The weekly weird
Thousands of insects stolen from museum
Philadelphians are on the lookout for 7,000 creatures — including a highly venomous spider — that were stolen from the city’s Insectarium and Butterfly Pavilion. It’s estimated that the stolen creepy crawlies are worth up to $50,000.
Thieves made off with up to 80 percent of the museum’s collection, including rare insects, lizards, snakes, zebra tarantulas, desert hairy scorpions and red spot assassin bugs, and a six-eyed sand spider whose bite could rot 25 percent of their victim’s body.
Insectarium CEO John Cambridge said that he wasn’t, “sure there’s ever been a larger live-insect heist. They are not difficult to sell, and there’s a thriving market of insect enthusiasts.”
Authorities believe the thieves previously worked at the museum and were “dismissed for extremely good reasons.” The museum set up a GoFundMe page to raise funds to replace its collection and continue its efforts to “bring insects and other arthropods to the public in a way that they can be loved and appreciated.”