This is the original article on shoplifting featured in Rabelais (Australia)
that is at the centre of this issue. THIS ARTICLE IS NOT REPRINTED TO ENCOURAGE
ANY PERSON TO COMMIT ANY ILLEGAL ACT, BUT FOR PURPOSES OF INFORMING DISCUSSION
OF THE ISSUES
AT HAND.
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The Art of Shoplifting
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Shoplifting is a topic that is practically relevant to many and it should
therefore not
become an exclusive craft confined to a small shoplifting elite.
On the contrary, shoplifting
is an art that deserves the widest possible
dissemination. For your convenience we have
printed below a step by step guide
to shoplifting. Good luck.
Within capitalism,
most of us are either (1) alienated from our labour and hence
dependent on the ruling classes
for commodities as basic as food and clothing,
(2) excluded from the division of labour, in
which case we are likewise
dependant on the State, or (3) performing unpaid and/or
unrecognised labour and
hence dependant on patriarchal relations for food, clothing,
etcetera. In any
case, our access to resources is severely limited by contemporary relations
of
domination. One partial solution to this problem may be to STEAL.
Sadly,
however, many people living precariously on low incomes tend to either:
(1) avoid shoplifting
for anachronistic moral and/or ethical reasons; or (2)
remain ignorant of the better methods
and techniques of shoplifting, thus
failing to maximise their lifting potential.
From the onset, the golden rule of theft should be enunciated: NEVER STEAL FROM
SOMEBODY WHO
COULD CONCEIVABLY BE A COMRADE. Hence kicking into a house on Bell
Street with a beaten up
old Mazda in the yard is irresponsible and
counter-revolutionary!
Be careful,
too, about taking stuff from small ‘corner store’ type shops — you
could be ripping off
someone in a situation not dissimilar to your own. On the
whole, it is best to play it safe
and go straight for the big corporate f***ers.
Some people will suggest that
shoplifters are a selfish breed, since ‘we all pay
for it in the end’ through inflated prices
to cover losses and so forth.
However, comrades, this and closely analogous arguments are
used to just ify
lowering wages, breaking unions, lowering corporate taxation and taxation on
the
rich and corporate sector we may as well sell ourselves into bonded slavery now,
or join the Liberal Party.
No, the injunction against stealing from capitalism is
itself a capitalist
ideology and should be spurned as such. Although we have been taught that
‘thou
shalt not steal’, an order historically backed by threats of divine retribution,
this should not for one minute stop us from taking the redistribution of wealth
into our own
hands. Believe me, no-one is likely to do it for us.
What follows is a list of
effective methods and observations that may prove
useful.
Preparing
oneself for the big haul:
1. If possible, you should always have some money on you when
intending to
shoplift, because if you’ve got none, it’s rather hard to argue that to steal
the item was a spontaneous decision. As a result, if you’ve got no money and are
caught shoplifting you are more than likely to be charged for burglary as well
as theft.
/>
2. Buying something at the same time that you steal stuff doesn’t necessarily
ensure success. Approaching staff for items you are absolutely sure they don’t
have is just
as good. Think of something that you know they don’t have (i.e. a
doona cover with a specific
pattern on it or something equally obscure) and
pretend that you are looking for this, so
that you have an excuse for being
there. If staff are ever suspicious of you or ask if they
can help you, ask them
if they’ve got the thing you are sure they don’t have. Never screw
this up — if
you do you will have to buy the item or they may realise that you are there to
steal.
3. It is always a good idea to carry a bag although you should never
stash
anything in it — if security/sales staff are suss on you the first place that
they’ll check is your bag and it may just get you off the hook if they can’t
find anything
suspicious inside of it.
4. Remember that there is no such thing as a standard store
detective — there
is no qualifying dress code, age, race, gender or class. Grandma will bust
you
this week and next week it’ll be a 5 year old kid.
5. Just as there is no
typical store detective nor is there a standard
shoplifter. Security do not go looking for
the poorly dressed people. They may
pick on you out of boredom, but remember, only an
unsuccessful store detective
picks on poorly dressed people. By the same token don’t believe
the stale myth
that suits + dresses = more successes; security anticipate that professional
shoplifters will dress up a bit. Wear whatever you want.
On entering the
maze:
1. As soon as you enter the store, suss out the sales people. First impressions
often count here. You could find a valuable blind-eye turning ally in younger or
less-affluent employees. Alternatively, an employee can often stand out as a
more wishy-washy
gullible individual — so even if they see you they are likely
to be too gutless to mention
it, either to you or to security.
2. Don’t be put off by signs such as ’shoplifters
will be prosecuted’ or
’security police patrol this store’. Often this is just bluff anyway,
and in any
case there is no security measure that cannot be undone by a clever shoplifter
/> or a quick talker. Do, however, keep your eye on security and be on the lookout
for video
surveillance cameras.
