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Pursuing individuals who murder for the purpose of harvesting human body parts

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Tyson ContehBBC Africa Eye, Sierra Leone

BBC Sally Kalokoh in a headscarf and shirt with white, black and orange stripes and a black collar gestures with her hands. On one of her arms she wears a beaded pearl-like bracelet.BBC

Papayo’s mother Sally Kalokoh has not come to terms with her son’s death and wants his killers found

With many families left traumatised by killings apparently linked to supposed magic rituals in Sierra Leone, BBC Africa Eye looks into those behind the trade in human body parts.

Warning: This article contains details some readers may find disturbing.

The mother of an 11-year-old boy murdered as part of a suspected black magic killing four years ago is devastated that no-one has yet been brought to justice for his death.

“Today I’m in pain. They killed my child and now there is just silence,” Sallay Kalokoh told BBC Africa Eye, explaining how her son Papayo was found with parts of his body removed, including his vital organs, eyes and one arm.

He had gone out to sell fish at the market and never came back.

His family searched for him for two weeks – and finally found his mutilated corpse at the bottom of a well.

“We always tell our children to be careful. If you are selling, don’t go to a corner or take gifts from strangers. It happens frequently in this country,” Ms Kalokoh said.

This murder in my hometown of Makeni, in central Sierra Leone, has haunted me as we often hear of reports of killings linked to black magic, also known as juju, that are never followed up or properly investigated by the authorities.

In Papayo’s case, the police did not even confirm that it was a “ritual killing” – when a person is murdered so that parts of their body can be used in so-called magic rituals by illicit juju practitioners.

They promise things like prosperity and power to clients who pay large sums in the false belief that human body parts can make such charms more potent.

But with the authorities severely under-resourced – there is only one pathologist in a country that has a population of 8.9 million – it is often impossible to gather the evidence needed to track down the culprits.

Belief in witchcraft is also so deeply ingrained in Sierra Leone, even among many police officers, that there is often a fear of pursuing cases further – and most go unsolved.

But I wanted to find out more about this underground trade in human body parts that leaves tragedy in its wake.

Our BBC Africa Eye team was able to find two people who claimed they were juju practitioners and offered to obtain body parts for ritual purposes.

Both said they were part of much larger networks – and one boasted that he had powerful clients across West Africa. The BBC was unable to verify these claims.

One member of our team went undercover, using the name Osman, to pose as a politician who wanted to achieve power through human sacrifice.

We first travelled to a remote area of Kambia district, in the north of the country near the Guinean border, to meet the juju man in his secret shrine – an area in dense bush where he consulted with his clients.

Calling himself Kanu, he wore a ceremonial red mask covering his whole face to conceal his identity and boasted of his political connections.

“I was working with some big, big politicians in Guinea, Senegal and Nigeria. We have our team. Sometimes during election time, at night, this place is full of people,” he claimed.

Election season is regarded by some as a particularly dangerous time when parents have been warned to take special care of their children because of the heightened risk of abductions.

On a second visit, Kanu became more confident and showed Osman what he said was evidence of his trade – a human skull.

“You see this? This belongs to someone. I dried it for them. It is a woman’s skull. I am expecting the person to pick this up today or tomorrow.”

He also pointed to a pit behind his shrine: “This is where we hang human parts. We slaughter here, and the blood goes down there… Even big chiefs, when they want power, come here. I give them what they want.”

When Osman specified that he wanted limbs from a woman to be used in a ritual, Kanu got down to business: “The price of a woman is 70m leones [£2,500; $3,000].”

A motorbike travelling along a dirt road in Sierra Leone with children looking on from a porch

Sierra Leone is one of the world’s poorest countries and is recovering from the legacy of a brutal 11-year civil war

Anxious not to put anyone at risk, we did not meet Kanu again. He may have been a scammer, but we handed over our evidence to the local police to investigate further.

Such juju men sometimes refer to themselves as herbalists, the name given to healers who use traditional medicine often made from local plants to treat common illnesses.

World Health Organization data shows that Sierra Leone – which suffered a brutal civil war in the 1990s and was at the centre of the Ebola epidemic a decade ago – had around 1,000 registered doctors in 2022, compared to reported estimates of 45,000 traditional healers.

Most people in the West African nation rely on these healers, who also help with mental health issues and treat their patients in shrines where there is an element of mysticism and spiritualism culturally associated with their craft and the remedies they sell.

Sheku Tarawallie, president of Sierra Leone’s Council of Traditional Healers, is adamant that “diabolic” juju men like Kanu are giving healers a bad name.

