In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Seventh Circuit
____________
No. 03-4075
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
WILLIAM R. KAPP,
Defendant-Appellant.
____________
Appeal from the United States District Court for
the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
No. 02 CR 418—Blanche M. Manning, Judge.
____________
ARGUED FEBRUARY 22, 2005—DECIDED AUGUST 19, 2005
____________
Before KANNE, WOOD, and SYKES, Circuit Judges.
KANNE, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted William Kapp for
multiple violations of the Endangered Species Act and the
Lacey Act connected with the killing of, and trafficking in,
endangered tigers and leopards and their meat, hides, and
other parts. On appeal, Kapp claims he is entitled to a new
trial because the evidence at trial was insufficient to
support the jury’s verdict and the district court erroneously
admitted certain evidence. Kapp also argues that the
manner in which he was sentenced violated the Sixth
Amendment. We conclude, however, that there was suffi-
cient evidence to support the jury’s verdict on all counts,
2 No. 03-4075
and the district court did not err in its evidentiary ruling.
We therefore affirm Kapp’s conviction, but order a limited
remand to determine whether Kapp should be resentenced
in light of United States v. Booker, 125 S. Ct. 738 (2005).
I. Background
Many people enjoy or support hunting, and many do not.
But surely most everyone could agree that the actions of
William Kapp were detestable. From 1997 to 1999, Kapp
and others purchased, killed, transported, and sold numer-
ous exotic animals, including tigers and leopards, which are
protected under the Endangered Species Act, 16 U.S.C.
§§ 1531, et seq. Kapp and the others did not hunt any of
these animals in the wild. Instead, they shot the animals
while they were helplessly confined, sometimes even posing
afterwards for safari-style photographs with the carcasses.
Kapp made thousands of dollars selling the meat, hides,
and other parts of the animals, until the United States Fish
& Wildlife Service (“USFWS”) caught wind of these ac-
tivities. The USFWS then executed “Operation Snowplow,”
an undercover sting operation leading to the arrest and
conviction of Kapp and his co-conspirators. The following
facts came to light at Kapp’s trial.
A. Kapp’s Killing of, and Trafficking in, Endangered
Animals
Kapp was an Illinois corrections officer and taxidermist
by trade. Kapp and his friend and fellow taxidermist Kevin
Ramsey became involved in the purchase and sale of exotic
animals in August 1997. Ramsey had heard that Steven
Galecki, an exotic animal distributor, wanted to sell off
some of his inventory of exotic cats. Ramsey relayed the
information to Kapp, whose taxidermy clientele included
wealthier potential buyers. Kapp contacted one of his taxi-
No. 03-4075 3
dermy clients, Dr. Robert Martinez, who expressed interest
in purchasing some of the animals for the purpose of
mounting and displaying them in his home.
Kapp and Ramsey met with Galecki at his business,
Funky Monkey Exotics, in Crete, Illinois. Galecki was
properly licensed with the USDA to keep and exhibit exotic
animals. But because of “difficulties” with the USDA,
Galecki could no longer afford to keep the animals. Galecki
was offering for sale two African lions, several mountain
lions, and two black spotted leopards. Kapp expressed in-
terest in the animals but was concerned because the
leopards were listed as endangered and Kapp did not have
the appropriate license to possess such animals. Galecki
assured Kapp that donations of endangered species were
not prohibited, so the federally required transfer paperwork
could be marked “donation” to make the transaction appear
legal.
On August 7, 1997, Kapp, Ramsey, and Martinez went to
the Funky Monkey to see and purchase the cats. Galecki
informed Martinez of the plan to fudge the USDA forms to
make the transaction appear legal. Thus assured, Martinez
used Ramsey’s handgun to shoot both lions, one mountain
lion, and one of the leopards, while the animals were
confined in their pens. Kapp and the others dragged the
carcasses into a field and posed for staged photographs.
Martinez paid about $5500 for the hides of the animals he
shot, and Galecki filled out a USDA Form 7020 to reflect
that the animals had been “donated” to Martinez. Galecki
also told Kapp and the others that he could acquire other
animals, including tigers, for the men.
Kapp, Ramsey, and Galecki took the carcasses to Czimer’s
Game and Seafoods, Inc., owned by Richard Czimer, an
exotic meats dealer. There, they skinned and weighed the
carcasses. Galecki sold all but the leopard meat to Czimer,
although the evidence indicated that Czimer offered to pur-
4 No. 03-4075
chase the leopard meat, too. Czimer paid $2392.50 for the
meat (about $3.00 per pound). Czimer recorded the trans-
action as a purchase of “lions.” Kapp tanned, mounted, and
delivered the leopard hide to Martinez.
