A woman in the US state of Connecticut had her package stolen from the front porch of her house, only to discover that the culprit was a black bear. Home surveillance footage posted on Facebook by Kristin Levine of Bristol showed the animal walking away with the Amazon package, which contained several rolls of toilet paper, in its mouth.

“Yea so if anyone sees an Amazon package in the Chippens Hill area with my name on it…feel free to bring it back?” Levine joked in the Facebook post.

Levine told NBC News that she was taken aback when the security system sent her two alerts in 10 minutes after the package’s arrival because she wasn’t expecting anyone else in the driveway.

ALSO READ: The internet is all hearts for two bees and how they open a bottle | Watch

“It was hysterical. I knew nothing in there was going to be irreplaceable so it was a fun afternoon for sure,” Levine said.

She later updated the post to inform the package in a neighbor’s yard, with its contents surprisingly intact.

Levine’s post received numerous comments, with some comparing the ‘thief’ to the bear from the Charmin toilet paper commercials. A person who said she lived nearby vowed to watch her packages better. “We have two bears that hang out up here in my neighborhood. This was too funny. We had one try to steal a trash bag out if our can, but my husband scared him off. Wish I had video taped it. Thanks for the laugh!!” she wrote.

The bear’s tagged ears suggest encounters with state wildlife officials, who have issued a list of Do’s and Dont’s for the state’s residents in case they run into the animals.

ALSO READ: Lioness attacks circus trainer in front of audience during live show. Watch

“Black bears are becoming increasingly common in Connecticut as the population continues to grow and expand. Reports of bear sightings, even in heavily populated residential areas, have been on the rise,” according to Connecticut’s Department of Energy and Environmental Protection. This is despite bears having been largely eradicated from the state by the 1800s.