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Cocaine, Monkeys and Now a Classic Harley Smuggled on Airlines

Thieving on a jet plane—the many recent cases of illegal activity.

Cocaine, Monkeys and Now a Classic Harley Smuggled on Airlines
Erick Thohir, second right, and Indonesia’s Finance Minister Sri Mulyani, center, check a Harley Davidson motorcycle during a news conference in Jakarta on Dec. 5. (SOurce: AP/PTI)

(Bloomberg) -- Indonesia’s top airline executive is set to be fired for allegedly ordering a classic Harley-Davidson motorcycle to be secretly shipped into the country on a new Airbus jet, the latest in a long line of smuggling incidents in the global aviation industry.

Anything from iPhones and iPads to gold and drugged monkeys have been smuggled on commercial aircraft in recent years. In the case of Indonesia, smuggling happens “often and under various means, and through many channels,” Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati told reporters in Jakarta on Thursday, as it was announced that PT Garuda Indonesia’s chief executive officer would be fired.

Cocaine, Monkeys and Now a Classic Harley Smuggled on Airlines

Here’s a look at some incidents:

Luxury Fashion on Korean Air

The widow and daughter of Korean Air’s late Chairman Cho Yang-ho were charged with using the airline to smuggle luxury goods worth nearly 90 million won ($75,000) into the country between January 2012 and May last year. The items included clothes, fashion bags and earthenware, and were smuggled aboard Korean Air planes disguised as items for the airline. A South Korean court issued suspended sentences for them in June.

Gold on Singapore Airlines

Indian customs officials arrested a cabin crew member from Singapore Airlines Ltd. last year, alleging he was wearing almost $50,000 worth of gold jewelry under his uniform, the South China Morning Post reported, citing local media. The person was planning to hand over the smuggled goods to an agent at a New Delhi hotel in return for less than $400, the report said.

Clothes on Vietnam Air

Tokyo police in 2014 arrested a cabin attendant from Vietnam Airlines on suspicion of smuggling stolen clothes into Vietnam. The airline later suspended five other crew members on suspicion of smuggling. That wasn’t the first incident linked to Vietnam Air. In 2002, its employees arriving in Hanoi on a flight from Dubai were found carrying gold, mobile phones and other goods, according to a local newspaper report.

Monkey Business

Sudanese authorities in 2014 thwarted a traveler’s attempt to smuggle 20 anesthetized monkeys out of the country. The monkeys were completely sedated when discovered in the passenger’s baggage at Khartoum airport, and later handed over to authorities.

Chinese Military Packages

A former manager for an unspecified international airline was charged in 2016 with smuggling packages for Chinese military officers stationed at the United Nations in New York. The person worked as a station chief at Newark Liberty International Airport, and smuggled the packages on flights to China in exchange for benefits including discounted liquor purchased from diplomatic duty-free shops. The contents of the packages weren’t revealed.

‘Air Cocaine’ Pilots

A French court in April sentenced two former air force pilots to six years in prison after 26 suitcases stashed with cocaine were found on their Falcon jet, according to a BBC report. The case dubbed “Air Cocaine” started in 2013 when police searched the jet headed for Saint-Tropez from the Dominican Republic. Five other people were sentenced for their involvement, including the ringleader of the operation, who was given 18 years in prison.

Fakes on a Plane

U.S. officials in September seized eight counterfeit Honda airbags at Ontario International Airport that arrived in two express packages from China. If genuine, the airbags would have a suggested retail price of nearly $5,000, U.S. Customs and Border Protection said. The fakes are typically used to replace original airbags after a vehicle is involved in a wreck, putting motorists at risk, according to U.S. authorities.

To contact the reporters on this story: Anurag Kotoky in New Delhi at akotoky@bloomberg.net;Harry Suhartono in Jakarta at hsuhartono@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Young-Sam Cho at ycho2@bloomberg.net, Will Davies

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