From the category archives:

Robber

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(Daily Mail) - The wife of a Mississippi high school football coach was gunned down Monday night after she found a man lurking in their backyard.

Ron and amanda price

Her husband was also shot as he sprinted outside their New Albany home to help her, but he is expected to recover.

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(Huffington Post) - Is that a romantic dinner in your pants or are you just happy to see me?

Dannial Ashley mug shot

Police in Florida could only wonder when they arrived at a supermarket where a 31-year-old man allegedly attempted to shoplift four steaks and a pair of candles by hiding the items in his trousers, according to the Naples Daily News.

Officials arrested Naples resident Dannial Ashley last week after grocery store employees spotted him stuffing the meat and candles — unlit, of course — into his pants. When one store worker confronted Ashley, the would-be thief ditched his stolen goods and attempted to escape on foot, WDBO reports.

The incident took place just two weeks after authorities released Ashley on bond following an incident involving aggravated assault, according to the Collier County Sheriff’s Office.

Despite the escape attempt, an employee reportedly chased down Ashley and convinced him to walk back to the store.

Authorities promptly arrested Ashley and returned the steak and candles to the store.

Ashley is charged with retail theft under $100.

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Submitted to WIDK by Bianca Coombs

(Daniel O’leary, New York Daily News)- An alleged robber in Chicago picked the wrong man to mess with.

Anthony Miranda, 24 is beaten by UFC fighter in attempted robbery

Anthony Miranda, 24, attempted a robbery and carjacking, police said, but his would-be prey was a 33-year-old mixed martial artist who competes in the Ultimate Fighting Championships. The tables were turned rather quickly, reports the Chicago Tribune.

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(The Smoking Gun) - After stealing a rowboat, jumping into a lake, and fleeing naked through thick underbrush, an agitated Florida man made a strange request to a sheriff’s deputy.

darrel lee horne

“Taser me, Taser me Bro,” Darrel Lee Horne demanded as he sat in the back a police cruiser, where he had been scuffling with a friend with whom he was arrested Friday afternoon.

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(Huffington Post) - A homeowner chased down and “hogtied” a man suspected of burglarizing his home twice in one day near Athens, Ohio, a sheriff says.

Trailer home

William Stanley’s video game systems had already been stolen on Thursday when he returned home in the evening to find an intruder inside, TV station WBNS reports.

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Posted to WIDK by Bianca Coombs

(Robert Klara, adweek.com) - As America’s retail brands gear up to welcome hordes of holiday shoppers, here’s a little something they might keep in mind: One in every 11 people who walk through the door are likely to walk out with at least one item he or she didn’t pay for.

10 most shoplifted items

Given that retailers are likely to lose $119 billion to shoplifters this year (1.45 percent of total sales), it’s not surprising that the loss-prevention folks have studied this problem from every angle. That’s how we know only 3 percent of shoplifters are “professionals” who’ll fence the goods, and most offenders are amateurs whose crimes are ones of opportunity.

“Seventy percent of shoplifters tell us they didn’t plan to shoplift,” says Barbara Staib, spokesperson for the National Association of Shoplifting Prevention.

We also know that three-quarters of shoplifters aren’t troubled teens; they’re adults–most with jobs. And 35 percent of losses will happen with the help of a corrupt employee.

The scariest part? Shoplifting is up 6 percent compared to 2010–and many experts predict retailers will face record losses by year’s end. “Our shrinkage rate is the highest it’s been in five years,” says Michael C. Creedon, North American vp of retail sales for ADT Commercial Security, who adds, “The economic environment has led to stealing for need-based purposes.” Johnny Custer, director of field operations for Merchant Analytic Solutions, says, “Most shoplifters simply succumb to temptation. But add a sense of desperation because of the economy and holiday pressures, and you have the recipe for theft soup.”

With some retailers gearing up to do 20 percent-40 percent of their annual sales, we wondered what items were most at risk as those sticky-fingered visitors slip down the store aisle. Here’s what store security pros told us.

1. FILET MIGNON Choice cuts of meat have become a Grade-A target for shoplifters (who, by the way, have also made supermarkets and grocery stores the most popular retail setting for theft). “Many police still believe [this] is the most common item stolen from grocery stores and supermarkets,” according to the U.S. Department of Justice. Between 2009 and 2011, the loss rate for “luxury meat” has risen by 21 percent.

 

10 most stolen items 2

2. JAMESON Expensive liquors help make up a “shrinkage rate” (stolen merchandise, basically) of 2.9 percent in North America. Liquor isn’t just nabbed by “minors looking to get drunk at their next party,” to quote a report by the AJ Novick Group. It also falls into the addiction category. Hard drinkers without enough cash to buy a bottle will just help themselves to one instead.

