‘So, this happened today…’ An ALDI shopper has issued an urgent warning after being targeted by thieves

No one ever suspects they’ll be the victim of a petty crime when they’re out and about – especially while shopping for groceries.

But because grocery shopping can be stressful at times (especially during sales), some may forget to keep an eye out for their recently-bought items.

Unfortunately, this is what happened to one shopper who claimed to be the victim of this sneaky crime.



An ALDI shopper is warning fellow customers to ‘protect’ their groceries after an encounter with a sly shopper at the checkout lane.

In a post to a popular Facebook group, the shopper made a post detailing the incident – which left other ALDI shoppers horrified.

According to her post, a neighbouring shopper had pilfered some of her grocery items while she was packing them inside her shopping bags.


ALDI1.jpg
The crime horrified other shoppers. Credit: Andrea Piacquadio/Pexels

‘Has anyone else had an experience in ALDI while packing their groceries, another customer pulls up beside you to pack their groceries and steals some of your groceries and packs them into their shopping bags?’ The customer wrote.

‘This happened today…true story,’ they added.

According to the shopper, they only realised what had happened because they put a few of their grocery items aside for lunch.

‘Otherwise, I would have been none the wiser. Protect your groceries people…food is expensive.’



Many ALDI shoppers were shocked at what the customer experienced.

‘That is the height of rudeness,’ one person claimed.

‘The bloody nerve of some people. Thanks for the heads up. I never even thought that was something that could happen,’ another shared.

However, others offered another side to the story, saying that it could have been an honest mistake.

‘Maybe it was an accident?’ Someone suggested.

‘I suspect it was an accident (tired/unwell/too stressed to pay attention) or even worse, that she was very poor and hungry,’ wrote another.


ALDI2.jpg
An ALDI shopper said a random person pulled up beside them and claimed that they ‘stole’ some of their groceries. Credit: ALDI

Other ALDI shoppers gave some useful advice to the shopper. One of which was to stop packing bags on the bench and try other methods.

‘I haven’t packed at the bench for years. Collapsible washing baskets and coolers in my boot, chuck it all in those,’ one customer said.

Another replied: ‘I don’t get why people don’t use the trolley bags. I can pack my trolley at the register faster than the cashier can scan my things. No double handling!’

‘I just pack my bags when I get to the back of my car,’ a third responded.



This isn’t the first time social media users weighed in on a ‘rude’ act. A Woolworths customer asked in another popular Facebook group if it might be considered ‘rude’ to swipe their Rewards card on someone else’s grocery shop during checkout, provided that the other person gave permission.

It was revealed that the question came after she scored a free 852 points from another shopper who bought $160 worth of groceries and didn’t have a card of their own. According to the shopper, the other customer was ‘more than happy’ to give them their points.

This is where the debate comes in because other social media users cautioned against this behaviour because they argued it was ‘ethically wrong to claim benefits from groceries you didn’t pay for’.

Others claimed that it was acceptable to take someone else’ points, provided that the other person offers first. If not, it would be acceptable to ask to take them. More details about this story can be read here.

With all this talk about sneaky behaviours, it begs the question of whether shoplifting is a mere act stemming from need or for personal gain, or if it has a connection to cognitive behaviour.

According to some reports, ‘typical shoplifters’ steal for personal gain and they thrive on the ‘thrill’ that the act provides. It’s also connected to a rebellious motivation, especially in younger adults. However, some people suffer from a psychological or cognitive behavioural disorder that makes the person act on impulse. This is called kleptomania.

People who suffer from this often fall victim to an urge that’s so powerful they cannot resist it, and afterwards, they often feel genuine guilt or shame. Kleptomania sufferers often steal spontaneously and do not premeditate or plan their actions. They also act without other people’s help or collaboration. Most steal in public places, like grocery stores, or often take from friends and family.

The items taken (which are usually of little to no value) are often stashed, never used, given away, or returned from where they were taken.
Key Takeaways
  • An ALDI supermarket customer is warning fellow shoppers to 'protect [their] groceries' after a sly shopper stole items from her.
  • Many ALDI shoppers were shocked by the incident, while some defended it as an honest mistake.
  • Other ALDI shoppers suggested packing strategies to avoid similar issues in the future.
Have you ever experienced anything like this while shopping at your local ALDI? This is something we’d never even considered and will definitely be keeping our eyes peeled. Share your story in the comments below!
 
