Interpol Busts Record Wildlife Trafficking Network, Seizes 30,000 Animals Across 134 Countries

December 11, 2025
Interpol Busts Record Wildlife Trafficking Network, Seizes 30,000 Animals Across 134 Countries
  • Interpol reports a record-breaking global wildlife trafficking operation in 2025, with nearly 30,000 animals seized and about 1,100 suspects identified across 134 countries.

  • The crackdown targeted a broad range of species, including pangolins, big cats, reptiles, and more than 6,000 birds plus over 2,000 turtles; in Africa, Kenyan and Tanzanian authorities seized substantial quantities of giraffe meat, zebra and antelope meat, and hides worth roughly $10,000.

  • The illicit trade spans invertebrates and marine life as well, with roughly 10,500 butterflies, spiders, and other arthropods seized, reflecting growing demand for wildlife-derived products used in traditional medicine and cuisine.

  • Two rainbow boa constrictors were found under blankets in a car in Dover after the driver bought them at a German reptile show without a licence.

  • Animals in custody, including tarantulas, snakes, and birds, are protected under CITES; most will be rehoused or used for research rather than released back into the wild.

  • Smuggling of small exotic species rose, with nearly 10,500 butterflies, spiders, and other arthropods seized, many protected under CITES, raising ecological and biosecurity concerns.

  • Adult tarantulas command high prices—up to 350 pounds for common species and even more for rarer Argentinian varieties—yet shipments suffer high mortality from poor handling.

  • Officials noted rising demand for exotic pets and traditional medicine fuels the market and urged stronger international cooperation and financial-tracking to disrupt criminal networks.

  • Over 100 endangered birds, including scarlet ibis and lovebirds, were found crammed into vehicles, with several deaths and many in filthy conditions raising health concerns.

  • Interpol leaders emphasize that wildlife crime networks increasingly link to drug trafficking and human exploitation, aided by cross-border cooperation, intelligence sharing, and cryptocurrency tracing.

  • Criminals are moving illicit funds through cryptocurrencies, and tracing these flows relies on cross-border cooperation and partnerships with financial platforms.

  • Other seized items included an elephant hair ring, king cobra balm, shark jaw, shark and crocodile meat, ivory carvings, and a tiger claw bottle when paperwork was missing.

Summary based on 12 sources


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