There are nonsexual eroticismthousands and thousands of stolen bugs -- including one of the world's most venomous spiders and several cockroach colonies -- still missing from the Philadelphia Insectarium and Butterfly Pavilion, in case you needed a reason to scream this weekend.
The thieves got away with $40,000 worth of insects and lizards on Wednesday. The insectarium estimates that the thieves stole about 7,000 animals in total, a whopping 80 to 90 percent of the insectarium's exhibits.
SEE ALSO: Nicole Kidman casually catches a giant spider like it's no big dealPolice and insectarium staff think the heist might have been an inside job. Security footage showed people walking around the museum holding plastic boxes full of some missing insects, including giant African mantises, bumblebee millipedes, warty glowspot roaches, tarantulars, dwarf and tiger hissers, and leopard geckos. When the crime was reported, the New York Timessays, insectarium employees found two staff uniforms "stuck to the wall with knives."
Whoever got away with the creepy crawlies knew what they were doing. The thief also stole the logs on record that documented each bug, which makes it even more difficult to figure out what was stolen.
To make it even worse, the Philly Voicereports that the thieves ran off with multiple cockroach colonies, which means that there are thousands of missing roaches somewhere in area.
On the plus side, the insectarium's Mexican Fire Leg Tarantula was found by police and returned!
View this post on Instagram
Because some of the insects were confiscated at a port of entry, "taking those critters is literally tampering with evidence," according to the insectarium's chief executive John Cambridge.
Three current or former staff members are suspects in the case, but the Philadelphia police haven't made any arrests yet.
Although the thieves face hefty prison sentences, Cambridge hopes they get off easy.
"They are young, and I really hope that this isn't something that follows them for the rest of their life," Cambridge told the New York Times. "Everybody does dumb stuff when they're young."
(Editor: {typename type="name"/})
How to live stream the New York Knicks in 2025
Kristen Bell performed songs from 'Frozen' for evacuees at a Hurricane Irma shelter
Drake is just as big of a Beyoncé fan as we all are, and his studio decor proves it
Policeman stops traffic to rescue a tiny kitten trying to cross the road
Best Presidents' Day deal: Save $250 on Peloton Bike
Hillary Clinton confirms she coped after her election loss with yoga, hiking, and wine
Rihanna gives the best explanation to Laverne Cox about that iconic diamond dress
Brie Larson discusses 'Messy Truth’ VR at Infinity Festival
Eric Wei's essentials for creating podcasts and running a business
Eddie Izzard now uses she/her pronouns, receives outpouring of support
11 Tech Products That Were Supposed to Fail... But Didn't
What do the Duck of Justice and a red 'It' balloon have in common? Stephen King.
接受PR>=1、BR>=1,流量相当,内容相关类链接。