Heres how Woman Managed Steal Tv 13 Seconds Video
A surveillance video from a big box electronics store in suburban Ohio showed just how quickly someone can make off with a pricey television. The clip, which began circulating online in mid-March 2015, captured a woman walking in during regular business hours, heading straight for a display model, and carrying it out the front door in roughly thirteen seconds flat. No one on the sales floor appeared to notice until she was already gone.
The footage revealed a simple but effective approach. She entered alone, wearing everyday clothes and moving at a normal pace so she blended with other shoppers. Once at the television she unplugged it with one hand while steadying the screen with the other, then lifted the set and kept walking without breaking stride. Store cameras showed her exiting through the same doors she came in, loading the television into a waiting car, and driving off before employees even reached the empty display stand.
Security experts who reviewed the clip later noted that the store’s layout and lack of immediate staff presence near the high-end displays probably helped. The entire act happened so fast that motion sensors on the exit doors never triggered an alarm, and no one thought to check receipts at that hour. It was the kind of low-friction theft that relied on speed and the assumption that shoppers do not usually run out carrying large items.
Local police said they were still reviewing the video for any useful details like the make of the getaway car or clearer images of the woman’s face. The store chain declined to comment beyond confirming that the television had been reported stolen. In the meantime the short clip kept getting shared online, with viewers mostly marveling at how little time the whole thing actually took.