Three kids walked into a room full of cameras and journalists — and just like that, the ‘Harry Potter’ era began.
Somewhere in Europe, a truck loaded with more than 400,000 KitKat bars has vanished — and honestly, it sounds like the pitch for the next great heist movie.
A shipment of approximately 413,793 KitKat bars was stolen while in transit after leaving a production site in Italy, according to a statement from Nestlé. The truck was headed to Poland for distribution across Europe when the roughly 12-ton haul of chocolate disappeared. The exact location of the theft has not been specified.
And in case you were wondering — no, the chocolate hasn’t turned up. Neither has the truck.
“The vehicle and its load are still nowhere to be found,” Nestlé said.
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Nestlé Leans Into the Absurdity
Give Nestlé’s communications team credit: they know what they’re working with. The company didn’t just issue a dry corporate statement about cargo loss. They went full pun mode.
“We’ve always encouraged people to have a break with KitKat,” Nestlé said. “But it seems thieves have taken the message too literally and made a break with more than 12 tons of our chocolate.”
But beneath the humor, Nestlé made clear this is part of a much bigger problem.
“Whilst we appreciate the criminals’ exceptional taste, the fact remains that cargo theft is an escalating issue for businesses of all sizes,” according to a statement to The Athletic.
“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.
No injuries were reported during the incident, according to a company spokesperson.
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Here’s the detail that takes this story from “fun candy crime” to “peak pop culture moment”: the stolen KitKat bars were part of the company’s Formula One line, themed after race cars.
A Chocolate Trail to Follow
Nestlé warned that the stolen products could enter unofficial sales channels across European markets. But the company said it has a way to track the missing haul.
The stolen bars can be traced using unique batch codes printed on their packaging, Nestlé said. The company stated that consumers, retailers and wholesalers can scan the on-pack batch numbers to identify whether products match the stolen goods, with instructions provided if a match is found.
So if you’re in Europe and spot a suspiciously good deal on F1-themed KitKats, maybe check that batch code before you buy.
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Still Missing, Still Wild
As of Nestlé’s statement, neither the truck nor its 12-ton chocolate cargo had been recovered. The shipment remains missing, the thieves remain unidentified and the whole thing remains one of the most shareable news stories in recent memory.
Twelve tons. Nearly 414,000 bars. A vanishing truck. Formula One branding. And a candy giant that responded with puns.
If this doesn’t end up as a documentary or at least a very long Reddit thread, something has gone wrong.











