1091 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
1091 lines
72 KiB
Plaintext
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*****Stealing SuperTarget: How to Hit the Bullseye*****
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By: Xap
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First Created Industriously on: 11/28/2004
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Between the Hours of: Midnight and 8 AM
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Boring but Necessary Disclaimer: The following document is purely for
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informational and entertainment purposes, and the sole responsibility for
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any illegal actions lies with the reader. The author is in no way
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responsible for the mistakes the amateurs will make while potentially
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attempting to perform things described herein. Read at your own risk.
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Oh - and if you do get caught, tell 'em Xap (pronounced "zap") sent ya.
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They won't know me, but they'll probably think the name is clever.
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********************************************************************************
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So, you've decided to join the Five-Finger discount club offered by so many
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fine retailers today. The most popular store chain around where I live
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seems to be Target and SuperTarget. I mean, great prices and none of the
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evil and filth you find at Wal-Mart, right? And look at all the incredibly
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expensive goods your sticky little fingers just can't wait to shove in your
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pockets. . .but wait. . .what's going to happen if someone who works for the
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store catches you stealing? How can you get away with it?
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To allay the fears of many readers that this is going to be just another
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stupid file written by an acnefied teen h4ck3r. . .(sorry, "cracker", I
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don't believe the media stereotypes either) everything written here is
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absolutely true Target procedure, written by someone who spent a long time
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working in the heart of their security department. It is all up to date as
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of today, but who knows what the future holds, right? The best I can tell
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you is, if you don't believe me, go apply for a job there yourself and find
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out. They hire 18 and above for the security dept. And good news - Target
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policy actually has more rules *preventing* their security from being able
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to stop you than the other way around. The odds are highly stacked in favor
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of thieves who are well-informed, as you are about to be. Gods bless
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wrongful-arrest lawsuits and the fear they have inspired in Corporate
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America. Reap, my friends! Reap!
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So why give them up when I used to be their loyal watchdog? Eh. They
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never knew the reason I was so good at catching thieves was because I used
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to be one myself. Talk about reverting to type now, huh? I actually
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started writing this as a book to try to publish with an alternative
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company, but didn't want to deprive the young and bold but short of pocket
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money from this valued information. In the spirit of sharing knowledge for
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the sake of everyone's betterment, I'm offering this up for free, and just
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hope no one will alter it in any way or try to claim it as their own. So,
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fly free, my beautiful tutorial! Enlighten the masses!
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Anyways, enough intro, on to the meat. I'll take you through all of
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Target's procedures, physical security, everything, and the ways you can go
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about circumventing and defeating all of them to the best of your ability.
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By the way - I'll use the terms Target and SuperTarget interchangeably.
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The only difference between the two is that SuperTargets are newer, tend to
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have better equipment, and have a grocery section.
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Onward!
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********** The People **********
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The first line of defense in any Target is its Asset Protection Department,
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or "AP" for short. You may have heard someone in the store calling "AP"
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over the radios all employees carry. This is the security department,
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usually called loss prevention at other stores. Every AP dept. has a few
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levels of employees. The bottom rung is the Target Protection Specialist,
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or TPS. These are the men and women in tan shirts and black pants, carrying
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handcuffs and radios on their belts. They patrol the stores, and by policy
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are supposed to spend most of their time at the front register lanes unless
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something else requires their attention. The main portion of their job is
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watching people checking out to see if any items have been left in the cart
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"by accident", and politely reminding them to pay for it. TPS's get quota'd
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on these items, so it's important they catch as many as possible. They
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watch the doors for suspicious looking people coming in, and assist with any
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emergencies, apprehensions, or anything else that may come up. But, due to
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their lack of rank, *TPS's cannot arrest anyone on their own*! I repeat, a
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TPS cannot stop you from leaving the store with stolen goods. They can
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scare the crap out of you, and check your receipts, and if they're feeling
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bold they can even request the stolen merchandise back. (That's against
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Target policy, though. No one is *ever* supposed to be accused of stealing.
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It hurts customers' feelings.)
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Next up the ladder are the Asset Protection Specialists, or APS's. These
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are the undercovers of the store, and believe me when I say that these folks
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are on the ball. Anyone not dedicated to their job won't last very long in
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this line of work. They patrol the store in plain clothes, carrying a
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hidden walkie-talkie (usually in a purse for the ladies, or in a pocket or
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clipped to the back of the pants for guys, with the shirt covering it).
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They might sit in the office and watch cameras instead, but they're
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encouraged to stay on the floor. A good way to Spot-the-APS is to look for
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someone dashing around to endcaps, ducking down and then moving quickly away
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to act nonchalant. Or just look to see if the rectangle-shape of the radio
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is poking through the back of their shirt where it's hidden. (P.S. - An
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endcap is just the Target term for the end of an aisle. All of Target's
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endcaps are perforated, partly for hanging hooks, but mostly so AP can hide
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and look through the holes to watch you steal. It's very hard to see
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someone hiding behind the endcaps, so be careful and listen closely for
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shifting and breathing.) APS's can arrest people all on their own, with or
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without backup, although if they're worried you might fight they will have a
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TPS, another APS, or enthusiastic regular employees ready to jump on you,
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too. Remember, an APS doesn't have to win the fight with you. They just
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have to slow you down long enough for everyone else to catch up. However,
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if you physically resist they are legally allowed to drop you, using minimal
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violence of course, and cuff you.
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The manager of the AP dept is called an Asset Protection Team Leader, or
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APTL. They usually spend more time researching employee theft than
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patrolling the floor, looking over cash register reports and so on. Many
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APTL's will not spend a lot of time in their personal store, traveling
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around to assist at other stores and leaving the APS's in charge. They
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essentially have the same powers as an APS, they're just way more
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experienced at it. Above them are the District and Regional APTL's, so on
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up the chain. These bigwigs usually never go to a store unless there's some
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major booster making the rounds and they're trying to set a trap for them.
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They're kind of like Target's personal shoplifter SWAT team, but without the
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guns or cool outfits.
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Something to keep in mind: every other employee in the store really wants
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to be in AP. AP is the coolest job in the store to have, and its members
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are constantly getting asked by regular employees if they can apply. What
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this means for you is that every other employee in the store is eager to
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prove that they can catch thieves too, so don't relax just because they're
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wearing red and khaki. Regular employees will go out of their way to alert
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AP to your presence and follow you around. However, if the red-shirts try
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to stop you leaving the store, breeze on by. They have no legal powers, and
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cannot arrest you.
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********** The Electronics **********
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Okay, on to the electronic security. You've no doubt noticed the hundreds
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of black plastic camera domes mounted in the ceiling of your local Target.
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Well, just as you suspected, quite a few of these are fake. But several
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dozen of them are not. Every Target store has a "camera placement plan"
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they follow, which may vary slightly from store to store, but generally
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follows similar guidelines. Most real cameras will be placed over
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high-theft item areas, such as Electronic Goods, the Pharmacy, Automotive,
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and so on. There is literally a camera mounted over every single register
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in the store, pointing down to watch transactions. There are *no* cameras
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in the Grocery section of SuperTargets (but there are fake domes). The
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closer you are to the outer wall of the Grocery, the farther you are from
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any real cameras. Along the back wall of most stores is the Domestics and
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Furniture sections. . .these usually have no real cameras, either, although
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fake domes are spaced every other aisle. And, of course, it is illegal for
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Target to place cameras in the bathroom, or near enough to the open-ceiling
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dressing rooms to see in.
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Like I said, it may vary between stores, but here are typically where all
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the movable, zoomable, real cameras are:
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- Over the Electronics checkout
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- One at each end of the front lane registers
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- Near the Automotive section (back corner of the store)
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- If the store has two sets of doors (SuperTargets), there will be one
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above each of the front corners of the building, for scanning the parking
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lots
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- One at the back of the building, near the rear loading docks
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- Usually in the middle of the Clothing sections, but far enough away from
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the dressing rooms
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- Possibly right over the Pharmacy section, or nearby
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- Right near the Guest Service desk, usually able to see the Portrait
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Studio too in SuperTargets
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- Above the wall-rack that divides the Men's and Women's Clothing sections
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Also, the fixed, non-movable (and often black and white) cameras are
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usually mounted:
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- Near razors and razor blades
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- Near any medicines commonly stolen by junkies
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- Pointing at an angle at the incoming and outgoing doors, to catch face
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shots of thieves as they enter or exit. After my term of employment, they
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seem to have installed a small dome right at the exit doors themselves, at
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about head height. I do not know if this is real or not, but probably is,
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as face shots were a major concern, and the higher cameras would usually
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only give fuzzy pictures at best.
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- Over various aisles near the Electronics section, with computers, games,
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stereos, etc.
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- Over auto radar detectors
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- Over GPS units in the camping section
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- *Definitely* over every single register, even in the Deli, Bakery,
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Starbucks and Pharmacy
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- Over the jewelry counter
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A lot of the real ones have been in use for a long time, and have larger
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plastic domes. The newer fake ones are smaller, but the older, bigger ones
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don't get taken out and replaced to match because who wants the hassle,
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right? Don't go strictly by this, because you never know. But it's a good
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guideline.
