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'Poltergeist' was thief

sophia8

Master Poster
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Oct 28, 2003
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http://www.guardian.co.uk/money/2008/may/11/consumeraffairs.insurance
When we had builders in, between January and March, one of them complained that he kept finding his tools had been moved overnight. When I came home from work each evening, something odd had happened - lightbulbs had failed or been removed or the connection for my landline had been pulled out of the wall. I lost £70 from my purse and £350 in £2 coins from a box hidden in my airing cupboard and two rings. Later I found that a laptop computer and digital camera had also gone missing. But with all the building work going on, I assumed I was just mislaying things.
It turned out that one of the builders was a thief who regularly misled homeowners into thinking that his thefts were poltergeist activity.
Wonder how many poltergeist reports he was responsible for?
 
The thief missed a great opportunity. He could have charged his victims for an exorcism when the job was done.
"...and when I leave you will find that no more of your possessions will go missing."
 
You're just supposed to take things in the attic or places nobody goes regularly. Stealing obvious stuff and saying, "Uhhh, a ghost musta took it!" is just stupid.
 
The thief's MO was to misdirect his victims, by planting the idea of a poltergeist. First, he'd just move stuff around, make things not work, and so on. Only when the victim was primed to accept that odd stuff would be happening - things being moved around and go missing in their absence - would he start removing stuff. That way, the victim wouldn't immediately start thinking that their things had been stolen; it would be a continuation of the previous "odd happenings" pattern.
Pretty good psychology.
 

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