One night last August, John Cambridge was making the rounds before closing time at the Philadelphia Insectarium and Butterfly Pavilion. That’s when the museum director noticed that Pinocchio, a gooty sapphire tarantula, was missing. His heart sank as he realized that dozens of glass cases normally teeming with rare tarantulas, scorpions, millipedes, mantises, cockroaches, and other creatures stood empty. “They were all gone,” says Cambridge. “They’d been taken.”
The theft turned out to be one of the biggest bug heists in history. About 7,000 insects and other critters had been stolen from the Insectarium—more than 80 percent of its collection. “We were bewildered,” says Cambridge. “A lot of the animals were threatened, exotic, and rare creatures, like the six-eyed spider, one of the most venomous spiders in the world.”
One night last August, John Cambridge was making the rounds at the Philadelphia Insectarium and Butterfly Pavilion. It was almost closing time. That’s when the museum director noticed that Pinocchio, a gooty sapphire tarantula, was missing. Dozens of glass cases were normally full of rare tarantulas, scorpions, millipedes, mantises, cockroaches, and other bugs. But the cases stood empty. Cambridge’s heart sank. “They were all gone,” he says. “They’d been taken.”
It was one of the biggest bug thefts in history. About 7,000 insects and other creatures had been stolen from the Insectarium. That was more than 80 percent of its collection. “We were bewildered,” says Cambridge. “A lot of the animals were threatened, exotic, and rare creatures, like the six-eyed spider, one of the most venomous spiders in the world.”