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All the cameras are routed back to the AP Office, which is always somewhere
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near the front of the store. At Targets, it's generally right next to the
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Guest Service desk, behind an "Employees Only" door with a peephole in it.
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At SuperTargets, it will be through some swinging doors at the front, and
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then probably right there in a hallway, same kind of door with the peephole.
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The doors are almost always locked, even when people are inside. Inside,
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there will be a room set up with several monitors, usually about 6 to 10,
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which are all connected through multiplexers to VCRs. On one wall will be
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shelves and shelves full of tapes, usually labeled something like, "1A, 1B,
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1C, 1D, 2A, 2B. . ." and so on. The number is usually the date of whichever
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month you're in. The tapes get reused every month, so on the first the "1"
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set is used again, and so on. This means unless they saved footage of you,
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if you didn't attract any camera attention before, next month that tape will
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have been recorded over. The A, B, C, D means the shift the tape was used
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for, morning, afternoon, evening and overnight. And a tape log on a
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clipboard is kept in the office to tell which tapes were used when, and what
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time they started and finished.
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So anyways, an AP can sit at the monitors and control the cameras using an
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old-style joystick switch, or a more modern sort of trackball. They can
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punch up any camera in the store on any monitor, although usually only about
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nine or ten will be able to move. The rest are fixed, and are most likely
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being recorded on a three-second skip. This means only every third second
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gets recorded (to save tape space), which aids thieves since it makes it
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hard to review and see quick motions. Sometimes thieves appear on an aisle,
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and a moment later seem to just vanish without doing anything. Of course,
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watching the cameras in real-time doesn't have the three-second skip. But
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if they have to go back and watch the tape again to see if you really did do
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what they thought you did, they have to worry about missing it if you moved
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too fast.
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The cameras they *can* move are top notch. They can often zoom in so close
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that they can read information right off your driver's license all the way
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from the ceiling. (If it's held still.) One of the big things AP has to
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get is face shots. They depend on being able to say, Yep, that's the guy.
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I've got his face on camera right here. So APs become very good at tracking
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moving people and objects, and at switching quickly to other cameras for a
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better view. If you spend too much time wandering in a spot where there are
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no good cameras, or no cameras at all, they'll have to deploy from the
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office and watch you on foot. This can be good for you, as it heightens the
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chances that they'll miss something important. However, an APS can come out
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and follow you while a TPS watches you on camera. If the TPS sees you do
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something, and the APS doesn't, APSs are *not* supposed to accept this as
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proof, but many often do. Of course, it's the APSs legal fault if the TPS
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was wrong.
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One of the biggest ways to get caught easily is to *look directly at the
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cameras*. I know this sounds stupid, and like common sense, but you would
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not believe how many nervous amateurs will glance repeatedly, or just boldly
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stare at the dome right above them, giving AP a perfect chance for a face
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shot and clear view of whatever they're stealing. Keep your eyes down, boy.
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Just assume the camera is real, and that you should be hiding your hand
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movements anyways. (Except in Grocery, heh.) If you want to scope out a
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camera, do it from a long way off, and do not tilt your head or eyes up.
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Use your peripherals. And trust me - you *cannot* see through the domes to
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tell if it's pointed at you. They're double-layered to prevent this. And
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an upturned face is *very* easy to see in a camera, even on one of the
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smaller monitors, and will instantly attract attention.
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Recently Target began outfitting all its stores with a system called
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"Loronix", which operates on digital recording in a computer instead of
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tapes. It's a big time-saver for AP, because they can just punch in a time,
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date and camera, and the footage will come up instantly, instead of having
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to hunt and peck through hundreds of tapes. Most of the cameras hooked up
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to it are fixed cameras, though, and still on the three-second skip. All of
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the register cameras will be on Loronix. They can also save the little
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movie files to disk, and give these disks to the police as evidence,
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playable on any computer.
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Also, Target camera monitors can be quickly punched up to display whatever
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current transaction is occurring at a certain register, *as the employee is
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ringing up the items*, to see if you're price-tag-switching or
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short-changing the cashier. Be wary.
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We'll touch back on cameras with the procedures. . .for now, on to the EAS
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tags!
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Every Target store has a set of EAS stands at the front doors, and all
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valuable merchandise (according to weekly store plans) is tagged with EAS
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stickers. These are square, white stickers with bar codes printed across
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them, which you've probably seen before. (The bar code is to help guests
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believe it's just for price scanning, not that Target doesn't trust them.)
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Just pick up a popular CD or DVD at Target, and one will probably be stuck
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to the back. They're tiny antennas of a sort (and forgive me if I don't
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know the electronics here - please, no techno-geniuses flaming me for
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mis-assuming how these work) that will trigger the EAS stand by radio
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frequencies. The stands constantly generate them, and the sticker passing
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through will interrupt them, setting off the alarm. (Coincidentally, the
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numbers printed on the sticker barcode are the actual frequency they're
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working on.) When items are "deactivated" at checkout, they pass the
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sticker over a CheckPoint pad that shuts them off. There is one of these
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pads below the counter of almost every register, so if you can manage to
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palm an item across it without employees noticing, you can deactivate the
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sticker. Supposedly, according to the online company tech specs, the
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Checkpoints are supposed to work up to around a foot or so above the actual
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pad. Sometimes crooked AP will swipe whole rolls of these stickers across
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the deactivator pad, rendering them useless before they're placed on
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products. A lot of other things set off the stands too - cell phones,
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electronic keycards, anything that might interfere with the frequency. You
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might even consider stealing a sticker and hiding it inside your wallet,
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cell phone, etc. just so if there's a TPS at the front checking receipts,
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you can wave your wallet or phone through and show that it's the culprit,
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not the DVD in your pants with the sticker removed. TPS's can not
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thoroughly search you, and if you set off the alarm and just keep on
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walking, unless an APS was about to arrest you anyways, a TPS can shout all
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they want but not stop you.
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These stickers can be peeled off pretty easily, and you can recognize them
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also by the pink underside with the square-loop-whirl of metal that makes
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the antenna. Of course, AP watches for people picking at packages and
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stickers, so hide your motion as much as you can, or just get rid of the
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package entirely during a moment you're out of camera view. And be careful
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- sometimes AP hides the stickers loose *inside* boxes, or they come
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pre-packaged that way, so you don't even know one's in there. The new rolls
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of stickers are kept locked up in the AP office until about once a week,
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when someone will go sticker all the new items on the shelves.
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Supposedly thieves have tried shielding the insides of backpacks with
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aluminum foil to prevent the tags from setting off the stands, but I can't
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tell you if this works for real or not. You might experiment by stealing
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just a sticker, taking it home, wrapping it in aluminum foil and hiding it
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inside your shoe or underwear or somewhere else not obvious, then going back
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to see if it sets off the alarm. If not, cool, break out that Reynold's
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Wrap and load up, man.
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Of lesser note in AP electronics is the AP computer, which keeps e-mail
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contact on a private intranet between all the stores, and houses files on
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every attempted and successful criminal act caught in the store. If any AP
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members witness suspicious activity, they will record their findings after
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the fact in the computer, and submit this info by e-mail to all the other
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local stores, warning them of potential thieves. (They also call a few
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local stores by phone if they scare off a thief and think they may be
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heading to another one nearby.) In these files go as much physical
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description as possible (age, weight, race, clothing), what the thief did,
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the make/model and license plate of a car if obtained, and whether or not
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they have good camera footage and face shots. If you're really desperate
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and need to steal whatever it is that day, drive about an hour away and find
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another one. Typically they only call stores within a few miles, or within
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the same general city. The farther you go, the less chance they've been
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warned. They also may store digital camera mug shots of arrested thieves in
|
|||
|
the computer (some less advanced stores still have Polaroids). Despite what
|
|||
|
a dumb cop may bold-face-lie to you, Target does *not* have facial
|
|||
|
recognition software in their cameras. Your picture is just for future
|
|||
|
reference, and the cameras will not track you by recognizing your picture.
|
|||
|
I actually had a cop tell a guy this once, and I was so disgusted I almost
|
|||
|
told the thief the truth instead. I mean, really. The APTL also uses the
|
|||
|
computer to track employee theft patterns and register shortages.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Also, to touch briefly on communications - APs keep in touch with each
|
|||
|
other by radio, and occasionally phone. AP office numbers are almost always
|
|||
|
a 209, or 3209 extension inside the building. Every store employee has a
|
|||
|
walkie talkie with two channels on it. Channel One is for general calls and
|
|||
|
quick conversations, and Channel Two is for more private talk when employees
|
|||
|
need to explain something in detail and don't want to block out One for
|
|||
|
everyone else. Only on AP walkie talkies is a third channel, private for AP
|
|||
|
use. Frequently if an employee spots a potential crime in progress, you may
|
|||
|
hear the radios crackle, "AP, go to two please, AP, go to two". Once on
|
|||
|
Channel Two, the employee may relate what they are seeing to the responding
|
|||
|
AP member. In theory, they try to be private, but other dumb employees will
|
|||
|
also switch to Two, wanting to listen to the action. This helps thieves who
|
|||
|
might overhear the eavesdropping employee, and realize they're the ones
|
|||
|
being talked about.
