Shoe boxes filled with snakes, spiders and scorpions caught in Australia

Parcel included six venomous vipers, three ball pythons, nine large tarantulas plus Asian forest scorpions

Exotic snakes and spiders (in clear boxes) on display after they were found in shoe boxes in a Melbourne mail room. Australian customs officers got more than they bargained for when two shoe boxes arrived from Europe with venomous snakes, exotic spiders and scorpions. PHOTO: AFP

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA:
Australian customs officers got more than they bargained for when two shoe boxes arrived from Europe with venomous snakes, exotic spiders and scorpions were found slithering inside the "creep crawly cargo".

The unusual discovery was made at Melbourne last month in two boxes marked shoes sent through the mail in a consignment identified as coming from northern Europe.

The parcel included six venomous vipers native to Southeast Asia, three ball pythons, nine large tarantulas from Mexico, Brazil and Colombia, plus Asian forest scorpions.

Australian Border Force officers, in a statement Tuesday headlined "Creepy crawly cargo", said it was a serious issue as they posed a high bio-security risk because they can carry pests and diseases that are not present in the country.


However, the Department of Agriculture and Water Resources also saw the lighter side.

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"This detection appears to be a clear attempt to get around the rules that are in place to protect us all," said Lyn O'Connell, a department official responsible for bio-security.

"No spider is a match for our bio-security web, we get our tails up when there are scorpions in the mail and if you try sending exotic snakes beware if we find intentional non-compliance, we bite back with the full force of the law."

Investigations are continuing into the source of the shipment with officials believing they were destined for the black market, where live reptiles are in demand as pets.
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