True to his word, Galecki later found two Bengal tigers
for Kapp and Martinez. Martinez agreed to purchase one of
the tigers and advanced $2000 for that purpose. Kapp
convinced another client, David Woldman, to purchase the
second tiger for $2500 up front, and an additional $2000
after delivery of the mounted animal.
Kapp, Martinez, and Woldman traveled to the Funky
Monkey to purchase the tigers. As before, the animals were
shot while confined, and Galecki falsified USDA transfer
documents to reflect that live animals had been donated to
Marinez and Woldman. The men posed for photographs
with the animal carcasses. Kapp and Galecki brought the
carcasses to Czimer’s, where they were skinned, weighed,
and sold. Kapp mounted a tiger hide and later delivered it
to Woldman, per their arrangement.
By early 1998, Galecki departed the exotic animal busi-
ness, so Kapp was forced to look elsewhere for a source. He
found one in Todd “Squirrel” Lantz, a wildlife dealer in
Missouri. Lantz offered to sell Kapp one Siberian and three
Bengal tigers at the price of $1000 apiece. Kapp arranged
to sell two of the tiger hides to George Riley, a Michigan
businessman. Kapp also offered Riley hides from a black
spotted leopard and two lions. Riley expressed concerns
about the legality of the sale, but Kapp assured him that
the hides could be “donated.” Riley then gave Kapp an ad-
vance of $10,500 for all of the hides.
In February, Kapp and Ramsey brought a trailer to
Lantz’s ranch in Missouri. There, Kapp shot and killed the
tigers while they were confined in the trailer. He paid Lantz
for the tigers with part of the money fronted by Riley. Kapp
and Ramsey skinned and cleaned the tigers while en route
No. 03-4075 5
back to Illinois. As before, the men sold the meat to
Czimer’s. In May 1998, per the arrangement, Kapp de-
livered to Riley hides from the two tigers, a leopard, and
two lions.
In March 1998, Lantz delivered Kapp nine tigers and two
lions. Kapp and Ramsey selected the eight largest tigers,
but rejected the two lions and the remaining small tiger. At
Kapp’s suggestion, they slaughtered the eight tigers in an
Alsip, Illinois, warehouse owned by Ramsey’s family. Again,
Kapp sold the meat to Czimer’s. As to the hides, however,
Kapp’s luck finally took a turn for the worse. Robert Hetzel,
one of Kapp’s prospective buyers, contacted the USFWS to
check the legality of the tiger hide purchase, likely alerting
the agency to Kapp’s activities. The agency responded that
the transaction would not be legal, so Hetzel and several
other prospective buyers backed out.
In the meantime, Lantz asked Sherry Roche, an animal
dealer in southern Illinois, if she would house the two lions
and the small tiger that Kapp had rejected. Unbeknownst
to Lantz, Roche was cooperating with agents of the USFWS,
which had been investigating Galecki but were now watch-
ing Kapp, too. At the USFWS agents’ request, Roche agreed
to care for Lantz’s animals. Roche also agreed to inform
Kapp that buyers were interested in the animals.
On April 1, 1998, Kapp and Ramsey traveled to Roche’s
farm, where the two men killed the lions and the small tiger
while the animals were confined in a trailer. USFWS agents
secretly videotaped the killings and later collected remain-
ing blood and tissue samples. Kapp and Ramsey sold the
meat to Czimer’s and stored the hides at Kapp’s home.
Kapp gave Roche $3500, to be forwarded to Lantz.
Later that April, Kapp offered to sell a New Jersey inter-
ior decorator the skull and hide of one of the Bengal tigers
killed in March. Kapp assured the prospective buyer (who
actually was an undercover USFWS agent) that there were
6 No. 03-4075
“all sorts of little tricks” to work around laws restricting the
sale. The agent agreed to purchase the hide and skull. Kapp
dutifully sent the items and also asked Roche to prepare a
falsified Form 7020 indicating the donation of the tiger
skull and hide.
In May 1998, agents secretly recorded Kapp asking Roche
to prepare more false forms to cover Kapp’s prior sales of
tiger and leopard hides. At the direction of the agents,
Roche agreed. Kapp provided Roche with facts to be in-
cluded on the forms, including the species, cause of death,
and the names and addresses of the “donees.”
In June 1998, Kapp purchased a group of cats from
Stoney Elam, an Oklahoma animal dealer. By this time, the
agents were determined to stop the killing of any more
animals. At the agents’ request, Roche suggested to Kapp
that it would be more profitable to buy live animals and
breed them themselves. Kapp agreed. Roche picked up the
animals from Elam and returned them to her farm.