|
|||
|
If a TPS sees something happening and wants to contact their APS, they will
|
|||
|
call "AP, go to three, please, AP, go to three", or the name of the person,
|
|||
|
i.e. "Bob, go to three please". If you ever hear the call to go to three,
|
|||
|
think twice about what you're doing, because you may have been spotted. If
|
|||
|
the APS is out on the floor and following someone, they leave their radio on
|
|||
|
Three, so no normal store announcements will come out of it. If a TPS wants
|
|||
|
to reach them then, they will go to Three on their own radio, blow gently
|
|||
|
for a moment, and wait for the APS to respond. On the APS end, it produces
|
|||
|
a soft static crackle, and if they can, the APS will get alone and call
|
|||
|
back. Frequently they can't because it would alert someone they're already
|
|||
|
following. A lot of times the TPS blows too hard, so if you're on an aisle
|
|||
|
and think you're alone, and you suddenly hear a crackling/blowing noise
|
|||
|
coming from an endcap, drop what you're doing and leave. You're probably
|
|||
|
already screwed.
|
|||
|
Some stores try to be clever and use other code names for AP, like
|
|||
|
"Hardware 4" or Mr. Something-or-other, to keep from alerting thieves that
|
|||
|
anything's wrong.
|
|||
|
All Target stores also have emergency codes that go over the radio and
|
|||
|
store speaker system. These are Red, Green and Yellow. Red is for fires,
|
|||
|
Green is for medical emergencies, and Yellow is for parents who've lost
|
|||
|
their children. Codes Red and Green will be announced three times in
|
|||
|
succession, with a location of where employees should respond to. Yellow
|
|||
|
causes all employees to stop, man every door in the store, and watch for
|
|||
|
potential kidnappers, while the other employees quickly search the store for
|
|||
|
the lost child. (A child found without a parent is not a Code Yellow, the
|
|||
|
store will just page the parents' name over the announcer.) These codes are
|
|||
|
useful for opportunity thieves, because unless a violent crime is about to
|
|||
|
happen, AP is required to respond to safety issues before theft ones. A lot
|
|||
|
of thieves will have a friend cause a fake "accident" on one side of the
|
|||
|
store to draw AP away from the side they're about to steal on. Of course,
|
|||
|
there may be enough AP members in-store to go around that day, so don't
|
|||
|
count on them all being away if they already know you're trying to steal.
|
|||
|
It's best if they have no idea you were about to do anything. Hang out in a
|
|||
|
totally different area, someplace harmless, like Office supplies. It's
|
|||
|
right next to Electronics, usually, so if you suddenly hear "Code Green,
|
|||
|
Grocery" over the intercom, you can instantly grab your stuff from
|
|||
|
Electronics and head out the door. This works best at SuperTargets, as the
|
|||
|
Electronics section is always right in front of the Blue Doors, while
|
|||
|
Grocery is all the way down the other side at the Green doors.
|
|||
|
(P.S. They're called the Blue and Green doors because that's what color
|
|||
|
they're painted on *all* SuperTargets.)
|
|||
|
And if you do decide to ever work with an accomplice - come in separate
|
|||
|
cars. Don't walk into the store together and then split up. AP will start
|
|||
|
watching you. And if you do the whole "accident" gag, please make sure it's
|
|||
|
plausible. The store will try to get you to show personal information for
|
|||
|
an accident report, in case you try to sue later and lie about how badly you
|
|||
|
were hurt. You can refuse to stay for this. Also - don't make your
|
|||
|
accident *so* bad that they immediately call an ambulance. You don't want
|
|||
|
to have to pay a few hundred in hospital bills just because you're a method
|
|||
|
actor, and your friend wanted a $20 DVD. The best course is probably to
|
|||
|
fake a fainting spell, and let an employee "wake" you back up. Stay out
|
|||
|
long enough to hear the Code Green being called, slowly wake up when the
|
|||
|
crowd arrives, and assure everyone you're okay, just a little dizzy, could I
|
|||
|
please have some water, but no, I don't think anything is seriously wrong.
|
|||
|
No, no ambulances. :)
|
|||
|
One more thing on communications - if you're trying something thieve-y at
|
|||
|
the registers, and your cashier suddenly gets a call on their phone, they've
|
|||
|
probably been warned you're up to something. AP does this all the time. If
|
|||
|
you back out and go to another register and *they* get a call? Leave. Just
|
|||
|
go. You're probably not going to make it out of the store with whatever
|
|||
|
you're trying.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
********** On With The Show ***********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now down to brass tacks. What do you do when you want to steal from
|
|||
|
Target? How do you get away with it?
|
|||
|
It starts all the way out in the parking lot, when you first arrive. If
|
|||
|
you can, come to the store on foot. Having a car really only gives them
|
|||
|
another way to track you, by your license plate. Second to that, park in
|
|||
|
another lot nearby and walk over, out of view of the Target. Lastly, park
|
|||
|
as far back as you can in the Target lot, but not so far that there are
|
|||
|
absolutely no other cars within 50 feet of you. The farther away you are,
|
|||
|
though, the harder it is for them to get your plate when you're leaving in a
|
|||
|
hurry. The cameras do zoom, but over distance the plate will fuzz out, and
|
|||
|
it's hard to track a rapidly moving vehicle. Come in to the store at a
|
|||
|
normal, casual walking pace, paying no attention to other people around you,
|
|||
|
cameras, anything but being a normal shopper. Way too many thieves come in
|
|||
|
fast, hoping to escape notice and be out before anyone knows they were
|
|||
|
there, but more often this attracts attention instead.
|
|||
|
When you first walk in the store, pay no attention to any tan-uniformed
|
|||
|
people you see. The TPSs should not frighten innocent people, and will not
|
|||
|
pay attention to you if you don't seem to notice them. Do *not* try to be
|
|||
|
clever and glance out of the corner of your eye at them. This is more
|
|||
|
suspicious then just giving them a polite smile and walking past.
|
|||
|
AP personnel are programmed to watch for behaviors, not stereotypes.
|
|||
|
(Seriously - despite what thieves may think, they *don't care* that you're
|
|||
|
black, or young, or have three pounds of metal in your face. They saw you
|
|||
|
glancing at cameras and opening that package, you dope. *That's* why they
|
|||
|
arrested you.) Of course, if you're dressed all raggedy and are obviously
|
|||
|
in need of a fix, they're probably going to watch you anyways. It helps to
|
|||
|
be neatly dressed, obviously well-behaved (Goofus all you want at home, but
|
|||
|
be Gallant in the store), and to be with another person. Single males who
|
|||
|
walk in quickly, take a handbasket and go straight to a section or float
|
|||
|
around a general area without actually *shopping* are instantly watched.
|
|||
|
Having a shopping cart means you're planning to spend more time in the
|
|||
|
store. Having a cart and your girlfriend with you means you're probably not
|
|||
|
thinking about stealing.
|
|||
|
If you really want to mess them up? Spend a half hour, or a whole hour,
|
|||
|
slowly going up and down the aisles in Grocery and doing a full cart of
|
|||
|
shopping. They'll give up, if they suspected you at all. Go and get that
|
|||
|
CD you wanted as an afterthought, pull up to a front lane full of people,
|
|||
|
pick up the CD, abandon your cart, and walk right out the front doors. (Try
|
|||
|
to go to a door without a TPS guarding it, of course.) It takes time, but
|
|||
|
they'll never see it coming. And it's not like *you* have to reshelve all
|
|||
|
that stuff.
|
|||
|
Do *not* load up your cart full of expensive stuff no one in their right
|
|||
|
mind would buy all at once. Even non-AP employees will know to call you in
|
|||
|
if they see a cart like that. Too many thieves will stack DVD players in a
|
|||
|
cart, and then cruise up and down the front aisles, trying to see which door
|
|||
|
is unguarded. This only gives AP more time to spot you, and a TPS *can*
|
|||
|
stop you at the door if they clearly saw you walk right past the registers
|
|||
|
without paying for a cart full of stuff. If you don't have a receipt, they
|
|||
|
can hold you there until you either abandon the cart and leave, or go back
|
|||
|
to pay. Don't try the "oh, me, I can't find this darn receipt in my big ol'
|
|||
|
purse" thing. If you leave the cart and walk quickly out, the TPS will not
|
|||
|
stop you. They do not care, they have the merchandise. You get away to
|
|||
|
steal another day. Also, for a TPS, a big cart full of expensive stuff that
|
|||
|
they prevented from being stolen is a *big* bonus in their quotas. They
|
|||
|
don't get extra pay, but it's major kudos for stopping a high theft amount.