“We are trying very hard to clear our image. The ordinary person doesn’t understand, so they class us [all] as bad herbalists. One rotting fish can destroy the batch of fish… We are healers, we are not killers,” he told BBC Africa Eye.

Mr Tarawallie is in fact trying to work with the government and another non-governmental organisation to open a traditional medicine clinic to treat patients.

It was those with a lust for power and money who were often behind the ritual killings, he believed.

“When somebody wants to become a leader… they remove parts from human beings. They use that one as a sacrifice. Burn people, use their ashes for power. Use their oil for power.”

Undercover filming of a man who said he was a juju practitioner and claimed to sell human body parts

The number of ritual killings in Sierra Leone, where most people identify as Muslim or Christian, is not known.

“In most African countries, ritual murders are not officially recorded as a separate or sub-category of homicide,” Emmanuel Sarpong Owusu, a researcher at the UK’s Aberystwyth University, told the BBC.

“Some are misclassified or misreported as accidents, deaths resulting from attacks by wild animals, suicides, natural deaths… Most perpetrators – possibly 90% – are not apprehended.”

When we found another suspected supplier of body parts, he was located in a suburb of the capital, Freetown, called Waterloo, which is notorious for drug abuse and other crime.

“I’m not alone, I have up to 250 herbalists working under my banner,” the man calling himself Idara told Osman, who was again undercover and wearing a secret camera.

“There are no human parts that we don’t work with. Once we call for a specific body part, then they bring it. We share the work,” Idara said.

He went on to explain how some of his collaborators were good at capturing people – and on Osman’s second visit played a voice message from one of them who claimed they were prepared to start going out every night in search of a victim.

Osman told him not to proceed yet but when he later received a call from Idara claiming his team had identified a victim, we contacted Police Commissioner Ibrahim Sama.

He decided to organise a raid – but said his officers would not do so without the involvement of Mr Tarawallie, who often assists the police on such operations.

“When we got intelligence that there is a particular dangerous witchdoctor operating a shrine, we will work with the traditional healers,” said an officer on the raid, Assistant Superintendent Aliu Jallo.

He went on to express the superstitions some officers have about tackling rogue herbalists: “I will not go and provoke situations. I know that they have their own powers that are beyond my knowledge.”

After Idara was captured – discovered hiding in the roof clutching a knife – Mr Tarawallie began searching the property for evidence, saying there were human bones, human hair and piles of what looked like dirt from cemeteries.

This was enough for the police to arrest Idara and two other men, who were charged in June with practising sorcery as well as being in possession of traditional weapons used in ritual killings. They pleaded not guilty to the charges and have since been granted bail, pending further investigations.

Two police officers, one with a motorbike, outside a house on a hill in Waterloo in Freetown. The house is made of concrete with a corrugated iron roof and some pots and a few maize plants can be seen outside.

The police raided this house in Waterloo and arrested the occupants, including Idara, who were later charged under anti-witchcraft laws

As we never heard back from the police in Kambia about Kanu, I tried to call him myself to challenge him about the allegations directly, but he was unreachable.

There are occasions when even high-profile cases appear to stall. Two years ago, a university lecturer went missing in Freetown and his body was later found buried in what police say was the shrine of a herbalist in Waterloo.

The case was referred in August 2023 by a magistrate to the High Court for trial, but two sources have told the BBC it has not been pursued so far and those detained by police have been released on bail.

My family is facing similar hurdles finding justice. In May, during our BBC investigation, my 28-year-old cousin Fatmata Conteh was murdered in Makeni.

A hairdresser and mother of two, her body was dumped the day after her birthday by the side of the road where a resident told the BBC two other bodies had been found in recent weeks.

Several of her front teeth were missing, leading the community to believe it was a ritual killing.

“She was a lady that never did harm. She was very peaceful and hard-working,” said one mourner as family, friends and colleagues gathered for a big funeral at her local mosque.

We may never know the true motive for Fatmata’s murder. The family paid for her body to be transported to Freetown for an autopsy – something the authorities could not afford to do – but the post-mortem was inconclusive and no arrests have yet been made.

As is the case for Papayo’s mother, the lack of closure and feeling of abandonment by the police fuels fear and terror in poor communities like Makeni.

Additional reporting by Chris Alcock and Luis Barrucho

More BBC Africa Eye stories from Sierra Leone:

Getty Images/BBC A woman looking at her mobile phone and the graphic BBC News AfricaGetty Images/BBC

Challenging Clients

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Floyd Mayweather recalls facing numerous world champions, but one opponent stood out as the toughest

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Floyd Mayweather shared the ring with a number of boxing icons throughout his illustrious career.