In early July, Riley expressed interest in purchasing a
black leopard hide. Kapp informed Roche of his intent to
kill one of the leopards they had purchased from Elam. At
the direction of the agents, Roche told Kapp that she al-
ready had a black leopard carcass in frozen storage that
Kapp could sell to his client instead of killing one of the live
animals. Kapp agreed, and on July 9, 1998, he picked up
the leopard carcass. Kapp also falsified forms indicating the
donation of one leopard to Riley. In August, at Riley’s
request, Kapp sent the leopard carcass to a taxidermist in
Michigan.
In October 1998, Kapp obtained from Lantz and Elam two
cougars, one tiger, and one “liger.”1 Kapp later sold the tiger
1
As its name suggests, a “liger” is a cross between a male lion
and a female tiger. Ligers do not occur naturally, so all known
(continued...)
No. 03-4075 7
hide to one of Riley’s associates, who had the hide mounted.
Other evidence indicated that Kapp sold meat from the
cougars, and possibly the liger, to Czimer’s. A month later,
Kapp was secretly recorded asking Roche to falsify a
transfer form reflecting donation of a tiger carcass to Riley’s
associate.
In the spring of 1999, one of the leopards kept at Roche’s
farm died of natural causes. Kapp offered to sell the leop-
ard’s hide to David Woldman, who agreed to the purchase.
Kapp sent the leopard hide and two tiger hides to a
New York tannery. This transaction would mark the end of
Kapp’s trade in protected animals and their parts.
In May 1999, USFWS agents raided and searched Kapp’s
home. Agents also raided the homes of Kapp’s associates.
Kapp quickly attempted to reduce his exposure to prosecu-
tion. For example, Kapp instructed Ramsey to withhold
information from the authorities. Kapp also tipped off
Woldman before the arrival of the USFWS agents.
Woldman destroyed incriminating photographs and the
mounted tiger in his possession and falsely told the agents
that he had not received a mounted tiger from Kapp.
Kapp’s damage control efforts came to naught—Operation
Snowplow was a success, leading to the arrests of Kapp and
some fifteen others in four different states. The government
1
(...continued)
ligers are in captivity. They apparently are a source of fascination
in popular culture. E.g., NAPOLEON DYNAMITE (Paramount
Pictures, 2004) (“It’s pretty much my favorite animal. It’s like a
lion and a tiger mixed . . . bred for its skills in magic.”). As
interspecies hybrids, ligers are not protected under U.S. wildlife
laws. Nor are the various other tiger/lion hybridizations, such as
the “ti-tigon” (offspring of a female tigon and male tiger) or the “ti-
liger” (offspring of a female liger and a male tiger). (Tr. 692-99.)
As discussed in greater detail below, hybrids—particularly
ligers—figure prominently in Kapp’s arguments on appeal.
8 No. 03-4075
confiscated numerous animal trophies, records, and other
evidence of illegal trafficking in endangered animals and
their parts.
B. Kapp’s Trial
On January 23, 2001, Kapp and six co-defendants2 were
charged in a 19-count indictment with conspiracy to violate
the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”) and the Lacey Act in
violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (count 1), with multiple vio-
lations of the ESA, 16 U.S.C. §§ 1538 and 1540, and with
multiple violations of the Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. § 3371.
Specifically, Kapp was charged with having violated the
ESA by knowingly and without permission (1) killing en-
dangered tigers and leopards within the United States
(counts 2, 7, 17, and 25), (2) transporting endangered tigers
in interstate commerce during the course of a commercial
activity (count 23), and (3) selling and offering to sell an
endangered leopard in interstate commerce (count 24).
Kapp was accused of violating the Lacey Act by (1) know-
ingly selling tigers and leopards and their parts having a
value exceeding $350, knowing that the animals and parts
were sold in violation of the ESA and related regulations
(counts 3, 5, 8, 11, 13, 14, 16, 18, 20, 21, and 26), and (2)
knowingly making and causing to be made false records
related to endangered tigers and leopards and their parts,
knowing that said animals and animal parts had been, or
were intended to be, transported in interstate commerce
(count 22).
Kapp moved to dismiss the indictment on the ground that
it failed to allege that the animals at issue were not “hybrid
crosses,” that the animals were captive, and that
§§ 1538(a)(1) and 1540(b)(1) of the ESA were void for vague-
2
Kapp’s co-defendants pleaded guilty pursuant to various plea
agreements.
