GENEVA (AP) — Swiss food giant Nestlé says about 12 tons, or 413,793 candy bars, of its KitKat chocolate brand were stolen after leaving its production site in Italy earlier this week for Poland.
The company, based in Vevey, Switzerland, said in a statement Friday that “the vehicle and its load are still nowhere to be found.”
The shipment of the crunchy bars, made of waffles covered with chocolate, disappeared last week while en route between production and distribution locations. The chocolate bars were to be distributed throughout Europe.
The missing candy bars could enter unofficial sales channels across European markets, the company said, but if this does happen, all products can be traced using the unique batch code assigned to individual bars.
A spokesperson for KitKat said that as a result, consumers, retailers and wholesalers would be able to identify if a product is part of the stolen shipment by scanning the on-pack batch numbers. If a match is found, the scanner will be given clear instructions on how to alert the company, which will then share the evidence appropriately.
“Whilst we appreciate the criminals’ exceptional taste, the fact remains that cargo theft is an escalating issue for businesses of all sizes," KitKat said in a statement.
“With more sophisticated schemes being deployed on a regular basis, we have chosen to go public with our own experience in the hope that it raises awareness of an increasingly common criminal trend,” the statement added.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Iranian rockets hit Tel Aviv area, injuring six - 2
Japan prepares to restart world's biggest nuclear plant, 15 years after Fukushima - 3
Air superiority and long-range strikes: what China's war games say about how it might assault Taiwan - 4
How to watch ‘The Traitors’ Season 4: Premiere date, episode release time, full cast list and more - 5
Underestimated Metropolitan Experience Urban communities On the planet
US measles cases surpass 2,000, highest in 30 years: CDC
Tesla Stock Hasn’t Looked This Cheap in a While
Enormous Credit And All that You Really want To Be aware
Fuel Price Spike Drives Surge in Used EV Sales in Europe
Report: Russian military pressuring students to work as drone pilots
Israeli lawmakers pass bill reviving death penalty for terrorists
Former hostage Eitan Mor on Hamas: ‘They will not give up until the last Israeli is gone'
Excelling at Cash The board: A Manual for Monetary Essentials
Trump administration plan to reduce access to some student loans angers nurses, health care groups













