Quick thinking Mr Harrison told the burglar he would need to check the
Blu-ray player was working and asked him to come back in an hour.
Speaking after the case, Mr Harrison, 60, said: “At first I didn’t think
because he had all his ID ready. Then I thought ‘this looks a bit
familiar and this, and this ... I’d best go and check.’
Once I had my suspicions they got stronger and stronger and that is when
we asked him to leave the player with us so we could test it out.
It was a decoy.”
The court heard once Ciamara left the store, Mr Harrison hot-footed it back to his house nearby to discover the door had been kicked in and his player and films were missing. The court heard when Ciamara returned to the store he was greeted by the police who arrested him on suspicion of burglary. Ciamara pleaded guilty to the offense, which took place in 2013, at Blackburn Magistrates’ Court. But after being granted bail he returned to his homeland of Poland and failed to return to court to be sentenced.
Officers from Lancashire police applied for a European Arrest Warrant and last week brought Ciamara back to Lancashire to face justice. Recorder Nicholas Clarke QC, sentencing, said: “He has abused his hospitality here. He has committed an offense here. He deserves to go to custody for a period.” He jailed Ciamara for four months with two months to run concurrently for the breach of bail. Speaking after the case, Mr Harrison said: “It sends out a message that the police will track down people who commit burglaries. They can’t get away with it. He’s either the unluckiest thief or the stupidest. I’m just glad I got my property back.”
The court heard once Ciamara left the store, Mr Harrison hot-footed it back to his house nearby to discover the door had been kicked in and his player and films were missing. The court heard when Ciamara returned to the store he was greeted by the police who arrested him on suspicion of burglary. Ciamara pleaded guilty to the offense, which took place in 2013, at Blackburn Magistrates’ Court. But after being granted bail he returned to his homeland of Poland and failed to return to court to be sentenced.
Officers from Lancashire police applied for a European Arrest Warrant and last week brought Ciamara back to Lancashire to face justice. Recorder Nicholas Clarke QC, sentencing, said: “He has abused his hospitality here. He has committed an offense here. He deserves to go to custody for a period.” He jailed Ciamara for four months with two months to run concurrently for the breach of bail. Speaking after the case, Mr Harrison said: “It sends out a message that the police will track down people who commit burglaries. They can’t get away with it. He’s either the unluckiest thief or the stupidest. I’m just glad I got my property back.”
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