I wake up with the nasties, and I had an apissonme moment.....



I just think thanks to the thieves working INSIDE  Australia Post, and the thieves working the letter boxes, including the "slacker posties" who leave mail hanging out of the slots....

I think thanks to the thieves in Australia Post, the people of Australia are being progressively overwhelmed by a tidal wave of identity theft....


More than 10500 postal voting kits and votes were stolen by people working in Australia Post in ONE council electorate alone...

A few entries back....

http://you-shit-me.blogspot.com.au/2017/05/aussie-post-loses-10500-postal-votes.html

http://you-shit-me.blogspot.com.au/2017/05/aus-post-fucks-up-postal-voting.html

Fuck Off.



Human rights my arsehole. 

Bring back summary executions on the spot.


On Duty Cop Executes Two Motorcycle thieves.

Sao Paulo, Brazil. Helicopter catches cop executing 2 criminals.

https://www.liveleak.com/view?i=def_1491266379

Good Shooting.....



Then you have all these cunts.











And good old fucking Morrie and his mates...

http://www.news.com.au/finance/money/australia-post-customers-at-risk-of-identity-theft-after-sorter-stole-credit-cards-for-criminals/news-story/57822c610c8f0642cc2247b2218b5f44



AUSTRALIA Post customers have been left exposed to potential scams and identity theft after a worker at a Sydney postal centre was caught stealing credit cards and other sensitive information for criminal contacts.

Investigators are unable to say how many people's confidential details disgraced night sorter Morris John Lilio compromised, with only four letters he lifted recovered.

The 60-year-old had been working at the Waterloo facility since 2008 when he was nabbed on camera sneaking out eastern suburbs residents' mail in August.

CCTV footage of his early-morning shifts revealed him repeatedly looking around the facility before slipping mail into his jacket sleeves and leaving the building for his morning break.

On the day he was arrested police seized several letters - one of which had a credit card inside it - all addressed to one Woollahra household hidden in a Gregory's street directory inside a colleague's parked car.

Detectives also found a series of text messages on Lilio's two mobile phones, including some from earlier in the morning when officers swooped on the thief.

"If you ever want the guy's signature he can get that also," one message said, listing a man's birthdate and phone number. "He said if he could get two really good GE (Money) or GO. Also can you please look out for tax return cheques."

In an earlier message Lilio wrote: "That's all I could get this morning. 2 and u got both. But send one of girls 2 pick up."

"No good, reported stolen," he was messaged back.

Lilio told police that people had asked him to do "things I don't want to do" after he got involved with drugs, but he denied acting on their demands for stolen mail.

He later claimed in court that any letters seen in his jacket got there by mistake when he was putting it on for his break.

But in Central Local Court last week, magistrate Mark Buscombe said Lilio's explanation that letters had repeatedly got stuck in his clothes accidentally was "fanciful".

He found Lilio guilty on four charges of mail theft, adding the former Australia Post worker had told police a series of lies and the text messages clearly showed he had been stealing mail for others based on the details they sent him.

Police admitted the bulk of the mail Lilio stole was never found and it was not known who he had passed the confidential material to.

Australia Post spokeswoman Melanie Ward said the organisation had a "zero-tolerance" to mail-security breaches and any workers implicated were immediately sacked, although she would not say what screening processes Australia Post had in place for its staff.

Lilio is scheduled to be sentenced next month.

Originally published as Mail scammer sorted identity theft



https://www.domain.com.au/news/international-fraudsters-target-sydney-unit-block-letterboxes-20161123-gsw1br/

International fraudsters target Sydney unit block letterboxes




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Letterboxes outside Sydney apartment blocks have been targeted by thieves working for international criminals who use stolen credit cards and documents in massive fraud schemes.
While credit cards are used to buy goods for re-sale, victims’ utility bills are used to borrow large sums of money and they then have to prove the debt isn’t theirs while the financial institutions eventually foot the bills.
Now apartment residents and their building managers have been advised to do whatever they can to prevent letterboxes being broken into – including moving them to inside the building.
Theft from suburban letter boxes has been a problem for years but NSW Fraud and Cybercrime Squad detectives say they have established direct links between international identity thieves and the large-scale theft of residential mail in the state.
They now strongly believe a spate of mail thefts has been directed by organised crime figures overseas.
The head of the State Crime Command Fraud and Cybercrime Squad, Arthur Katsogiannis, says local criminals, known as “boxers,” are selling the stolen identity documents to international syndicates.
“Information from documents such as bank statements and utility bills is then used by the overseas criminals to apply for large loans in the names of their unwitting victims, thereby defrauding financial institutions,” Detective Superintendent Katsogiannis said.
“Often the street-level thieves are equipped with specially-modified tools to pry open apartment block letter boxes, robbing scores of victims at once,” he added. “Others are using master keys that open dozens of letter boxes at a time.
“The low level thieves tend to keep any credit cards they find to fraudulently purchase goods for later re-sale whilst the identity documents are provided to the international identity theft operations for the larger frauds,” Detective Superintendent Katsogiannis said.
“The large scale theft of credit cards and identity documents from suburban letterboxes is a huge, and growing threat to strata residents in NSW”, says Karen Stiles, Executive Officer of the Owners Corporation Network (OCN), the peak body for strata owners and residents.
“Victims may not even know their letterbox has been robbed. They target high density areas on transport lines that offer large groups of accessible letterboxes,” says Stiles.
“OCN urges all strata residents to check the security of their letterboxes, to clear their mail every day, and have it re-directed or collected by friends when they are away” she adds.
“Apartment owners should consider secure location and design of their letterboxes, and the installation of quality CCTV to deter and help catch mail thieves.”
NSW Police has joined forces with a range of other crime prevention partners, including Crime Stoppers, Australia Post, the Department of Justice, the University of Technology ‘Design Out Crime’ program and the City of Sydney to launch the “MailSafe” campaign, providing residents with advice about how to better secure their mail.
NSW Police Force Corporate Sponsor for Crime Prevention, Brad Shepherd, has urged residents to use padlocks on their letter boxes or install improved locks and says strata managers should consider the secure placement and design of letter boxes and the installation of quality CCTV systems to catch and deter mail thieves.
“It’s not petty theft,” Chief Supt Shepherd said, “We know mail theft is the start of a greater fraud problem.”





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