Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Other Frequently Stolen Items. Retailers also report issues keeping these items in stock, according to the NRF: Jeans (11%) Cigarettes (10%) Teeth-whitening strips (10%) Contraceptives (10%) Cell ...
Vehicles stolen in 2023: 15,852. Theft rate per 100K vehicles: 1,815. Average annual full-coverage insurance rate: $2,273. Ford pickups regularly land on the NICB’s list of the most stolen vehicles.
Valued at €113 million. In December 2022 it was announced that a large portion of the stolen items had been recovered. Thirty-one of the items were returned to the museum after being seized by Berlin authorities. [46] [47] Drents Museum heist: Confirmed 2025
Among the stolen items were a 10.73-carat Graff diamond ring, two De Beers butterfly diamond rings, and other luxury items from Van Cleef & Arpels, Chopard, and Hermes, according to police.
In the United Kingdom, according to the 2009 Equipment Theft Report, published by the National Plant & Equipment Register, the most commonly stolen items in that country in 2008 were trailers (911 thefts), excavators (849), site dumpers (244) and telehandlers (202). The biggest increases in thefts were in agricultural tractors (up 149 percent ...
In the United Kingdom, The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides was the most-shoplifted book in 2007. [8] St. Mark's Bookshop (which closed in 2016) in the East Village of Manhattan, like Barnes & Noble, used to move frequently-stolen titles behind the counter. At that bookstore, as of late 2009, the books behind the counter included works by ...
All four stolen items are of huge cultural significance to Romania, with the Helmet of Cotofenesti considered a national treasure. In the late 1990s, 24 bracelets from the same era were dug up by ...
In 1996, two rare early Mormon manuscripts were stolen from the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County, when the thief requested the manuscript and replaced it with a facsimile. [ 12 ] In many cases, document thieves occupy positions of trust, or have established records of legitimate accomplishment, prior to their crimes.