February 25, 2018

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Highlights Of The Pyeongchang Olympics Closing Ceremony, In Photos

Artists perform near the Olympic flame during the closing ceremony. “Although parting is sad, we will remember Pyeongchang with beautiful memories,” said Lee Hee-beom, the Pyeongchang Olympics organizing committee president.

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Martin Bernetti/AFP/Getty Images

The Pyeongchang Winter Olympics concluded Sunday evening in South Korea. The closing ceremony saw fewer athletes than the opening event 17 days ago — some Olympians have already gone home — but didn’t skimp on pageantry, K-pop and expressions of hope for peace between the two Koreas.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in (from left), his wife Kim Jung-sook, Ivanka Trump and North Korean Gen. Kim Yong Chol (back right) attend the closing ceremony.

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Wang Zhao/AFP/Getty Images

Ivanka Trump, daughter of the U.S. president, and South Korean President Moon Jae-in sat near a visiting North Korean general, Kim Yong Chol, believed to be a former spy chief, whose delegation had earlier been met with a sit-in by conservative South Korean lawmakers near the border crossing.

“Although parting is sad, we will remember Pyeongchang with beautiful memories. Athletes, you are true champions,” said Lee Hee-beom, the Pyeongchang Olympics organizing committee president. “The seed of peace you have planted here in Pyeongchang will grow as a big tree in the not-distant future. The hope and aspirations of South and North Korean athletes together with cheerleaders will definitely serve as a cornerstone of the unification of the Korean Peninsula.”

Thomas Bach, the head of the International Olympic Committee, said North and South Korea “have shown how sport brings people together in our very fragile world. You have shown how sport builds bridges.”

With the Olympic flame extinguished in Pyeongchang, the torch has been passed to Beijing. In 2022, the Chinese capital will host the next Winter Games. In the meantime, we have the Summer Olympics to look forward to in Tokyo in 2020.

Although some athletes had already gone home, the closing ceremony of the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics didn’t skimp on pageantry or celebration.

Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

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Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

Figure skaters Vanessa James and Morgan Cipres of France march in the parade of athletes. Their music choices for their routines drew a lot of attention from the media and on YouTube.

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Maddie Meyer/Getty Images

Flags of the participating nations are projected onto the stands as athletes enter the stadium. Unlike in the opening ceremony, there is no specific order for procession as all athletes come together.

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Francois Xavier-Marit/AFP/Getty Images

As part of the ceremony, 400 performers come in holding LED balls, followed by giant balloons that refer to the globe.

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Martin Bernetti/AFP/Getty Images

Tongan cross-country skier Pita Taufatofua (left) once again marched bare-chested in frigid weather and met onstage with China’s silver medalist snowboarder Liu Jiayu and U.S. bronze medalist skier Lindsey Vonn.

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Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images

The ceremony began with a montage of the achievements and notable moments of the Winter Games. Other moments included a dance performance.

Charlie Riedel/AP

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Charlie Riedel/AP

According to the ceremony guide, K-pop singer CL performed “The Baddest Female,” “representing passion and the venturing spirit,” and 2NE1’s hit song ” ‘I Am the Best’ to convey the message that everyone is a winner.”

Natacha Pisarenko/AP

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Natacha Pisarenko/AP

The two-hour ceremony, featuring fireworks, started at 8 p.m. on Sunday in South Korea – 6 a.m. ET Sunday in the U.S.

Francois Xavier-Marit/AFP/Getty Images

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Francois Xavier-Marit/AFP/Getty Images

Four-time Olympian Arianna Fontana of Italy donned the gold, silver and bronze medals she won in the short track speedskating events in Pyeongchang.

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David Ramos/Getty Images

The Olympic flame of the 2018 Winter Olympics is extinguished amid fireworks at the closing ceremony. The next Winter Games will be held in 2022 in Beijing.

