50 star tortoises in a Bangkok bag, 8 turtles in socks

50 star tortoises in a Bangkok bag, 8 turtles in socks

Three turtle seizures — 50 star tortoises in Manila, 8 in socks in Hong Kong — plus 183 fake World Cup jerseys at Newark.

Global Customs Seizure Curio
2026/6/14 · 1:19
購読 1 件 · コンテンツ 29 件
A Malaysian passenger landed at Manila on June 12 carrying 50 live Indian Star Tortoises in checked baggage arriving from Bangkok. The same morning, Hong Kong opened a US air consignment labeled "clothing and computer equipment" and found 8 live turtles stuffed into socks.

50 Indian Star Tortoises at Manila's NAIA

The passenger arrived from Bangkok at Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA). Officers from the Bureau of Customs (BOC) and the Philippine National Police Aviation Security Group (PNP AVSEG) scanned the bags at the Arrival Customs X-Ray area and flagged the shapes. Inside: 50 live Indian Star Tortoises, each a CITES Appendix I species — the highest tier of international trade prohibition, the same category as tigers and mountain gorillas. 1
The tortoises were turned over to the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR) for care. The passenger was arrested for alleged violations of Philippine wildlife protection laws. 2
Indian Star Tortoises (Geochelone elegans) are native to India, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka. They are heavily collected for the exotic pet trade — their shell pattern, a radiating star design in gold and black, is one of the more striking in the tortoise family, which is part of what makes them a smuggling target. A single adult can fetch several hundred dollars in illegal markets; 50 of them in one bag represents a meaningful shipment, not a personal hobby. The Bangkok–Manila corridor has appeared in CITES wildlife trafficking cases before, partly because the Philippine pet trade demand is real and partly because the Manila route avoids some of the more heavily screened departure points out of Southeast Asia.
No confirmed weight or estimated market value has been disclosed by Philippine authorities for this case.

8 turtles in socks, shipped from the US to Hong Kong

On June 12, Hong Kong Customs seized 8 live turtles of suspected scheduled endangered species at Hong Kong International Airport. The turtles were inside an air consignment that had arrived from the United States, declared as "clothing, shoes, computer equipment, health supplements, and handbags." Inside the carton: socks, and inside the socks, turtles. Estimated market value: HK$16,000 (approximately US$2,050). 3
Two live turtles on a grey surface — official evidence photo released by Hong Kong Customs after the June 12 HKIA seizure
Two of the eight turtles after extraction from their sock packaging. 3
The case was handed over to the Agriculture, Fisheries and Conservation Department (AFCD) for species identification and follow-up. Under Hong Kong's Protection of Endangered Species of Animals and Plants Ordinance (Cap. 586), maximum penalties run to a HK$10 million fine and 10 years' imprisonment.
The "socks as padding" concealment method has precedents at HKIA and at other regional airports. Soft fabric protects shells from impact, muffles movement, and — critically — looks like legitimate packing material on an X-ray screen. A carton declared as personal goods from the US is also a lower-suspicion profile than a parcel from a high-alert wildlife source country. The tactic works until it doesn't, and this one didn't. No suspect has been named; the consignment was cargo rather than accompanied baggage, which removes the obvious person-to-charge.

Quick hits

Newark, New Jersey — On June 12, CBP officers at Newark Liberty International Airport seized 183 counterfeit soccer jerseys from a US citizen arriving from Peru. The man told officers he planned to sell them for $2 each. Had they been genuine, their combined MSRP would have been $30,286. 4
CBP inspection table at Newark Liberty showing a spread of seized counterfeit soccer jerseys, including Zidane, Ronaldo, Ødegaard and other player names visible on the backs
The 183 seized jerseys laid out at Newark. The declared resale plan: $2 per jersey. 4
A commenter on the CBP post did the math publicly: "No one flies to another country with counterfeit anything to make $366." CBP used the hashtag #CBPxFIFA2026. The agency has reported more than 900 World Cup counterfeit seizures totaling over $13 million as of last week, including a single ~$850,000 shipment of fake Nike, Adidas, FC Barcelona, and Argentine Football Association clothing intercepted at Los Angeles International Airport. 5
Mumbai update — Harsha Sunny, the model arrested at Mumbai's Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport on June 11 carrying 11.824 kg of hydroponic cannabis worth ₹11.82 crore (~$1.4 million) from Bangkok, told customs investigators that a fellow passenger she met during the trip handed her the bag before disappearing. Mumbai Customs officials said they considered the explanation fabricated. 6 No network arrests have been reported yet.
Cover image: official evidence photo of two of the eight turtles seized by Hong Kong Customs at HKIA on June 12, 2026. Image from Hong Kong SAR Government press release.

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