Latest news with #Sauerland

News.com.au
6 days ago
- News.com.au
1500 tarantulas hidden inside biscuit boxes caught at German airport
Officials were left 'speechless' when they discovered about 1500 young tarantulas hidden in biscuit boxes shipped to an airport in Germany. Customs officials released photos of the spiders in tiny plastic containers on Monday after making the discovery three weeks ago when the packages arrived at Cologne Bonn Airport. The officials said there was a 'noticeable smell' coming from the 7kg of confectionery boxes. 'My colleagues at the airport are regularly surprised by the contents of prohibited packages from all over the world, but the fact that they found around 1500 small plastic containers containing young tarantulas in this package left even the most experienced among them speechless,' Cologne customs office spokesperson Jens Ahland said in a statement. 'An extraordinary seizure for German Customs, even though it saddens us to see what some people do to animals purely for profit.' The packages came from Vietnam and were due to be delivered to an address in Sauerland, northwestern Germany. While the tarantulas were believed to have been shipped alive, violating animal welfare laws, 'many' died in transit. The remaining spiders were said to have been put in professional care. The Cologne customs office said criminal proceedings were underway against the recipient of the packages. It said animals of any kind must be declared to customs and that import duties need to be paid on parcels sent from a non-EU member state. Last year, a Korean man was arrested for allegedly trying to smuggle more than 300 tarantulas out of Peru by strapping them to his body. Authorities had thought the 28-year-old foreigner's stomach 'looked swollen' when passing through security at Jorge Chávez International Airport on November 8, 2024. They found two belts holding small plastic containers and Ziploc bags with 320 tarantulas, 110 centipedes and nine bullet ants, according to Peru's forestry and wildlife service, SERFOR. SERFOR said the young man was planning to fly to Korea via France before he was arrested by police.


Fox News
6 days ago
- Fox News
German customs officials seize 1,500 tarantulas smuggled in international spongecake shipment
German customs authorities recently made a skin-crawling discovery when they found about 1,500 young tarantulas concealed in a shipment of spongecake boxes. The package, which had arrived at Germany's Cologne Bonn Airport three weeks ago from Vietnam, weighed more than 15 pounds and had a noticeable smell that tipped off officials, according to a news release from the Cologne customs office. "My colleagues at the airport are regularly surprised by the contents of prohibited packages from all over the world, but the fact that they found around 1,500 small plastic containers containing young tarantulas in this package left even the most experienced among them speechless," Jens Ahland, spokesperson for the Cologne customs office, said in a statement. "An extraordinary seizure for German Customs, even though we are saddened by what some people do to animals purely for profit." Many of the tarantulas did not survive the trip, and the surviving spiders were placed in professional care. Criminal proceedings are underway against the package's recipient in the Sauerland region of the country, according to the news release. "Animals of any kind must be declared to customs and import duties paid for parcels from a non-EU member state," the release noted. Last year, a passenger was busted at Miami International Airport for trying to get onto an airplane with a bag of snakes in the passenger's pants. The TSA shared images of the reptiles on X at the time, writing that officers in Florida "detected this bag of snakes hidden in a passenger's pants at a checkpoint." Jens Ahland did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital's request for comment.


South China Morning Post
15-07-2025
- South China Morning Post
1,500 tarantulas found in cake boxes at German airport: custom officers ‘speechless'
German customs authorities have found some 1,500 tarantulas concealed within chocolate sponge cake boxes at Cologne/Bonn Airport during a seizure. Cologne customs spokesman Jens Ahland said on Monday that the package, which came from Vietnam, had a 'distinctive smell' that did not match the declared 7kg (15lbs) of cakes. Crammed into small plastic containers and hidden in cake packaging, the venomous spiders were apparently intended for a recipient in the western German Sauerland region. 'My colleagues at the airport are regularly surprised by prohibited package contents from all over the world, but finding around 1,500 small plastic containers with young tarantulas in this package left even the most experienced among them speechless,' Ahland said in a statement. Ahland said it was an 'extraordinary seizure', but it had saddened authorities to see what some people do to animals for profit. A number of the animals had died, while the remaining living spiders were handed over to specialists. The chocolate sponge-cake boxes the tarantulas were shipped in to Cologne Bonn airport, western Germany. Photo: Haupzollamt Koeln/AP Ahland said that the estimated value of the shipment was being assessed.
Yahoo
14-07-2025
- Yahoo
1,500 tarantulas seized at airport after being smuggled in chocolate spongecake boxes
Around 1,500 tarantulas have been seized after being hidden in chocolate spongecake boxes and shipped to an airport. The tarantulas were found inside plastic containers that had been hidden in the cake boxes which were then shipped to Cologne Bonn airport, western Germany. Customs officials were alerted to the package, which arrived from Vietnam, by a 'noticeable smell' that didn't resemble the expected aroma of the 7 kilograms (about 15 pounds) of the confectionery treats. "My colleagues at the airport are regularly surprised by the contents of prohibited packages from all over the world, but the fact that they found around 1,500 small plastic containers containing young tarantulas in this package left even the most experienced among them speechless,' Cologne customs office spokesman Jens Ahland said in a statement. The tarantulas were being shipped to Cologne Bonn airport, western Germany. (Haupzollamt Koeln via AP) ((Haupzollamt Koeln via AP)) Ahland hailed an 'extraordinary seizure," but one that "saddens us to see what some people do to animals purely for profit.' Many of the eight-legged creatures didn't survive the trip, in a suspected violation of German animal-welfare rules, while survivors were given to the care of an expert handler, the office said. Reached by phone, Ahland said that the estimated value of the shipment was being assessed. Criminal proceedings are underway against the intended recipient in the Sauerland region, east of the airport, in part for alleged violations of failure to pay the proper import duties and make the proper customs declarations, the office said. The tarantulas were discovered about three weeks ago, but the customs office only made the images public on Monday.


The Guardian
14-07-2025
- The Guardian
About 1,500 tarantulas found hidden in cake boxes at German airport
Arachnophobes beware: customs officials have released photos from a seizure of roughly 1,500 young tarantulas found inside plastic containers that were hidden in chocolate sponge cake boxes shipped to an airport in western Germany. Customs officials said on Monday they had found the shipment at Cologne Bonn airport in a package that had arrived from Vietnam. A Cologne customs office spokesperson, Jens Ahland, said they had been tipped off by a 'noticeable smell' that did not resemble the expected aroma of the 7kg (about 15lb) of the confectionery treats. 'My colleagues at the airport are regularly surprised by the contents of prohibited packages from all over the world, but the fact that they found around 1,500 small plastic containers containing young tarantulas in this package left even the most experienced among them speechless,' Ahland said in a statement. Ahland hailed an 'extraordinary seizure', but one that 'saddens us to see what some people do to animals purely for profit'. Many of the eight-legged creatures did not survive the trip, in a suspected violation of German animal welfare rules, while survivors were given to the care of an expert handler, the office said. Reached by phone, Ahland said the estimated value of the shipment was being assessed. Criminal proceedings are under way against the intended recipient in the Sauerland region, east of the airport, in part for alleged violations of failure to pay the proper import duties and make the proper customs declarations, the office said. The tarantulas were discovered about three weeks ago, but the customs office only made the images public on Monday.