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I have never experienced this and really can't comprehend how it could happen . I do however do my shopping on line.

I sometimes feel the shops are stealing from us when they give close to expiry dairy and milk products as well as sometimes not so fresh fruit n veg when shopping on line.

Maybe you should do a post on Are you 100 % shopping on line or what problems do you experience shopping on line , then send it off to Coles n woolies.

The last part of the past sounds like a sickness called cleptamania
 
I would have a DISCUSSION with anyone seen talking things from my, or anyone else's groceries.

Life is not that tough here in Australia. There are people giving away free food everywhere without stealing from others. A related story: I once sat reading in a park at a bench having a meal and I heard a homeless guy not far away telling another, that he was sitting in the bins out the back of woolies in Byron Bay the night before and someone dumped a pile of groceries on him.
He said he called out HEY! People are shopping here!

The young employee apologized and left and now they lock it! He said in disbelief, what is society coming too, when its great food and they just chuck it away he said. Sad story and True on all levels.
 
Christmas 2019, before Covid... and I am checking out via Woolies Self-Serve area... after scanning I place the good on the tray at the side turn around to pick up the next item THEN after a little while think that my pile of groceries is not as big as I would expect THEN I notice this beautiful 3/4 year old girl picking up my christmas groceries and putting them in her mum's trolley. Her mum saw it at the same time and scolded her... I simply Laughed because she had such an angelic look and she obviously thought she was helping .. I said to her mum ..I want a kid like that one and my grocery bill could be a lot cheaper LOL...
 
I NEVER pack my shopping at the bench, just put it straight in the trolley after it's scanned and put it in bags and coolers in my boot when I get to my car. No matter how hard you are doing it, stealing is not the answer. There are many welfare agencies out there who will help during difficult times and free meals are available at many community centres on a regular basis. Stealing is stealing and not acceptable under any circumstances.
 
There is a shopping centre in S.A. That has two coles supermarkets, somebody would do their weekly shop and put their goods in the car. They would then return with their docket and get exactly the same goods from the other store, if they got stopped on the way out they would just show their docket. Nobody bothered to check the time on the docket. Double dipping at its worst.
 
No one ever suspects they’ll be the victim of a petty crime when they’re out and about – especially while shopping for groceries.

But because grocery shopping can be stressful at times (especially during sales), some may forget to keep an eye out for their recently-bought items.

Unfortunately, this is what happened to one shopper who claimed to be the victim of this sneaky crime.



An ALDI shopper is warning fellow customers to ‘protect’ their groceries after an encounter with a sly shopper at the checkout lane.

In a post to a popular Facebook group, the shopper made a post detailing the incident – which left other ALDI shoppers horrified.

According to her post, a neighbouring shopper had pilfered some of her grocery items while she was packing them inside her shopping bags.


View attachment 15045
The crime horrified other shoppers. Credit: Andrea Piacquadio/Pexels

‘Has anyone else had an experience in ALDI while packing their groceries, another customer pulls up beside you to pack their groceries and steals some of your groceries and packs them into their shopping bags?’ The customer wrote.

‘This happened today…true story,’ they added.

According to the shopper, they only realised what had happened because they put a few of their grocery items aside for lunch.

‘Otherwise, I would have been none the wiser. Protect your groceries people…food is expensive.’



Many ALDI shoppers were shocked at what the customer experienced.

‘That is the height of rudeness,’ one person claimed.

‘The bloody nerve of some people. Thanks for the heads up. I never even thought that was something that could happen,’ another shared.

However, others offered another side to the story, saying that it could have been an honest mistake.

‘Maybe it was an accident?’ Someone suggested.

‘I suspect it was an accident (tired/unwell/too stressed to pay attention) or even worse, that she was very poor and hungry,’ wrote another.


View attachment 15046
An ALDI shopper said a random person pulled up beside them and claimed that they ‘stole’ some of their groceries. Credit: ALDI

Other ALDI shoppers gave some useful advice to the shopper. One of which was to stop packing bags on the bench and try other methods.

‘I haven’t packed at the bench for years. Collapsible washing baskets and coolers in my boot, chuck it all in those,’ one customer said.