3. Electric tools The “DIY” category is No. 3 globally in terms of shrinkage. According to research conducted by Nottingham University in the U.K., the most common items men steal are electric toothbrushes and power tools. (Statistically there are more male shoplifters than females, and the genders have different theft preferences.) In U.S. home-improvement stores, plug-in tools are the items most likely to walk off.

4. iPHONE4 Electronic gadgetry in general– including video games, smartphones, and laptops–and Apple products in particular disappear in a (digital) flash. According to the AJ Novick Group, 100,000 laptops, for instance, annually walk away from big-box stores. “We’re going to see an evolution this year,” says MAS’s Custer. “The quality of the merchandise will increase a lot more, which is why people will be trying to steal more electronic items.”

most stolen items 35. GILLETTE MACH 4 Razor blades really cut it on the resale market, especially Gillette Mach 4s. That’s because the replacement-blade packs retail for around $23 dollars, and lots of whiskered men can’t afford that right now. “Check the online auction sites, and you’ll see a tremendous number of people trying to sell razor blades,” Custer says. Adds Read Hayes, director of the Loss Prevention Research Council: “In bad economic times, you’ll see more basic items stolen.” Shaving products account for over 2.7 percent of store inventory losses.

6. AXE The brand’s deodorants and body washes are some of the most-stolen products year-round. (Dial is a close second.) “We have some of the best-smelling shoplifters on the planet,” Custer says. Most of them are pros who dump the goods at flea markets and bodegas. “Walgreens and CVS recently experienced a series of burglaries,” Hayes adds, “where the only thing stolen was body wash.”

7. POLO RALPH LAUREN Designer apparel, with Tommy Hilfiger being another big brand, is a prime target, as it’s always been. “Clothing has been shoplifted since the beginning of shoplifting,” says Rachel Shteir, author of The Steal: A Cultural History of Shoplifting. “My theory has to do with people stealing to transform themselves.” Clothing theft has increased by 31 percent since 2009.

8. LET’S ROCK ELMO The furry red Muppet’s new product, which tops the Toys”R”Us 2011 “Hot Toys” list, is very likely to get nabbed this year, along with every other item on that roster. The must-have holiday toy has always been ripe for the picking, but that’s especially true now. “People won’t be able to provide the same kind of Christmas they’re accustomed to,” Custer says. “They can’t afford the hot toy.” They can, however, steal it.

9. CHANEL NO. 5 Expensive fragrances now make up close to 4 percent of losses in stores in which they’re sold, according to the 2011 Global Retail Theft Barometer. “Highly desirable and often small in size, [they] can be extremely vulnerable to theft,” the report says. It doesn’t help that designer fragrances are popular for personal use, resale, and, of course, as gifts.

most stolen items 4

10. NIKE Big-name athletic shoes are especially desirable because they appeal to sports and fashion bugs alike. The U.S. Justice Department classifies sneakers as “high risk” merchandise in terms of likely theft. In a crowded store, it’s easy for a shoplifter to show up in flip-flops, try on a pair of Adidas, and bolt out the front door.

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(Daily Mail) - Two women are accused of using a baby as a weapon by wildly swinging the baby’s car seat at security guards after they were stopped for allegedly shoplifting.

Jodie willis megan kelley mug shots

Jodie Willis, 25, and 21-year-old Megan Kelley, of Orlando, Florida, are also accused of trying to use the shopping cart, with Kelley’s baby daughter in it in a car seat, to push past the guards when they were first stopped at the city’s Walmart store.

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(Huffington Post) – A 17-year-old girl in Santa Ana was afraid she was going to lose her boyfriend, so she lied to him and told him she was pregnant.

gladys remigo steven david quirino robert henry rodriguez

Nine months later, she needed a baby to keep up the lie… so she stole her roommate’s.

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(Daily Mail By JESSICA SATHERLY) - A thief who tried to rob an Arizona gas station with a ‘bomb’ was actually only armed with a toy penguin.

andri jeffers

Andri Jeffers allegedly tried to hold up the Chevron Station in Dewey-Humboldt, Arizona, with the ‘bomb’ hidden under her shirt.

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(CBS Chicago) - A church in far north suburban Antioch is scrambling – after someone stole items that were donated as Christmas gifts for needy families.

st. stephens lutheran church

As CBS 2′s Pamela Jones reports, during regular business hours on Monday, somebody walked into St. Stephen Lutheran Church and stole $700 worth of toys, coats other items intended for Open Arms Mission Charities.

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