Seacoast Connects
Portsmouth Herald - Hampton Union - Exeter News-Letter - Dover Community News - Rockingham News - York County Coast Star - The York Weekly
  Advertise - Contact Info - Email Headlines - Home Delivery Specials - Place a Classified Ad - Submit Announcements - Site Map
Strange But True printPrint Story  emailEmail Story  discuss Discuss Story
» More Strange but True

Reptiles smuggled in garden gnomes
By The Associated Press
Posted:  June 19, 2007

PHOTO

This photo supplied by the Australian Customs shows a snake stuffed inside a garden gnome found during a recent international mail check, customs officials said Tuesday, June 19, 2007. Customs officials found two snakes and three lizards wriggling inside the ceramic garden statues during a routine postal inspection in Sydney on June 10.
AP Photo/Australian Customs Service

SYDNEY, Australia - What's in a gnome? For surprised Australian customs officials, the answer was snakes and lizards.

During a routine check of international mail on June 10, an officer discovered two snakes and three lizards stuffed inside three of the diminutive garden figurines in a shipment from Britain.

"When the package was opened, the officer spotted several snakes moving about. The package was immediately resealed," Australian customs said Tuesday in a statement.

A day later, officials at the same facility X-rayed another package from Britain and found five snakes and five lizards stuffed inside pottery figures and other ornaments.

Both packages had been had been declared as gifts.

It was not immediately clear what types of snakes and lizards were in the shipments.

It is illegal to bring live reptiles into Australia without a license. No one was arrested over the incident, but customs said its investigation was continuing.

Wildlife smuggling carries a maximum penalty of 10 years imprisonment and fines of up to $92,000 if convicted.

The reptiles had to be euthanized due to quarantine regulations.

Site Sponsor

Go to Seacoastonline!

Seacoast Online is owned and operated by Seacoast Media Group. Copyright © 2008 Seacoast Online. All rights reserved. SeacoastOnline.com Copyright Notice and Terms of Use. Seacoast Connects Terms and Services Seacoast Media Group is a subsidiary of Ottaway Newspapers, Inc., a Dow Jones Company.