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Tis' The Season To Steal: $1.84 Billion Will Be Shoplifted Before Christmas

Shoplifting

SARAH SKIDMORE   12/23/11 04:45 PM ET   AP

More than spirits are being lifted this holiday season.

During the four weeks leading up to Christmas this year, an estimated $1.8 billion in merchandise will be shoplifted from U.S. retailers, according to The Global Retail Theft Barometer, a survey of retailers worldwide. That's up about 6 percent from $1.7 billion during the same period last year.

"They shoplift for Christmas gifts, they steal for themselves, for their family," says Joshua Bamfield, executive director of the Centre for Retail Research and author of the survey.

Sticky fingers are common during the holidays. The crowded stores and harried clerks make it easier to slip a tablet computer into a purse or stuff a sweater under a coat undetected. But higher joblessness and falling wages have contributed to an even bigger rise this year. People steal everything from necessities (think food) to luxuries they can no longer afford (think electronics or Gucci purse).

"It's really a question of need versus greed," says Joseph LaRocca, senior adviser of asset protection for the National Retail Federation trade group. "People will rationalize what they are stealing: `Oh, I'm feeling the economy. I lost my job.' But it's hard to make the argument you need a $900 handbag."

Experts say the economy's influence is largely a cop-out. They say shoplifters are stealing for myriad reasons this holiday season that have nothing to do with economic turmoil. Some do it for a rush or thrill. For others, it's about filling a void. Still others are trying to relieve anxiety, boredom or depression – all emotions that are particularly common during the holidays.

"Shoplifting is generally a crime of opportunity_ and opportunities abound at the holiday," says Barbara Staib, a spokeswoman for the National Association for Shoplifting Prevention, a nonprofit that provides shoplifting prevention education programs. "The stressors that come with the holiday will certainly help them rationalize their need for bad behavior."

Shoplifting is surprisingly common. An estimated one in 11 Americans shoplift, according to the National Association for Shoplifting Prevention. It bases its information on academic research and information from those who are ordered or choose to enter its counseling programs for shoplifters.

About 75 percent of shoplifters are adults – equally men and women – while kids make up about 25 percent of them. More than 70 percent of shoplifters say they did not plan ahead to steal and they acted spontaneously.

A report from the Justice Department and Federal Bureau of Investigation showed that there were 1.06 million shoplifting offenses in 2010 known to law enforcement nationwide, up from 875,191 such offenses in 2006.

It adds up to billions of dollars in losses for retailers.

Theft of all kinds – including shop lifting, organized retail crime, employee theft and vendor fraud – cost retailers more than $119 billion worldwide in the 12 months ending in June, up nearly 7 percent from the same a year earlier. That's the biggest increase recorded by the Global Retail Theft Barometer since it began the survey in 2007.

In the four weeks leading up to Christmas, retailers in the U.S. are expected to lose $5 billion in theft and other crimes. About 36 percent of those losses come from shoplifting. Employee theft represents about 44 percent. Vendor theft and administrative error make up the remainder.

Several major chains declined to discuss their efforts to thwart the growing theft in stores by shoppers and employees. But the National Retail Federation says big merchants are spending about $11.5 billion a year to fend off losses.

They're trying to improve their technology, such as surveillance methods and tagging of merchandise with security devices. They also are working with competitors and law enforcement agencies more than ever by sharing more information, such as what criminals are taking and how they are targeting individual merchants.

Retailers' efforts are important, prevention experts say, because theft not only costs them, but society as a whole. Theft drives up retailers' costs and those are often passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices on everything from blueberries to blouses.

"I think one of the things we have to remember is shoplifting is a crime," says Staib, with the prevention group. "Shoplifting is not just an economic issue, it's a social issue."

Shop owner Travis Maynard, who has been on both sides of the shoplifting fence, agrees.

As a teenager running with a bad crowd, he used to steal regularly – Visine to cover up his drug use, condiments to finish off his sandwich and even a flowering tree as a gift for his mother. Then he got caught stealing a Misfits CD at age 16 and changed his ways.

Maynard, 31, now watches for shoplifters at Lime Tiger Studio, a shop in Murfreesboro, Tenn., where he sells antiques, vintage clothing and other items. He says he knows the tricks and is on high alert when someone is lingering too long in a certain spot.

"For someone to come in and pretend to be a patron of my business and steal, to me it's the most disgusting thing someone could do," Maynard says. "It's one of the highest levels of dishonesty."

____

Sarah Skidmore reported from Portland, Ore.