|
|||
|
They will still put a report in the computer, and probably try to find tape
|
|||
|
of you and record your car as you drive away, but they will never stop you
|
|||
|
from leaving empty-handed.
|
|||
|
Okay, so you've found a smaller item that you want, say a DVD. Browse
|
|||
|
around first. Do not walk straight in, grab the one you want, and head for
|
|||
|
the back of the store. Look through several, even read the back of the one
|
|||
|
you want, put it back, look at another, check how much money you have in
|
|||
|
your wallet, then slowly appear to decide on your target. This goes for
|
|||
|
most other items, too. If you can, have a basket full of other items, too,
|
|||
|
that you appeared to really shop for. Don't just toss random stuff in your
|
|||
|
cart as props. Honestly shop, like you normally would. Wait until you're
|
|||
|
shopping through an empty part of the store, and either remove the sticker
|
|||
|
or open the package as quickly and quietly as you can. If you know there's
|
|||
|
a camera dome nearby, keep your body hunched over the item, your back to the
|
|||
|
dome, and move your arms as little as possible. It's all in the hands now.
|
|||
|
A long range camera might still see you from far away, so keep your body as
|
|||
|
close to the shelf as possible, too. Some thieves will reach back in
|
|||
|
between other boxes on a shelf and open the wrapper back there, so no
|
|||
|
cameras can see what they're doing (although they will probably still see
|
|||
|
that DVD coming back out and going in your pocket). If someone suddenly
|
|||
|
comes on to the aisle, don't freeze, don't look, just let go and walk away.
|
|||
|
Continue shopping if you like, but remember, they will *never*, ever arrest
|
|||
|
you for attempted theft. You have to actually leave the store with items on
|
|||
|
you to be arrested. It's a universal law of shoplifting.
|
|||
|
A good place to go for opening packages might be the middle of the clothing
|
|||
|
section. . .the racks are just below head height, so anyone sneaking up on
|
|||
|
you will make themselves very conspicuous if they have to start ducking and
|
|||
|
crouching. If you hold the item in between two shirts hanging on a display,
|
|||
|
it will make it almost impossible for the cameras to see what you're doing
|
|||
|
(and be wary, they also do sometimes put moving cameras in the Clothing
|
|||
|
section).
|
|||
|
Say you do everything right, no one shows up. . .put the item somewhere it
|
|||
|
won't leave a visible bulge under your clothes. Light jackets with interior
|
|||
|
pockets sewn in them are great for this. Even if your jacket doesn't have
|
|||
|
one, just get a piece of matching-color cloth in a big square, and sew three
|
|||
|
sides of it to the inside of your jacket liner, under your arm, to make a
|
|||
|
shoplifting pocket. If your jacket has a lining, you could even just make a
|
|||
|
wide horizontal slit and drop things into it. This is great when you have
|
|||
|
something in hand, because you can lean over with the other hand and pretend
|
|||
|
to be getting something off a low shelf, which causes that side of your
|
|||
|
jacket to hang down, and your stealing hand slips the item smoothly into
|
|||
|
your jacket, while you still appear to only be browsing. This is better
|
|||
|
done with leather jackets and things that won't show an outline of the item
|
|||
|
easily. I used to shoplift right in front of cameras in my younger days by
|
|||
|
taking stuff to a magazine section, turning my back to the camera and
|
|||
|
leaning sideways against the shelf. My outer hand would be holding up a
|
|||
|
magazine to read while my shelf-side hand would be opening the package. My
|
|||
|
body, to the camera, did not appear to be moving at all, because I only
|
|||
|
moved my hand and not my arm. I would then smoothly slip the item into a
|
|||
|
secret pocket in my jacket, and continue reading, folding the package very
|
|||
|
small and hiding it behind the other magazines on the upper racks when I
|
|||
|
picked up a different one to "read". Of course, the magazine section in
|
|||
|
Target has several cameras nearby, since it's right in Electronics, so you
|
|||
|
may have to find somewhere else to lean.
|
|||
|
What if it's warmer weather, and you can't wear a jacket? Target AP will
|
|||
|
watch for non-seasonal clothing, i.e. people wearing too many layers in
|
|||
|
blazing heat, or not wearing a jacket at all in the winter. A very common
|
|||
|
(and surprisingly easy to get away with) theft is to walk in without a
|
|||
|
jacket, take one of the $100+ leather ones, slip it on, and walk right back
|
|||
|
out. Target will often put EAS stickers in their jackets, but it is almost
|
|||
|
always midway up the inside of the sleeve, probably the left one. Feel
|
|||
|
inside the sleeve for something square and hard, peel it out, wad it up,
|
|||
|
throw it away, and you can walk out without any alarm. If you're trying to
|
|||
|
steal in shorts and a t-shirt during the summer, it becomes trickier to hide
|
|||
|
things under your clothes. For guys and girls, try to slip things down the
|
|||
|
front of your underwear. I know it feels weird, and try not to walk funny,
|
|||
|
but it's the only place anything more than a few inches across will probably
|
|||
|
not show up. Don't just put it in your pants - it'll go straight down the
|
|||
|
leg and fall out. You may even want to sew a special pocket inside there,
|
|||
|
just for shoplifting. Some thieves will put on a pair of baggy exercise
|
|||
|
pants underneath their real pants, and strap them off above the knee with
|
|||
|
rubber bands or string to things can be dropped down the pants safely and
|
|||
|
won't fall out. A boxer short version of this can be made for summer days.
|
|||
|
Just put on your boxers, tie them off near the end around your thigh, and
|
|||
|
put on your real shorts over them. And a note for you schoolkids: backpacks
|
|||
|
and bags are not a good idea (even foil-lined ones for you experimenters).
|
|||
|
Any kind of bag will stand out and you will be watched until you leave the
|
|||
|
store. Ladies who carry purses are lucky. . .it's often very difficult for
|
|||
|
AP to establish that a lady actually put something in her purse, especially
|
|||
|
if her back was to the camera.
|
|||
|
A sure-fire way to guarantee messing up AP's strategy at any time is to
|
|||
|
duck into a bathroom or the dressing rooms in Clothing. Remember - you can
|
|||
|
cross the registers to the bathrooms at the front with stuff inside your
|
|||
|
clothing, because *it's not theft until you leave the store*. Literally.
|
|||
|
If AP sees you heading that way, they may send a TPS to tell people the
|
|||
|
restroom is closed, and force you back into the store. There is also a
|
|||
|
restroom at the Pharmacy, though, and chances are they won't beat you there
|
|||
|
first. If you do get in, though, head for a stall and stay there for a few
|
|||
|
minutes. A TPS or APS may follow you in, pretend to use the restroom, or
|
|||
|
probably just wash their hands (so they can immediately follow you back
|
|||
|
out). The restroom is not a good idea if you have a package you want to
|
|||
|
open, just if you've already got something hidden. Open it on the floor,
|
|||
|
hide it, go to the bathroom. Too many times APs will break the rules, and
|
|||
|
follow you in to the bathroom. Then they will pretend to leave by opening
|
|||
|
the door and letting it shut, waiting silently. You, being previously
|
|||
|
unaware, would then proceed to loudly open your package, thinking you're
|
|||
|
alone, at which point the AP will sneak over to the stall, whip the door
|
|||
|
open and tell you to give it up and get the hell out of their store. A good
|
|||
|
hard yank will pop open a restroom stall, and they don't care if your pants
|
|||
|
are down. This is true even if you're a little kid, because children will
|
|||
|
almost always take toys and stuff to the bathrooms and think they're safe in
|
|||
|
there. Of course, if they arrest you, you know now Target policy and can
|
|||
|
claim that they made illegal surveillance of you while in a private area.
|
|||
|
Under normal circumstances, if an AP is following all the rules, they will
|
|||
|
wait until you come out, send in someone to check for the stolen items you
|
|||
|
may have dumped or for empty packages in the toilets, paper holders, or
|
|||
|
trash, and then try to establish if you still have the item hidden on you or
|
|||
|
not. Many times this will instantly break their chain of surveillance and
|
|||
|
they will have to let you go. Also, if you use the Pharmacy bathroom and
|
|||
|
dump the wrapper in the trash, you will have a few moments to get to the
|
|||
|
doors while a TPS or APS will have to verify that the wrapper is there, and
|
|||
|
radio to the person making the apprehension. However, this still
|
|||
|
constitutes breaking observation, and they will probably just try to scare
|
|||
|
you by manning the front doors. Under very rare conditions they can call a
|
|||
|
DAPTL and get permission to make a bathroom apprehension, but this is almost
|
|||
|
never allowed. Another thing to consider - the bathrooms in SuperTargets
|
|||
|
are always right next to an Employees only door, usually right in front of
|
|||
|
their break room. Come back out, and if no one's nearby, you could duck
|
|||
|
right in there and run for the Employee entrance door. Careful, though, as
|
|||
|
sometimes AP will hide right behind that first door and watch through the
|
|||
|
window to see when you come out of the bathroom.
