
100,000 cockroaches and turtles in a toy box
Australia quietly broke its national record on May 26 — over 100,000 live exotic cockroaches seized from a single NSW breeder, euthanized, no charges filed — while Hong Kong found eight endangered turtles sealed in deli tubs inside a box labeled "toys." Five more seizures across the window: 39 kg of meth as tea at Wellington, 850 g of gold in a truck mattress at the Bulgaria–Turkey border, $145,000 in undeclared cash at Mumbai's midnight security lane, and 5 kg of silver packed into modified car suspension arms at Lok Ma Chau.

Eight live turtles packed into plastic deli containers and a cardboard box labeled "toys." Six days before the World Cup opener, tea bags with a street value of NZ$13 million. A mattress hiding half a kilogram of gold chains on the Bulgaria–Turkey motorway.
100,000+ cockroaches seized in New South Wales — Australia's biggest bug bust
Officers from the Australian Department of Climate Change, Energy, Environment and Water (DCCEEW) arrived at a commercial breeding operation in Bathurst, New South Wales, on May 26 and found themselves counting past six figures. 1
The haul: more than 100,000 live cockroaches. Two species, both banned in Australia — Madagascar hissing cockroaches (Gromphadorhina portentosa, which can grow 5–8 cm long and produce an audible hiss by forcing air through their spiracles) and Dubia roaches (Blaptica dubia). Estimated value: AU$200,000 (about US$142,000). 1
The breeder was running what investigators believe was a reptile-food supply business. Stefanie Lesser, a snake catcher in Bathurst, told the AP that oversized exotic roaches are prized as feeder insects precisely because of their bulk: fewer individual roaches needed per feeding session, which makes them economical for reptile keepers. 1

Neither species has gone through Australia's environmental risk assessment process, which the DCCEEW said means they "have not been subject to an environmental risk assessment" before entering the country. 1 The roaches were euthanized. No charges were filed against the breeder; authorities confirmed this is the largest single seizure of exotic invertebrates in Australian history.
Eight turtles in deli tubs, declared as toys from the US
Hong Kong Customs flagged two air cargo shipments at Hong Kong International Airport on June 4 through routine risk assessment — both declared as toys, both consigned from the United States. 2
Inside the outer cartons: colorful toy packets on top, and beneath them, plastic deli-style containers sealed with foam padding. Each container held a live turtle, wrapped in a damp cloth or tissue to survive transit. Eight turtles in total, identified as a suspected protected species, with an estimated market value of US$19,000 (about HK$148,000). 2
The case was referred to the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department for species confirmation. Under Cap. 586 (the Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance), importing or possessing protected species without a licence carries a maximum fine of HK$10 million and 10 years in prison. No arrests were announced.
39 kg of meth disguised as tea, two women charged at Wellington
New Zealand Customs intercepted approximately 39 kg of methamphetamine at Wellington International Airport over the long weekend of June 2, the drugs packaged to look like ordinary loose-leaf tea. 3
Two women — aged 21 and 22 — were subsequently charged with importing a Class A controlled drug. 3 The seized quantity is valued at approximately NZ$13 million (about US$7.9 million). 3
Methamphetamine is a Class A controlled drug under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975 in New Zealand; importing it carries a maximum sentence of life imprisonment.
Gold chains under the mattress, Bulgaria–Turkey border

On June 3, Bulgarian customs officers at Kapitan Andreevo — the country's main crossing point with Turkey — ran a detailed inspection of a truck driven by a 50-year-old Turkish national identified as G.K. 4 In the cab's sleeping berth they found the mattress had been partially hollowed out. Three boxes were stashed inside, containing 538 grams of 14–22 karat gold jewelry valued at €74,106. A separate haul of 319.9 grams worth €34,990 had been found in a refrigerated food bag during a different vehicle inspection at the same checkpoint days earlier. 4
Combined: more than 850 grams of gold jewelry, total value exceeding €109,000. G.K. was charged under Article 242(1)(e) of the Bulgarian Penal Code — smuggling by a person who uses a vehicle — released on €2,000 bail, and banned from leaving the country. 4
$145,000 in cash at midnight, Mumbai T2
Shortly after midnight on June 4, a Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) officer at the Terminal 2 security checkpoint at Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport (CSMIA) in Mumbai asked a passenger — a national of Chad, a landlocked country in north-central Africa — to open his bags. 5
The inspection turned up US$145,000 (approximately ₹1.39 crore) in undeclared foreign currency. 5 The CISF handed the passenger and the cash over to Mumbai Customs for further action. Travelers entering or leaving India are required to declare cash holdings above US$5,000; the undeclared amount here was 29 times that threshold. No charge details were published.
5 kg of silver hidden inside car control arms, Lok Ma Chau
At the Lok Ma Chau Control Point on June 2, Hong Kong Customs officers pulled over a cross-boundary private car heading for the mainland and put it through a thorough inspection. 6
The silver wasn't in the boot or under a seat. Officers found it inside the front suspension control arms — the structural components connecting a car's wheel assembly to the chassis — where the hollow sections had been modified to serve as smuggling cavities. A second cache was found in the centre console. Total: approximately 5 kg of suspected smuggled silver, market value about HK$130,000 (roughly US$16,600). 6

The 45-year-old male driver was arrested and later bailed; the car was impounded. Under the Import and Export Ordinance, importing or exporting unmanifested goods carries a maximum fine of HK$2 million and seven years in prison.
Cover image: Hong Kong Customs and Excise Department official photo, via Bastille Post / HKSAR Government
References
- 1AP via Click2Houston — Australian cockroach kingpin caught with 100,000 illegal insects
- 2Bastille Post / HKSAR Government — Hong Kong Customs Seizes Eight Live Endangered Turtles Worth $19,000 at Airport
- 3NZ Herald — Wellington Airport drug bust: 39kg of meth found disguised as tea
- 4Fakti.bg — Customs officers seized smuggled gold items worth over 100,000 euros
- 5Mid-Day / PTI — Security Force seizes foreign currency worth Rs 1.39 crore from African national at Mumbai Airport
- 6Hong Kong Customs and Excise Department — Hong Kong Customs seizes suspected smuggled silver worth about $130,000
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