I’m a cashier, and it’s really strange just how easy it is to spot a criminal. It’s like they go out of their way to fit as many stereotypes as possible into their identity.

Someone tried to pay with fake bills earlier today at work, wearing a baseball cap, reflective glitter sunglasses, a leather jacket, and jeans, smelling of cigarettes talking in a heavy accent with a silent large guy following behind him, and pretending to not understand English even as he pulls fake bills out from a bulging pocket.

Like, wtf

  • Janx@piefed.social
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    10 hours ago

    Low-hanging fruit. You’re noticing the dumbest, easiest-to-recognize scammers and thieves acting how you’re anticipating they will…

  • MurrayL@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Confirmation bias. You simply don’t notice the criminals who don’t look or act the way you’re expecting.

    • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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      1 day ago

      Exactamundo. OP expected this guy to be a criminal, and noticed when he did criminal things. How many people has OP assumed weren’t criminals based on the way they dressed who got away with whatever scam they were pulling?

    • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      I think that’s the key to getting to bigots.

      Not:

      You’re falsely accusing people!

      They don’t give a shit about other people, but:

      You’re missing other criminals!

      Gets their amygdala all riled up

    • SethranKada@lemmy.caOP
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      1 day ago

      Yeah, that happens a lot. The smart ones just take the product out of the packaging and leave it on the shelf somewhere. I find the things all the time, so I’m definately missing a lot. That’s not really what I’m talking about though.

      I’m talking about the ones that security chases out of the store, or that try to scam us. They aren’t smart about it. Sure, there’s plenty of innocent looking scammers and really offputting normal customers, but they aren’t all that common from what I’ve found. I treat everyone the same regardless anyway just in case I’m wrong, but still.

      I suppose what I’m finding aren’t criminals but rather attempted criminals. I’m guessing they just grew up watching tv and when they got drunk or high enough to think stealing was a good idea, they just copied the aesthetics. Doesn’t make having to deal with scammers that smell like they’ve never used a shower before and smoke a pack of cigaretts a day any better.

      • mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works
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        8 hours ago

        The smart ones just take the product out of the packaging and leave it on the shelf somewhere.

        Wait, so they take packaging but not the item? Weird.

        /s

      • Ada@piefed.blahaj.zone
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        1 day ago

        I find the things all the time, so I’m definately missing a lot. That’s not really what I’m talking about though.

        Which makes your question “Why do a specific subset of criminal folk, that I’ve defined as looking and acting in a specific fashion, look and act in a similar fashion?”

  • FreshParsnip@lemmy.ca
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    22 hours ago

    Has it occurred to you that if you saw a criminal that didn’t fit the stereotype, you might not know it?

    • Kristell@herbicide.fallcounty.omg.lol
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      21 hours ago

      Was going to say exactly this. OP’s only found the people who’re bad at it. The ones who can do it you’ll only catch if you’re watching inventory as they enter/leave.

  • Mothra@mander.xyz
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    23 hours ago

    Hello. I’ve worked in a few retail stores. Never a supermarket cashier though. I can’t say I would lump all criminals as looking the same. I can certainly describe a couple stereotypes, but many fly under the radar.

  • wakko@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Ask yourself who perpetrates crimes.

    Do they have a job? A steady income? Stability in their life? Confidence about their future? Did they go to college or even complete high school?

    Or, are they broke, desperate, possibly with chemically altered cognition, and very likely to have a limited education/understanding about the world?

    The fact is - when you don’t know much, you look at the world through a very limited perspective. This restricts a person’s thinking into a narrow set of tracks that are all the most obvious paths to the goal of quick cash (often, to buy drugs to stave off the DTs for a few more hours). The stereotypical behaviors are the only things that are seemingly possible with a limited education and a chemical addiction.

    The reason stereotypes exist is because most humans aren’t that creative. Most people, most of the time, will do the same basic things everyone else does in the same basic ways everyone else does it.

    The main difference here is that a crook rationalizes their actions and does not properly consider key facts, like the general success rate of robberies. Most of the time, desperation plays a strong enough role as a motivator that you can see these folks telling themselves how they “have to” do this. They’ll psyche themselves up in the moments before they decide to act because they need to convince themselves that what they’re doing “has to be done” even when they know their odds of success are abysmal.

    Small-time crooks are cliche because the underlying reasons behind what made them crooks is always the same three or four things - poor, uneducated, desperate, and (often) addicted to something. The educated crooks are smart enough to get laws passed to make their crimes legal.

  • FoolsQuartz@lemmynsfw.com
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    23 hours ago

    because, unironically, they get kicked out of criminal club for not dressing the same way.

    Have you ever seen those cop shows where someone has to go undercover in a drug trade or something and they get accused of being a cop instantly? It’s like that. The cops, having not spent a while acclimatising to criminal culture, are caught unaware by the rules at play.

    So, ironically, even the people who like to believe they’re rebelling against society, are very adherent to strict societal rules like dress code.