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Costa Rica police seize 5 capybaras, crack cocaine and marijuana from fleeing vehicle

Costa Rica police seize 5 capybaras, crack cocaine and marijuana from fleeing vehicle

SAN JOSE, Costa Rica (AP) — Costa Rican police seized five capybaras, crack cocaine and marijuana after chasing down a fleeing vehicle on a highway along the Central American country's Pacific coast on Thursday.
The large rodents are a semi-aquatic South American relative of the guinea pig and happen to be
having a moment
on social platforms. But they are not native to Costa Rica, and the Public Security Ministry said Thursday that possessing, transporting or trafficking them is illegal. The agency said it had never recorded another seizure of the animals.
Two men in the vehicle, who both had criminal records, were arrested.
'The police action was important and shows the concurrence where the drug world coincides with the introduction of non-native species,' Security Minister Mario Zamora said.
The capybaras were turned over to the National System of Conservation Areas to be evaluated by veterinarians. As a non-native species they can't be released in Costa Rica so they will be taken to a refuge for environmental and conservation education programs.

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Grieving parents awarded $2.25M after Georgia doctor plastered videos of their decapitated baby on social media
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