Asia, in a remote
region of Western Mongolia, are home to a plummeting population of the largest
sheep in the world, the argali. The endangered species is beloved for its giant
curving horns, which can run over 6 feet in length.
“On a hunting trip this August, Donald Trump Jr.
shot and killed one.
“His adventure was supported by government resources
from both the U.S. and Mongolia, which each sent security services to accompany
the president’s eldest son and grandson on the multi-day trip. It also thrust
Trump Jr. directly into the controversial world of Mongolian trophy hunting — a
polarizing practice in a country that views the big-horned rams as a national
treasure. The right to kill an argali is controlled by an opaque permitting
system that experts say is mostly based on money, connections and politics.
“Trump Jr. received special treatment during his
summer trip, according to records obtained by ProPublica as well as interviews
with people involved in the hunt. Listen to the episode.
“The Mongolian government granted Trump Jr. a
coveted and rare permit to slay the animal retroactively on Sept. 2, after he’d
left the region following his trip. It’s unusual for permits to be issued after
a hunter’s stay. It was one of only three permits to be issued in that hunting
region, local records show.
“Afterward, Trump Jr. met privately with the
country’s president, Khaltmaagiin Battulga, before departing the capital of
Ulaanbaatar back to the U.S., according to Khuantai Khafezyn, a local
government official in the region where Trump Jr. hunted the argali and a
former government official with knowledge of the meeting. It isn’t clear what
was discussed. Trump Jr. wouldn’t answer questions about the meeting.
Representatives for Battulga haven’t responded to requests for comment.
“‘What are the chances the Mongolian government
would’ve done any of that to someone who wasn’t the son of the United States’
president?’ asked Kathleen Clark, a professor specializing in legal ethics at
Washington University in St. Louis School of Law. She said that though Trump
Jr. is not a government employee, he’s nonetheless politically influential,
incentivizing foreign officials such as the Mongolian leader to treat him
favorably out of a ‘desire on the part of a foreign government to curry favor
with the president’s family.’”
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