Chameleon Nation
Avid Member
After the CITES papers have been applied for, approved then passed. ( this could take up to a year depending on where they are coming from) They can be shipped immediately or carried over the border by the individual that the papers are made out to. You must give customs at least 48 hours notice if you are carrying them across to allow them to look the animal over.
If you smuggle or try to bring the animal across without proper paperwork, customs will seize the animal, and I am sorry to say but they kill them. It does not matter how endangered the animal is, it means nothing to them. I got into a little argument with a customs agent. I said that if these animals are endangered, or any other animal for that fact, why would they be destroyed. He could not give me a straight answer and kept saying that it is their policy. Not to mention if you do try smuggling they will throw you in jail. It is quite the sentence if you try to bring something illegal into the country since 9/11. My advice is do the paperwork properly to ensure the animal a future.
If you smuggle or try to bring the animal across without proper paperwork, customs will seize the animal, and I am sorry to say but they kill them. It does not matter how endangered the animal is, it means nothing to them. I got into a little argument with a customs agent. I said that if these animals are endangered, or any other animal for that fact, why would they be destroyed. He could not give me a straight answer and kept saying that it is their policy. Not to mention if you do try smuggling they will throw you in jail. It is quite the sentence if you try to bring something illegal into the country since 9/11. My advice is do the paperwork properly to ensure the animal a future.
Two things would concern me about smuggling:
1. If they actually ask verbally, or on a form, if I am bringing across anything live. (I wouldn't mind with holding info from them if it didn't come up, but wouldn't want to lie.)
2. If they did discover the chameleon, they would confiscate it, and how on earth would they know how to care for it? I would have to hope it ended up with a reptile rescue group that wouldn't try to treat it like a bearded dragon. I can just see some poor 3 month old cham sitting in a glass tank on a log underneath a 150watt bulb. Not that I'm slamming rescue groups. Thank God for them. But I imagine the ones near the border are probably a little overworked.