No. 03-4075 9
ness for failing to clarify “at what point an animal loses its
endangered status.” The district court denied the motion,
and the case proceeded to an eight-day trial before a jury.
The government presented a sizable body of witness testi-
mony, including testimony from Kapp’s co-conspirators who
had pleaded guilty, USFWS agents and other witnesses,
and experts testifying as to the identity of the animals in
question. The government also presented substantial physi-
cal evidence—including documents, taped conversations,
photographs, hides, skulls, and even fully mounted tigers
and leopards—in support of its case against Kapp.
On April 3, 2003, the jury returned a verdict of guilty on
all counts but two (counts 5 and 25). On November 14,
2003, the court sentenced Kapp to a term of imprisonment
of 51 months, to be followed by a three-year term of super-
vised release. The court also ordered Kapp to pay a fine of
$5000 and to perform 300 hours of community service.
II. Discussion
On appeal, Kapp challenges the sufficiency of the evi-
dence supporting his conviction. He also takes issue with
the district court’s admission into evidence of mounted tigers
and leopards, claiming that it was unduly prejudicial and
improperly aroused the emotions of the jury. See Fed. R.
Evid. 403. Finally, Kapp seeks resentencing because, he
contends, the manner in which he was sentenced was
contrary to the Supreme Court’s holding in United States v.
Booker, 125 S. Ct. 738 (2005). We take these arguments in
turn.
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence—Endangered Species Act
Violations
In challenging the sufficiency of the evidence, Kapp faces
an uphill climb. We must evaluate whether, “after viewing
the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution,
10 No. 03-4075
any rational trier of fact could have found the essential ele-
ments of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” Jackson v.
Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979) (emphasis in original);
United States v. Hicks, 368 F.3d 801, 804-05 (2004) (quota-
tions omitted). This standard applies to all the evidence,
both direct and circumstantial, together with all reasonable
inferences to be drawn therefrom. United States v. Jordan,
223 F.3d 676, 683 (7th Cir. 2000) (citation and quotation
omitted). We defer to the credibility determinations of the
jury, “and we overturn a verdict only when ‘the record
contains no evidence, regardless of how it is weighed, upon
which a rational trier of fact could find guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt.’ ” United States v. Cummings, 395 F.3d
392, 397 (7th Cir. 2005) (quoting United States v. Starks,
309 F.3d 1017, 1021 (7th Cir. 2002)). In short, we must
determine “whether the fact finder’s take on the evidence
was wholly irrational . . . .” United States v. Hoogenboom,
209 F.3d 665, 669 (7th Cir. 2000).
Before turning to Kapp’s arguments on the merits, we will
briefly review the reach of the ESA, the principal statute
under which Kapp was convicted. The ESA, 16 U.S.C.
§§ 1531, et seq., prohibits a wide range of conduct with
respect to various species of fish and wildlife that are
protected—that is, specifically listed as endangered or
threatened. Under the ESA, “fish and wildlife” is defined as
“any member of the animal kingdom, including without
limitation any mammal . . . [and] any part, product, egg, or
offspring thereof, or the dead body or parts thereof.” 16
U.S.C. § 1532(8); see also 50 C.F.R. § 10.12. The
Department of the Interior has delegated to the USFWS the
authority to enforce the ESA.
Protected animals are listed by their common and scien-
tific names pursuant to the Linnean system of classification:
first by genus (capitalized), then by species (not capitalized)
and, if applicable, by subspecies (also not capitalized). 50
C.F.R. § 17.11. Animals may be listed as protected at the
No. 03-4075 11
species level, the subspecies level, or by specific population
or geographic range. Id. The regulations specify that
[t]he listing of a particular taxon includes all lower
taxonomic units. For example, the genus Hylobates
(gibbons) is listed as Endangered throughout its entire
range . . . ; consequently, all species, subspecies, and
populations of that genus are considered as Endangered
for purposes of the Act.
50 C.F.R. § 17.11(g). Clearly, then, when an animal is listed
as protected at the species level, all subspecies of that
animal are also protected. Cf. id. If, however, an animal is
listed only at the subspecies level, animals of the same
species but different subspecies are not protected unless
those subspecies are separately listed. Cf. id.
Neither the ESA nor the regulations, however, refer spe-
cifically to hybrids, which are crosses between listed and
unlisted animals. Although the Department of the Interior
at one time sought to protect hybrids under the ESA if at
least one parent was a member of an endangered species,
the Department reversed this position because of the
adverse impact the protection of such hybrids would have
on efforts to preserve listed species. At all times relevant to
Kapp’s case, the USFWS enforced a policy, consistent with
50 C.F.R. § 17.11(g), in which hybrids of a listed species and
an unlisted species are not protected under the ESA. (See,
e.g., R. 150, Exs. B, C, D, E, F (Legal Memoranda from the
Office of the Solicitor, Dep’t of the Interior, to USFWS).)
