SHOPLIFTING
“QUITE A PROFESSION.*
Shoplifting has from Isolated cases of kleptomania grown Into a profession In Sydney. A leading Sydney retail house, one Of the proprietors of wnioh was interviewed last week, catches with its house detectives on an average 400 shoplifters each year. Over the last eighteen month* they have been satisfied to take a confession and issue a warning themselves in 150 cases.
The others, being second, third and fourth offenders in their establishment. they have sent before a magistrate.
In a recent case before the court a woman, who had three; previous convictions for shoplifting and five for other offences, was fined £2O or three months’ imprisonment She decided to pay the fine and was given three months in which to find the money. The store in question cannot assess the amount of stuff stolon each year by. jhopfsiters. But the dhectors know that the timq of the two bouse detectives is fully occupied
Shoplifting is so payable a proposition to those who take to It seriously that a gang of twelve women have been in the habit of making regular raids on their establishment. While half the gang takes up the time of the assistants in one corner of the floor, the other half collects the loot. One of the women was caught in the act one day. She had frocks worth £7O in her suit case. If three or four of the women working in that gang made a similar haul It would be a good day for the dozen. As many as six arrests have been made in that store in one day. and it is not the largest retail house In the city. 4 it is getting worse each day,” one of the members of the firm said, “but the magistrates seem to treat shoplighting as a negligible thing, because in some cases the value of the stolen pioperty is small."
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Bibliographic details
Manawatu Times, Volume XLIX, Issue 2340, 9 January 1926, Page 13
Word Count
318SHOPLIFTING Manawatu Times, Volume XLIX, Issue 2340, 9 January 1926, Page 13
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