3. Try to find where the video surveillance monitors are and who
is watching
them; often they are not even looking at them. See if you can get a glance at
/> their monitor. Often it is one monitor hooked up to 20 cameras which changes
sequentially
(every 30 seconds or so). Other times it’s one guy in a room
looking at 50 screens while
reading the paper or glued to the box. These
monitors are usually pretty small and have a
wide aperture, showing more of the
room but not enough detail to adequately see what you are
up to.
4. It is a good idea to keep your back to the camera as much as possible without
looking suspicious. Check out cameras (hold-up cameras) are often set up to
check on
employees, so they are not hard to keep your back turned to.
Blind-spots and
other lifting techniques:
1. A blind-spot is a section of the store where you are
barely visible and can
thus feel free to both dump and collect stuff, without fear of being
seen.
Display units can make perfect blind-spots — they ensure security is confident
they have their eye on you, when in fact they can only see your top half — at
the same time
they enable you to keep your eye on security. For these reasons,
the best blind-spots are
usually below the chest — around waist high.
Blind-spots are good for loading into the lip
of your jeans or into a jacket.
2. Make sure your blind-spot is not under surveillance.
Never hang around your
blind-spot for too long. Most of all, be careful to never lead
security to your
blind-spot.
3. A good method is to take everything you want to
your blind-spot and collect
it all later in one go, or better still get someone else to
collect it for you.
Getting someone else to collect for you can be a great system,
particularly with
exchanges — which I’ll come to later. If you are really pedantic, or you
think
that they are watching you, then load up, go to the toilets and pass the stuff
under the wall/partition of the cubicle to a waiting friend in an adjoining
cubicle and get
them to leave with it.
(No item 4 in original text — ed.)
5. Speaking of
dunnies and change-rooms, one of the oldest tricks in the book is
to put more than one
garment on a hanger (works particularly well with women’s
underwear), go to the change-rooms
and put the garment underneath what you are
wearing. Alternatively, if you are a woman, you
can slip your old bra on a
hanger and put on the new one. DonÕ t be put off by the staff as
you enter the
change-rooms — they are usually quite disinterested and so long as the number
of hangers you exit with matches the little plastic number they’ve given you
they’ll
be satisfied.
6. On the subject of women’s underwear, the lingerie department is
ideally
suited to male shoplifters — not only is it the perfect excuse for looking
embarrassed or suspicious (they have come to expect this), but staff are less
likely to
harass you by trying to help you and will be more sympathetic
generally.
Exchanging crap for more crap
Exchanging things — that is, taking the redistribution
of wealth into your own
hands by refunding yourself for an item you never paid for, or
swapping
something you stole that you don’t want for something you do want, or swapping
/> something that you don’t want that is unstealable and therefore refundable — is
a whole
new ball game.
1. If you plan to steal something and then make an exchange always take
stuff
that people are likely to take back like sheets, or other obscure household
items. If questioned you can say to them "as if I’m gonna keep the receipt, I
didn’t
plan to bring it back". Books and other small but expensive items such as
computer
software are also great exchangeables.
2. Stealing women’s underwear and cosmetics are
the perfect alibi for male
shoplifters who specialise in exchanges. Male customers always
f*** up buying
stuff for their girlfriends/wives/mothers and when it comes to lingerie, it’s
just too easy for a guy to look goofy, have sales staff sympathise and all too
quickly
agree to exchange or refund the items. This works particularly well
around Xmas time when you
can tell them you bought it for your mother but she
already had that one.
3.
Never take an exchange item to the store you stole it from and make sure the
other store
(e.g. Myers in Doncaster as opposed to Northland) has the same item
before you take it
back.
4. Make sure you have chosen your item before you approach anyone for an
exchange. Also, tell the people in the first department that you want an
exchange without
mentioning receipts — they should send you down to the
appropriate department for your other
item and then ring up this department
providing a referral, which if you are lucky will mean
you do not have to
provide a receipt given that everything appears legitimate.
5. The first time you exchange a stolen item for another product make sure you
get something
unstealable in return, like a video, watch, or something else kept
behind a counter, so that
the second time you do it, even if you don’t get an
exchange receipt they will not suspect
that it is stolen.
6. Exchange receipts are a pain in the arse. Sometimes smart arse
sales people
will write a cross the original docket ‘no original receipt’ which is a problem,
so if you have a bit of money on you, it is a good idea to exchange for
something that
costs a little bit more so that they have to give you a cash
receipt.
7. Don’t
freak out if they call security while you are acting out an exchange —
as returns will often
require security’s signature this is quite standard
procedure and nothing to worry about.