Mayweather is widely regarded as one of the greatest fighters of all time, hanging up his gloves with a perfect unbeaten record of 50-0.

He became a five-division world champion from super-featherweight to light middleweight during that time, defeating legends such as Manny Pacquiao, Oscar De La Hoya and Canelo Alvarez over the years.

After a total of 26 world title fights, one man stands out for Mayweather as the best he ever fought, telling the Million Dollaz Worth of Game podcast that Pacquiao holds that honour.

“The best fighter I ever fought probably was Manny Pacquiao.

It’s because of his movement. He’s a hell of a fighter, and I can see why he won so many fights, and I can see why he’s going down as a Hall of Famer. It’s just certain moves he makes.”

After years of speculation, Mayweather and Pacquiao finally fought back in May 2015, with the American claiming a unanimous decision victory.

While ‘Pac-Man’ may have come up short in that bout, it is clear to see why Mayweather views the Filipino legend as his greatest ever opponent, as Pacquiao picked up world honours in a record eight divisions during his career.

He made a sensational return to the sport back in July at the age of 46 when he fought to a draw with WBC welterweight champion Mario Barrios, and has actually been linked to a shock rematch against Mayweather in recent weeks.

Voyager 1 Expected to Hit One-Light-Day Milestone in 2026

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As it heads out of the solar system never to return, the deep space probe Voyager 1 is headed for yet another cosmic milestone. In late 2026, it will become the first spacecraft to travel so far that a radio signal from Earth takes 24 hours, or one light day, to reach it.

According to Einstein, the speed of light is as fast as it’s possible for anything to go. That may seem arbitrarily restrictive, but at 186,000 miles per second (299,388 km/s), that leaves a lot of leeway unless you’re dealing with things at computer speeds where a delay can be aggravating.

Another thing that can be aggravating is that though light is fast, the universe is, as The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy says, really big. This means that if you have to cover a long enough distance, the speed of light starts to become noticeable in a way that we don’t see on Earth.

Perhaps the first time we saw this publicly was during the Apollo Moon landings over 50 years ago. If you watch old video recordings of the astronauts on the lunar surface talking to Mission Control back on Earth, you’ll notice that there’s a delay of about 2.6 seconds between when someone makes a comment and the other party replies. That’s because with the Moon being about 226,000 miles (363,000 km) from the Earth, it takes a radio signal 1.3 seconds to travel the distance.

Diagram of Voyager 1’s position in relation to the Sun

NASA

If you go to Mars, this gap becomes up to four minutes. For Jupiter, it’s up to 52 minutes, and for Pluto (which I still stubbornly say is a planet!) that comes to up to 6.8 hours. Small wonder that deep space missions require robotic spacecraft that have a high degree of autonomy. If they had to wait for direct instructions from Earth before making a move, a few Mars rovers would have ended their careers as a pile of scrap at the bottom of a ravine.

None of this compares to Voyager 1, the veteran probe launched in 1977 to make a flyby of Jupiter and Saturn before heading out on a one-way trajectory into interstellar space. Despite being almost a half-century old and flying through the incredibly cold, radiation-saturated depths of space at the edge of the solar system, it still continues to function and NASA is determined that it will continue to do so until its nuclear power source finally gives out in the next year or so.

Functioning or not, along with its sister craft Voyager 2, Voyager 1 will continue moving farther and farther from Earth. As it does so, the time light takes to travel to it stretches out as well. According to NASA, at the time of writing, the probe is about 15.7 billion miles (25.3 billion km) from Earth, with a one-way message taking 23 hours, 32 minutes and 35 seconds to reach its destination.

But in around a year, (currently estimated to fall on November 15, 2026), Voyager 1 will be 16.1 billion miles (25.9 billion km) from Earth, crossing the line where a signal from it will take 24 hours to reach us.

Record Breaking: Voyager 1 Is About to Be a Light-Day Away

Voyager 2 is still somewhat in the van with a distance of a mere 19.5 light hours.

Despite the vast distances involved, both Voyager probes are still in contact with Mission Control thanks to NASA’s Deep Space Network tracking system. The bad news is that from late next year, any commands given to Voyager 1 will require two days just to be acknowledged, so maintaining the distant explorer is a case of slow motion nerves for space agency engineers.

