Copied from link....
Orchid scheme nipped in bud
Los Angeles Times31 Oct 2015By Brittny Mejia
U. S. District Attorney
VICTOR MANUEL ARIAS CUCHO pleaded guilty in connection with 200- plus protected orchids found inside his luggage — including a Lego box — at LAX.
Victor Manuel Arias Cucho had packed the necessities for his trip last month from Australia to Peru, including a My Pillow Pets plush toy and a Lego box.
But what really mattered was whatwas inside of them — more than 200 protected orchids, in violation of an international wildlife treaty.
During a layover at Los Angeles International Airport, federal authorities nipped Cucho’s scheme in the bud.
Cucho pleaded guilty in U. S. District Court on Wednesday to a federal offense of illegal trade in a protected species. The Peruvian national, aware that he couldn’t bring the orchids into the United States or Peru without proper docu--
mentation, concealed them in his luggage, according to a statement from the U.S. attorney’ s office.
The orchid plants were hidden inside a bee- shaped pillow, aswell as a tissue box, a Lego Ninjago box and a plastic tube that stores posters, said Asst. U.S. Atty. Dennis Mitchell of the Environmental and Community Safety Crimes Section.
“When someone is trying to conceal something, they obviously know they’re doing something that is prohibited,” he said.
Cucho had been flying from Australia — after attending an orchid trade show in Sydney— to Peru on Sept. 24, when he had the layover at LAX. There, Cucho submitted a customs declaration, in which he denied carrying any plants.
He was then sent by customs authorities to a secondary agricultural inspection, and that’s where his illicit cargo was discovered. The orchids are protected under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora.
The case against Cucho is the result of an investigation by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. U.S. Custom sand Border Protection first uncovered the orchids in the luggage.
LAX is no stranger to wildlife smuggling. Turtles have been hidden in snack food boxes, live lizards concealed in a belt and a live monkey was found inside of a duffel bag, said Jaime Ruiz, a customs spokesman.
“What was really how the orchids were concealed,” Ruiz added, ticking off the additional items that Cucho had used. The orchid plants were also in a tool box, a laptop case and plastic bottles. “People go to great lengths to circumvent U. S. law.”
In a 2011incident during a routine pat- down, Transportation Security Administration agents found bright yellow birds stuffed in socks and taped to thearmand leg of a traveler heading to China. The passenger was arrested by U.S. Fish and Wildlife officers on suspicion of smuggling goods and exporting an endangered species.
“It’s a wild, wildworld out there,” Ruiz said with a laugh. “We’ve seen it all at LAX.”
U.S. Magistrate Judge Karen L. Stevenson sentenced Cucho to two years’ probation and ordered him to pay a $ 7,500 fine.