/>
8. If you’re having problems getting an exchange, big department stores normally
have consumer rights people located upstairs somewhere — they can usually be
contacted by
information telephones. These are people with big egos who like to
wield power and the sales
staff, who are much lower down the hierarchy, are
usually pretty freaked out by this power.
If you do get the ego from upstairs on
side, they will organise a sales person to look after
you and after the
egomaniac goes up upstairs again, they sure will — because the sales
person
does not want to reprimanded by the same person from upstairs more than once,
you will be practically able to get them to do anything that you want them to. A
good
technique is to tell the person upstairs a different story to the one that
you tell the sales
person. You can get angry at this stage and tell them that
they f***ed you around, that you
don’t want an exchange any more and that you
want a refund now and they will usually
comply.
9. Be wary of the long term employee — you’ve got to know when to stop. Be
/> particularly wary of the head of sales or middle management who have been
working there
for a long time (sometimes 20 years or more) and are not as scared
of the big guys from
upstairs as are the newer employees. You can often convince
some of the younger staff that
they are allowed to do refunds if you tell them
that you used to work there.
10.
Another commonly used technique is to take an empty bag from the same store
with a receipt in
it for previously paid for items and then nick the same stuff,
which gives you the perfect
alibi.
11. Better still, if you’ve got some money, find two things that are worth
/> however much you’ve got, take them out of the store and stash them somewhere,
then go back
in and buy the exact same items. While leaving the checkout, make a
big deal about it.
"Am I doing the right thing? Will she like it? Will it fit
him? etcetera" and then
"what the heck!" (Make sure you don’t go overboard and
push them to mention keeping
the receipt or worst of all mention it yourself!)
Pay for it. About half an hour to a couple
of hours later (not too long) take
the stuff back to the same sales people and they’ll
usually give you cash
without a receipt because they remember selling it to you. If you pull
it off
you’ve got a cash receipt and your stolen goods which you can exchange at
another store.
Leaving the store safely:
1. Always double back just
as you are about to leave the store so that you can
check if anyone is following you (99.9%
of the time they will follow you out of
the store before they approach you). Alternatively,
go up and down an escalator
or in a lift and press every button in the lift and it will be
obvious if anyone
is following you.
2. If people are watching you, whatever you
do, do not try to discreetly dump
stuff unless you are absolutely sure that you can get away
with it. If caught
dumping stuff they usually won’t charge you but they may f*** you around
for a
few hours.
3. If you are caught dumping stuff never let a store detective
know it was
because of them. Always make out it was a result of a sudden guilty conscience.
Never let a store detective know that you know that they are on to you, because
they
won’t put them on you the next time. That way you get to know store
security and are able to
keep your eye on them as much as you can.
4. If you want to have a bit of fun and don’t
plan to continue shoplifting that
day, or ever, or you just don’t give a shit, go up to a
store detective and
treat them like a sales person, asking them for help etcetera. It is just
as
embarrassing for them to be caught as it is for you. It is always a good thing
to
break their spirits or at least bring them down every now and again.
Alternatively, use
reverse psychology on them. Say "I’m going down to such and
such department. I’ll see
you down there". Often they’ll be too embarrassed that
they’ve been busted and think
that you won’t do it now that you’re being watched
and you will have the run of the mill.
/>
5.NEVER GET TOO CONFIDENT or you will start to make silly mistakes.
The end:
Finally, if you get caught — lie your teeth out! Never admit to
premeditation.
Always say that the opportunity arose, so you took it. Don’t act tough or be a
smart arse. Cry. Bawl. Admit a guilty conscience. Beg them not to call the cops.
Tell
them that CSV will take your kids off you and then weep.
Even though some stores say
they have a policy to call the police it is not
necessarily true and they may, after lots of
tears and admissions of guilt, just
get you to sign a statement which says you’ll never enter
that store again. If
the cops do arrive, it’s a good idea to act scared shitless because they
may
assume you’re a first offender and not bother to check your record. Don’t
antagonise the filth — it is their personal discretion as to how bad you get
busted.
You are most likely to be charged with ‘theft’ if caught shoplifting, but you
can be
charged with ‘burglary’ as well if you don’t have any money on you.
‘Equipped to steal’ is
what you will be charged with if, for example, you have a
slit in the lining of your jacket
for concealing stolen goods. ‘Obtaining
financial advantage’ and ‘deception’ are what you are
likely to be charged with
as well as ‘theft’, if caught exchanging stolen items.
Carmen Lawrence, with thanks to Joshua and Destroyer 267.
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If you get busted, the following telephone numbers will be useful.
Alphaline Emergency
24 hour free legal service (for people under 25 years old)
Phone: 9419 7427
Fitzroy Legal Service
Phone: 9419 3744
Aboriginal Legal Service
Phone:
9419 3888
West Heidelberg Legal Service
Phone: 9459 8833

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