Smuggle

  • Posted: May 14th, 2011 - 10:28am by Doug Powell

    Students travelling home to live in your parent’s basement after graduation today – don’t try this.

    Noor Mahmoodr, a 36-year-old citizen of the United Arab Emirates, was detained soon after midnight by undercover officers at a Bangkok airport with a baby bear, a pair of panthers, two leopards and some monkeys - all aged under two months - in his cases.

    The man, who was trying to get the creatures onto a first-class flight to Dubai from Suvarnabhumi airport, was charged with smuggling endangered species out of Thailand, according to Colonel Kiattipong Khawsamang of the Nature Crime Police.

    He said one of the bags had been abandoned in an airport lounge because the animals were being too noisy.

    The animals were taken into the care of local veterinarians.

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  • Posted: February 5th, 2011 - 7:40am by Doug Powell

    In January, The Daily rode along on a raw milk smuggling run. Excerpts below.

    Wearing a black-brimmed country hat, suspenders and an Amish beard, "Samuel" unloaded his contraband from an unmarked white truck on a busy block in Manhattan (New York, not Kansas).

    He was at the tail end of a long smuggling run that had begun before dawn at his Pennsylvania farm. As he wearily stacked brown cardboard boxes on the sidewalk, a few upscale clients in the Chelsea neighborhood lurked nearby, eyeing the new shipment hungrily.

Clearly, they couldn’t wait to get a taste.



    Samuel is part of a shadowy community of outlaw Amish and Mennonite dairy farmers who risk fines, loss of equipment and product, and even imprisonment to transport raw milk across state lines and satisfy a burgeoning appetite for illegal raw milk in places like New York.

    Samuel has more than 140 customers waiting for him, ready to pay $6 a gallon. 

Samuel’s smuggling run started in Pennsylvania's Amish country, where his family farm is located. As Amish doctrine prohibits him from operating an automobile, he paid a non-Amish person to drive. 

The final destination was an unmarked converted factory on the eastern edge of Chelsea.

    Churning out the product

In mid-January, I paid a visit to Amish country to explore the roots of the raw milk supply chain. The dairy farm I visited was run by Isaac, an Amish raw milk black-marketer who, like Samuel, agreed to discuss his operation on the condition that his identity was concealed.



    Isaac, wearing traditional Amish clothing and an Amish beard, nodded in agreement. 

Maurer dismissed the FDA’s findings on raw milk, saying he’s never heard of anyone getting more than a bellyache from the stuff. 

For Isaac, the issues are cultural. When it comes to dairy farming, becoming a smuggler was the only way to maintain a pure, Amish way of life.“

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  • Posted: January 11th, 2011 - 9:01am by Doug Powell

    The L.A. Times reports that federal officials arrested two Japanese men for allegedly smuggling 55 live turtles into LAX in snack food boxes.

    Atsushi Yamagami, 39, and Norihide Ushirozako, 49, were arrested Friday by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service after an undercover sting operation, according to a statement by the U.S. attorney's office.

    Authorities said they infiltrated the ring over the last few months in an investigation known as "Operation Flying Turtle."

    Prosecutors said the charges carry a maximum possible federal prison sentence of 20 years.

    "In August 2010, Hiroki Uetsuki, an associate of Yamagami and Ushirozako, traveled from Osaka, Japan, and arrived at Honolulu International Airport," where turtles were discovered in his suitcase, prosecutors said.

    "After U.S. Fish and Wildlife agents arrested Uetsuki, he informed the agents that Yamagami paid him approximately 100,000 yen (approximately $1,200) and his travel expenses to smuggle turtles and tortoises into the United States," officials said.

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  • Posted: July 28th, 2010 - 6:04am by Doug Powell

    Fresh off reports that a Peruvian man tried to smuggle 18 baby moneys into Mexico City by strapping them to his body, Michael Plank, owner of US-based Big Game Reptiles, admitted in a Californian court he smuggled 15 live Australian lizards into the US by strapping them to his chest.

    Acting on a tip from a "confidential informant", a pat-down search on Plank after he arrived at Los Angeles international airport last November on a United Airlines flight originating in Sydney found two money belts strapped to his chest containing two geckos, two monitor lizards and 11 skinks worth more than $US8500 ($A9400).

    Plank pleaded guilty after initially denying the charges.
     

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  • Posted: July 20th, 2010 - 9:53am by Doug Powell

    Customs officials (left, not exactly as shown) at Mexico City's airport detained a Peruvian man (right, not exactly as shown) carrying 18 baby monkeys, including two which had died, hidden under his clothes, federal police said.

    "The Titi monkeys were found hidden in a band tied around the man's body," a statement said.

    The Sydney Morning Herald reports the discovery was made when the 38-year-old man appeared edgy during random checks on passengers off a flight from Lima, Peru, it said.

    Titi monkeys -- found in Central and South America -- are protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES).

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