|
|||
|
The same goes for ducking into the changing rooms. Hide an item like a DVD
|
|||
|
inside a folded up pair of pants, request an item count tag from the
|
|||
|
attendant at the changing rooms (if they're there) and walk inside. AP
|
|||
|
cannot watch you from cameras while you're in there, and no cameras are near
|
|||
|
enough to see in. This is law. They can try to get in another booth next
|
|||
|
to yours and listen for packages opening, then find the empty package after
|
|||
|
you leave. And changing attendants will often call AP if they think someone
|
|||
|
is acting suspicious, or if they hear wrappers being torn. If an AP member
|
|||
|
ever does arrest you after you entered the bathroom, they are probably
|
|||
|
counting on the fact that you will be scared, and won't know that they can't
|
|||
|
do it. They will alter their report to say that you unconcealed the stolen
|
|||
|
items and reconcealed them again back out in the store after you left the
|
|||
|
bathroom, which is enough to arrest you on. (Of course, if you really do
|
|||
|
take the stuff out and then hide it again after you leave the bathroom, you
|
|||
|
deserve to be arrested.) Many, many times APs of all levels will fudge
|
|||
|
their reports to hide small mistakes they made or rules they overlooked for
|
|||
|
the sake of arresting someone they were sure was guilty, and other AP
|
|||
|
members will probably cover for them, for the greater good. Of course, they
|
|||
|
risk arresting someone with nothing on them, which is very bad for an AP, or
|
|||
|
of a fellow team member later ratting them out to an APTL, but chances are
|
|||
|
they'll get away with it, especially if they're working alone that day.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
********** The Ties That Bind **********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now to touch more directly on AP rules. These explain why the bathroom
|
|||
|
trick works. An APS has many rules about when they specifically *cannot*
|
|||
|
make an apprehension (arrest you). More so, as I said in the intro, than
|
|||
|
they do about when they *can* arrest you. The odds are *always* stacked in
|
|||
|
an intelligent thief's favor, if they know the store policies. The stores
|
|||
|
are too afraid of lawsuits, and let APs know they may be fired for even only
|
|||
|
one false arrest, even after years of good service. They have several steps
|
|||
|
they have to acquire during watching you that if they lose even one of, they
|
|||
|
may not be able to make the arrest.
|
|||
|
First, they must observe you enter the area without the about-to-be-stolen
|
|||
|
merchandise. This rule is the most often overlooked by APSs, because
|
|||
|
chances are they won't know you're a thief until you're stealing something.
|
|||
|
Second, they have to see you select the merchandise from the shelf or
|
|||
|
display. They can't risk arresting you for stuff you brought in to the
|
|||
|
store on your own.
|
|||
|
Third, they have to actually see you conceal the merchandise. They are
|
|||
|
allowed leeway here, because you may have your back to them, but if they see
|
|||
|
you pick up an item, fiddle with the wrapper, and suddenly the empty
|
|||
|
wrapper's dropped on the shelf and the item has disappeared, they can make
|
|||
|
"reasonable assumptions" that you have it hidden on you. Again, someone
|
|||
|
watching on camera may be able to record you clearly hiding the item, and if
|
|||
|
it's a fellow APS, the APS on the floor will probably be okay in trusting
|
|||
|
their judgment. If it's a TPS on camera, the APS is not supposed to take
|
|||
|
their word on it, but still can if they're willing to risk accepting the
|
|||
|
legal blame and losing their job if they're wrong.
|
|||
|
Fourth, and most importantly, the APS then has to *maintain* observation of
|
|||
|
you so well that there is *no* reasonable doubt you still have the item on
|
|||
|
you. This is the hardest bit of any surveillance, because a thief with an
|
|||
|
item hidden knows they're a time bomb. The thief will start moving more
|
|||
|
quickly, trying to find a safe way out, ducking around aisles, making it
|
|||
|
harder for the APS to follow them. This is always a good idea for thieves.
|
|||
|
Moving quickly, weaving, makes it harder for visual contact to be
|
|||
|
maintained, and for cameras to follow you. A lot of times a thief good at
|
|||
|
doubling back and weaving may lose the entire AP dept, and it won't be until
|
|||
|
later when the tapes are reviewed that they see the thief leaving the store.
|
|||
|
This gives you every opportunity to dump the stuff if you feel unsafe, and
|
|||
|
still walk out a free person.
|
|||
|
Fifth and last, you then have to actually walk through the doors with the
|
|||
|
item still on you. All SuperTargets have double doors, and AP plays on
|
|||
|
this. They will always take you as soon as you pass the first set of doors,
|
|||
|
inside the foyer. If you haven't left the store with stolen goods, it isn't
|
|||
|
theft yet, no crime has occurred. APS's are always asked, "Did you have
|
|||
|
your Five Steps?" to determine if they actually followed the rules. There
|
|||
|
are lots of mitigating circumstances where they can bend the rules, but
|
|||
|
overall these ties bind them very tightly, and help you out enormously.
|
|||
|
For instance - if you place a large box under your shirt that's so obvious
|
|||
|
anyone can see the corners poking out, and the APS loses you during Step
|
|||
|
Four, but finds you again right at the doors, still poking out squarely,
|
|||
|
they can act on reasonable assumption that you are still stealing. Or if
|
|||
|
you clearly are carrying the item in your hand, not concealing it at all,
|
|||
|
they can ignore that rule too.
|
|||
|
What this also means is that at any time, if you know that you are being
|
|||
|
watched, or even suspect it, you don't have to hide anything. You could
|
|||
|
walk right up to the APS, and remove every item from your jacket, hand it to
|
|||
|
them, smile and walk out the door. There's nothing they can do.
|
|||
|
Theoretically, you could even stop at the stands, before you leave, and drop
|
|||
|
everything on the floor right there, wave to the camera, and go. But when
|
|||
|
you get near the doors, it'll be hard to prove you weren't intending to
|
|||
|
leave, so best to do it a ways back.
|
|||
|
To help your case if you do get away, try to wear glasses, a hat, and
|
|||
|
clothing you never intend to wear again. Alter your appearance as much as
|
|||
|
possible. Die your hair, even. Too many thieves get recognized by their
|
|||
|
signature clothing, and when you come back to steal the second time and get
|
|||
|
caught, they'll remember the first time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
********** The Rundown **********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
So let's say you've decided to go for it anyways. You know you're being
|
|||
|
watched, but you really want that item tucked away in your jacket. You've
|
|||
|
weaved and moved, but you're not sure if you lost them or not. You're near
|
|||
|
the front doors, and you want to act casual, but suddenly one of several
|
|||
|
things can go wrong.
|
|||
|
There may be a TPS blocking your way out. Often, if they think you'll
|
|||
|
spook and give up, a TPS may just walk nearby you while you're still in the
|
|||
|
store, glancing very obviously in your direction and making a few more
|
|||
|
passes as you continue. If a TPS is handling it, an APS may not even be on
|
|||
|
duty. Remember, a TPS can only scare you, they can't stop you. If you go
|
|||
|
all the way, they may stand right in front of the exit doors. If you cross
|
|||
|
to the other doors, they'll cross with you, either pretending not to notice
|
|||
|
you or staring blatantly at you. If this happens, head back out into the
|
|||
|
store. Get to a safe distance, and see if the TPS is following you. Lead
|
|||
|
them to the back of the store, and as fast as you can, don't worry about
|
|||
|
other customers, sprint for the front. Blast out the doors, and away. You
|
|||
|
never have to shop there again, you know. Or just quickly and casually
|
|||
|
weave until the front doors are open, then walk quickly out. They cannot
|
|||
|
stop you.
|
|||
|
You may not see anyone, but an APS may be waiting nearby for you to head
|
|||
|
out the doors. They will then run quietly up behind you, whip out their
|
|||
|
orange security badge, and shout, "Target Security!" or "Asset Protection!"
|
|||
|
or any combination of these with "Freeze!" They have to announce who they
|
|||
|
are, otherwise you can claim later you thought you were being assaulted by a
|
|||
|
stranger. They won't always pull out their badge, a verbal warning is
|
|||
|
legally enough. Be ready if you think you've outrun them, too. . .many
|
|||
|
times a lone APS will enlist burly, video-game-generation-violent store
|
|||
|
employees to wait outside the doors and trap you. These guys don't know the
|
|||
|
rules as well, and may just try to beat you into the ground instead of just
|
|||
|
subduing you.
|
|||
|
There's also a very important rule that Target thieves need to know - the
|
|||
|
Sidewalk rule. If you can make it past the sidewalk, Target is supposed to
|
|||
|
let you go. They can't risk the liability of chasing you into traffic and
|
|||
|
getting you hurt or killed by a car. Of course, if an APS has their arms
|
|||
|
around you, and you drag them past the sidewalk, you've just waived your
|
|||
|
right to the Rule. It's all just part of the fight now. This is another
|
|||
|
reason to be nervous of normal, non-AP employees. They may not know the
|
|||
|
Rule, and drag you back from the lot if they can catch you, and AP will
|
|||
|
probably bend the rules and fudge reports to cover. I witnessed it a few
|
|||
|
times.
