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MSPCA Position: Support Sponsors: Senator Jason Lewis and Representative Jay Livingstone Status: Referred to Joint Committee on Environment and Natural Resources. Hearing held 10/21/2025. S. 616 reported favorably by committee and referred to the committee on Senate Ways and Means. H. 3935 reported favorably by the Joint Committee on Environment and Natural Resources and referred to House Committee on Ways and Means.
This legislation restricts the trade of ivory and rhino horn within Massachusetts, ensuring that the Commonwealth is not contributing to the global poaching crisis. The bill largely mirrors 2016 federal ivory trade regulations, which were adopted for the express purpose of addressing the “unparalleled and escalating threats to African elephants.” However, federal law does not regulate intrastate trade in ivory and rhino horn, creating enforcement loopholes and making state action critical. Legislation to prohibit the trade of parts and products sourced from imperiled species, including elephant ivory, has been passed in California, Hawaii, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Mexico, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Vermont, Washington, and Washington, D.C. Additionally, China instituted a nationwide ban in 2018 and the U.K. enacted an ivory ban in 2019. The Massachusetts bill does not affect trade in whale or other marine mammal parts and includes common-sense exemptions, such as for musical instruments and museums.
Check out our educational comic strip, created by Boston-area college student Sophia Smith, which explains how wildlife trafficking in ivory and rhino horn has put elephants and rhinos in great peril—and what you can do about it.
Wildlife trafficking is a global crisis and is putting elephants and rhinos at risk of extinction. The international illegal ivory trade has more than doubled since 2007, with the U.S. ivory market ranking among the top worldwide, and 2016 saw the largest quantity of illegally traded ivory seizures to date. The crisis has reached such a level that scientists predict that at current poaching rates forest elephants could be extinct within a decade. The latest scientific data, from 2016, confirms that a massive decline continues: over the course of seven years the African savannah elephant population declined by 30%, due primarily to poaching. All five extant rhino species are threatened with extinction, fewer than 5,000 black rhinos remain today, and some rhino populations number only in the hundreds.
Massachusetts is a major contributor to facilitating the illegal ivory trade. Several investigations have revealed that Massachusetts plays a role in the illegal ivory trade. In May 2019, an HSUS undercover investigation at the New Bedford Whaling Museum found several undocumented ivory items for sale. The sellers were unable to produce any documentation as to the age or origin of the items, calling their legality into question. In 2017, another HSUS investigation found ivory items of questionable origin readily available for sale across the Commonwealth, with vendors even offering smuggling tips. Further, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service data on the port of Boston from January 2010 to July 2016 revealed both legal and illegal imports into Massachusetts. There have also been several criminal cases involving illegal ivory in Massachusetts, including the following:
According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the legal ivory market, of which the U.S. is one of the largest operators, provides easy cover for the trade of illicit ivory to flourish. Anti-smuggling investigations and market research have shown that illegal ivory and rhino horn are frequently passed off as legal products. Further complicating enforcement, mammoth and mastodon ivory is nearly indistinguishable from elephant ivory to the untrained eye, which creates enforcement burdens and facilitates demand for ivory, as mammoth and mastodon ivory are often intermingled in international shipments and retail sales. As the New York Department of Environmental Conservation states, “It can be difficult to distinguish mammoth ivory from elephant ivory without specialized training and analysis. In addition, articles fashioned from elephant ivory can be altered to resemble mammoth ivory. Effective enforcement efforts require that elephant ivory and mammoth ivory be treated identically.” In early 2019, scientists specializing in wildlife forensics reported a finding of mammoth ivory in an illegal ivory shipment in Cambodia.
This bill would NOT criminalize the possession of ivory and rhino horn currently owned by Massachusetts residents, nor would it prohibit inheritance or noncommercial gifts.
In the media:
Updated 10/16/2025