jhegarty wrote: » I assume the shoplifter has left the shop when they put the picture up.
Run_to_da_hills wrote: » No proof, this is where I could see a lawsuit. Since the introduction of the bag levi many customers now bring their own bags. I have often seen customers placing items from the shelves into these bags rather than use trolleys and at the checkout taling them back out and running them through the scanners. Likewise if you place an item in your pocket and take it out at checkout and pay for it you cannot be done.
Run_to_da_hills wrote: » No proof, this is where I could see a lawsuit.
jayteecork wrote: » As you walk into my local Spar, there are pictures of persons leaving the premises, recorded on the store security cameras. These are pictures of people of people Spar deemed to have been shoplifting and have posted their pictures in the hope of disgracing them i guess. While I don't think this is a bad idea per se, I'm just wondering about the legaility of the whole idea. I mean, what happened to being innocent until proven guilty? It's pretty serious posting someone's picture on a shopfront claiming them to be a thief without the benefit of proof. I've noticed this practice in a Spar in Cork city too.
Sir Molle wrote: » I don't know why people are crying about the risk of innocent people getting their photos put up. Shop lifters stick out like a sore thumb. People who put things in their own bags instead of using the baskets/trolleys in shops are usually older and naieve. The vast majority of the time they give you the bag to unpack, scan and pack again. It's on par with people bringing their own papers in to a shop and buying stuff. You can tell if someone came in with a paper, and it's just as easy to tell if someone's trying to pass off as having come in with a product when they've picked one up off the shelves in the shop because they're usually very panicky.
Deleted User wrote: » ...Power City in Drogheda do it too.
ScumLord wrote: » Is it? Do shops really watch every person that comes in and what they brought in? I always bring a bag with me to the shop, fill it up and empty it out at the till. In small towns like mine it could easily escalate to the point where old folks that don't like the look of some young one accuse them of all kinds of things (behind their back usually). At the same time shopkeepers shouldn't be afraid to catch the person out there and then. After the fact without prove is bollix, if you think someone is stealing from you on a regular basis it's easy enough to catch them out.
ChocolateSauce wrote: » If the shop has evidence enough to believe a person has stolen from them they should have them arrested and tried, not take matters into their own hands.
Cianos wrote: » In my area people make posters and put them up around the streets, showing photographs of known nazis living in the district, with names and addresses even written on them.
jayteecork wrote: » Ok they didn't specifically state it
rubadub wrote: » Solid proof of what? they have made no claims.
rubadub wrote: » Again- proof of what? Did you read what the OP said, the shop made no claims at all.
ChocolateSauce wrote: » I think it is probably illegal, at least until such a time as the accused is found guilty in a court of law, and with good reason I suppose.
astrofool wrote: » The RTE and BBC will always show pictures of suspects of crimes on their shows, how is this any different?
rubadub wrote: » What is illegal?? AGAIN- they made NO claims.
Gummy Panda wrote: » It could be breaking the data protection act by disclosing this information publicly. Data Protection & CCTV
Sir Molle wrote: » The majority of people who steal are Roma, Teenagers or people on heavy drugs. If the teenagers are local, they odds are that someone will know them and they will be shamed out of doing it again, how ever the other two groups tend to be rather shameless.
Aldito wrote: » Slight generalisation there...
P.C. wrote: » You can put pics up of anyone you want, as long as you don't say why you have put the pics up.
jayteecork wrote: » I've noticed this practice in a Spar in Cork city too.