shiregirl
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Published: sun herald
Source:
I know this has been up before but i found the second last paragraph interesting. A recently created crossbred
SOMETHING fishy appears to be going on in the world of reptile trading following the arrest of a man at Sydney Airport for allegedly trying to smuggle 44 reptiles out of the country.
The arrest of Evan Alexander Peterson, 24, of Bonnet Bay, has been linked by police to the appearance of an American alligator at a Scouts camp and the theft of animals from a NSW far South Coast native animal farm.
The farm's owner, Brett Allison, said he had been dogged by strange coincidences since a sighting of the 1.5-metre alligator at a Scouts camp near his Merimbula enclosure.
"Everything's ridgy-didge and then all of a sudden an alligator shows up.
"I was doing weights in my yard and the cops walked up to me and said `Have you lost a crocodile?' " the 31-year-old biologist and native animal collector said.
"I said `No, mate, it's probably a goanna, because I get them walking through all the time."
Then, on the same night, Mr Allison's enclosure - home to snakes, lizards, turtles, sugar gliders and other native animals - was broken into.
Several days later he was robbed again.
During the two robberies Mr Allison lost animals including diamond and scrub pythons - "real bitey bastards" - as well as pig-nosed turtles and sugar gliders.
He reported the incidents to police and forgot about the matter, but was amazed when a week later police issued a press release linking the thefts to the Sydney Airport arrest.
"None of those animals this guy was [arrested at the airport for] are mine," Mr Allison said.
Police said Peterson had been removed from a Bangkok-bound flight at the airport on February 20, after a routine X-ray by a Customs officer allegedly found 44 lizards and snakes in his luggage.
When Peterson's luggage was opened officers allegedly found the reptiles in socks and cloth bags, including 24 shingleback lizards, 16 blue-tongue lizards, three black-headed pythons and an albino Darwin carpet snake.
The carpet snake, one of only about 100 of a recently created crossbreed, could be worth about $20,000 and the entire haul was worth between $160,000 and $200,000, Customs said.
Peterson faces up to 10 years in prison if he is convicted on charges relating to the export of native species without a permit.
Source:
I know this has been up before but i found the second last paragraph interesting. A recently created crossbred
SOMETHING fishy appears to be going on in the world of reptile trading following the arrest of a man at Sydney Airport for allegedly trying to smuggle 44 reptiles out of the country.
The arrest of Evan Alexander Peterson, 24, of Bonnet Bay, has been linked by police to the appearance of an American alligator at a Scouts camp and the theft of animals from a NSW far South Coast native animal farm.
The farm's owner, Brett Allison, said he had been dogged by strange coincidences since a sighting of the 1.5-metre alligator at a Scouts camp near his Merimbula enclosure.
"Everything's ridgy-didge and then all of a sudden an alligator shows up.
"I was doing weights in my yard and the cops walked up to me and said `Have you lost a crocodile?' " the 31-year-old biologist and native animal collector said.
"I said `No, mate, it's probably a goanna, because I get them walking through all the time."
Then, on the same night, Mr Allison's enclosure - home to snakes, lizards, turtles, sugar gliders and other native animals - was broken into.
Several days later he was robbed again.
During the two robberies Mr Allison lost animals including diamond and scrub pythons - "real bitey bastards" - as well as pig-nosed turtles and sugar gliders.
He reported the incidents to police and forgot about the matter, but was amazed when a week later police issued a press release linking the thefts to the Sydney Airport arrest.
"None of those animals this guy was [arrested at the airport for] are mine," Mr Allison said.
Police said Peterson had been removed from a Bangkok-bound flight at the airport on February 20, after a routine X-ray by a Customs officer allegedly found 44 lizards and snakes in his luggage.
When Peterson's luggage was opened officers allegedly found the reptiles in socks and cloth bags, including 24 shingleback lizards, 16 blue-tongue lizards, three black-headed pythons and an albino Darwin carpet snake.
The carpet snake, one of only about 100 of a recently created crossbreed, could be worth about $20,000 and the entire haul was worth between $160,000 and $200,000, Customs said.
Peterson faces up to 10 years in prison if he is convicted on charges relating to the export of native species without a permit.