That's interesting. Would Elephants stop being hunted if they were the property of a private organization? that's interesting, but I doubt it. How would these rights be enforced? Farm animals are concentrated and easily protected, Elephants are not. Would private security drive off poachers? Would police? The ivory market would still exist, hence the incentive to poach would still exist. The fact that the Elephants would be "owned" by xyz.inc wouldn't change that. Or are you saying Elephants should be raised for Ivory privately? (Is that economically viable? Ivory prices would probably go so far through the roof as to be impractical. You have to raise an elephant to harvest it's ivory one time. What's the cost & return on that? Seems to me if it were viable, people would be doing it already.)
I think you kind of made my point at the end of your post. When you pointed out that property has the protection on the law. So what's the difference then? How do you punish people who violate the law (stealing somebody's else's Ivory?). With fines and jail and so forth. It would be no different. You prosecute offenders, which is exactly what is happening.
(Edit: About there not being a "victim" to be made whole. Consider a person who kills a hermit, with no friends or family. Someone who was totally off grid in every sense, including social. Is that person still guilty of murder? Of course, the fact that there is no victim to be made whole (and there isn't), doesn't matter. What matter is "was there a victim" in the first place.)
Now you're asking the right questions.
With modern tech, that all becomes easier and cheaper and makes the business an attractive and profitable thing. The whales have the same problem, most fishes do, too. With satellite tech, drones, etc. such things are very doable.
Law is a big subject, probably beyond this thread. It's been discussed many times in npr. Basically, law is discovered by judges. The current situation in elephant countries is no one owns the stock, everyone does. That is the old tragedy of the commons. Clickt for more on why it never works, and doesn't work for elephants now. Some countries have forms of partial ownership and those have fewer problems of extinction but could still be improved by real property ownership.
The answer to your last one about the hermit is the perp gives up his life. There is no other way in this case, is there? The victim at least RIP and those left living know the incentives for murder are less than before.
Utopia isn't one of the options.
Jeff Livingston