Similarly, the USFWS policy did not allow for protection of
hybrids of animals listed at the subspecies level and unlisted
subspecies. (See id.)
Kapp was convicted for his actions involving tigers and
leopards. Tigers (Panthera tigris) and leopards (Panthera
pardus) are listed at the species level as endangered pur-
suant to 16 U.S.C. §§ 1532 and 1533. Because these animals
are protected at the species level, all tiger and leopard sub-
12 No. 03-4075
species are similarly protected, as set forth in the regu-
lations. 50 C.F.R. § 17.11(h). Pursuant to the regulations
and USFWS policy, therefore, all members of all subspecies
of tiger and leopard, including the offspring of different
subspecies of tigers and different subspecies of leopards, are
protected under the ESA. But crosses between tigers or
leopards (including all subspecies) and members of unlisted
species or subspecies, such as lions, are not protected.
Therefore, ligers or tigons, which are hybrids of tigers
(Panthera tigris, listed) and lions (Panthera leo, not listed),
are not protected.
Kapp does not dispute that he purchased and killed a
large number of exotic cats and that he harvested and
traded their parts in interstate commerce. Rather, Kapp
claims that this case “is about genetics.” Kapp contends
that the government failed to prove beyond a reasonable
doubt that the animals at issue were endangered and pro-
tected under the ESA, because it was theoretically possible
that the animals were actually unprotected hybrids at the
species level. Kapp takes the position that the government
should have proved, presumably through DNA or other
genetic evidence, that the animals were not ligers, tigons,
or other non-protected species hybrids. Similarly, Kapp
argues that the evidence was insufficient to show that the
slain animals were not unprotected hybrids at the subspe-
cies level (for example, hybrids of two different subspecies
of tiger or leopard).
Kapp’s arguments are flawed in so many respects, it is
difficult to know where to begin. We can, however, safely
dispense with Kapp’s suggestion that the leopards at issue
in his case may have been unprotected hybrids at either the
species or subspecies level. Kapp failed to present evidence
in support of this line of argument at trial, nor did he
develop this theory in his appellate briefs, so he has waived
it. See United States v. Holm, 326 F.3d 872, 877 (7th Cir.
2003). We view Kapp’s appeal, then, as challenging the
No. 03-4075 13
sufficiency of the evidence only with respect to tigers
(although we may occasionally mention leopards in our
discussion of the evidence presented at trial).
With that, we can turn to Kapp’s species-level-hybrid
argument. As noted, Kapp contends that the government
failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the tigers at
issue were not unprotected tiger hybrids, such as ligers. In
support, Kapp hones in on the testimony of one of the
government’s expert witnesses, Bonnie Yates, head of the
morphology section and mammal unit coordinator of the
USFWS Forensic Laboratory. Kapp points to the fact that
Yates admitted that she had little experience with identifi-
cation of hybrids at the species level. On this slender reed
Kapp rests his assertion that the government “offered no
credible evidence that the[ ] animals were endangered at
the species level.”
We can find no indication that Kapp challenged Yates’s
qualifications as an expert witness or the district court’s
instructions to the jury regarding Yates’s expert testimony,
and he certainly raises no such arguments here. Yates
testified to her extensive academic training and experience
as a forensic morphologist,3 in which she was and is re-
sponsible for identifying parts and products derived from
mammals, such as bones, claws, or hair. In her experience,
Yates has made identifications of approximately 100,000
specimens.
The government introduced a substantial number of
hides, mounts, and other animal parts that had been con-
3
As Yates testified, morphologists identify specimens by direct
visual comparisons to known and catalogued specimens (“voucher
specimens”) in museums or other scientific collections.
Morphologists also make systematic use of detailed recorded
descriptions of animals contained in various learned treatises,
scientific papers, and field guides.
14 No. 03-4075
fiscated from Kapp and his co-defendants. The record indi-
cates that Yates gave detailed testimony with regard to
these animal specimens. On the basis of her experience and
qualifications, Yates examined the specimens and identified
all but one to a reasonable degree of scientific certainty as
having come from endangered tigers or leopards. During
her testimony, as she identified each specimen, she ex-
plained the basis for her conclusion and called attention to
the most prominent physical characteristics from which she
derived her conclusions.
Yates identified one hide recovered from Kapp’s home as
a liger hide. She admitted that she had little experience
with tiger hybrids, because there was little scientific infor-
mation available. Her research in that area was largely
confined to one scientific publication and internet sources.
