Cincinnati Officers Bust ‘Winter Jacket’ Egg Smuggle Bound For Alaska

On May 27, Customs and Border Protection officers at Cincinnati’s port of entry opened what was supposed to be a shipment of winter jackets from Germany and instead found something far more delicate inside: 337 hatching eggs packed in foam. The boxes were headed for Alaska but did not have the required U.S. Department of Agriculture paperwork, so officers seized the shipment and handed it over to the USDA’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, or APHIS, for custody and inspection. Officials say the catch came through routine agriculture screening designed to stop potential biological threats before they ever reach U.S. farms.

What CBP Says They Found

According to WLWT, Cincinnati CBP agriculture specialists pulled the package for a closer look after imaging raised questions about what was really inside. Instead of puffy coats, officers opened the boxes and discovered eggs nestled in foam layers, despite the shipment being declared as winter jackets.

In a statement to WLWT, Port Director Eric Zizelman said the interception “highlights the vigilance and dedication of CBP agriculture specialists.” WLWT reports the eggs were seized on May 27 and turned over to APHIS for follow-up testing and whatever disposition USDA officials decide is appropriate.

Why USDA Puts Tight Controls On Hatching Eggs

APHIS warns that poultry hatching eggs can carry highly contagious viruses, including highly pathogenic avian influenza, and are therefore tightly regulated. Under APHIS guidance, importers need a USDA import permit, a veterinary health certificate, and a port inspection before hatching eggs can legally come into the country.

The agency notes that, “with few exceptions, poultry hatching eggs may not be imported from or transit through countries affected with highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI).” Importers also have to schedule inspections at least 72 hours in advance. Shipments that show up without the right documentation, such as the one stopped in Cincinnati, can be refused entry or seized outright.

Not The First Time Someone Tried This

CBP has seen this play before. Officers say similar attempts to sneak in hatching eggs have turned up at other facilities, which is part of why agricultural screening has become such a routine step in mail and cargo operations…

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