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A further threat was made to place a pipe bomb in the garden of a Tesco customer, capable of killing people. [4] Police consulted with the bomb disposal team, who stated that if 'Sally' was capable of making the previous devices, that they were more than capable of making a pipe-bomb, that could injure or kill people.
In July, hoax bomb warnings were sent to 76 Tesco supermarkets. [1] [2] They warned that bombs would go off on Saturday, 14 July or "Black Saturday".[1] [2]14 Tesco branches closed, including those in Clitheroe, Grimsby, Pontefract, Market Harborough, Ashby de la Zouch, Bury St Edmunds, Hucknall, Hereford, Ledbury and Glasgow.
A television advertising campaign in the end of the 1980s included a cover version of the song Locomotion, with these slogans replacing 'Come on baby, do the Locomotion'. (The song was then popular because of Kylie Minogue's successful cover of 1988). Crazy Prices' long time advertising theme was alternate lyrics set to the tune Tiger Feet by Mud.
The Tesco blackmail plot was an extortion attempt against the British supermarket chain Tesco and which led to the largest blackmail investigation in the UK. [1] [2]Nigel Wright, 45, from Lincolnshire was sentenced at the Central Criminal Court of England and Wales for blackmail after he plotted to extort £1.4 million from the supermarket company.
Tesco blackmail plot; Tesco bomb campaign; Tesco Clubcard This page was last edited on 20 June 2022, at 15:05 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
2007 Tesco blackmail campaign; Tesco blackmail plot; Tesco bomb campaign; Y. May 2005 Yangon bombings This page was last edited on 27 November 2024, at 02:47 (UTC). ...
The company was the subject of a letter bomb campaign lasting five months from August 2000 to February 2001 as a bomber calling himself "Sally" sent letter bombs to Tesco customers and demanded that Clubcards be modified to be capable of withdrawing money from cash machines. [29]
Tesco bomb campaign - an attempted extortion against British supermarket chain Tesco in August 2000, in which a blackmailer identified by the pseudonym "Sally" sent letters to Tesco stores threatening to harm customers if his demands—for Clubcards, modified so that the holder could withdraw cash from ATMs—were not met.