Another replied: ‘I don’t get why people don’t use the trolley bags. I can pack my trolley at the register faster than the cashier can scan my things. No double handling!’

‘I just pack my bags when I get to the back of my car,’ a third responded.



This isn’t the first time social media users weighed in on a ‘rude’ act. A Woolworths customer asked in another popular Facebook group if it might be considered ‘rude’ to swipe their Rewards card on someone else’s grocery shop during checkout, provided that the other person gave permission.

It was revealed that the question came after she scored a free 852 points from another shopper who bought $160 worth of groceries and didn’t have a card of their own. According to the shopper, the other customer was ‘more than happy’ to give them their points.

This is where the debate comes in because other social media users cautioned against this behaviour because they argued it was ‘ethically wrong to claim benefits from groceries you didn’t pay for’.

Others claimed that it was acceptable to take someone else’ points, provided that the other person offers first. If not, it would be acceptable to ask to take them. More details about this story can be read here.

With all this talk about sneaky behaviours, it begs the question of whether shoplifting is a mere act stemming from need or for personal gain, or if it has a connection to cognitive behaviour.

According to some reports, ‘typical shoplifters’ steal for personal gain and they thrive on the ‘thrill’ that the act provides. It’s also connected to a rebellious motivation, especially in younger adults. However, some people suffer from a psychological or cognitive behavioural disorder that makes the person act on impulse. This is called kleptomania.

People who suffer from this often fall victim to an urge that’s so powerful they cannot resist it, and afterwards, they often feel genuine guilt or shame. Kleptomania sufferers often steal spontaneously and do not premeditate or plan their actions. They also act without other people’s help or collaboration. Most steal in public places, like grocery stores, or often take from friends and family.

The items taken (which are usually of little to no value) are often stashed, never used, given away, or returned from where they were taken.
Key Takeaways

  • An ALDI supermarket customer is warning fellow shoppers to 'protect [their] groceries' after a sly shopper stole items from her.
  • Many ALDI shoppers were shocked by the incident, while some defended it as an honest mistake.
  • Other ALDI shoppers suggested packing strategies to avoid similar issues in the future.
Have you ever experienced anything like this while shopping at your local ALDI? This is something we’d never even considered and will definitely be keeping our eyes peeled. Share your story in the comments below!
To pull up next to you when you are packing your goods at Aldi is no accident, I have had people pull up next to my trolly to supposedly have a chat when I am out shopping and I guard the trolly very carefully. I don't trust anyone anymore.....
 
No one ever suspects they’ll be the victim of a petty crime when they’re out and about – especially while shopping for groceries.

But because grocery shopping can be stressful at times (especially during sales), some may forget to keep an eye out for their recently-bought items.

Unfortunately, this is what happened to one shopper who claimed to be the victim of this sneaky crime.



An ALDI shopper is warning fellow customers to ‘protect’ their groceries after an encounter with a sly shopper at the checkout lane.

In a post to a popular Facebook group, the shopper made a post detailing the incident – which left other ALDI shoppers horrified.

According to her post, a neighbouring shopper had pilfered some of her grocery items while she was packing them inside her shopping bags.


View attachment 15045
The crime horrified other shoppers. Credit: Andrea Piacquadio/Pexels

‘Has anyone else had an experience in ALDI while packing their groceries, another customer pulls up beside you to pack their groceries and steals some of your groceries and packs them into their shopping bags?’ The customer wrote.

‘This happened today…true story,’ they added.

According to the shopper, they only realised what had happened because they put a few of their grocery items aside for lunch.

‘Otherwise, I would have been none the wiser. Protect your groceries people…food is expensive.’



Many ALDI shoppers were shocked at what the customer experienced.

‘That is the height of rudeness,’ one person claimed.

‘The bloody nerve of some people. Thanks for the heads up. I never even thought that was something that could happen,’ another shared.

However, others offered another side to the story, saying that it could have been an honest mistake.

‘Maybe it was an accident?’ Someone suggested.

‘I suspect it was an accident (tired/unwell/too stressed to pay attention) or even worse, that she was very poor and hungry,’ wrote another.


View attachment 15046
An ALDI shopper said a random person pulled up beside them and claimed that they ‘stole’ some of their groceries. Credit: ALDI

Other ALDI shoppers gave some useful advice to the shopper. One of which was to stop packing bags on the bench and try other methods.

