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Stuffed tiger was no toy

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A box labeled ‘toy tiger’ raised eyebrows of customs inspectors in San Francisco. An investigation followed. And now, the Associated Press reports Friday, a Bay Area couple admitted in federal court to trying to illegally import a real stuffed tiger into the United States. The AP tells the tale:

The pair pleaded guilty to one charge each of trying to import an endangered species without proper permits. In exchange for those pleas, prosecutors dropped more serious smuggling charges. Nicki Phung, 31, and Steven Tieu, 38, are both expected to be sentenced to probation. Each has agreed to pay $5,000 to a nonprofit dedicated to protecting wild cats.

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The two were caught in December when a U.S. Customs official at San Francisco International Airport inspected a box labeled “toy tiger” mailed from Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, and bound for the couple’s home in Hercules, Calif. Phung’s attorney, Geoffrey Rotwein, said the mounted tiger was meant as a gift and that the couple did not intend to sell it.

“They feel really bad about what they did,” Rotwein said. He said the couple don’t know who the gift giver was and didn’t know until “late in the game” that they were to receive a stuffed tiger.

“They kind of got duped into this,” Rotwein said. “They didn’t really what they were getting into.”

-- Steve Padilla

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