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Cellphones Crime Iphone Security United States Apple

New York Thieves Wearing Apple Store T-Shirts Steal $16,000 In iPhones (pix11.com) 120

An anonymous reader quotes this article from a TV station in New York about a "brazen daylight heist" made possible by wearing the right t-shirt: Two thieves put on Apple store employee T-shirts and headed past the Genius Bar to the repair room, grabbed what they could and walked out with more than $16,000 worth of stolen iPhones... Police said just one hour before, the same thieves may have stolen three iPhones 6's worth $1,900 from the Apple Store on 14th Street and Ninth Avenue in the West Village... Earlier this year, three thieves pulled off two similar, but much more lucrative heists, at the Upper West Side Apple Store at Broadway and 67th Street, a training center for Apple employees. Once again, they dressed as Apple employees and stole a total of $49,000 worth of iPhones.
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New York Thieves Wearing Apple Store T-Shirts Steal $16,000 In iPhones

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  • $16,000? (Score:2, Flamebait)

    by rfengr ( 910026 )
    $16,000 retail maybe, but probably $1600 to manufacture, so that is the true loss.
    • Re:$16,000? (Score:5, Funny)

      by MisterSquid ( 231834 ) on Sunday June 12, 2016 @02:54PM (#52300579)

      Two thieves put on Apple store employee T-shirts and headed past the Genius Bar to the repair room, grabbed what they could and walked out with more than $16,000 worth of stolen iPhones

      The good news is that only 10 phones were stolen.

      • by cusco ( 717999 )

        headed past the Genius Bar

        Which should indicate what kind of Genius staffs the store. Or do they have such high turnover that people don't recognize who is a co-worker and who isn't?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    They were probably undercover FBI agents trying to reduce the availability of iPhones to consumers.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If you walk in like you belong, look like you belong, act like you belong, and have balls of brass, you too can go places and do things you shouldn't.

    • by Yvan256 ( 722131 )

      If you've got balls of brass, the one thing you can't do is get a full body x-ray scan.

    • Ah yes, Valentines day used to be the glorious hacker holiday. The only day a speed delivery uniform and a bunch of flowers opens you every door.

      Sadly companies caught on. But it was good times.

    • This fails to work if there really are geniuses at the genius bar though.

  • by fuzzyfuzzyfungus ( 1223518 ) on Sunday June 12, 2016 @02:52PM (#52300571) Journal
    What can you actually do with a stolen iphone at this point?

    There are presumably markets where IMEI blacklists won't cause you any trouble(or you can use the thing as a glorified ipod touch); but Apple presumably has knowledge of serial numbers/device IDs/etc. and there aren't a lot of alternatives for things like iOS updates Indeed, if they felt like it, Apple would be in an excellent position to brick the devices if they ever made the mistake of accepting an update from Apple.

    Do they just part them out? Are their actually still jailbreaks and such for the newer models good enough that you can operate one outside of Apple's sight? Do you just resell them to optimistic idiots looking for suspiciously good deals on idevices and make this their problem?

    I can see that 'compact, expensive, widely desired' are all good qualities in a theft target; but 'bristling with radios and globally unique IDs burned into the hardware and firmware; and nearly impossible to use without the vendor's continued cooperation' seem like egregiously bad qualities.
    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      Apple would be in an excellent position to brick the devices if they ever made the mistake of accepting an update from Apple.

      Apple can probably just remotely block the ability to activate after a factory reset, and remotely enable their 'Find my iPhone' feature, then permanently lock the devices up.

    • by p0p0 ( 1841106 ) on Sunday June 12, 2016 @03:29PM (#52300719)
      More importantly: does any of that matter?
      Chances are these guys will pawn them or sell them on the street. If they had half a brain they would never use them and once the money has changed hands they don't have to worry about whether they have been blacklisted or not.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      You can sell them to suckers they don't know any better. The thieves profit, the end buyer, who may ultimately not even know they've purchased a stolen iPhone loses.

    • Thieves have never been known for an over abundance of forethought. Can see them now, in jail "Seemed like a good idea at the time ..."
    • Do you think the thieves will use them? They could be fenced as new phones even if they're bricked.
    • What can you actually do with a stolen iphone at this point?

      Or you could buy one for cash some place, and then return the stolen one in its place. It's not like Best Buy looks at anything but the SKU.

      Or You could just put on Khakis, a blue shirt, and a nametag, and trade out your stone iPhones for Best Buy "clean" ones.

      Or if you had a buddy who worked at Best Buy, the buddy could "launder" the iPhones for you.

      Lots of possibilities...

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        Or you could buy one for cash some place, and then return the stolen one in its place. It's not like Best Buy looks at anything but the SKU.

        Actually, for cellphones, I believe Best Buy and other retailers track serial numbers - when they get a shipment of new phones, they enter every serial number into their inventory system. If any get stolen, they can look it up in the system and know exactly what serial numbers were stolen.

        It also goes that when you buy a cellphone, they scan the serial number as well -

  • by Anonymous Coward

    "walked out with more than $16,000 worth of stolen iPhones"

    So... wait. The thieves stole stolen iphones?

    • No, they walked out with iPhones which they had just stolen. I see your point, but the original statement isn't grammatically incorrect.

  • by technomom ( 444378 ) on Sunday June 12, 2016 @02:57PM (#52300591)

    It's in Chelsea or maybe the Meatpacking District (if you read some of the signs in the area), but it definitely isn't West Village.

  • Now they need the state, crying for help because evil nasty criminals stole stuff from them. But when its about paying taxes, or helping the FBI decrypt a shooter's iPhone, they say fuck the state.

    I don't have anything against companies building products that can't be decrypted. But this iPhone was a product that *could* be decrypted by apple, but they refused simply to protect their image as manufacturer of phones that can't be decrypted.

    The feds should decline investigating until apple pays its fucking ta

    • 1. Apple pays all taxes required by law, and they play by the same rules as any other company.
      2. Apple didn't break any laws by refusing to crack the encryption on one of their phones, if they had then the FBI would have pursued it rather than giving up--and Apple is innocent until proven guilty.
      3. The FBI doesn't have the right to unilaterally refuse to investigate crimes just because they don't like the victim--that would be pretty fucked up.
      4. By all accounts this was a local crime and will be investigat

  • and a couple of Mac Books?
  • If Australia can do it we can too. Every phone, sim card or not has a personal identification number. It's 100% possible to implement a database of phones and prevent carriers from registering stolen and lost phones. If we did this we could actually motivate people to do the right thing and return phones to their owners.

    The carriers and manufacturers don't want to do it because stolen phones increase sales of replacements.
     

  • I work in retail, and we have vendors who work in plain, dirty clothes (maintenence vendors especially) all the time. They NEVER wear their nametags and sometimes don't even check in. I have told AP on more than one occasion what a stupid idea it is to let them go unchecked, most of the areas they work in are right next to our stockroom. I'm just waiting for someone to walk back there and walk out with a handful of stuff, never even questioned.
  • This was pretty genius!

    I guess that's why they let them past the "Genius Bar" and into the back area.

    You'd think there would have been a badge reader, though...

  • I could have told Apple that tee-shirts were bad authentication credentials.
  • Strange. Given the cost of buying an iPhone, I've known for years that the people wearing the Apple T-Shirts were thieves.
    #can't-take-a-joke
  • If even a real Apple store employee can walk out of there with a bunch of hardware then there is a real problem with their security.. The fact that even 2 unknown persons just wearing a t-shirt can walk off with that kind of hardware is even more bizzar.

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