‘I haven’t packed at the bench for years. Collapsible washing baskets and coolers in my boot, chuck it all in those,’ one customer said.

Another replied: ‘I don’t get why people don’t use the trolley bags. I can pack my trolley at the register faster than the cashier can scan my things. No double handling!’

‘I just pack my bags when I get to the back of my car,’ a third responded.



This isn’t the first time social media users weighed in on a ‘rude’ act. A Woolworths customer asked in another popular Facebook group if it might be considered ‘rude’ to swipe their Rewards card on someone else’s grocery shop during checkout, provided that the other person gave permission.

It was revealed that the question came after she scored a free 852 points from another shopper who bought $160 worth of groceries and didn’t have a card of their own. According to the shopper, the other customer was ‘more than happy’ to give them their points.

This is where the debate comes in because other social media users cautioned against this behaviour because they argued it was ‘ethically wrong to claim benefits from groceries you didn’t pay for’.

Others claimed that it was acceptable to take someone else’ points, provided that the other person offers first. If not, it would be acceptable to ask to take them. More details about this story can be read here.

With all this talk about sneaky behaviours, it begs the question of whether shoplifting is a mere act stemming from need or for personal gain, or if it has a connection to cognitive behaviour.

According to some reports, ‘typical shoplifters’ steal for personal gain and they thrive on the ‘thrill’ that the act provides. It’s also connected to a rebellious motivation, especially in younger adults. However, some people suffer from a psychological or cognitive behavioural disorder that makes the person act on impulse. This is called kleptomania.

People who suffer from this often fall victim to an urge that’s so powerful they cannot resist it, and afterwards, they often feel genuine guilt or shame. Kleptomania sufferers often steal spontaneously and do not premeditate or plan their actions. They also act without other people’s help or collaboration. Most steal in public places, like grocery stores, or often take from friends and family.

The items taken (which are usually of little to no value) are often stashed, never used, given away, or returned from where they were taken.
Key Takeaways

  • An ALDI supermarket customer is warning fellow shoppers to 'protect [their] groceries' after a sly shopper stole items from her.
  • Many ALDI shoppers were shocked by the incident, while some defended it as an honest mistake.
  • Other ALDI shoppers suggested packing strategies to avoid similar issues in the future.
Have you ever experienced anything like this while shopping at your local ALDI? This is something we’d never even considered and will definitely be keeping our eyes peeled. Share your story in the comments below!
It wouldn't happen to me. I just put everything straight in the trolley at the checkout then put it in some boxes and coolbags I have in the car boot.

Why the need to sort it all out on the bench? It's all going in people's boots anyway.🤔
 
No one ever suspects they’ll be the victim of a petty crime when they’re out and about – especially while shopping for groceries.

But because grocery shopping can be stressful at times (especially during sales), some may forget to keep an eye out for their recently-bought items.

Unfortunately, this is what happened to one shopper who claimed to be the victim of this sneaky crime.



An ALDI shopper is warning fellow customers to ‘protect’ their groceries after an encounter with a sly shopper at the checkout lane.

In a post to a popular Facebook group, the shopper made a post detailing the incident – which left other ALDI shoppers horrified.

According to her post, a neighbouring shopper had pilfered some of her grocery items while she was packing them inside her shopping bags.


View attachment 15045
The crime horrified other shoppers. Credit: Andrea Piacquadio/Pexels

‘Has anyone else had an experience in ALDI while packing their groceries, another customer pulls up beside you to pack their groceries and steals some of your groceries and packs them into their shopping bags?’ The customer wrote.

‘This happened today…true story,’ they added.

According to the shopper, they only realised what had happened because they put a few of their grocery items aside for lunch.

‘Otherwise, I would have been none the wiser. Protect your groceries people…food is expensive.’



Many ALDI shoppers were shocked at what the customer experienced.

‘That is the height of rudeness,’ one person claimed.

‘The bloody nerve of some people. Thanks for the heads up. I never even thought that was something that could happen,’ another shared.

However, others offered another side to the story, saying that it could have been an honest mistake.

‘Maybe it was an accident?’ Someone suggested.

