These days just getting on an airplane is a cause for
nervous tension due to full body scanners, intrusive pat-downs, long lines at
security check points, and what seems to be a constantly changing list of what
you can and can't take on the plane.
All-in-all, flying is not the fun experience it used to be.
And that's just on domestic flights. You add to that the need to clear passport
control and customs on international flights, both entering a foreign country
and coming home, and it's enough to make your head spin.
There's certainly been enough written about what seems to be
the ever changing TSA restrictions and requirements, so I won't dwell on those. But I did find an interesting list of
contraband seized by Customs inspectors around the world…a bit more than trying
to sneak in an extra bottle of wine hidden in your suitcase.
And here is that list.
10) Shoes Stuffed With Heroin: Smugglers might be a scheming lot, but that
doesn't mean they always use their brains.
In October 2010, a 32 year old US citizen and her younger brother
disembarked from a Caribbean cruise and were tagged by Customs for a secondary
screening process. When they opened the
woman's luggage they found 15 pairs of 1980s style men's shoes…definitely
suspicious items for a woman to be bringing back from the Caribbean. They discovered over 6 kilos of heroin duct
taped inside the shoes.
9) Human Skulls: Not the creepy Halloween decorations. In September 2010, two American tourists had
6 human skulls confiscated from their luggage at the Athens International
Airport in Greece. They had purchased
the 6 skulls at a souvenir shop on the island of Mykonos and thought they were
fake. They were charged with desecrating
the dead.
8) Tiger Cub: The 3 month old tiger cub was found sedated
and hidden among stuffed animal tigers inside a woman's luggage at Bangkok
International Airport when the oversize suitcase went through an X-ray
machine. The woman was headed to Iran
where the tiger cub could have brought in more than $3,000 on the black
market. The cub was sent to a wildlife
conservation center and the woman faced wildlife smuggling charges and fines.
7) Fake $100,000 Bills: In 2009, agents confiscated two $100,000
counterfeit bills from a passenger arriving at New York's JFK Airport from
Seoul. In 1934, rare $100,000 bills were
printed to be circulated between the U.S. Treasury and Federal Reserve
Banks. The bills were never put into
general circulation. The man claimed to
have found the bills in an old book belonging to his father. The bills were turned over to the Secret
Service.
6) Cocaine Cast: A leg in a cast can garner some sympathy, but
it didn't work for a Chilean passenger arriving at the Barcelona, Spain,
airport from Santiago. Customs agents
decided to spray the cast with a chemical that turns bright blue when it comes
in contact with cocaine. And it did.
5) Bear Paws: And I'm not talking about the pastry,
either. In October 2010, a dozen genuine
furry bear paws were confiscated from a Vietnam man's luggage in Ho Chi Minh
City Airport upon his return from Hong Kong.
Bear paw soup is considered a delicacy.
4) Snakes and Lizards: You're familiar with the movie, Snakes On A Plane? Well, in 2009 a would be smuggler taped 14
snakes and 10 lizards onto his body in an attempt to sneak them into
Norway. Oddly enough, it was a tarantula
spotted in his luggage that led to a full body search.
3) Bonytongue Fish: Having an airline lose your luggage is an
inconvenience. However, it's even worse
when you're smuggling fish in your suitcases.
In 2009 a man returning from Malaysia to his home in Queens, New York
City, unfortunately did not have his luggage arrive on the same flight. The next day a Customs agent doing random
checks on lost luggage discovered 16 fish packed in individual plastic bags and
cushioned with Styrofoam. Considered
good luck charms in Asian cultures, they sell for $5,000 to $10,000 apiece.
2) Rhinoceros Horns: Ireland is not where you'd expect to find
pieces of safari animals. Over a period
of time in late 2009 and 2010, three Irish passengers were busted at Shannon
Airport for smuggling 10 rhinoceros horns valued at approximately 500,000
Euros, which at today's exchange rate (today being Dec. 4) is $670,700. Rhino horns are often ground down and used as
a prized ingredient in Chinese medicine.
1) Snake Wine: A glass of snake wine might not have the same
appeal as a nice Merlot. But in
Southeast Asian countries, a whole snake soaking in alcohol is a specialty. In May 2009 a routine Customs inspection in
Miami revealed a cobra and other poisonous snakes packed into a jar of liquid
in an express mail package from Thailand.
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