Yates did testify, however, that ligers have a number of
identifying characteristics making them visually distinct
from tigers. Several photographs of ligers illustrating these
distinguishing characteristics were entered into evidence
and presented to the jury. In addition, during cross-exam-
ination, Yates rejected the possibility that the tigers she
had identified might be hybrids.
Upon review of the record, we cannot agree with Kapp’s
contention that there was insufficient evidence that the
animals at issue were tigers as opposed to unprotected
species-level hybrids. There is no suggestion that Yates was
not qualified to offer the testimony that she did, and the
record discloses that Yates’s testimony was detailed,
comprehensive, and supported by other evidence presented
to the jury. The jury certainly could reasonably conclude,
based on Yates’s testimony, that the animals were in fact
endangered tigers and leopards.
In any event, Yates’s testimony was not the only evidence
presented to the jury. The jury also heard the testimony of
Steve Fain, supervisor of the genetics section of the USFWS
Forensic Laboratory. Fain performed DNA analysis on one
No. 03-4075 15
of the hides and tissue and on blood samples taken from
Roche’s farm. Fain identified the samples as coming from
tigers, although he conceded that current DNA identifica-
tion methods could not definitively rule out the possibility
that there could be some lion genes in the animals’ paternal
history. But Fain also testified that the more definitive
method of ruling out interspecies hybridization is morpho-
logical analysis, thus reinforcing the reliability of Yates’s
testimony and conclusions.
Perhaps the most damning evidence before the jury, how-
ever, came from Kapp himself. The government presented
substantial evidence that Kapp was well aware of the
distinction between the protected animals and unprotected
hybrids like ligers. For example, evidence showed that Kapp
had purchased ligers, had a tanned liger hide in his home,
specifically described ligers in a recorded conversation with
an undercover agent, and identified certain hides as “liger”
on transmittal records.
These acts contrasted sharply with Kapp’s actions re-
garding the endangered tigers and leopards at issue in this
case. In tape-recorded conversations, Kapp always referred
to the animals he planned to purchase, kill, transport, and
sell as tigers or leopards, not ligers or other hybrids. He al-
so made clear his understanding that tigers were protected
by the ESA, whereas ligers were not. Moreover, the jury
saw evidence of Kapp’s efforts to conceal his conduct. The
falsified USDA forms prepared by or at the direction of
Kapp reflected that the animals were tigers or leopards, not
hybrids thereof. Plus the documents falsely reflected
“donation” of the animals, indicating Kapp’s understanding
of the law and his solution to get around it. Finally, the
government presented evidence of Kapp’s efforts to hide
evidence of his transactions once it became clear that the
government was investigating him.
All of this evidence together and in context supports the
16 No. 03-4075
jury’s conclusion that the animals at issue were endangered
and not interspecies hybrids. In sum, the jury could reason-
ably infer not only that the animals in question were tigers,
but also that Kapp understood the difference between tigers
and ligers and that he knew his actions were illegal. We
conclude that the evidence presented at trial was amply
sufficient to support Kapp’s conviction on the ESA counts.
Kapp’s subspecies hybrid argument fares no better. Again,
Kapp finds fault with the testimony of Yates. Yates ad-
mitted that she was unable to identify particular subspecies
of tigers at issue, nor could she conclude to a reasonable
degree of certainty whether any of the tigers actually were
hybrids of various subspecies of tiger (inter-subspecific
crosses). This means that Yates could not identify, for ex-
ample, whether a particular tiger was a Sumatran or
Bengal tiger or a hybrid of the two. Fain, the government’s
other expert, also acknowledged that he could not deter-
mine whether the tigers were subspecies hybrids.
These apparent shortcomings are irrelevant, however.
Kapp’s argument rests upon the faulty premise that the
ESA does not protect any inter-subspecific crosses—that if
two subspecies of tiger, such as a Bengal tiger (Panthera
tigris tigris) and a Siberian tiger (Panthera tigris altaica),
produce offspring, it would be an unrecognized taxonomic
unit and therefore an unprotected hybrid. But as already
noted, the regulations make clear that “[t]he listing of a
particular taxon includes all lower taxonomic units.” 50
C.F.R. § 17.11(g). The relevant taxon in this case is
Panthera tigris, which is the tiger at the species level. All
subspecies of tiger are therefore protected, so it does not
matter whether Yates could identify a particular hide as
coming from a Bengal tiger or some other subspecies.