|
|||
|
If you do get jumped by an APS at the door, it's best to assume there's
|
|||
|
backup coming. A TPS has to maintain camera footage of the actual
|
|||
|
apprehension starting, but the instant the APS makes contact with the thief,
|
|||
|
the TPS will sprint out to help. This is why the AP office is at the front,
|
|||
|
and exactly between both sets of front doors. Other employees and even
|
|||
|
customers will often run over to help. If you are going to do anything
|
|||
|
violent to get free, do it as soon as you know you're being attacked.
|
|||
|
Remember, the second doors will slow you down, no matter how fast you're
|
|||
|
moving. An APS will run around in front of you, so if you do try to run, it
|
|||
|
will probably be back into the store, where they can control you. APSs come
|
|||
|
in all shapes and sizes, too, from tiny little women to massive,
|
|||
|
bodybuilding men. And don't just assume that since they're small, you can
|
|||
|
overpower them. Most of the tiny women I knew at Target could beat the hell
|
|||
|
out of men twice their size in a few seconds. Target security are not lax
|
|||
|
in their fight training. They are not allowed to use their radios,
|
|||
|
handcuffs or anything else as weapons. They are not supposed to strike you,
|
|||
|
only subdue you by grappling, but if you start swinging punches, they
|
|||
|
probably will too, and then you have no legal excuse. You started it, and
|
|||
|
they *will* have tape to prove it. (Remember those fixed cameras at the
|
|||
|
front doors?) Other than that, all bets are off, and chances are no one
|
|||
|
will care if you sustain extra bruises during your capture.
|
|||
|
Here's a rule I would not advise you to use unless you're absolutely
|
|||
|
desperate: Target policy forbids AP from attempting to arrest you, or even
|
|||
|
coming near you, if you have a weapon. If at some point, while you're in
|
|||
|
the store, you very clearly display a knife or gun to the cameras, they will
|
|||
|
back off, and attempt to spook you into leaving. APSs will probably start
|
|||
|
making themselves very obvious to you, not even trying to hide anymore, just
|
|||
|
glaring as they walk past. *****HOWEVER*****. The instant they know you
|
|||
|
have a weapon, and are apparently thinking about needing it to get out, they
|
|||
|
may call the cops to provide backup. They will most certainly report you to
|
|||
|
the police even if you do leave without stealing, especially if they get
|
|||
|
your license plate. I would say that a smart thief should *NEVER* carry a
|
|||
|
weapon for something like shoplifting. It will go *way* harder for you if
|
|||
|
you do get arrested, and if you know the rules about being able to walk away
|
|||
|
whenever you want, it's just not worth it. When stealing from Target, you
|
|||
|
are never going to end up in a life-or-death situation. Or even a
|
|||
|
life-or-jail one, if you can just get yourself to dump and walk away. If
|
|||
|
you do want to carry something, I'd suggest pepper spray, as it's
|
|||
|
non-lethal, and many people would just happen to have it on them. You could
|
|||
|
always claim you were panicked by the sudden shout and person barreling down
|
|||
|
on you, and you just reacted and sprayed them. You always carry pepper
|
|||
|
spray for self-defense, right?
|
|||
|
Of course, as with every other rule, there's an exception. . .if an AP
|
|||
|
member is absolutely *sure* you cannot get to your weapon before they can
|
|||
|
drop you, they may risk their own life and try to arrest you. They will
|
|||
|
probably receive a stern warning later, but it's their choice. But it's
|
|||
|
very heavily pushed upon all APs that no item in the store is ever worth
|
|||
|
anyone's life. Just let them go, get video footage, report it to the
|
|||
|
police.
|
|||
|
A good idea for any thief is to consider alternative exits. Every Target
|
|||
|
store has several emergency exit doors located around the outer walls.
|
|||
|
These doors always have a Detex unit panic bar attached to them, and the
|
|||
|
double doors (mostly found in SuperTargets) will also have a knob-controlled
|
|||
|
vertical locking bar. These doors are also all hooked into the Operator's
|
|||
|
alarm panel in the recesses of the Employee Only area. To open a panic bar,
|
|||
|
you need only to push on the arm, and the door will open, setting off a
|
|||
|
blaringly loud alarm, so be ready to run. (Unless the batteries have run
|
|||
|
down, in which case it might be almost silent - hey, it's really happened a
|
|||
|
lot. You could also plausibly pick the main lock to open the latch, or use
|
|||
|
a set of Detex keys to open the casing lock and pull out the battery if you
|
|||
|
had time.) And there<72>s a magnetic switch hooked to the top of the door
|
|||
|
which sets off a small alarm at the Operator<6F>s desk to let them know the
|
|||
|
door has been opened. They will immediately contact AP by radio if a Detex
|
|||
|
door is opened, and let them know which one. On the double doors, you can
|
|||
|
first turn the knob on the vertical bar, which will unlock it, then slam
|
|||
|
open the panic bar and run out. Neither of these devices can ever actually
|
|||
|
be really locked, because they're emergency exits. In a fire or disaster,
|
|||
|
they can't count on being able to get a key to them, so *anyone*, at
|
|||
|
*anytime*, has to be able to open them easily. This is very popular with
|
|||
|
kids, who know the odds of AP catching them running out an emergency door
|
|||
|
are slim. If you don't think you're being watched yet, you might even
|
|||
|
release the locking bar first before you've taken anything, and then when
|
|||
|
you've got the stolen goods, run at full speed, slamming open the Detex bar
|
|||
|
and, simultaneously, the door, and sprinting away. AP might notice it's
|
|||
|
unlocked, though, and set a trap for you by waiting right outside, or behind
|
|||
|
nearby shelves. A lot of times fixed cameras are pointed right at these
|
|||
|
doors because they're so popular with repeat boosters. (Oh, side note -
|
|||
|
anyone who has been recognized, even vaguely, as having used the fire exits
|
|||
|
to steal several times, even from different stores, will attract the special
|
|||
|
attention of those RAPTLs and DAPTLs I mentioned earlier, the Target SWAT
|
|||
|
team. They don't like fire exit boosters, and will specifically set traps
|
|||
|
just for you, boyo.)
|
|||
|
But, warning aside, they are a very good alternative when other doors seem
|
|||
|
blocked. Many thieves will even have an accomplice waiting right outside
|
|||
|
the emergency door in a car, so they can peel away. If AP sees a car on
|
|||
|
camera waiting by an exit door, though, they may come out to speak to you or
|
|||
|
call the police to shoo you away. Or just set traps for you. Anyways.
|
|||
|
There is usually a door in the sports section of the store, near the Camping
|
|||
|
Goods, right on an aisle. There are usually four hidden in Employee Only
|
|||
|
areas at the back of the store. In Grocery where the long freezer walls
|
|||
|
meet at the corner, there is a swinging door set. Go through these, and
|
|||
|
just beyond should be another emergency exit door. The same goes if you're
|
|||
|
along the back wall of the store, in the Domestics sections. There will be
|
|||
|
a large set of swinging doors, charge through these, you should see straight
|
|||
|
ahead of you a fire door. Also, if you follow the tall shelves of items in
|
|||
|
the rear warehouse area of SuperTargets, it may look like you're heading
|
|||
|
towards a dead end, but in between the last shelf aisles will be another
|
|||
|
Detex door (with no locking bar!), and beyond that, in the employee
|
|||
|
training/conference room, there will also be a non-bar Detex door. You risk
|
|||
|
employees spotting you, of course, but unless they're ignorant of the rules
|
|||
|
they shouldn't try to actually stop you, other than shouting "Hey!"
|
|||
|
If you're really bold, you could even charge into the Employees Only
|
|||
|
swinging doors at the front of the store (SuperTarget only), and towards the
|
|||
|
Employee entrance door. (It will always be right by the Operator's desk,
|
|||
|
and has EAS stands around it, because they don't trust employees, either.)
|
|||
|
You'd probably have to run past several employees, and definitely right past
|
|||
|
the AP office door, but once you're out, you're gone into the parking lot.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Of course, with all this excitement and bravery, there still comes the
|
|||
|
gentler ways of getting out. AP, despite being well trained and on the
|
|||
|
ball, is only human and cannot be everywhere. They probably only spot about
|
|||
|
10% of the theft going on, and catch about 1%.
