menu_open Columnists
We use cookies to provide some features and experiences in QOSHE

More information  .  Close

Lion Trafficker Convicted Using DNA Evidence in World First: Everything We Know

12 0
24.02.2026

Get unlimited access to everything VICE has to offer.

Turn off all ads on VICE.com

Exclusive New VICE Documentaries

Member Exclusive Features & Columns

Turn off all ads on VICE.com

Exclusive New VICE Documentaries

Member Exclusive Features & Columns

Turn off all ads on VICE.com

Exclusive New VICE Documentaries

Member Exclusive Features & Columns

4 Magazines Delivered to Your Door

Lion Trafficker Convicted Using DNA Evidence in World First: Everything We Know

Those involved in the crime were sentenced to 24 months in prison, making this the world’s first conviction based on forensic evidence tied to a single lion.

Share on X (Opens in new window)X

Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Facebook

Share using Native toolsShareCopied to clipboard

In a legal first that could reshape the fight against wildlife trafficking, a court in Zimbabwe has secured a conviction for lion poaching using DNA evidence from a single animal.

Forensic science has been helping human investigators find perpetrators of recent crimes and crimes dating back decades, maybe even centuries in some cases. Now, it’s helping prosecutors speak for animals that can’t testify in a court of law.

The case centered on a lion that was illegally killed near Victoria Falls. Authorities seized claws and other body parts from suspects, but possession alone isn’t necessarily a crime. To win a conviction, prosecutors had to prove the remains came from a lion that had been unlawfully killed.

DNA Evidence Secures Lion Trafficking Conviction

A team at the Victoria Falls Wildlife Trust laboratory, working with support from TRACE and TRAFFIC, developed a full DNA profile from the seized parts. They matched it to genetic data already collected from the known lion killed near Victoria Falls. That DNA match became the focal point of the prosecution’s case—and it worked. They won.

Those involved in the crime were sentenced to 24 months in prison, making this the world’s first conviction based on forensic evidence tied to a single lion.

African lions are targeted for international trade in their claws, teeth, skins, and other body parts, sold as ornaments or jewelry. As IFLScience points out, a 2026 study found that without meaningful intervention, the growing demand for lion parts could push populations toward collapse and eventual extinction.

Now that conservation groups have forensic tools at their disposal, there could be many more science-based pieces of evidence brought into courtrooms across Africa, and one day the world, that could help bring down poaching numbers and help at-risk species thrive once again.

Share on X (Opens in new window)X

Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Facebook

Share using Native toolsShareCopied to clipboard

NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory/Southwest Research Institute/Roman Tkachenko What Built the Dusty Red ‘Snowman’ Floating in Space? 3 minutes ago By Luis Prada

What Built the Dusty Red ‘Snowman’ Floating in Space?

Guenterguni/Getty Images Lion Trafficker Convicted Using DNA Evidence in World First: Everything We Know 8 minutes ago By Luis Prada

Lion Trafficker Convicted Using DNA Evidence in World First: Everything We Know

Picture by Christian Filardo Exclusive: An Ex-UN Officer Reveals His Secret Double Life of Cocaine Addiction 14 minutes ago By Adam Christopher Smith

Exclusive: An Ex-UN Officer Reveals His Secret Double Life of Cocaine Addiction

By Adam Christopher Smith

(l-r) Chris Farley, Tim Meadows, Jay Mohr, Adam Sandler, Norm MacDonald on 'SNL' (Photo by Al Levine/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images via Getty Images) Adam Sandler and Jay Mohr Almost Came to Blows Over Sunglasses in Their ‘SNL’ Days 15 minutes ago By Tony Alpsen

Adam Sandler and Jay Mohr Almost Came to Blows Over Sunglasses in Their ‘SNL’ Days

The former UN worker in question (All pictures courtesy of source) ‘I Was Snorting 5 Grams a Day’: The Wild Life of a Cocaine-Addicted UN Worker 21 minutes ago By As told to Mattha Busby

‘I Was Snorting 5 Grams a Day’: The Wild Life of a Cocaine-Addicted UN Worker

By As told to Mattha Busby

Peter Dazeley/Getty Images The 3 Most Common Reasons Open Relationships Fail 39 minutes ago By Ashley Fike

The 3 Most Common Reasons Open Relationships Fail

Screenshot: Blizzard Entertainment, Xbox World of Warcraft May Be Coming to Xbox Game Pass Ultimate 42 minutes ago By Brent Koepp

World of Warcraft May Be Coming to Xbox Game Pass Ultimate

Robin Williams (Photo by Sonia Moskowitz/Images/Getty Images) Why Robin Williams Was Prevented From Appearing in the ‘Harry Potter’ Movies 47 minutes ago By Tony Alpsen

Why Robin Williams Was Prevented From Appearing in the ‘Harry Potter’ Movies

Norm Macdonald (Photo by Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images) Norm Macdonald Tried to Get O.J. Simpson on His Show After Trashing Him for Years 51 minutes ago By Tony Alpsen

Norm Macdonald Tried to Get O.J. Simpson on His Show After Trashing Him for Years

DrPixel/Getty Images What Your Venus Sign Says About You 55 minutes ago By Sammi Caramela

What Your Venus Sign Says About You

Add your account details


© Vice