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Florian Choblet/AFP/Getty Images

North Koreans and South Koreans walk side by side. Thomas Bach, the head of the International Olympic Committee, said North and South Korea “have shown how sport brings people together in our very fragile world.”

Natacha Pisarenko/AP

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Natacha Pisarenko/AP

An elaborate, illuminated performance celebrates the Winter Games’ next site, Beijing, complete with an appearance by skating pandas.

Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

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Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

French biathlon champion Martin Fourcade (center), who won three gold medals in Pyeongchang, poses for a selfie with athletes and volunteers during the closing ceremony.

Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images

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Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images

The Olympic flame is extinguished in the cauldron. But Olympics fans will have to wait just over two years for another fix — the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.

Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

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Javier Soriano/AFP/Getty Images

Members of Olympic Athletes from Russia teams parade in. The athletes had to compete under a neutral flag after the nation’s official team was banned from the games.

Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images

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Dean Mouhtaropoulos/Getty Images

Drones light up the sky in the shape of Soohorang, the white tiger Pyeongchang Winter Olympic Games mascot. The winning athletes were given plush tigers in Soohorang’s image.

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Martin Bernetti/AFP/Getty Images

Performers deliver a South Korean flag. Organizers had promised that the Olympic Stadium would be “filled with the roar of compliments and the applause of friendship.”

Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images

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Jonathan Nackstrand/AFP/Getty Images

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Boom In Antler Pet Chews May Have Opened A Black Market

Moose and caribou antlers sit in a corner of the Alaska Fur Exchange in Anchorage. These large, high-quality antlers are unlikely to be cut down into pet chews and are mostly purchased by collectors.

Zachariah Hughes/Alaska Public Media

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Zachariah Hughes/Alaska Public Media

Three weeks after he mounted them on the front of his garage, Jeff Young found his prized antlers were literally ripped off.

“I think they just hung on them,” Young says of the thieves, pointing up at the empty drill holes on the garage’s façade one gray morning in Anchorage this winter.

“They were up on this six-foot ladder, as far as they could get, and then just pulled them down,” Young says.

He found the ladder, taken from a nearby construction site, near his garage the next morning.

“It sucks getting stuff stolen,” Young says. “Doesn’t matter what it is.”

In this case, it was two large racks of moose antlers. Young and other hunters see antler theft as growing problem — one connected to the pet industry.

After the theft in July of 2016 Young tried tracking the antlers down. They held sentimental value; the larger set of antlers came from the first moose he had successfully hunted. The set had a distinctive feature he was sure would help it be identified: A bullet hole right through the center where he’d landed his shot.

Young filed a police report, scoured social media, and called a few merchants offering to buy, but to no avail. It wasn’t until later that he found other hunters griping to one another and on neighborhood groups like Nextdoor about the same thing happening to them.

“I started hearing more stories from other friends that are hunters: ‘Yeah, I had a pile by the shed, been there 10 years, all gone,’ ” Young says. “Another guy was like, ‘Yeah, I always threw them on the roof, come home one day, all gone.’ ”

The demand driving this theft, hunters believe, is the pet store trend of selling strips of antler as dog chews.

Loose regulation, high demand

Boxes of deer, caribou, and moose antlers are sold at the Alaska Fur Exchange in Anchorage, some as pet chews, others as souvenirs or material for crafts.

Zachariah Hughes/Alaska Public Media

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Zachariah Hughes/Alaska Public Media

At a Capitol Hill pet store in Washington, D.C. called Howl to the Chief, clerk Vincent Ford extols the benefits of antler: It’s got healthy minerals, lasts a long time, and is particularly good for canine oral health.

“It takes off the plaque and the tartar by them chewing on it, so this is a good treat for that, too,” Ford says. Antler is just one of the popular organic chew products sold to pet owners. It’s a growing share of the booming pet supply industry, which last year saw more than $69 billion in sales, according to the American Pet Products Association.

