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  • An account of a purse snatching at a John Lewis (a large department store with its headquarters in London's Oxford Street) which led to a burglary began its online life in November 2008: I heard this story from my CEO today. Her sister went shopping in John Lewis. She visited the ladies room and hung her handbag on the back of the toilet door. As she carried on about her business, a hand suddenly appeared over the top of the stall and grabbed her bag clean off the hook!!! As if this wasn’t bad enough, she reported the incident to the manager of the store. A couple of days later she took a call to say her bag had been found, without her purse. She arranged a time to go and meet the manager to collect her things. On arriving at John Lewis at the agreed time, the manager was not expecting her — nothing had been found, no one had called. When the lady got home, her house had been burgled, with no sign of forced entry, they had used her Driving License for the address and her keys to let themselves in!!!!!! I promise this is real — it isn’t just a scaremongering story, I was so shocked at how complex bag snatching crime has become. Please be extra vigilant ladies, Christmas is a bad time for this sort of thing anyway, but with the credit crunch there are a lot of desperate criminals out there!! While this particular account can't be verified (precious little information is provided in terms of the who, when and where, details necessary to the process of tracking down the incident), the implied advice about not stowing one's purse on the hook affixed to the door of a restroom stall is valid. Handbags have indeed been snatched from the stalls of public restrooms by thieves who reached over closed doors and lifted them from the hooks the stalls' occupants had placed them on. This form of thievery is so commonplace that some airports have taken the precaution of removing the hooks from stall doors, as, for instance, the As for the second part of the tale (about the victim's home being broken into when she went to retrieve her purse), Bill Cain, an instructor for the National Crime Prevention Task Force in Atlanta, said in a 2004 seminar that some purse snatchers have been known to telephone their victims later, saying they stole the handbags on dares and wanted to return them. When a victim would go to a designated site to retrieve her purse, the thieves would burglarize her house. The majority of burglars prefer to go about their business while the home is unoccupied. Some even choose which domiciles to burgle based on knowledge that the residents will be elsewhere at the time of the However, while lures have been successfully used to get people out their homes so that their residences can be rifled, the premise of clearing a householder out of the way by sending her on a wild goose chase to reclaim a purse has one inherent flaw: It assumes that with her gone, the targeted house will now be standing empty. Therefore, if you ever do misplace a handbag or have one snatched from you and subsequently receive a call from someone asking you to retrieve the recovered bag, make the caller aware that the home has other occupants who will be staying in place while you're off reclaiming your property, even if that means temporarily inventing a spouse and some children (e.g., "Oh, yes, I can certainly come get it. I'll ask my husband to watch the kids while I'm gone"). A well-traveled urban legend fits the "one theft facilitating a subsequent burglary" pattern of the handbag tale. In the A July 2009 version of the e-mail quoted above contained the signature block of DC Nick Gilbey of the Violent and Organised Crime Unit at the Plumstead Police Station in the U.K. That officer said about the item that "It didn't originate from me and it's a hoax. Please disregard the email and do not refer to it."
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  • English
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