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Deadly snakes found in posted packages sent to Australia


Highly poisonous snakes have been discovered in the Australian post as wildlife officers try to uncoil a reptile-smuggling racket, it was reported Friday.

A death adder and king brown snake – among the deadliest snakes in the world – were part of a haul of 93 reptiles hidden in six packages
posted from the remote mining town of Kalgoorlie in Western Australia, wildlife officers told broadcaster ABC.

Other reptiles shipped included geckos, skinks and lizards. The reptiles could have fetched 150,000 Australian dollars
(119,000 US dollars) on the black market.

Wildlife officer Matt Swann said the animals had been caught in West Australia, and that this was one of the largest intercepts of illegally marketed animals in Australia.

They were inside plastic containers which could have broken open, letting the deadly snakes escape in the postal system. Five reptiles
died before they were discovered.

“They pose a real threat and risk to the people involved in the transport and handling of these packages, and that can have fatal
consequences,” Swann said.

Nobody has been charged as yet, but investigations are continuing. Smugglers of protected species can be fined up to 20,000 Australian
dollars per species.