|
|||
|
Many people will try just filling up a cart with whatever they want and
|
|||
|
walking through the register lanes and right out the door. Out in the
|
|||
|
parking lot, they can load up their car at leisure. (Not quite the same as
|
|||
|
the cart-full-of-DVD-players I said earlier, this is just a cart full of
|
|||
|
different, probably not too expensive items.) Someone may have a Target bag
|
|||
|
from a previous purchase that still looks relatively new, pull it out of
|
|||
|
their pocket in the store, load up, and walk out. Some people make a small
|
|||
|
purchase, ask for a bag, and then head back into the store and load more
|
|||
|
goods into it. And there's always the most common supermarket theft in the
|
|||
|
world - eating candy out of the candy bins without paying for it, or "just
|
|||
|
one or two" grapes from the shelf. I used to take great pleasure in
|
|||
|
sneaking up on little fat kids stealing candy from the bins, coming right up
|
|||
|
behind them, and saying, basso profundo, "You gonna pay for that?" Deer in
|
|||
|
the headlights, every time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
********** When It All Comes Down **********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Uh oh. . .you made a bad mistake, and now you're in cuffs and being taken
|
|||
|
to the Office to await your punishment. What do you do now?
|
|||
|
Let's backtrack a moment and look at the theft you made, to see where we
|
|||
|
can improve your chances. First - AP doesn't like to apprehend for items
|
|||
|
under $20, because then they can really only warn you, take the stuff back,
|
|||
|
put you in a report, take your picture and let you go. If you have a
|
|||
|
one-dollar candy bar, you could probably walk right out the door waving it
|
|||
|
over your head and no one would stop you. And I really mean $20. . .if
|
|||
|
you're even half a buck under, they'll probably let you go. But Gods help
|
|||
|
you if you're a penny over.
|
|||
|
If you don't think your chances are good when you're being arrested (i.e.
|
|||
|
the APS towers over you, biceps bulging), do not fight in *any* way. Calmly
|
|||
|
hold up your hands, palms open, and state that you surrender. Lay down on
|
|||
|
the floor with your hands behind your back if you want, and let them
|
|||
|
peacefully cuff you. I guarantee, if you're calm and don't look like you'll
|
|||
|
run, they won't even cuff you. They'll take you firmly by the arm to make
|
|||
|
sure you can't get away, though. This is a time when some thieves might try
|
|||
|
to suddenly attack the AP, break free and run back out the door, but the
|
|||
|
police will then be after you for assault. Chances are they probably got
|
|||
|
good enough footage of you to screw you over on that count, and there
|
|||
|
probably won't be just one AP holding your arm, either. The more you
|
|||
|
cooperate, the better they'll treat you.
|
|||
|
If you were dumb enough to bring a weapon, and you're now cuffed and being
|
|||
|
led away, clearly state, "I want you to know, I have a weapon, a (knife,
|
|||
|
gun, etc.) in my (right pocket, holster, etc.)" Do *not* try to remove it,
|
|||
|
as this might be taken as hostile action.
|
|||
|
When you're taken to the Office, you will be on camera the whole time
|
|||
|
you're in it. Don't try to make up any stories about AP beating you
|
|||
|
severely (unless they really did), or sexually molesting you, because AP is
|
|||
|
*very* good about getting everything on tape, and will be able to prove
|
|||
|
quickly that you're a thief *and* a liar. They also always leave at least
|
|||
|
one AP or store team member of the same sex as you in the office the whole
|
|||
|
time, to act as a witness.
|
|||
|
You will be sat down in a plastic chair, or in one of the new restraining
|
|||
|
benches being installed in most Targets. These are metal benches with a
|
|||
|
crossbar for attaching handcuffs, so they don't have to worry about you
|
|||
|
running away until the cops get there. Here's an interesting secret - the
|
|||
|
crossbar actually is made in two pieces, and screws together like a curtain
|
|||
|
rod at the center. You can't see the seam because of a support, but the bar
|
|||
|
can be unscrewed, and not only are you free then, you have a length of metal
|
|||
|
pipe for a weapon. Of course, many AP people have realized this, and taken
|
|||
|
the time to superglue it together. (And they will probably just have
|
|||
|
attached a second set of cuffs to the chain on your cuffs, and that to the
|
|||
|
bar, so even if you do get free, you're still cuffed behind your back. Not
|
|||
|
a good situation for escape.)
|
|||
|
Here's something to drill into your skull: please, *please* do not try the
|
|||
|
"I have to go the bathroom" trick. Even if you really do have to go. AP is
|
|||
|
not going to let you, no matter how much you whine. If they've been around,
|
|||
|
they will probably tell you, "That's why the chair is plastic," or, "That's
|
|||
|
why the bench has all those little holes in it." They're serious. Wet
|
|||
|
yourself right there if you want. And don't try the "Owwwww, my handcuffs
|
|||
|
are too tight, waaaah," thing. In a few minutes the police will be there
|
|||
|
and will change out their handcuffs for AP's, so you can whine all you want
|
|||
|
to them instead.
|
|||
|
Now they move on to questioning you. They will need all the personal info
|
|||
|
they can get from you for their reports. Name, age, ID if you've got it
|
|||
|
(don't bring it if you're feeling rebellious). They will want to know why
|
|||
|
you stole, and most of the time all they ever hear is "I don't know."
|
|||
|
Unless you tried to beat them up, they will be very civil and polite to you,
|
|||
|
and try to convince you to tell them more about what you were doing when you
|
|||
|
tried to steal. A *very* common line from APSs and APTLs interviewing
|
|||
|
thieves is, "Now we're going to try to establish your honesty, so I can tell
|
|||
|
the cops you're dealing fair with us. It'll go better for you. Now, I know
|
|||
|
everything you took. I know everything you did. And I want you to tell me,
|
|||
|
in detail, what you did, to see how honest you're going to be with me."
|
|||
|
They usually only use this line if they're missing some important gap in
|
|||
|
their observation of you. They will also tend to sit you down and
|
|||
|
immediately tell you, "I want everything you took on this desk right now.
|
|||
|
Everything you were going to steal." If you're cuffed, they may have to
|
|||
|
remove it for you. But it's definitely smart to obey them on this count at
|
|||
|
least. . .they're right, the police will be searching you as soon as they
|
|||
|
arrive, and it will be noted that you tried to lie about not having any
|
|||
|
other stolen goods on you. However, if you *did* take stuff under $20, and
|
|||
|
they haven't found it all, and you're pretty sure you're about to be let go,
|
|||
|
you can risk bluffing it out and still get away with something for the day's
|
|||
|
hassle.
|
|||
|
Overall, if you just want to get the legal stuff done with quickly and
|
|||
|
accept your punishment, I'd say cooperate completely. However, you are not
|
|||
|
required to cooperate with Target in any way. You can just say, "I'm taking
|
|||
|
my right to remain silent in advance," and then shut up until the cops get
|
|||
|
there. It's probably better this way. The cops may submit all your
|
|||
|
personal info back to Target later, but the less info they have on you, the
|
|||
|
better your chances are for stealing in the future. Don't try to lie to the
|
|||
|
cops, though. You can still continue to remain silent, it is your right.
|
|||
|
But the cops will be able to really check if you lie about your name,
|
|||
|
address, etc. I know this seems like common sense, but there are probably
|
|||
|
going to be a lot of dumb people out there who would try this.
|
|||
|
Another note: Target can hold you for a reasonable amount of time before
|
|||
|
calling the police. They could keep you in that office for a few hours if
|
|||
|
they wanted, pumping you about your theft.
|
|||
|
Honestly, I'm not sure what'll happen to you after the cops take you off, I
|
|||
|
never checked up. I do know that I've seen people I personally fought to
|
|||
|
the ground and arrested walking around free a few months later, so it can't
|
|||
|
be that bad.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
********** Common Sense and Random Ideas **********
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Since I've written this whole thing from about midnight until 8 AM, my
|
|||
|
mind's getting fuzzy, but I wanted to finish it all in one go. So here's
|
|||
|
the rest of the advice and cool ideas I can offer up before I hit the sack.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Price tag switching is a very common means of theft at any store. You can
|
|||
|
steal the sticker off of another, less expensive item, and lay it over the
|
|||
|
item you want. Hopefully the cashier will not notice, or you might even
|
|||
|
find a slightly crooked friend already working at that store who's willing
|
|||
|
to overlook it. Some crooked cashiers will attach stickers to their
|
|||
|
forearms or watch, so when their friend comes through the line at a
|
|||
|
pre-decided time, they can simply swipe their own arm across as each item
|
|||
|
goes pass, ringing up the same price every time. This will be very obvious
|
|||
|
if AP ever reviews the transactions by computer, but otherwise is a great
|
|||
|
way to help your friends steal. Tech-savvy thieves can also try printing up
|
|||
|
their own sticker labels at home by buying an item with a low price,
|
|||
|
scanning the image of the barcode into their home computer, and printing
|
|||
|
them up on adhesive backed paper, available at any office supply store.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
When cutting open a totally sealed package, don't rip it with your bare
|
|||
|
hands. This makes way too much noise, and is very noticeable on camera.
