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Man stuffed 6 parrots in his boots in bizarre border smuggling attempt, officials say

Man stuffed 6 parrots in his boots in bizarre border smuggling attempt, officials say

Yahoo16-05-2025

A man was caught attempting to smuggle parrots into California after U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers noticed "unusual clothing bulges" around his ankles and discovered six birds stuffed into his boots, authorities said.
The bizarre incident happened April 30, when Customs and Border Patrol Agents pulled aside a 51-year-old man applying for admission to the United States from Mexico at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry.
An officer spotted the misshapen lumps around the man's feet after asking him to step outside his vehicle. When they patted him down, they discovered the undeclared birds hidden in his boots. They found six additional parrots in his car, including two that were dead, according to the CBP.
Read more: Threatened in their homeland, feral Mexican parrots thrive on L.A.'s exotic landscaping
"The smuggling of birds is extremely dangerous," Sidney Aki, director of CBP San Diego field operations, said in a statement. "Birds can also be hosts for a variety of diseases that can threaten native wildlife and U.S. agricultural industries, potentially causing widespread economic consequences."
This is not the only recent livestock smuggling attempt thwarted at a U.S.-Mexico border crossing in California.
On May 4, a 26-year-old-man applying for admission to the United States at the San Ysidro Port of Entry was caught attempting to smuggle 16 live parakeets and three live chickens, officials said. CBP officers saw a blanket moving inside the man's car and discovered the animals in two cages underneath it, authorities said.
Last March, officers found 21 parrots and a keel-billed toucan while searching a sedan at the U.S.-Mexico border crossing in Tecate, according to CBP.
Border Patrol agents detained the drivers and passengers in the two recent suspected smuggling attempts and turned them over to Homeland Security Investigations and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services for further investigation.
The confiscated animals are under quarantine by U.S. Department of Agriculture Veterinary Services to ensure they are not carrying any avian diseases such as bird flu.
Sign up for Essential California for news, features and recommendations from the L.A. Times and beyond in your inbox six days a week.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.

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‘Humanitarian rescue' of migrants, or the EU's dirty work?

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Approximately 750,000 men died in the Civil War, which was more than 2.5% of America's population at the time. In Boston on January 15, 1919, a massive storage tank filled with 2.3 million gallons of molasses broke and sent a 15-foot tall flood of the sticky stuff flowing through town, killing 21 people. The 11 dead mentioned in the headline was later raised to 21. Lastly, in the year 1800, the world population totaled 1 billion. Today — 225 years later — the world's population is more than eight times larger (8.2 billion).

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