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Zombie Terminator ammunition seized at Wilmington port May 1, 2021 FacebookTwitterEmail WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) Federal agents have seized 40 rounds of “Zombie Terminator” ammunition from a Delaware port, preventing its shipment to Honduras. U.S. Customs and Border Protection said Friday that the rounds were discovered during an X-ray examination of household goods in a shipping container at the Port of Wilmington Tuesday. It is illegal to export ammunition without a federal license. Customs and Border Protection said the box of .38-caliber ammunition was tagged as “the best self-defense ammo during a zombie apocalypse.” Top Picks In Shopping ....
Officials seize Honduras-bound ‘Zombie Apocalypse ammo at Wilmington port Jeff Neiburg, Delaware News Journal Headlines April 30, 2021 Replay Video UP NEXT Forty rounds of the best self-defense ammo during a zombie apocalypse marked for Honduras was intercepted at the Port of Wilmington, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced. The box of Zombie Terminator .38-caliber ammunition was found Tuesday during a joint examination of outbound shipping containers at the port. Officers initially detected an anomaly during an X-ray examination of a shipment of household goods destined to Honduras. Officers discovered the anomaly was a box of ammo. “Ultimately, Customs and Border Protection does not want illegally exported ammunition ending up in the hands of criminals or criminal organizations who could use that ammo to hurt innocent victims,” Keith Fleming, acting director of field operations for CBP’s Baltimore Field Offi ....
View Comments Forty rounds of the best self-defense ammo during a zombie apocalypse marked for Honduras was intercepted at the Port of Wilmington, U.S. Customs and Border Protection announced. The box of Zombie Terminator .38-caliber ammunition was found Tuesday during a joint examination of outbound shipping containers at the port. Officers initially detected an anomaly during an X-ray examination of a shipment of household goods destined to Honduras. Officers discovered the anomaly was a box of ammo. “Ultimately, Customs and Border Protection does not want illegally exported ammunition ending up in the hands of criminals or criminal organizations who could use that ammo to hurt innocent victims,” Keith Fleming, acting director of field operations for CBP’s Baltimore Field Office, said in a press release. ....