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Shoplifting in charity shops

(121 Posts)
Truffle43 Fri 01-May-26 09:05:41

I volunteer in a local charity shop and am disappointed to say that shoplifting happens on a regular basis.
Yesterday a member of staff watched how a group worked together. This group were challenged in a nice way over an expensive item being put into the woman’s bag. I know challenging is not what you do but it happened. They were so unperturbed it was unbelievable. How much do charities lose to these dreadful people and how much do shops in general lose to these people who see no wrong in taking things and not paying for them. This behaviour sickens me how do others feel.

Oreo Fri 01-May-26 13:21:55

Greggs are now keeping all food behind the counter, no more help yourself displays as people were really helping themselves to food and walking out.And if I were a store manager I would get people to pay before handing any food over the counter.

Oreo Fri 01-May-26 13:26:02

Shoplifting like many other things in our country, is now out of control because there are very few consequences.

keepingquiet Fri 01-May-26 13:40:20

It was me! Children stealing single grapes is not really up there with people stealing from charity shops though, is it?

Not that I encouraged theft in my kids- though my son when in his pushchair once took the hand off a shop dummy and at another time I took a kinder egg from the shelf!

When I noticed this after we left the shops I promptly turned the buggy round and put them back!

Sago Fri 01-May-26 13:47:38

We reeled our granddaughter through the lanes in Brighton.
It was only when we got home we realised she had a real stash of little treasures…all stolen.

Sago Fri 01-May-26 13:47:50

Wheeled not reeled!

Doodledog Fri 01-May-26 13:53:39

Oreo

Doodledog

I suspect it's just as easy pickings for some people who have always lived in our country, and who see it as their country too. There is really no need to bring race into this.

Dishonesty is dishonesty, and people (from wherever they originate) stealing from a charity shop are particularly bad, as the whole set up depends on good will, from the donors, from the volunteers and from those paying for the goods.

FYI race has nothing to do with what I said, they are the same race as us.Different countries such as those in Eastern Europe are different to us only by culture/ customs/ language.
This particular shop is plagued by shoplifters from that region.

Okay.

Magenta8 Fri 01-May-26 13:54:06

There used to signs in charity shops and other shops which read:

Shoplifting is Theft
We Always Prosecute

I haven't seen that sign for years. Of course the first line is still true but the second line isn't.

rafichagran Fri 01-May-26 13:55:51

I am friendly with a manager of a charity shop. They took the changing rooms away because she said there was so much thieving going on in there.
I find it disgraceful that people shoplift but I feel it is worse if it is a charity shop.

TheSunRisesInTheEast Fri 01-May-26 14:37:25

All the charity shops in my town and the neighbouring town have done away with changing rooms because of shoplifting. The worst culprits were the ones with long hair tied back in a headscarf, long flowing skirts and platform mules with socks. Apparently they layer clothes from the shops under their own clothes. Our Asda, Sainsbury's and Tesco never replaced their changing rooms after covid, I don't know why.

MT62 Fri 01-May-26 15:33:52

Really? I’ve heard it all now 😩
Mind you charity shops are quite expensive now.

MT62 Fri 01-May-26 15:35:17

TheSunRisesInTheEast

All the charity shops in my town and the neighbouring town have done away with changing rooms because of shoplifting. The worst culprits were the ones with long hair tied back in a headscarf, long flowing skirts and platform mules with socks. Apparently they layer clothes from the shops under their own clothes. Our Asda, Sainsbury's and Tesco never replaced their changing rooms after covid, I don't know why.

Do they had stuff in the headscarf?

Calendargirl Fri 01-May-26 15:39:53

I know it’s good to try on clothes before buying, but seeing as charity shops now have a returns policy the same as other retailers, it’s not as though you are stuck with a garment the wrong size or style.

Just keep your receipt and return it unworn.

keepingquiet Fri 01-May-26 15:45:10

Or better still, return it as a donation...?

MT62 Fri 01-May-26 16:14:43

Oreo

Greggs are now keeping all food behind the counter, no more help yourself displays as people were really helping themselves to food and walking out.And if I were a store manager I would get people to pay before handing any food over the counter.

Quite right. It’s going to get to a point where shops will put a counter across the door.
When I went to Glasgow, some shops keepers were sat in some kind of cage with a slit. Think maybe off licences.
I watched a YouTube clip where these ‘Roma’ went into a honesty shop & they robbed it blind. Absolutely cheeky.

Allira Fri 01-May-26 16:22:27

Calendargirl

Someone upthread said about supermarkets giving away fruit and veg.

Tesco are promoting this for children, but the tv advert shows a young lad pinching a grape off a display and running out with it, to be pursued by a huge ‘fruit’ monster.

Might seem insignificant, one grape, but it just trivialises stealing, which is what it is.

Tesco are doing a good thing helping schools provide more healthy food for children and encouraging children to eat more fruit and vegetables, however, I think that advert is horrible.
The monster would terrify me, not encourage me to eat more fruit and veg.

I take the point about the stealing too.

Stealing from charity shops must be a new low though.

Purplepixie Fri 01-May-26 16:22:59

It’s very upsetting. What had society come to? I’m Fedup with people pussyfooting around them as well. Name and shame them. If they’re on benefits then stop their money.

Allira Fri 01-May-26 16:26:33

Sago

We reeled our granddaughter through the lanes in Brighton.
It was only when we got home we realised she had a real stash of little treasures…all stolen.

😁

I remember going to the supermarket with DD in a buggy many years ago. At that time they used to put little packets of sweets at the checkout. Being busy packing, paying and carefully hanging the bags on the pushchair, I didn't notice until we'd walked home that she had a stash of sweeties in the buggy.

They no longer have sweets at the checkout.

Tenko Fri 01-May-26 16:26:37

I volunteer in a charity shop and yes shoplifting is a problem . We’ve closed the changing rooms for this reason and no longer have large items on the forecourt as they go missing .
The shoplifters are always in a group of two or three and one will ask for something in the window. Whilst distracted the other two grab items .
I challenged one once as they were leaving and they ran off . It was summer and the door was open.
We don’t have cctv unfortunately and on my session there’s just me and the manager . On other days there’s lots more staff to man the shop . I mentioned to the manager to get the staff to move days , but she said the regular volunteers are stuck in their ways and won’t budge.

Silvergirl Fri 01-May-26 17:04:33

I agree it is a very low ebb indeed.

Romola Fri 01-May-26 17:21:00

Does anyone remember Lady Isobel Barnettt, the tv personality in the 1950s who was prosecuted for shoplifting? She took her own life. I think she had some sort of compulsion.

TheSunRisesInTheEast Fri 01-May-26 17:23:09

And Richard Madeley? 🤔

Gran22boys Fri 01-May-26 17:25:15

Oreo

Shoplifting like many other things in our country, is now out of control because there are very few consequences.

Exactly!

MT62 Fri 01-May-26 17:28:04

Hide stuff

MT62 Fri 01-May-26 17:28:28

Srite

TheSunRisesInTheEast Fri 01-May-26 17:31:11

Actually, Richard Madeley wasn't prosecuted because despite it happening on two separate occasions, he said he just forgot to pay. Yeah right 🙄.