Kapp selectively cites various Department of Interior
and USFWS writings to support his contention that hybrids
of two protected subspecies (e.g., protected tiger subspecies)
are not protected under the ESA. With these writings, Kapp
No. 03-4075 17
suggests that the government’s hybrid policy does not pro-
tect inter-subspecific hybrids (even if the species is listed)
or that the policy is hopelessly inconsistent.4 Neither
conclusion is correct, nor relevant, for that matter. As dis-
cussed at length above, the implementing regulations make
clear that subspecies of tiger (and therefore, inter-subspe-
cific crosses of tiger) are endangered and protected because
tigers are listed at the species level. 50 C.F.R. § 17.11(g).
Even if a USFWS pamphlet was less than clear, or even
contradictory, such publications do not trump the con-
trolling law and regulations at issue in Kapp’s case.5
Moreover, the cited documents addressing unprotected
subspecies hybrids are inapposite because they relate to
animals that are listed at the subspecies, not the species,
level—a circumstance not present here. E.g., 50 C.F.R.
§ 17.11(h). Kapp’s position that inter-subspecific crosses of
tigers are not protected by the ESA finds no support in the
law or relevant implementing regulations. We therefore
reject Kapp’s subspecies hybrid argument in its entirety.
4
Bizarrely, Kapp contends in his reply brief that “if there is any
consistent USFWS ‘hybrid policy’ it is that the purpose of con-
servation under the ESA is to protect purebreds or ‘pure genetic
heritage.’ Perhaps because its purpose reeks of the antebellum
South or Nazi Germany this genetic snobbery is downplayed.”
Needless to say, the latter comment is completely unsupported
and does not advance Kapp’s subspecies hybrid argument in any
positive sense.
5
We note that the district court disallowed evidence at trial that
Kapp had relied on allegedly incorrect information contained in
various USFWS publications concerning the protected status of
subspecies hybrids (and with good reason, as a number of these
publications post-date the acts for which Kapp stood trial). In any
event, Kapp wisely does not appeal this aspect of the district
court’s evidentiary rulings.
18 No. 03-4075
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence—Lacey Act Violations
The Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. §§ 3371, et seq., prohibits a
range of activity involving wildlife that has been taken,
possessed, transported, or sold in violation of an underlying
federal, state, or foreign law or regulation (the ESA, for
example). The Lacey Act also prohibits falsification of rec-
ords, accounts, or labels for fish and wildlife with knowl-
edge that the fish or wildlife has been, or is intended to be,
transported in interstate commerce. 16 U.S.C. § 3373.
Kapp’s argument is simple: he could not have been con-
victed for Lacey Act violations because he did nothing in
violation of the ESA. Kapp is wrong about the evidence
supporting his conviction for violations of the ESA, for the
reasons extensively set forth above. All of the evidence that
sufficiently supported Kapp’s conviction under the ESA
likewise supports his conviction for violations of the Lacey
Act. In addition, the government offered ample evidence, as
recounted in the facts, to fulfill the unique requirements of
the Lacey Act. On the basis of the evidence presented, we
conclude that the jury could reasonably find Kapp guilty
beyond a reasonable doubt on the Lacey Act counts.
C. Challenge of the District Court’s Evidentiary Ruling
We turn now to Kapp’s challenge to the admission of
mounted tigers and leopards into evidence. At trial, Kapp
objected to the admission of the mounts, claiming that the
probative value of the evidence was substantially out-
weighed by undue prejudice. The district court rejected
Kapp’s challenge, finding that the mounts were “the best
available physical evidence” and that their admission would
“allow[ ] the government to demonstrate, and the jury to
observe . . . that the animals in question were, indeed,
endangered leopards and tigers protected by the ESA.” The
mounts were highly probative, the court reasoned, because
they “allowed the jury to see that the animals had been
No. 03-4075 19
killed, how they were processed after killing, and Kapp’s
motive in participating in their killing and processing.”
Kapp argues on appeal that the court’s ruling was “par-
ticularly egregious” because jurors were “left with an in-
delible impression of beautiful animals having been killed
and mounted” and may have “punished” Kapp for killing
animals, irrespective of whether those animals were en-
dangered.
The district court has broad discretion to determine ad-
missibility of evidence, and we will reverse only upon a
clear showing that the court abused its discretion. See
United States v. Pulido, 69 F.3d 192, 201 (7th Cir. 1995).
Federal Rule of Evidence 403 states that “[a]lthough rel-
evant, evidence may be excluded if its probative value is
substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair preju-
dice . . . .” Evidence is not to be excluded simply because it
might be graphic or disturbing, see United States v.