Source: NASA

Russia-Ukraine conflict: Recap of major developments on day 1,369 of the war | Latest updates on Russia-Ukraine conflict

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Here are the key events from day 1,369 of Russia’s war on Ukraine.

Here’s where things stand on Monday, November 24.

Trump’s plan

  • United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio told reporters in Geneva that “a tremendous amount of progress” was made during talks in the Swiss city on Sunday and that he was “very optimistic” that an agreement could be reached in “a very reasonable period of time, very soon”.
  • Rubio also said that specific areas still being worked on from a 28-point peace plan for Ukraine, championed by US President Donald Trump, included the role of NATO and security guarantees for Ukraine.
  • Andriy Yermak, the head of Ukraine’s delegation, echoed Rubio’s sentiments, telling reporters that they made “very good progress” and were “moving forward to the just and lasting peace Ukrainian people deserve”.
  • Trump had earlier posted on Truth Social saying that Ukraine was not grateful for US efforts. “UKRAINE ‘LEADERSHIP’ HAS EXPRESSED ZERO GRATITUDE FOR OUR EFFORTS, AND EUROPE CONTINUES TO BUY OIL FROM RUSSIA,” Trump wrote.
  • The US president’s post prompted a quick reply from Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, who wrote on X that his country was “grateful to the United States … and personally to President Trump” for the assistance that has been “saving Ukrainian lives”.
  • Zelenskyy later said in his nightly video address that Trump’s team in Geneva was “hearing us [Ukraine]” and that talks were expected to continue into the night with “further reports” to come.
  • US media outlet CBS reported that Zelenskyy could visit the US this week for direct talks with Trump, but that it would depend on the outcome in Geneva.
  • French President Emanuel Macron said the European Union (EU) should continue to provide financial support for Ukraine and that he remains confident in Zelenskyy’s ability to improve his country’s track record against corruption, adding that Kyiv’s path to EU membership would require rule of law reforms.
  • Meanwhile, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban accused EU leaders of deliberately prolonging the war, which he claimed Ukraine has “no chance” of winning. He also described ongoing EU support for Kyiv in the conflict as “just crazy”.

Fighting

  • A “massive” Russian drone attack on Ukraine’s Kharkiv killed four people and wounded 12 others on Sunday, according to local officials. The wounded included two children aged 11 and 12.
  • The acting head of the Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration, Vladyslav Haivanenko, said that the region experienced a “difficult day”, with repeated Russian drone and shelling attacks that killed a 42-year-old woman and a 39-year-old man, and wounded at least five people.
  • A Russian shelling attack killed a 40-year-old man working in a field in Ukraine’s Zaporizhia region, the State Emergency Service wrote in a post on Telegram.
  • The governor of Russia’s Moscow region, Andrei Vorobyov, said that a Ukrainian drone attack on the Shatura Power Station, a heat and power station ​120km (75 miles) east of the Kremlin, ignited a fire. The attack cut off heating to thousands of people, before it was later restored, Vorobyov said.
  • Russia’s Federal Air Navigation Service also said temporary restrictions were in place at Moscow’s Vnukovo international airport after three Ukrainian drones headed for the capital were shot down.
  • Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk says an explosion on a Polish railway line that is a key route for aid deliveries to Ukraine, including weapons transfers, was an “unprecedented act of sabotage”, pledging to find those responsible.
  • Oil prices fell as loading resumed at the key Russian export hub of Novorossiysk on the Black Sea after being suspended for two days following a Ukrainian attack.
A person stands on a balcony damaged in a Russian attack on Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk region on Sunday [Handout/Dnipropetrovsk Regional Military Administration via Anadolu]

Weapons

  • Ukraine and France signed an agreement for Kyiv to buy up to 100 Rafale fighter jets over the next 10 years during a meeting between Zelenskyy and Macron in Paris.

Top China Growth Stocks Identified by Jefferies for Investors to Monitor

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Jefferies Reveals Top China Growth Stocks for Investors to Watch

Rubio praises ‘significant advancements’ made at Ukraine peace talks

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A “tremendous amount of progress” has been achieved in talks to finalise a US-proposed peace plan to end the Russia-Ukraine war, Secretary of State Marco Rubio has said.

But “there’s still some work to be done”, Rubio said after meeting Ukrainian and European negotiators in Geneva, Switzerland.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky said there were “signals that President [Donald] Trump’s team is hearing us”.

Ukraine and its European allies had expressed concern over the leaked proposals, seen as favouring Russia and welcomed by Vladimir Putin as “the basis” for settlement. Zelensky had said Ukraine “might face a very difficult choice: either losing dignity, or risk losing a key partner”.

