90 kg in a SKIMS Truck, 109 Animals in Two Bags

Seven customs seizures from a 29-hour window: a Polish trucker sentenced to 13.5 years for stashing 90 kg of cocaine inside a SKIMS shapewear lorry; two women at Bangkok airport with 109 live animals crammed into two suitcases; 44 venomous Indonesian pit vipers in checked baggage at Mumbai; US CBP seizing 40 genuine ancient coins and releasing 3 fakes from the same box; a DRI undercover sting on a snake charmer supply chain; 187 kg of marijuana in 187 neat packages carried by a 22-year-old Briton; and Irish Revenue's three sniffer dogs logging €695,000 in contraband.

A Polish truck driver hauling 28 pallets of Kim Kardashian shapewear got paid €4,500 to carry £7.2 million worth of cocaine in a purpose-built cavity welded inside the trailer doors. Meanwhile, two women at Bangkok airport tried to board a flight to Chennai with 109 live animals split between two suitcases. It has been a full 29 hours for the world's border officers.

1. The SKIMS lorry: €4,500 for a £7.2 million job

Jakub Jan Konkel, 40, a Polish national from Kartuzy, picked up the drugs from an industrial estate in Belgium, drove to Hook of Holland, boarded a ferry, and arrived at Harwich International Port, Essex, on September 4–5, 2025. 1 UK Border Force ran an X-ray and found 90 individually wrapped 1-kg packages of cocaine hidden inside a specially constructed hide built into the skin of the rear trailer doors. 2
The 28 pallets of SKIMS clothing were entirely legitimate; neither the exporter nor the importer was involved. Konkel's tachograph recorded a 16-minute unannounced stop in Belgium — investigators believe that is when the drugs were loaded without the shipper's knowledge. He was also carrying a phone programmed to wipe itself after 18 hours.
On May 18, 2026, Judge Richard Wilkin sentenced Konkel to 13 years and 6 months at Chelmsford Crown Court. 3 His fee — €4,500, or roughly 0.05% of the drugs' street value — makes the math of this kind of courier arrangement very clear from the crime group's perspective.
SKIMS brand shapewear packaging sealed inside a clear evidence bag bearing EVIDENCE BAG and scenesafe labels
SKIMS brand shapewear packaging sealed inside a clear evidence bag bearing EVIDENCE BAG and scenesafe labels
Image from: £7m of cocaine found in lorry carrying Kim Kardashian underwear & clothing — National Crime Agency

2. Two suitcases, 109 animals, a flight to Chennai

On the night of May 17, Thai customs officers at Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok ran two suitcases through an X-ray scanner and stopped. Inside: 2 white porcupines, 2 armadillos, 35 turtles, 50 lizards, and 20 snakes — 109 live wild animals total, all alive. 4 Two Indian women were arrested before they could board a Thai Airways flight to Chennai.
Thailand's Department of National Parks, Wildlife and Plant Conservation (DNP) announced the bust the following morning. 5 The tactic is stripped-down: no false compartments, no chemical concealment — just luggage dense enough that without the scanner, the animals are invisible. The limiting factor is how much a suitcase can hold; 109 animals across two bags answers that question empirically.

3. 44 Indonesian pit vipers in checked baggage

The same Bangkok–India corridor produced a second seizure the same weekend. Mumbai Customs pulled 44 Indonesian pit vipers (a highly venomous species) and 4 other snakes, plus 5 turtles, from the checked baggage of an Indian passenger arriving from Bangkok at Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport. 6 Total: 48 snakes, 5 turtles.
That arrest then unravelled into four more: investigators subsequently detained four additional suspects and seized 139 more animals connected to the same trafficking network. 5 Indonesian pit vipers are sought in the illegal exotic pet trade; routing them through Bangkok before transiting into India obscures the country of origin.

4. CBP seizes 40 genuine ancient coins — and releases 3 fakes

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers intercepted a mis-declared shipment containing 40 genuine ancient coins, confirmed as authentic cultural property by expert examination. The same shipment contained 3 items that looked old but turned out to be fakes; those 3 were released. 7 Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) has been notified.
The inversion is the detail: the smuggler apparently mixed genuine antiquities with convincing forgeries, possibly betting that customs officers would conclude the whole lot was decorative. CBP's field operations offices in Seattle and Chicago jointly posted the seizure. The exact origin of the coins and the shipment's declared country of provenance have not been publicly disclosed.
23 ancient coins of varied shapes and ages laid out on a pale card, showing worn surfaces and ancient markings
23 ancient coins of varied shapes and ages laid out on a pale card, showing worn surfaces and ancient markings
Image from: CBP intercepts smuggled ancient coins — CBP via Instagram / Reddit r/AncientCoins

5. A snake charmer's stock, sold on social media

India's Directorate of Revenue Intelligence (DRI), Hyderabad Zonal Unit, ran an undercover decoy operation in Warangal, Telangana on May 18. The target: a suspect who had been buying Indian Red Sand Boas (Eryx johnii) from local snake charmers and posting them for sale on social media. 8 Two live snakes were seized; one person arrested.
The Red Sand Boa is protected under Schedule IV of India's Wildlife Protection Act, 1972. It is trafficked almost entirely because of folk beliefs that it brings wealth — the snake charmers who supply the pipeline are themselves often unaware of the legal exposure. The DRI's undercover purchase closed the loop.

6. A 22-year-old British man, 187 kg of marijuana, Trinidad

Trinidad and Tobago's Customs and Excise Division flagged a 22-year-old British national at the airport on May 17 during routine passenger clearance and directed him to the red channel for further inspection. They found 187 kg of marijuana packed into 187 individual trafficking packages, with a street value estimated at over TT$5 million (approximately US$1.3 million). 9 The precise packaging count — one package per kilogram — suggests a distribution operation rather than personal use.

7. Ireland: €695,000 in one week, three dogs doing most of the work

Irish Revenue published a summary on May 18 covering operations from May 11–17 across Dublin, the Midlands, County Cavan, and Rosslare Europort. 10 The haul: 21.5 kg of herbal cannabis (€419,500), 146,900 cigarettes and 22.5 kg of tobacco (€160,000 combined, approximately €124,000 in evaded tax), 87 counterfeit goods, 5.4 kg of cannabis resin, 490 litres of alcohol, and 172 weapon accessories. Detection credit was shared by three sniffer dogs: Toby, Ciara, and Sam.

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