‘I suspect it was an accident (tired/unwell/too stressed to pay attention) or even worse, that she was very poor and hungry,’ wrote another.


View attachment 15046
An ALDI shopper said a random person pulled up beside them and claimed that they ‘stole’ some of their groceries. Credit: ALDI

Other ALDI shoppers gave some useful advice to the shopper. One of which was to stop packing bags on the bench and try other methods.

‘I haven’t packed at the bench for years. Collapsible washing baskets and coolers in my boot, chuck it all in those,’ one customer said.

Another replied: ‘I don’t get why people don’t use the trolley bags. I can pack my trolley at the register faster than the cashier can scan my things. No double handling!’

‘I just pack my bags when I get to the back of my car,’ a third responded.



This isn’t the first time social media users weighed in on a ‘rude’ act. A Woolworths customer asked in another popular Facebook group if it might be considered ‘rude’ to swipe their Rewards card on someone else’s grocery shop during checkout, provided that the other person gave permission.

It was revealed that the question came after she scored a free 852 points from another shopper who bought $160 worth of groceries and didn’t have a card of their own. According to the shopper, the other customer was ‘more than happy’ to give them their points.

This is where the debate comes in because other social media users cautioned against this behaviour because they argued it was ‘ethically wrong to claim benefits from groceries you didn’t pay for’.

Others claimed that it was acceptable to take someone else’ points, provided that the other person offers first. If not, it would be acceptable to ask to take them. More details about this story can be read here.

With all this talk about sneaky behaviours, it begs the question of whether shoplifting is a mere act stemming from need or for personal gain, or if it has a connection to cognitive behaviour.

According to some reports, ‘typical shoplifters’ steal for personal gain and they thrive on the ‘thrill’ that the act provides. It’s also connected to a rebellious motivation, especially in younger adults. However, some people suffer from a psychological or cognitive behavioural disorder that makes the person act on impulse. This is called kleptomania.

People who suffer from this often fall victim to an urge that’s so powerful they cannot resist it, and afterwards, they often feel genuine guilt or shame. Kleptomania sufferers often steal spontaneously and do not premeditate or plan their actions. They also act without other people’s help or collaboration. Most steal in public places, like grocery stores, or often take from friends and family.

The items taken (which are usually of little to no value) are often stashed, never used, given away, or returned from where they were taken.
Key Takeaways

  • An ALDI supermarket customer is warning fellow shoppers to 'protect [their] groceries' after a sly shopper stole items from her.
  • Many ALDI shoppers were shocked by the incident, while some defended it as an honest mistake.
  • Other ALDI shoppers suggested packing strategies to avoid similar issues in the future.
Have you ever experienced anything like this while shopping at your local ALDI? This is something we’d never even considered and will definitely be keeping our eyes peeled. Share your story in the comments below!
I always take my trolly Streight to the car so im not loitering in the shop. and i pack it aat the car that way i dont have to even take bags into the shop.
 
It’s not rude it’s theft !!!!!!! I
don’t shop at aldi or use self serve checkouts at Woolies or Coles. Keep our kids (and others) in jobs by going through a staffed checkout - it doesn’t take that much longer, go shopping when you aren’t in a rush.
 
I always take my trolly Streight to the car so im not loitering in the shop. and i pack it aat the car that way i dont have to even take bags into the shop.
I personally feel it quite unfair to condemn a chain of stores, because of one incident that happened in a particular store that a customer and not the store did.

it's horrible to be stolen from, nobody's dismissing that, but life happens.

for instance: There are at least 15 telegraph poles situated on the main streets of Lismore, that are the ongoing cause of countless impacts to unsuspecting vehicles over the years, including one of mine. Everybody knows about them, as many have impacted their vehicles over the years.

It's difficult to see these government sanctioned (they built them) income generators, especially when reversing into a car space on a rainy day or night.

The government aren't going to fix that, it's just a thing that happens and we get to know about. However, the law or SOCIAL justice will catch up one day and cause a financial or actual impact injury to thieves. They will always get identified and caught; cameras are everywhere now.

It is my opinion that similarly to the dangerously located telegraph poles, when a customer steals another customers food, it's just a life lesson in awareness. Just like the telegraph pole impacts that occur constantly to people, these will keep happening until we know to avoid them.

Another person stealing from us is not a department stores fault.
 
