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Detergent theft umm

loboloco

Well-known member
I don't know, but if I just had to steal something, I think I would go for something else.


GRIME WAVE

It’s a dirty job: Police nationwide take on soaring Tide detergent theft
By M.L. Nestel Monday, March 12, 2012



  • 031212-news-tide-theft-webedit-4-ss-662w.jpg
    Photo: Dakota County Attorney's Office

    Patrick Costanzo stole $25,000 worth of Tide.
  • 031212-news-tide-theft-webedit-1b-ss-662w.jpg
    Photo: John Gress/Reuters
  • 031212-news-tide-theft-webedit-2c-ss-662w.jpg
    Photo: Gazette.net/Maryland Community News Online

    A Tide thief makes a major haul in Prince George's County, Md.
  • 031212-news-tide-theft-webedit-4-ss-662w.jpg
    Photo: Dakota County Attorney's Office

    Patrick Costanzo stole $25,000 worth of Tide.
  • 031212-news-tide-theft-webedit-1b-ss-662w.jpg
    Photo: John Gress/Reuters

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Law enforcement officials across the country are puzzled over a crime wave targeting an unlikely item: Tide laundry detergent.

Theft of Tide detergent has become so rampant that authorities from New York to Oregon are keeping tabs on the soap spree, and some cities are setting up special task forces to stop it. And retailers like CVS are taking special security precautions to lock down the liquid.

One Tide taker in West St. Paul, Minn., made off with $25,000 in the product over 15 months before he was busted last year.

“That was unique that he stole so much soap,” said West St. Paul Police Chief Bud Shaver. “The name brand is [all] Tide. Amazing, huh?”

Tide has become a form of currency on the streets. The retail price is steadily high — roughly $10 to $20 a bottle — and it’s a staple in households across socioeconomic classes.

Tide can go for $5 to $10 a bottle on the black market, authorities say. Enterprising laundry soap peddlers even resell bottles to stores.

“There’s no serial numbers and it’s impossible to track,” said Detective Larry Patterson of the Somerset, Ky., Police Department, where authorities have seen a huge spike in Tide theft. “It’s the item to steal.”

Why Tide and not, say, Wisk or All? Police say it’s simply because the Procter & Gamble detergent is the most popular and, with its Day-Glo orange logo, most recognizable of brands.

George Cohen, spokesman for Philadelphia-based Checkpoint Systems, which produces alarms being tested on Tide in CVS stores, said: “Name brands are easier to resell.

“In organized retail crimes they would love to steal the iPad. It’s very easy to sell. Harder to sell the unknown Korean brand."

Most thieves load carts with dozens of bottles, then dash out the door. Many have getaway cars waiting outside.

“These are criminals coming into the store to steal thousands of dollars of merchandise,” said Detective Harrison Sprague of the Prince George’s County, Md., Police Department, where Tide is known as “liquid gold” among officers.

He and other law enforcement officials across the country say Tide theft is connected to the drug trade. In fact, a recent drug sting turned up more Tide that cocaine.

“We sent in an informant to buy drugs. The dealer said, ‘I don’t have drugs, but I could sell you 15 bottles of Tide,’ ” Sprague told The Daily. “Upstairs in the drug dealer’s bedroom was about 14 bottles of Tide laundry soap. We think [users] are trading it for drugs.”

Police in Gresham, Ore., said most Tide theft is perpetrated by “users feeding their habit.”

“They’ll do it right in front of a cop car — buying heroin or methamphetamine with Tide,” said Detective Rick Blake of the Gresham Police Department. “We would see people walking down the road with six, seven bottles of Tide. They were so blatant about it.”

Robyn Cafasso, chief deputy district attorney in Colorado Springs, Colo., said the problem is nothing more than “organized shoplifting” and can be stopped. One method is to toughen punishments for recidivists.

“There’s this old-school thought that this is a shoplift, so it goes into the municipal system,” Cafasso said. “We’re starting to actually get more habitual offenders out of the municipal system and refile charges to make it a more serious offense.”

Cafasso agreed that there’s been a major upswing in Tide theft. “Everybody knows that liquid detergent Tide is an expensive item,” she said.

The pharmacy chain CVS is locking down Tide and other laundry detergents in certain parts of the country alongside flu medication and other commonly stolen items. Joe LaRocca, of the National Retail Federation, said: “It’s a game of cat and mouse. There’s a real balance that takes place between customer service — the product available on the shelf — and securing the merchandise.”

Officials at Tide are trying to keep their hands clean.

“We don’t have any insight as to why the phenomenon is happening, but it is certainly unfortunate,” said Sarah Pasquinucci, a spokeswoman for Procter & Gamble.
 
Look for criminal wearing clean clothes.
:yum:

For crying out loud!
This is one of those, just when you thought you'd heard it all stories.

Glad I'm a Cheer girl!
'course that may be the next target.
What the hell is up with the price of laundry detergent anyhow?
:hammer:
 
nuts.

and where the hell do they find tide for 5 or 10 dollars a bottle? or even powder?

with pg...cheers for cheer!
arm and hammer is good too, an you don't need a bank loan to get it either.

tide task force....lol
 
Anyone see that old Tom Cruise movie "Days of Thunder"? Somewhere in that movie Cole Trickle (Cruise) is told by his crew chief to go hit the pace car. Baffled, Cole asks why. His crew chief says 'You've hit everything else on the track, may as well get 'em all', or something to that tune.

Enter Juan Pablo Montoya. He is a real life 'Cole Trickle' and has hit everything and every driver on the track, even bumping the pace car on a warmup lap. The only thing Juan didn't hit? A jet dryer. He clobbered one in the Daytona 500 and a HUGE fire resulted from his crash (luckily everyone was okay). After they put out the fire, they really didn't know what condition the new (paved last year) track was in after burning for 20 minutes or so. The track is covered with powder from extinguishers and unburned jet fuel. What does Daytona track officials use to clean the track as tens of millions watched? Yup, Tide.

Here is a link to the commercial Tide made from the incident and the incident itself.

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eikRWidjL00"]The Tide Commercial[/ame]

[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XEBjNh1GSwY"]Juan Pablo as Cole Trickle[/ame]

Now you know the power of advertising on NASCAR
Every real man now has to have Tide in his garage if he's a NASCAR fan.
 
Umm, real men are not NASCAR fans.

As you likely guessed, that was sarcasm. I try not to stereotype people, but after attending exactly 2 NASCAR races (Inaugural Indy Race - unknown guy named Jeff Gordon won, and a night race at Bristol) that were corporate funded outings, and there sure is a lot of 'true rednecks' in the crowd. On the flip side, I know two retired business owners who travel in a Prevost motorcoaches to nearly every race. One has a hopped up Cat C-16 diesel that puts out over 800 hp and 3100 ft. lbs of torque! Clearly, they do not fit the stereotype unless, of course, you have two stereotypes; the rednecks and the filthy rich fans.
 
with pg...cheers for cheer!
arm and hammer is good too, an you don't need a bank loan to get it either.
I purchase all paper products and laundry detergents, cleaning supplies at dollar stores (DG and Family Dollar).
It's the same damned thing as is sold in the larger chain grocery stores.
 
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