I surely would.

For me it all comes down to the care of the animals while they are alive, and the process by which they are slaughtered. If it is all done humanely, I have no problem with it.

When I was in Australia for a month or so visiting my brother after he finished up a study abroad program there, one of the things we did was go on a tour of a croc farm.

I was thoroughly impressed with the care and maintenance of the facility and their animals. The breeders were basically kept in all naturalistic enclosures that rival some of the best zoo and other captive croc enclosures in the world. The young were raised communally, divided by size, in concrete ponds with some of the cleanest water I've ever seen. I don't know how they do it, but keeping water clean with an enclosure full of young to adolescent crocs is freaking hard.

I ate croc while I was in Australia. It really would surprise me if it didn't come from that farm because there aren't a ton of croc farms in the country. I would happily buy a croc wallet from them if I was in the market for one, and if it were legal in the US (it isn't, it is too hard to distinguish saltwater croc skin from american croc skin).

When people raise cows, every bit of the cow gets used. The meat is sold as, well, meat. The hide is turned into everything from shoes to car seats. The hooves are turned to glue and the bones are probably a big component in reptile calcium supplements. I have no issues with leather wallets as long as the cows are raised and slaughtered humanely, and there is no waste with the remnant parts of the animals. The same goes for reptiles.