Thieves Steal 42" Plasma TV From Mall During Shopping Hours
Those post-holiday TV sales just aren't enough for some people, because somehow, a 42" plasma set used for display in a retail store in Albany, Georgia, was stolen from the counter during business hours. The employee who was working at the time had possibly the least helpful eyewitness testimony ever:
I realized that it was gone when my boss came in and said the monitor was gone. And I said the monitor was gone. So I just jumped up and saw that the monitor was gone. That was pretty much it.So, it seems as if the monitor may be gone.
"TV stolen in during peak shopping hour" [WALB.com]
(Photo: Getty)
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@vaxman: In the employee's defense, they were "in the back putting plain t-shirts in a box" which sounds like they were in a different room with the theft occurred and was still in there when the boss came back.
That said, this is a photo studio we're talking about. It's not like the place sells TVs and it would look like the person(s) taking it away had just bought one. How is it that no one saw someone taking the TV?
@Huntergreene: It also helps if you carry a clipboard. Although admittedly, that might be difficult if you're trying to carry a TV.
dude, if thieves want something that bad, they can get it without being noticed (it's all about your demeanor.)
damn, huntergreene beat me to it.
That being said, unplugging, picking up and carrying a 42" plasma takes balls, and some muscle. my 37" was almost a bit too much to move by myself (more because of its dimensions) so 42" must have been a [worthwile] pain in the ass to haul quickly
@magic8ball: It helps if you also have coveralls and a white van. A dept store in my town a few years back just kept giving all their furniture to these guys that would show up in coveralls and a white work van. Claimed they were there to pick up furniture and the employees would often help them load it into their van. It took a few months for the store to figure out where all their products were going.
Confidence helps, a cargo van and wearing Dickies coveralls is even better.
About 20 years ago some guy had a jacket printed with "IBM Factory Service" on it & had work tickets printed. He went into large secretarial pools in NYC, said he was there to pick up broken typewriters, put them on the cart he had & just picked up Selectric typewriters, then costing about $1500 each.
He supposedly stole a few hundred & was never caught.
Why should some min. wage-monkey care what gets stolen in the store they are working in? When I was a kid first working a shitty job I could care less what happened. Heck! Most kids got a new shitty job every few weeks or months.
Its funny that managers & the higher ups think that when you pay someone absolute shit wages... that they will fight tooth & nail to help the company in any way possible. LOL! Pay shit... you get shit back!
And about the cops lifting fingerprints .... what a lot of people dont realize is that there is such an INSANE backlog of fingerprint IDing on cases that all the non-serious cases are perpetually pushed to the back of the list compared to the REAL Fingerprint-IDing cases (like murder etc. etc.). It can take literally YEARS for them to get to low priority cases.
I remember working at Sears the summer before I went to college, back when shoes were still on commission. Our department was right near one of the entrances, and they had the bright idea to put a bunch of air conditioners right next to our department.
Next to the door.
With no security nearby.
By the end of the day, half the air conditioners had apparently walked out of the store.
Mall security ftl.
@Verklemptomaniac: Air conditionners, pfft... Try washer and dryer :) I thought first it was a joke first, when I heard the news.
Everytime I am in the mall near opening time, I see the not yet attended Dell kiosk with the 4 or 5 flat panel tv's just sitting there 50 feet from the mall entrance, waiting for someone in a pair of overalls, fake name tag and a walkie-talkie to stroll up to it, unmount it, and walk right out.
Nobody would think twice.
Most things are easier to take in broad daylight if you know what you are doing. Not that I've ever stolen anything in my entire life if you don't count sampling the jelly beans in the candy store.
To all those who say it's attitude. Absolutely, I worked in a 'major theme park that shall remain nameless' in the 90's and someone walked out one day with a six and one half foot Raptor prop from our Jurassic Park exhibit. I suppose the Raptor could have left through the employee entrance carried by someone wearing coveralls. But since no once noticed a SIX FOOT RAPTOR leaving the park, I guess we will never know. Seriously, who is going to question that person. We were instructed to not approach people we KNEW were shoplifting. How do you approach a cat with plums big enough to walk off with a dinosaur?
@LilKoko: It might not have helped. One of current co-workers used to work at a Zellers (mid-level Canadian dept store chain) when someone stole their security camera from the checkout area.
Apparently the last few seconds of video consisted of some radical left-right shaking before going black.
careful bro, sampling jelly beans is a pretty serious offense; justifiable enough to get tased depending on the circumstances/how many jelly beans were allegedly sampled
When I worked at Sears they had a guy walk out with a washer and dryer. He was an ex employee and he took the freight elevator (which goes right past loss preventions office) and even had other employees unknowingly help him steal. Took them right off the floor by telling them he was loss prevention and he was switching out a customers broken one with the floor models. Two appliance employees helped him wheel the washer while he got the dryer. The people in receiving helped him load it into his truck.
If he never worked at Sears and sent someone else in to do the job then they probably would've never been caught or would've had much better chances at getting away with it.
Most these big department store employees have no idea who watches the cameras.
@magic8ball: If you add in a dismissive look, or a annoyed shooing wave, that also helps. Just peer at your clipboard, while someone wheels away the TV on a handtruck. Anyone says "Hey, what are you doing?", just look at them like they SHOULD know.
The Emperor's New Clothes is more than just a fable. It's actually true. I once directed traffic on a four lane road adjacent to where I worked for a half hour during a power outage to get our customers out of our lot. All I had was a whistle, and what I gleaned from watching cops do it on TV. I even had a cop drive right by me, and didn't say boo.
@brennie:
Sounds a lot like Universal Studios Hollywood to me. The Jurassic Park thing blew your cover dood.
Some friends of mine wandered around the employee areas of the Bonneventure Hotel in LA one time. Some staff looked at them funny. But wily people there are, they pointed at their clipboard, and then something at the ceiling, and wrote something down. The staff then went about their business, ignoring them.
Clipboards are better than the Jedi Mind Trick.
You would be amazed at what you can get away with at retail locations if you show up with an official looking photo ID, a clip board, an orange safety vest and the tiniest bit of inside information.
Years ago when I was a copy machine repairman I was left alone in a room of a church FULL of money. It looked like Scrooge McDucks vault.
@bdgbill: In light of your observation, I'd like to revise your comment to say, "You would be amazed at what you can get away with when you put forth an image of piety and ask people for their money in the name of god."
Yeah, I grew up in Albany, GA. It has gone downhill A LOT in the 12 years since I left there to go to college & never looked back. But let's just say, I knew people there were in a dead-end town even back then. There is absolutely nothing redeeming about that town. I hate that I still have to go back there periodically when I visit my mom. Nothing about this story suprises me at all.
people have walked out of the CompUSA I work for with TVs on more than 1 occasion. One guy walked in the front door, grabbed a 32 inch LCD and walked out right in front of the door guard. This is what happens when you pay minimum wage to the people you expect to guard your inventory.
@morganlh85: I agree. People don't believe me when I tell them how easy it is to steal from companies. A former client of mine didn't think I could steal computers from them, I walked into their office, looked for a computer no one was using, said i was the new tech and was told to pick it up to be upgraded and walked out. simple. It's all about confidence.

























is the monitor gone?