I guess people blame the government, not because it's a quick go too, but because the ongoing woes of the less fortunate have been documented as being dismissed by governments for generations.

Whenever a person who appears a victim to social reform, social assistance, or government care, does a bad thing like robbing or stealing, that affects us all. We condemn the perpetrators however we tend to also consider them as symptoms and the true cause of the problem as being government inadequacy to address the ongoing societal problems that so many people are now and for far too long been experiencing. After all, every person is born innocent to life, none of us are born bad.

The government is slowly getting it and finally waking up, but until far more people are properly housed and cared for, I guess people will always wiggle their fingers at the way our nation has been governed, especially if what it does or does not do for people in society, also affects others hey.
 
I have never experienced this and really can't comprehend how it could happen . I do however do my shopping on line.

I sometimes feel the shops are stealing from us when they give close to expiry dairy and milk products as well as sometimes not so fresh fruit n veg when shopping on line.

Maybe you should do a post on Are you 100 % shopping on line or what problems do you experience shopping on line , then send it off to Coles n woolies.

The last part of the past sounds like a sickness called cleptamania
I do all my shopping online and I get so tired of Coles sending me food such as chicken that has only two days before the use by or best before date. I've complained, and even got a refund, but Coles hasn't improved their practice. Fruit and vegetables don't last in the fridge and often look quite tired when they arrive. I have no choice but to shop online because of mobility problems.
 
It’s not rude it’s theft !!!!!!! I
don’t shop at aldi or use self serve checkouts at Woolies or Coles. Keep our kids (and others) in jobs by going through a staffed checkout - it doesn’t take that much longer, go shopping when you aren’t in a rush.
I really would like to use staffed checkouts but most of the time there are few open and big lines of customers. Our local Coles now has only 4 staffed checkouts and many, many, self serve. There is only ever 1 staffed checkout open apart from the service desk which has a limit of 12 items and has 1 operator trying to do multiple tasks as well as serve. There are usually 5-6 customers lined up at the staffed checkout before more will open. The checkout service has definitely gone Down,Down.
 
I guess people blame the government, not because it's a quick go too, but because the ongoing woes of the less fortunate have been documented as being dismissed by governments for generations.

Whenever a person who appears a victim to social reform, social assistance, or government care, does a bad thing like robbing or stealing, that affects us all. We condemn the perpetrators however we tend to also consider them as symptoms and the true cause of the problem as being government inadequacy to address the ongoing societal problems that so many people are now and for far too long been experiencing. After all, every person is born innocent to life, none of us are born bad.

The government is slowly getting it and finally waking up, but until far more people are properly housed and cared for, I guess people will always wiggle their fingers at the way our nation has been governed, especially if what it does or does not do for people in society, also affects others hey.
Exactly, well said. People on government support payments don’t get enough to survive on, and the government allow big companies to get away with huge tax rip offs all the while paying their workers the minimum wage they can, and now the government is allowing interest rates to skyrocket making even more people desperate. All they have to do is increase the cost of GST, which will mean everyone across the board, rich and poor, will help rein in the inflation rate, instead of the people on the poorer end of society copping all the pain, once again.
 
I do all my shopping online and I get so tired of Coles sending me food such as chicken that has only two days before the use by or best before date. I've complained, and even got a refund, but Coles hasn't improved their practice. Fruit and vegetables don't last in the fridge and often look quite tired when they arrive. I have no choice but to shop online because of mobility
I really would like to use staffed checkouts but most of the time there are few open and big lines of customers. Our local Coles now has only 4 staffed checkouts and many, many, self serve. There is only ever 1 staffed checkout open apart from the service desk which has a limit of 12 items and has 1 operator trying to do multiple tasks as well as serve. There are usually 5-6 customers lined up at the staffed checkout before more will open. The checkout service has definitely gone Down,Down.
I really would like to use staffed checkouts but most of the time there are few open and big lines of customers. Our local Coles now has only 4 staffed checkouts and many, many, self serve. There is only ever 1 staffed checkout open apart from the service desk which has a limit of 12 items and has 1 operator trying to do multiple tasks as well as serve. There are usually 5-6 customers lined up at the staffed checkout before more will open. The checkout service has definitely gone Down,Down.
That’s terrible service.
 
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