Groenewald owns and operates a 10,600 acre
game farm, Pragtig outside of
Musina, Limpopo and runs a safari business known as Out of Africa Adventurous Safaris. Before becoming a safari operator and game farmer, Gronewald was a police officer.
Out of Africa Adventurous Safaris Beginning in the 1990s, Out of Africa Adventurous Safaris advertised safari trips to hunting clubs in the United States, notably in Michigan and at trade shows. The company organised hunting tours in Botswana, Tanzania, South Africa and Zimbabwe. In 2003, Gronewald began offering hunting tours of
Zimbabwe. Critics alleged Gronewald and Out of Africa operated illegal safaris on the
lands of evicted white farmers and was insulated from scrutiny by ties to the country's
ZANU-PF government. At the time, other big game hunters alleged Gronewald was hunting illegally on his safari hunts. Game farm owner and big game hunter Dale McClelland notified
Safari Club International about Gronewald's conduct, but the organization's ethics committee did not act on the allegations.
Lacey Act conviction In April 2010, Groenewald was arrested in the United States for importing an illegally caught leopard trophy to the United States. The leopard was killed by an Alabama hunter on an illegal South African hunt organised by Groenewald in 2006. Groenewald was indicted by the United States Justice Department and imprisoned in Alabama. He later pled guilty to violating the
Lacey Act and was ordered to pay $30,000 in fines and $7,500 in restitution.
2010 charges In 2009, Groenewald and his wife purchased 36 rhinos from
Kruger National Park allegedly for breeding for their game farm. In September 2010, Groenewald was arrested with nine other persons, including two veterinarians, a pilot and professional hunters who were charged with 1,872 counts of related to various crimes related to
racketeering and illegal wildlife trafficking. Groenewald caught the attention of local officials in Limpopo Province after his neighbors reported rhino poaching and a low flying helicopter, belonging to Groenewald over their properties. When his property was searched, authorities found a "burial site of over a dozen horn-less rhinos", including some of those purchased from Kruger a year earlier. The 1,872 charges against Groenewald and his co-conspirators became the largest wildlife crime cases in South African history. The magnitude of the case, would drag through the South African court system for the next decade. While waiting for the trial to go to court, Groenewald was released on a R1,000,000 bail (more than $50,000 US dollars), said to be the largest amount ever paid for a wildlife felony case.
Bryan Christy reported authorities traced 439 rhino horns to activities at Groenewald's game farm. At the time of Groenewald's arrest, he additionally faced a number of civil lawsuits from members in the hunting community, and was subject to a no-contact order after issuing a death threat to a former business partner. At the time, the value of assets seized was worth $7 million US dollars. Despite his pending charges, on bail, Groenewald received several permits from the Government of South Africa to hunt
white rhinos, as well as
serval, leopard, civet cats and a
wild cat. In 2013, the South African government proposed a plan to legalise the trade in rhino horn, aiming to work with the private sector to eliminate poaching through a legal trade.
Czech Republic investigation In September 2013, authorities from the Czech Republic investigating the illegal trade in white rhino horns imported to the Czech Republic from South Africa traced falsely declared rhino horn to hunts that took place on Groenewald's farm. Horns imported to Europe by fictitious hunters and declared as part of legal hunting trophies were found to be sold on to buyers in Asia for traditional medicine purposes. The Czech Environmental Inspectorate found a Vietnamese entity paid for Czech hunters to participate in rhino hunts, but was unable to find Czech hunters in South Africa with valid CITES permits. The investigation's findings would lead to sweeping changes in EU import policies for wildlife trophies. Czech authorities would later charge three Vietnamese individuals for their role in the smuggling ring.
2014 United States Indictment In October 2014, Groenewald and his brother Janneman Groenewald were indicted on 18 counts of conspiracy and fraud related to illegal rhino hunting by the
United States Department of Justice. Prior to the indictment, the Justice Department investigated the Groenewald's and Out of Africa safari company under "Operation Preposterous", which looked into illegal hunting of live rhinoceros in South Africa. The operation outlined a multitude of charges and activities that took place between 2005 and 2010. The Justice Department disclosed the brothers sold numerous illegal rhinoceros hunts to American hunters under the guise of culling "problem" animals. The horns would later be sold on the black market. The Groenewalds were subsequently charged with multiple Lacey act violations, conspiracy,
mail fraud and
bank fraud. In 2015, the United States reportedly was attempting to extradite the brothers to the United States for trial. In 2017, Dawie and Janneman Groenewald were apprehended on an
international arrest warrant by
Interpol in
Polokwane. The brothers successfully raised bail and the extradition hearing was postponed. Janneman Groenewald died in December 2018.
Legalised rhino horn markets In late 2017, South Africa's Department for Environmental Affairs removed a moratorium that banned domestic trade in rhino horn. Conservation groups highlighted the policy was due to intense pressure by domestic game farm owners. That year, a portrait of Groenewald by
Brent Stirton was part of the winning submission of the
Natural History Museum's Wildlife Photojournalist Story Award. The portrait was included in a series by Stirton on the lives and trafficking of rhinos in South Africa. Groenewald's inclusion was due to his advocacy towards legalising the trade in rhino horn.
2021 charges While on bail in July 2021, Groenewald and fellow game farmer Schalk Abraham Steyn were arrested in South Africa for the illegal possession and transport of 19 rhino horns. The value of the horns was estimated at R2.6 million. The pair were later released on bail. The case was set for trial in 2024. It was later delayed.
Trial delays and continued hunting Groenewald and his co-defendants have not yet been brought to trial for the more than 1,800 charges brought against them in 2010. After numerous delays, in March 2024, the
National Prosecuting Authority in Limpopo, scheduled the trial to be held in October and November 2024. That October, the court announced the case would be delayed once again. The court reported Groenewald and his co-defendants are scheduled to stand trial in the Limpopo High Court on February 9, 2026. The charges involve illegally hunting rhinos, dealing in rhino horn, racketeering and money laundering. == See also ==