On December 18, 2009 a yet-to-be-apprehended, armed man robbed cash from 3 establishments - a Circle K convenience store, a Mobile gas station and a Shell gas station. Robbing 3 establishments in 1 day is surprising. What is more surprising is the robberies occurred in Southern California - off 3 different freeways exits. In Southern California the traffic-jammed freeways are robbers of time. However, what's most surprising is the man committed all 3 robberies in 30 minutes. Although no one was hurt, the robber obviously didn't know that crime doesn't pay - but giving time management lessons would.
In a sermon during the 2009 Christmas season Reverend Tim Jones, an Anglican priest in Britain, advised his congregation to shoplift. The priest said it was permissible for people in desperate situations to take food. His advice was to shoplift from large, chain stores that would pass the cost on to their customers in the form of higher prices. Amid an uproar of protests from Britons, the Archbishop of York emphatically stated that the Church of England does not advise shoplifting and he summoned Reverend Jones to meet with him - perhaps to suggest sermons about the lifting of spirits only.
In January 2010 Tatiana Khan, a 69-year-old California antiques dealer, sold a Picasso drawing - "The Woman in the Blue Hat" - for $2 million. Khan said she could sell it for less than market value because it came from the Malcolm Forbes family estate. The FBI said Khan could sell the drawing for less because she had paid an artist $1,000 for the copy. The FBI also seized a painting by abstract expressionist Willem de Kooning, which Khan allegedly bought with $720,000 from the drawing deal. Does crime pay? Khan may spend 45 years in prison drawing - her own conclusion.
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