Tuesday, October 07, 2014

Shoplifting: thrill of theft makes good people do bad things

 
This lovely Eastern European woman living just north of Montreal got into a common problem recently.
   According to a recent court ruling, the woman, (whose name I won't mention because it would only further the misery in this world) was caught on video stuffing 21 items into her purse of a value of $475 from a Sears store on January 8, 2013. 
   She told a judge that she had two small children and another on the way while her husband was out of work.
   Prosecutors noted, however, that she lives in a $500,000 home and drives a Mercedes. 
  A store employee testified at her trial that he had seen her steal items a few weeks prior but she got away before he could find her. 
   The 31-year-old recently asked a judge for absolution in return for a $1,000 donation to charity because a criminal record would hamper her efforts to visit her husband's parents in the U.S.A. but a judge ruled that she'd have to go through probation and pay a fine. 
   Her story is remarkably common in Quebec and shows that otherwise good people can have their judgment clouded by the intoxicating rush of getting away with something illegal.
   Shoplifting has not been discussed much recently, perhaps because bricks and mortar retail outlets are too busy trying to figure out how to survive the onslaught of online shopping, so it's unclear what the most recent trends are. 
   But according to numbers from four years back thieves steal about $1.6 million from retail stores every day in Quebec, with about half of all thefts committed by employees. The 2011 statistic of $585 million was down from an estimated $800 million four years earlier.
  The downtown Simon's outlet reported in 2011 that it nabs five thieves a day, who justify their actions by assuming that stores are rich and can afford to take a loss, according to an employee. 
   Thieves often have psychological issues to deal with and many of those caught are brought for group discussion therapy at an establishment somewhere near Girouard and NDG Ave.  
   About one-in-three shoplifters is inspired to steal by depression, while many others have kleptomania
   Quebec supermarkets, convenience stores and pharmacies lost $418 million in 2010. Furniture, home furnishings, computers, software, appliance, hardware and department stores lost $166 million. Shoplifters consisted of 53 per cent men and 33 per cent women and 12 percent were teens.  It's the most common type of crime among minors

5 comments:

  1. Still one has to wonder about the "convenience" of online shopping when one considers the usually outrageous shipping charges on top of currency exchange rates when ordering from the U.S.

    Doesn't it make more sense, for example, to purchase a book from a local store or to have them order it for you?

    People need to get out more.

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  2. I was briefly an active shoplifter as a teen. Getting caught with a pocketful of Star Wars action figures at a KMart in 1980 cured me pretty quick (even though I ran and got away).

    For a number of years in my early 20's I stole disposable razor blades for shaving purely because I was broke and thoght the prices were so crazy that it justified theft. Cured that time by witnessing a 70 sommething old man get caught stealing something in a drug store. He burst out crying and begged pathetically to be let go. A scene I will never forget. Been on the straight and narrow ever since.

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  3. It's an interesting phenomenon which I've noticed a number of my closest friends often partake, some of which I would have never pegged as such. The risk is just much too high in my opinion unless one hasn't eaten in days and teeters starvation.

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  4. Both my ex-wives admitted to me that they shoplifted while adults and married to me. One got caught and they let her go. Both did it for the thrill.

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  5. They do it to support drug habit

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