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Dumb nigger Renel Rene Richardson Arrested as "Lookout" in $2M iPad Theft.

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Another Stupid Obama Voter

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Nov 17, 2012, 8:17:33 PM11/17/12
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If you're going to try and steal a whole bunch of iPads – $1.9
million worth of iPad Mini tablets, to be exact – you might want
to keep quiet about your plans. Maybe you can run a Web search
for, "iPad Mini shipment times" for a particular target, or
query the phrase, "How to operate a forklift" instead of asking
your friends for information and advice.

Unfortunately, that's exactly what Renel Rene Richardson didn't
do: Instead, the worker at New York's John F. Kennedy
International Airport is alleged to have asked his co-workers
for details about the nearly two-million-dollar shipment and how
he might go about acquiring a forklift prior to the big steal.

According to a new report by the New York Post, federal agents
have arrested Richardson in conjunction with his alleged role in
the theft. Richardson, who works in the exact Cargo Air Services
building where the iPad Mini shipment was stolen this past
Monday night, is alleged to have been the lookout for the
operation. Two other unknown individuals did the bulk of the
work, loading two pallets of approximately 3,600 iPad Mini
tablets onto a truck and driving out after being confronted by
another airport employee.

It could have been worse for Apple, however. The thieves left
three additional pallets of iPad Mini tablets untouched.

The stolen iPads apparently remain missing, even after
Richardson accompanied investigators on a trip through Long
Island Wednesday night in search of the vehicle used in the
theft.

The Cargo Air Services building has a bit of a history when it
comes to large robberies. Specifically, it was also the site of
1978's "Lufthansa Heist," a robbery that involved the stealing
of $5 million in cash and $875,000 in jewels from vaults at the
airport.

The story didn't end well for a number of those involved in the
heist, however: Leader Jimmy Burke's worries that too many
individuals knew about the various parts of the theft (or left
evidence of their involvement) resulted in a number of murders
of various people related, sometimes just tangentially, to the
operation.

http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2412266,00.asp

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