|
|||
|
Bring along a sharp exacto knife or box cutter, and slice as much as you can
|
|||
|
around the item inside. If you can cut it completely away so that no
|
|||
|
bending or ripping of the package has to occur to get it out, all the
|
|||
|
better. A lot of tricksters will pay cash for a DVD, take it home, and very
|
|||
|
carefully open the bottom part of the clear wrapper. They remove the box,
|
|||
|
take out the DVD, and carefully slide the box back inside the wrapper, then
|
|||
|
reseal it with clear glue. Sometimes they might use a cheap, throwaway CD
|
|||
|
or blank CD-ROM to replace it for correct weight. Take it back to the same
|
|||
|
store, and return it for your money back (they only make you
|
|||
|
exchange-for-the-same if the package has been opened). Your crime will
|
|||
|
probably go undiscovered until the next person buys it off the shelf and
|
|||
|
brings it back to complain. (Pay with cash so you leave no trail of
|
|||
|
yourself, just in case.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Box stuffing is another common means of theft. Select a very large box
|
|||
|
(say a baby stroller), open it up, and stuff lots of small, inexpensive
|
|||
|
items into it, then tape it back up (bring your own tape). The cashier
|
|||
|
rings up the big box, you pay for it, take it home, and empty out your
|
|||
|
goodies. You can even return the big box item the next day and get your
|
|||
|
money back.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Don't waste time on small potatoes. Sure, you could steal that DVD today.
|
|||
|
Or you could steal a $100 jacket, sell it on Ebay, and buy five DVDs
|
|||
|
tomorrow.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you ever find a receipt from Target on the ground or in the trash
|
|||
|
somewhere, and it doesn't look horribly mangled or dirty, see if there's
|
|||
|
anything expensive on it paid for by cash or check. (Make sure it's for a
|
|||
|
previous day if it's by check, so they can't just say, Oh, here's your
|
|||
|
check, we'll just tear it up.) You can then walk into the store, grab that
|
|||
|
same item off the shelf, take it to Guest Services and "return" it for the
|
|||
|
cash. If you can ever get your hands on a roll of real receipt tape from
|
|||
|
Target, you could scan in a real receipt from a minor purchase, and alter it
|
|||
|
according to match more expensive items, then print it out yourself. Brand
|
|||
|
new is much better than trash receipts. Of course, AP watches for people
|
|||
|
doing this, and you may not even realize you have the whole dept. casually
|
|||
|
waiting around you at the desk, looking just like customers. I suppose you
|
|||
|
could also just buy entirely blank receipt tape of the same texture and size
|
|||
|
from an office supply, and scan both the front and back of the receipt,
|
|||
|
printing up new ones all your own. However, be forewarned that since they
|
|||
|
keep computer-cash register records, they can instantly bring up your
|
|||
|
previous transaction, and see that the receipt doesn't match, or doesn't
|
|||
|
exist at all. This is why it's better to just use found receipts, or if you
|
|||
|
find a dirty, mangled, receipt, print up a shiny new one with the exact same
|
|||
|
info on it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
AP also watches specifically for people waiting in cars right outside the
|
|||
|
front doors. Thieves will have their buddies wait for them in case they
|
|||
|
come out running, so they can peel away. This is stupid, because Target
|
|||
|
won't chase you into the parking lot. Just have your friend park way back
|
|||
|
in the lot, and run out to them. Or, as suggested earlier, come entirely on
|
|||
|
foot, and leave the same way so there's no way to identify you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If for some reason you ever think about robbing Target's Guest Service desk
|
|||
|
(beats me why, it's right out in the open and all), don't fall for their
|
|||
|
Robbery Fund. It's a plastic clear bag with wads of cash inside it labeled
|
|||
|
"$2000" on each wad. It's really a load of ones with big bills around it.
|
|||
|
(I don't think it's an ink-pack or tracker, just a sucker batch to make you
|
|||
|
think you got more than you really did.)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you're one of those ridiculous drug thieves that likes to steal Sudafed
|
|||
|
for your suppliers, keep in mind that Target will let you actually buy three
|
|||
|
boxes at a time, with no problem. APs don't mind buyers, but when a
|
|||
|
jittery, obvious junkie comes in and starts dumping boxes and boxes of
|
|||
|
Sudafed into a handbasket, they are definitely going to be waiting for you
|
|||
|
at the doors.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The AP offices will always have a spare handcuff key somewhere, probably
|
|||
|
hanging on the wall, and a door that has to be opened from the inside
|
|||
|
(meaning no one else can come in from the outside without their own key).
|
|||
|
The ceiling is usually a false lowered ceiling, which means a person could
|
|||
|
push up the acoustic tile, climb onto the wall structures and make their way
|
|||
|
carefully to another room, climb quickly down and run for it.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Do not ever act nonchalant, then suspicious when you think you're alone,
|
|||
|
then nonchalant again when you see a person walk by. This is what AP is
|
|||
|
hoping to see you do. The best thieves will appear casual and like they
|
|||
|
don't even notice that they *are* stealing while they're doing it. If you
|
|||
|
can open a package while moving around a corner, even better. Corners are
|
|||
|
your friends, as they momentarily break surveillance of you as the APS
|
|||
|
follows or the camera view has to be switched. If you need to conceal or
|
|||
|
dump, do it on the move, preferably the instant after you turn a corner.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
At some Targets (the plain Targets), ceiling mirrors will be installed over
|
|||
|
some high-theft aisles. APSs will carry small hand mirrors covered by a
|
|||
|
magazine or other item, and look down into their mirror, which reflects the
|
|||
|
ceiling mirror, and shows them what you're doing in the next aisle over.
|
|||
|
For some reason most thieves never look up into these mirrors. They
|
|||
|
probably think they're hiding cameras or something. Even without a hand
|
|||
|
mirror, an APS can simply pretend to be shopping the top shelf, and glance
|
|||
|
upwards directly at the ceiling mirror. If you start to head down the
|
|||
|
aisle, they will pace you in the opposite direction, moving around the
|
|||
|
endcap right as you do, watching you in the mirror, and you may never even
|
|||
|
know they're there. They also sometimes will push along a cart with a large
|
|||
|
mirror in it, turned at a sideways angle so they can see down an aisle
|
|||
|
they're walking past just before they themselves actually come into view.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you ever see someone up on a hydraulic lift repairing cameras or moving
|
|||
|
camera domes, do not assume it's just a janitor. Only AP touches the
|
|||
|
cameras and domes, and they now have a bird's eye view of you.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The best time of day to steal is probably the instant the store opens in
|
|||
|
the morning. TPSs working solo shifts have to make the rounds of the store,
|
|||
|
and take a tally of all the high-theft items on a clipboard. This keeps
|
|||
|
them in a predictable pattern of movement, as they generally make one big
|
|||
|
circle around the store, and they won't be in the office watching the
|
|||
|
cameras. Many shifts are covered completely alone by a TPS or APS with no
|
|||
|
backup at all. Every store usually has only one or two APSs, and at least
|
|||
|
three or four TPSs that come on different shifts. At store closing, the
|
|||
|
main lights will be shut off, and the doors manned by regular employees so
|
|||
|
that no one new comes in, but the last people in the checkout lane may get
|
|||
|
out. The TPSs have to make the rounds with the inventory clipboard again at
|
|||
|
closing, so this would also be a good time to steal, although it increases
|
|||
|
the chance there will be another AP member somewhere in the store or
|
|||
|
watching cameras. The TPS will check in Pharmacy, for drugs and razors,
|
|||
|
through a lot of aisle for empty packages, the radar detectors, GPS units,
|
|||
|
and anything else being watched for high theft.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
To sum it all up, the best things you can do for yourself are:
|
|||
|
- Come on foot, or park out of view of the store.
|
|||
|
- Pay attention to your "shopping". Only lifters watch other shoppers.
|
|||
|
- Be casual. Don't look up, or around.
|
|||
|
- Once loaded, move fast, and weave.
|
|||
|
- Use alternate exits if you don't feel safe.
|
|||
|
- Pay attention to radio announcements from nearby employees.
|
|||
|
- Hit the bathrooms or changing room to screw them up.
|
|||
|
- TPS's by their own lonesome cannot stop you. But they may have backup.
|
|||
|
- Try to keep it as far under $20 as you can if you think you'll be caught.
|
|||
|
- If all else fails, drop the stuff in very plain view, and leave.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Good luck to all the up-and-comers out there. I hope this tutorial was as
|
|||
|
entertaining and informative as the disclaimer says it was. Again, I accept
|
|||
|
no responsibility if you actually act on any of this info, and it's your own
|
|||
|
damn fault if you get caught. I apologize if I forgot to mention anything,
|
|||
|
you'll just have to figure it out on your own. And there's always the
|
|||
|
chance that after a few months from this tutorial's release, they'll find
|
|||
|
out about it, freak out, and change everything. But, life is an adventure.
|
|||
|
Just think slow, follow the guidelines, and you'll be right on Target.
|
|||
|
Peace, cheers, and I'm out.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
- Xap
|
|||
|
|