Lightfoot, 224 F.3d 586, 588 (7th Cir. 2000), and if evidence
is probative of an issue relevant to an element of the
offense, it must be admitted in all but the most extreme
cases. See id. at 588 (“revolting” evidence admissible despite
risk of prejudice); accord United States v. Lopez, 271 F.3d
472, 482 (3d Cir. 2001) (photographs depicting serious
disfigurement by mutilation admissible); United States v.
Allen, 247 F.3d 741, 793 (8th Cir. 2001), judgment vacated
on other grounds, 536 U.S. 953 (2002) (autopsy photographs
admissible).
In this case, we find persuasive the district court’s as-
sessment that the tiger and leopard mounts were not only
relevant, but highly probative and assisted the jury in un-
derstanding and evaluating the testimony of the witnesses,
particularly Yates. As Kapp is fully aware, the prosecution
of his case required the government to identify the animals
in question and show that they were in fact endangered,
and key to that determination was the testimony of Yates
20 No. 03-4075
and other witnesses. The record makes clear that the
animal mounts admirably served the purpose of assisting
the jury’s understanding of that testimony, as the jury was
able to conduct its own visual examination of the evidence
and evaluate the conclusions of Yates and other witnesses.
Cf. United States v. Salameh, 152 F.3d 88, 122-23 (2d
Cir. 1998) (noting that evidence that assists the jury to
understand a witness’s testimony, even if disturbing, is
generally admissible). What is more, Kapp has failed to
show that the mounts were somehow offensive, nor is there
any indication that the mounts induced the jury to decide
Kapp’s case on the basis of emotion rather than on the
evidence presented. See Pulido, 69 F.3d at 201; accord
United States v. Carpenter, 933 F.2d 748, 751 (9th Cir.
1991) (“gruesome” videotape depicting dead, charred, and
decomposing birds was admissible and not unduly prejudi-
cial in a Lacey Act case).
In sum, we agree with the district court’s conclusion that
“[t]he mounts were no more shocking or disturbing than the
mounted animals displayed at any museum of natural
history. . . .” Even if the mounts had some potential to
arouse emotional antipathy against Kapp, this must be
balanced against the probative nature of that evidence. We
cannot say that the probative value of the animal mounts
was substantially outweighed by any risk of unfair preju-
dice or that the district court abused its discretion in
allowing the mounts to be presented to the jury. Cf.
Lightfoot, 224 F.3d at 588 (Rule 403 balancing “is the
quintessential job for the trial judge, who is in a far better
position to weigh the advantages and disadvantages of ad-
mitting particular evidence.”). Kapp, therefore, is not enti-
tled to a new trial on that or any other basis.
D. Sentencing Issues
No. 03-4075 21
Finally, we turn to Kapp’s contention that he was sen-
tenced in violation of the Sixth Amendment because the
district court imposed a sentence pursuant to the sentenc-
ing guidelines and on the basis of facts not found by the
jury beyond a reasonable doubt. This argument, of course,
implicates United States v. Booker, 125 S. Ct. 738 (2005), in
which the Supreme Court extended the principles articu-
lated in Apprendi v. New Jersey, 530 U.S. 466 (2000), to the
federal sentencing guidelines and rendered the guidelines
advisory.
The record discloses that the court found that Kapp had
a base offense level of 6. The court, however, enhanced
Kapp’s sentence by 16 levels on the basis of facts found by
a preponderance of the evidence—Kapp was a leader or
organizer, Kapp was motivated by a desire for pecuniary
gain, the value of the wildlife at issue was between
$200,000 and $350,000, and Kapp obstructed justice. These
enhancements brought Kapp’s offense level to 22, increas-
ing his potential maximum penalty from 6 to 51 months’
imprisonment. The court then imposed the maximum al-
lowable sentence of 51 months’ imprisonment, in addition
to fines, supervised release, and community service.
Kapp’s sentencing took place before the Court issued its
decision in Booker. Kapp brought no challenge to the man-
ner of his sentencing before the district court, so we review
for plain error only. Pursuant to this court’s opinion in
United States v. Paladino, 401 F.3d 471 (7th Cir. 2005), we
therefore order a limited remand of this case so that the
district court may advise us whether it would have imposed
the same sentence knowing that the guidelines are not
mandatory.
22 No. 03-4075
III. Conclusion
For the reasons given, we AFFIRM Kapp’s conviction.
While retaining jurisdiction over the case, we REMAND this
case for the limited purpose of allowing the district court to
advise us of its intentions regarding Kapp’s original
sentence.
A true Copy:
Teste:
________________________________
Clerk of the United States Court of
Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
USCA-02-C-0072—8-19-05