Speaking to reporters late on Sunday, Rubio said the negotiating teams in Geneva had had a “very good day”.

He said the main goal had been to try to narrow “open items” from the 28-point US plan – and the parties involved had achieved that in a “substantial way”.

However, America’s top diplomat added that any final agreement would have to be agreed by the Ukrainian and US presidents – before the package was sent to Russia – and that there were still a couple of issues they need to continue to work on.

Several media outlets reported they had seen an alternative plan from Kyiv’s European allies led by the UK, France and Germany. The BBC has not seen the document and Rubio denied any knowledge of its existence.

Earlier on Sunday, Trump accused Ukraine’s leaders of showing “zero gratitude” for US efforts to end the Russia-Ukraine war.

The US president also pointed out that Europe – where Kyiv has some of its staunchest allies – was continuing to buy oil from Russia.

Moscow relies heavily on its oil and gas exports to continue financing its war in Ukraine.

The Geneva talks are focusing on the US draft, the leaked version of which includes a Ukrainian troop withdrawal from the part of the eastern Donetsk region that they currently control, and the de facto Russian control of Donetsk, as well as the neighbouring Luhansk region in addition to the southern Crimea peninsula annexed by Russia in 2014.

The plan also includes freezing the borders of Ukraine’s southern Kherson and Zaporizhzhia regions along the current battle lines. Both regions are partially occupied by Russia.

The US plan also limits Ukraine’s military to 600,000 personnel – from about 880,000 now.

The draft crucially includes a pledge for Ukraine not to seek membership of Nato. Instead, Kyiv would receive “reliable security guarantees” about which no details have been given.

The document says “it is expected” that Russia will not invade its neighbours and that Nato will not expand further.

The draft also suggests Russia will be “reintegrated into the global economy”, through the lifting of sanctions and by inviting Russia to rejoin the G7 group of the world’s most powerful countries – making it the G8 again.

Russia currently controls about 20% of Ukrainian territory and its troops have been making slow advances along the vast front line, despite reported heavy losses.

Trump has given Ukraine until this coming Thursday to agree the proposals.

But he then said this was not his “final offer” for Kyiv, after Ukraine’s allies from Europe, Canada and Japan voiced concerns.

And Rubio told reporters on Sunday he was “very optimistic that we’re going to get there in a very reasonable period of time very soon”, whether it was Thursday, other days, or Monday the following week.

Top economist warns that affordability crisis will persist: It could have been avoided

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Moody’s Analytics chief economist Mark Zandi lamented what could’ve been, if President Donald Trump hadn’t waged war on trade and immigration.

In a social media post on Sunday, he noted that prices have surged since the pandemic and are continuing to climb at an “uncomfortably quick pace,” with the country now suffering an affordability crisis.

“Consumer price inflation is near 3%, well above the Fed’s inflation target, and everything points to even higher inflation dead-ahead,” Zandi said. “It didn’t have to be this way.”

To be sure, inflation has cooled sharply since hitting 9% in 2022, and Trump’s tariffs haven’t stoked inflation as much as anticipated. But the annual rate has still marched higher since he imposed global tariffs in April.

The most recent data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that the overall consumer price index was up 3% in September from a year ago, accelerating from an annual rate of 2.3% in April.

Bureau of Labor Statistics

Before April, inflation was following a downward trajectory that was on track to slowing back to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

“But higher tariffs, highly restrictive immigration policy, and de-globalization more broadly have upended that outlook, and inflation appears likely to remain stubbornly high for the foreseeable future,” Zandi added.

“The high inflation, combined with a job market struggling to create jobs, rising unemployment, and slowing wage growth, means that the tough financial times low- and middle-income Americans are grappling with will continue on.”

In an accompanying chart, he sees inflation heating up even more next year to nearly 3.5% then easing a bit—but remaining above 3%.

By contrast, an alternate scenario without Trump’s tariffs and under normal immigration conditions would send inflation hovering around 2.25% through 2026.

Meanwhile, the Trump administration insists that prices are under control, but has also rolled back certain tariffs on grocery staples like coffee, fruits and beef.

In an interview Sunday on NBC’s Meet the Press with Kristen Welker, Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was adamant that inflation hasn’t worsened since April, despite the data showing it has.

“So inflation hasn’t gone up,” he said. “And Kristen, the one thing that we’re not going to do is do what the Biden administration did and tell the American people they don’t know how they feel.”