Ford carries pricier organic chews, like lamb and cow tails. The store stocks horns from goat and bison, too. Hand-length shards of deer and elk antler are on the more affordable side. But the expense and popularity has regular customers getting entrepreneurial in the hunt for antlers out in the wild.

“A lot of people actually have [started] to get their own antlers now,” Ford says. “This lady tells me she goes to Alaska and just takes a trash bag and does it.”

Online, pet supply companies will sell a six-inch chunk of elk antler for $15, marked as organic and “naturally shed,” a designation that implies they were collected after being dropped by the animal during a seasonal molt. An Alaska-based business offers single caribou antler chews for large-breed dogs at $23. Amazon Prime members can get a thick slice of moose antler for $30.

Any link between pet chews and stolen antlers is hard to prove, largely because there is little data or monitoring over the source material and complicated supply chain.

The Anchorage Police Department has a record of 14 antler thefts in 2017 but Deputy Communications Director Nora Morse suspects that number is under-reported. Police in Alaska also cannot definitively say whether antler theft is on the rise. A burglarized home-owner might not specify for a police report that moose or caribou antlers were among the possessions stolen from a home.

But hunters and horn merchants believe the thefts are being carried out by low-level criminals trying to make a fast buck by unloading antlers that are eventually sold to larger pet supply companies. Unscrupulous buyers can easily cut the antlers and horns into small chunks with a table or band saw, making the source material all but impossible to trace. The issue is framed as a subset of Anchorage’s worsening property crime, which municipal and law enforcement officials attribute in part on the state’s opioid epidemic.

The market for antler chews, particularly on the supply side, is very loosely regulated. While animal products meant for consumption have to meet certain safety criteria of the Food and Drug Administration, the pet supply industry falls under a murky mix of federal, state, and industry standards. Nationally, the Association of American Feed Control Officials, a volunteer group with no regulatory authority, develops model guidelines for pet foods. That organization’s website names their state counterpart in Alaska as the Division of Agriculture, but Lora Haralson with the division wrote in an email that they do not regulate or have requirements for these kinds of pet products.

Multiple pet supply companies contacted for this story either declined to comment or offered general remarks that sourcing quality standards are ensured.

So it can be up to individual buyers to determine if a moose antler was legally obtained.

Cash for antlers

“If a guy comes in and he looks like a hunter and he talks like a hunter then you get a pretty good feel for it,” says Gus Gillespie from behind the counter at the Alaska Fur Exchange.

Gillespie got into the horn and hide trade several decades ago after years with the Navy and as an engineer in the oil fields on Alaska’s North Slope. Now he and his wife run the Fur Exchange, where on any given day, just past the rows of wolf and opossum pelts, are piles of antlers jumbled up like waist-high tumbleweeds. On the ground are plastic bins filled with spiky tines and plates sawed down into palm-sized strips. It is an astounding volume of animal matter.

“As far as antler, it’s either crap and we don’t want it, or it’s really, really nice,” Gillespie says with a laugh.

The four or five years since antler chews have become more popular with his customers have been good for Gillespie’s business. Instead of trading predominantly in the large, high-end antlers favored by artisans and collectors, the store can now buy more medium-sized products to cut down into the chews they stock in baskets by the register.

But he has turned sellers away if he thinks the source material might have been illegally obtained. Gillespie points to the pervasive presence of substance abuse, and says he and his staff look for whether a person seems drunk, high, or in withdrawal as they assess a potential purchase.

“If it’s questionable, we don’t do anything with it for a while,” he says. They might tell someone to come back in a few hours, pulling images of the person or their license plate from the numerous security cameras mounted around the store, sharing the information with police.

“We have been instrumental in a lot of people getting caught,” Gillespie says.

But anyone he turns away can just go to Craigslist—where every day in Alaska, plenty of people promise in all caps to pay up to $50 a pound in cash for antlers. And once they’re cut down into the small chunks sold over the counter, nobody can really say whether they were stolen or not.

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