Follow AP retail coverage at http://www.twitter.com/AP_Retail

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More than spirits are being lifted this holiday season. During the four weeks leading up to Christmas this year, an estimated $1.8 billion in merchandise will be shoplifted from U.S. retailers, accor...
More than spirits are being lifted this holiday season. During the four weeks leading up to Christmas this year, an estimated $1.8 billion in merchandise will be shoplifted from U.S. retailers, accor...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rewith85man
12:24 AM on 12/26/2011
That probably explains another reason why the economy is screwed up.
08:57 PM on 12/25/2011
Did they really have to use Eminem's younger days pic for the article?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rewith85man
12:20 AM on 12/26/2011
If so, then that is whig*** stereotype.
07:01 PM on 12/25/2011
may all of you that are out there shoplifting this season...I wish you success...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justgrl03
03:54 AM on 12/26/2011
Why would you encourage bad behavior?
01:20 AM on 12/25/2011
Good thing the kid in the picture is white, or there would be a racial tirade.
07:02 PM on 12/25/2011
you can say that twice...
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08:24 AM on 12/24/2011
ows occupying retail goods
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stjoshy
"C is for COOKIEEEEE. thats good enough for me"
09:31 PM on 12/24/2011
hardy har har my fellow 99%r. how does it feel to be ignorant and to lazy to fight for what your fellow 99%rs have the guts to? if your tired and old then so be it, but dont talk down about a movement that your are obviously to ignorant to support.. let alone understand
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08:13 AM on 12/25/2011
they are a movement that is too ignorant to figure out that they represent less than 1%.
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12:19 PM on 12/26/2011
why would i want thieves to fight my wars for me?
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captaincrawley
If Canada is socialist, then so am I.
02:04 AM on 12/24/2011
Little thieves get locked up, big thieve become lords.

--Zhuang Zi, Chinese philosopher (369-286 BCE)

Some things never change.
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01:58 AM on 12/24/2011
"...when she wants some-thing and don't wanna pay for it...she walks right...through the door...walks right through the door...Hey all right! If I get by, ...it's mine.

Mine all mine!"
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
elaine tomkinson
10:35 PM on 12/23/2011
Why did they show a teenager on the picture? 75% of all shoplifting is done by adults......
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
10:19 PM on 12/23/2011
Does this mean we have here identified one of Satan's objectives in promoting "the Christ-mas", that is, the magnifying of the difference between the "haves" and the "have-nots". The 1%-ers from the lower end of the 99%-ers, the Wall-streeters from the "Dumpster-shoppers"? The "I was a poor man, but I was a good man" form "I'm gonna take advantage of you sucker any way I can man"? Make them, "eat their heart out", "Show them how much better off you are than they are"?
09:47 PM on 12/23/2011
I'm surprised why the image of a black man wasn't used...

XD
thebigbike
ran away to be a cowboy
08:11 PM on 12/23/2011
not all that much compared to the bailouts.... and we ain't getting paid back from most of those... put the "financiers" in the pokey right next to the shoplifters!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Annette Hammond
If only everybody knew
07:22 PM on 12/23/2011
Well--It's a crime what stores charge for ALOT of items anyway.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Samantha Monteleone
I hold on, & I feel strong, & I know that I can.
06:37 PM on 12/24/2011
Amen, Annette.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justgrl03
03:58 AM on 12/26/2011
still does not give anyone the right to help themselves.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
piceaglauca
The picture says it all....
06:48 PM on 12/23/2011
Don't companies buy at a loss so that they can cover their shrink. I always thought they paid for 80% but were sent 100%. The 20 difference being markdowns, damage and loss. So they really don't lose anything considering they set their prices to cover their loss in what ever form it comes? I know that is true in Fresh. Is that true also in GM?
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08:26 AM on 12/24/2011
you must have studied economics at ows camp?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
new beginning
Practice random acts of kindness-change the world
08:50 AM on 12/24/2011
Now THAT is funny!
03:34 PM on 12/23/2011
Hey, what ever happened to the trillions of dollars the Bush administration stole from our government?
To quote Rumsfeld "We cannot account for $2.3 trillion dollars that is missing."

This is fact not fiction people.
thebigbike
ran away to be a cowboy
08:12 PM on 12/23/2011
That needed to be mentioned. but seems like it's just walking around money for rumsfeld and cheney and bush
odra
Why is this an issue?
02:21 PM on 12/23/2011
I wonder how much money is taken away from families by bank fees and bogus bank charges this holiday season.