- cross-posted to:
- legalcatadvice@lemmit.online
- cross-posted to:
- legalcatadvice@lemmit.online
A shoplifting bird dubbed “Steven Seagull” has been banned from a convenience store for flying off with packets of crisps over a six-year stealing spree.
Staff at the Lyndale Central store in Wyke Regis, Dorset, have put up posters urging customers to “close the door” behind them in a bid to stop Steven.
The manager of the store, Stuart Harmer, said the crafty seagull had made off with about 30 packets of crisps in the past two months alone.
He said: “Trying to explain to the powers that be that I’ve got stock loss because of a seagull - they think its a joke.”
Mr Harmer said Steven “comes in the shop when the doors open, puts his head around the corner of the door, nicks a packet of crisps and flies off with it”.
According to Mr Harmer, Steven is particularly fond of BBQ beef flavoured crisps.
Do customers read postings in the UK? Because they certainly don’t in the US.
They should install some kind of mechanism to automatically close the door when it’s not being held open. If the higher-ups don’t want to pay for it, he should calculate how many bags of crisps it would take to pay for it, and then say when Steven has been prevented from stealing crisps for X days it will have paid for itself.