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Over 12 Tons Of KitKat Bars STOLEN In Heist
Okay, I have never heard of a KitKat bar heist.
But that has now changed.
A shipment of over 12 tons of KitKat bars was stolen in Europe.
The massive theft comes just a week before Easter, which may cause some supply shortages in Europe.
CBS provided further details on the heist:
A massive 12-ton shipment of Nestle’s crunch KitKat bars was stolen in a chocolaty heist that risks causing a shortage in stores right before Easter.
KitKat, owned by Swiss food giant Nestle, told AFP on Saturday that “a truck transporting 413,793 units of its new chocolate range has been stolen during transit in Europe.” The shipment disappeared last week while heading between production and distribution locations, the company said.
“We’ve always encouraged people to have a break with KitKat,” a spokesperson told AFP, referring to its famous catchphrase. “But it seems thieves have taken the message too literally and made a break with more than 12 tons of our chocolate.”
The company said the stolen truck had left a factory in central Italy and was making its way to Poland when it was stolen, adding that “the vehicle and its contents remain unaccounted for.”
“Investigations are ongoing in close collaboration with local authorities and supply chain partners,” Nestle said.
The chocolatier warned that the missing chocolate bars may lead to a shortage of KitKats appearing on shelves and buyers may struggle to find their favorite chocolates ahead of Easter.
It also said the missing chocolate bars “could enter unofficial sales channels across European markets.”
KitKats aren’t the only consumer items being stolen.
As WLT Report previously reported, a truck shipment of Tucker Carlson’s nicotine brand ALP Pouches was hijacked from a warehouse in California.
The shipment, which contained over 375,000 cans of ALP, is valued at millions of dollars.
The ALP Heist: What Happened
$100,000 reward, read below
A truck carrying millions worth of ALP nicotine pouches has vanished while travelling from California to Kentucky.
The shipment, which contained around 378,000 tins of ALP’s new limited “Drifters” line, was picked up… pic.twitter.com/il0A6U5lzs
— Alp Pouch (@alppouch) March 4, 2026
Full Text:
The ALP Heist: What Happened
$100,000 reward, read below