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Thief dressed as Apple Store employee gets away with 19 iPhones
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MacNN Staff
Join Date: Jul 2012
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In the latest of several similar attacks targeting New York's Apple Stores, a thief has brazenly walked into an Apple Store and later out of it with 19 iPhones, reports DNAinfo. As with other recent instances, the thief worked with a small team, but crucially, dressed as an Apple employee wearing a replica store blue-colored T-shirt. Using this method, the thief was able to enter a back-of-store iPhone repair workroom at around 5:30PM on June 1, swipe the iPhones from a drawer, and pass them off to an accomplice, who managed to hide them under his shirt before the pair exited the store together.
The ruse has been able to work quite effectively, as it is not uncommon for new employees not previously seen by repair shop staff to walk in and out of the area. However, it does, apparently, require some level of inside knowledge to understand the layout of the stores. Police are investigating the incident, with the total value of the single theft worth approximately $16,130.
In another incident earlier this year, thieves targeted the Upper West store on two separate occasions over a two-month period, reported the New York Post. On both those occasions, a woman wearing a replica Apple Store employee T-shirt managed to steal eight iPhones, while two accomplices worked in tandem, with one as a lookout and the other causing a distraction. The second occasion was more fruitful, yielding another 59 iPhones. The total haul was estimated at $49,300.
As part of a policy instituted by Apple Senior VP of Retail and Online Stores, Angela Ahrendts, Apple employees must all wear the same color shirt with official Apple logo, although each staff member can choose whether they wear a short sleeve top, long sleeve top, crew neck shirt, or polo shirt. Thieves have cottoned on to the fact that they can blend into an Apple Store without arousing immediate suspicion. Apple has not made any public comment on the matter, but it could resolve the problem by requiring an employee badge and access card to employee-only areas.
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Fresh-Faced Recruit
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: Portland, OR
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Thieves have cottoned on to the fact...
Cotton the fabric of our lives.
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Grizzled Veteran
Join Date: Nov 2006
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My wife works at Louis Vuitton retail store. Merchants were stolen every year in her store. Some got caught, some are not. Also fake credit cards were detected many times. Employees are trained to identify them.
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Last edited by coffeetime; Jun 12, 2016 at 02:25 PM.
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Addicted to MacNN
Join Date: Aug 2007
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I don't know why anyone steals smartphones theses days. You can't activate the phone because the EID would be flagged as a stolen phone.
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45/47
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Senior User
Join Date: Dec 2001
Location: Prince George, BC, Canada
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Originally Posted by Chongo
I don't know why anyone steals smartphones theses days. You can't activate the phone because the EID would be flagged as a stolen phone.
I think the problem is that they can probably sell them privately and people will buy them. By the time that person takes it to activate it, they are long-gone.
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