Bessent added that imported goods aren’t contributing to inflation and that services, which aren’t directly impacted by tariffs, are fueling it instead.

At the same time, lower energy prices should help ease pressure in other categories while trade deals Trump has reached with top economies will bring other prices down in the coming weeks and months, he predicted.

And lower taxes next year under the One Big Beautiful Bill Act will increase take-home pay for Americans, boosting overall affordability, Bessent said.

“I am very, very optimistic on 2026. We have set the table for a very strong non-inflationary growth economy,” he added.

Cracking Down on Immigration: The Danish Approach

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new video loaded: The Danish Model for Immigration Crackdown

For European governments, Denmark’s hard-line immigration policy is a model for how to get a grip on contentious issue and stay in power. Our reporter Jeanna Smialek reports from Copenhagen on the the effects of the policy.

By Jeanna Smialek, Katrin Bennhold, Nikolay Nikolov, Leila Medina and James Surdam

November 23, 2025

Bertie Higgins catalog acquired by Reservoir

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Reservoir Media has acquired the music catalog of American singer-songwriter Bertie Higgins, adding publishing and master recording rights to works that include the 1981 hit Key Largo to its portfolio.

The transaction marks the independent music company’s latest deal to expand its holdings of legacy catalogs. In September, the company acquired the music publishing catalog of Miles Davis.

The New York Times reported at the time that Reservoir Media has spent $876 million on M&A (across catalogs and other companies) since its inception in 2007.

Financial terms of the Higgins acquisition were not disclosed.

Reservoir noted in its announcement that Higgins “cemented himself as an icon” in the yacht rock movement, a soft rock subgenre. Key Largo reached No. 8 on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1981 and held the top position on the Adult Contemporary chart for two weeks. The Recording Industry Association of America certified the single Gold after it spent 17 weeks in the Top 40.

Then in 1983, Higgins dropped his debut album, Just Another Day in Paradise, which reached the Top 40 on the Billboard 200. The album featured the title track and Casablanca, which Japanese singer Hiromi Go later covered.

“Reservoir, and particularly Donna Caseine, demonstrated commitment to preserving and expanding my legacy, which is now of the utmost importance me.”

Bertie Higgins

Higgins went on to release more than 20 albums over his career, including several compilation records.

On Spotify, he has over 314,000 monthly listeners.

Higgins, born in Tarpon Springs, Florida, started as a touring drummer with the Roemans, opening for acts including the Rolling Stones and the Beach Boys. After returning to Florida, he drew attention from producers Bob Crewe, Phil Gerhard and Felton Jarvis. The Florida Music Hall of Fame inducted him in January 2016 with a Lifetime Achievement Award, followed by induction into the Florida Artists Hall of Fame in 2019. He has received recognition in Germany and China and continues to perform globally.

Commenting on the deal with Reservoir, Higgins said: “I am extremely pleased to be working with Reservoir Media for the next phase of my musical journey. Above all else, Reservoir, and particularly Donna Caseine, demonstrated commitment to preserving and expanding my legacy, which is now of the utmost importance me. I could not be happier with my decision.”

“Bertie Higgins is a staple figure of the yacht rock genre, whose songwriting legacy, from the global success of ‘Key Largo’ to his enduring international appeal, represents a unique and valuable addition to our catalog.”

Donna Caseine, Reservoir Media

Reservoir EVP Global Creative Director Donna Caseine added: “Bertie Higgins is a staple figure of the yacht rock genre, whose songwriting legacy, from the global success of ‘Key Largo’ to his enduring international appeal, represents a unique and valuable addition to our catalog.

“We are honored to bring his body of work to Reservoir and further reinforce our commitment to strategically expanding our portfolio through meaningful partnerships with legacy artists.”

The acquisition comes as Reservoir continues to expand its catalog through acquisitions. In 2021, Reservoir acquired Tommy Boy Music in a deal valued at approximately $100 million. In February, the company acquired UK dance and electronic label New State, and the label’s entire recorded music catalog of over 13,000 tracks.

In 2019, Reservoir acquired the Chrysalis Records catalog for an undisclosed fee.

In May, the company revealed that it spent over $115 million on acquisitions and advances in its latest fiscal year (ended March 31, 2025).

In its earnings report published in August, Reservoir Media posted $37.2 million in revenue for Q1 of its fiscal 2026, which corresponds to Q2 of calendar 2025. That’s an increase of 8% YoY, or 5% YoY on an organic basis excluding acquisitions.

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