
U.S. Customs and Border Protection agriculture specialists at Chicago’s O’Hare International Airport intercepted two significant, prohibited commodities on April 11.
CBP officers referred a traveler arriving from Cameroon to a secondary agriculture inspection. An anomaly discovered during an X-ray examination of the traveler’s baggage prompted a thorough search of the suitcase. A CBP agricultural specialist discovered a monkey carcass within the luggage. Due to significant human health concerns, the monkey remains were detained by CBP and destroyed in accordance with partner governing agency directives.
A subsequent traveler from Liberia tried to deceptively sneak in prohibited ruminant meat. CBP agriculture specialists inspected eight boxes within the traveler’s baggage and discovered meat, bones, and hair concealed in dried seafood. The traveler admitted that the concealed meat was beef. Seafood is generally admissible, but ruminant meat from certain parts of the world is prohibited due to the presence of disease, such as Bovine spongiform Encephalopathy and Foot and Mouth Disease.
CBP agriculture specialists seized a total of 125 pounds of prohibited ruminant meat, one pound of prohibited fresh leaves, and four types of prohibited seeds for planting from the Liberian traveler’s baggage.
“CBP’s agriculture specialists mitigate the threat of non-native plants and pests, plant and animal diseases, and other potentially contaminants entering the United States,” said Chicago Field Office’s Acting Director of Field Operations Michael Pfeiffer. “The sheer volume of prohibited items our specialists intercept daily demonstrates how they play an essential and critical role in preventing plant and animal diseases from entering the United States.”hts.”
Trade in counterfeit consumer goods is illegal. It threatens the health and safety of American consumers, steals from trademark holders, and takes tax revenues from the government, and it funds transnational criminal organizations. Counterfeit consumer goods may also be sourced or manufactured in facilities that employ forced labor.
Counterfeiters manufacture consumer goods using substandard materials and parts that could prematurely break or harm consumers. Protect your families by purchasing authentic consumer products from reputable retailers. Learn more about the consequences of counterfeits by visiting CBP’s Fake Goods Real Dangers webpage.
CBP protects businesses and consumers every day through an aggressive Intellectual Property Rights enforcement program. During fiscal year 2025, CBP seized over 78,000,000 counterfeit goods with an estimated manufacturer’s suggested retail price worth over $7.3 billion, had the goods been genuine.

