In Australia, a woman, 50, (name withheld) has been arrested in connection with the 'strawberry contamination scare' where sewing needles were found hidden inside fruit.
The woman is expected to face unspecified charges on Sunday evening.
Police said she was arrested on Sunday following a complex nationwide investigation which was launched after shocked shoppers first reported the contamination in September.
A customer took a disturbing photo of a needle wedged inside a strawberry. It's believed the scare affected several states in Australia.
No fewer than 100 reports of needles being found in strawberries was recorded, though many were suspected to be copycat cases or social media stunts.
Farmers were forced to dump tonnes of berries, and supermarkets pulled the fruit off sale.
The first cases emerged in Queensland, where a man was taken to hospital with stomach pains after eating strawberries. The scare spread to every Australian state and later to New Zealand, raising public alarm.
Australia's government in response to the scare raised the maximum prison term for fruit tampering from 10 to 15 years.
Prime Minister Scott Morrison vowed to "throw the book" at anyone responsible, saying: "It's not funny, putting the livelihoods of hard-working Australians at risk, and you are scaring children. And you are a coward and a grub".
The woman is set to appear in a Brisbane court on Monday.
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