Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple Store thieves make out like bandits by dressing as employees

Apple store logo
Image used with permission by copyright holder
Sometimes to beat them, you pretend to join them. Just ask the three thieves who managed to steal a grand total of 67 iPhones from an Apple Store on the Upper West Side of New York City, and another 19 from a SoHo location. Their method? Mimicry. By donning the same outfits worn by actual Apple store employees, the robbers were able to abscond with tens of thousands of dollars worth of iPhones. Guess uniformity isn’t always a good thing.

According to the New York Post, the burglars actually hit the Upper West Side location twice in the past month, first stealing eight iPhones (worth more than $5,300), then getting bolder still and taking 59 iPhones (worth $44,000). In the first case, the Post notes that “a male cohort distracted the real workers, while another acted as a lookout during the heist.” Their female colleague then took care of the actual theft. More recently, sources say, “a man dressed as a worker walked over to the store’s Genius Bar help desk and snatched handfuls of new iPhone 6s from a storage drawer … He handed the batches off to a female accomplice hiding out in a nearby bathroom, where she stuffed them into a duffel bag.” Again, the third member of the party served as a guard.

Recommended Videos

Unfortunately, the iPhones in questions were neither sensor tagged nor locked, so the shoplifters may be able to access the devices.

The  shirts that helped make the robberies possible were introduced in 2015. The uniforms, which Apple calls “Back to Blue… But All New,” are a series of blue shirts that, of course, all look somewhat similar to one another, making it easy for others to blend in.

Genius? Or just taking advantage of Apple’s branding?

Lulu Chang
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Fascinated by the effects of technology on human interaction, Lulu believes that if her parents can use your new app…
A PC emulator is now on the iPhone app store after previous rejection
A photo of an Apple screen and a close-up of the App Store icon with three notifications on it.

A new game emulator for iOS has joined the party. UTM, an open-source PC operating system emulator, has released UTM SE after a lengthy review process and a previous rejection.

You can download UTM SE for free on App Store for iOS and visionOS, and it'll be added to AltStore Pal, an alternative app marketplace in the EU. "Shoutouts to AltStore team for their help and to Apple for reconsidering their policy," UTM posted on X (formerly Twitter).

Read more
iOS 18 is about to make Apple Maps better than ever
Two iPhones showing a comparison between Google Maps and Apple Maps.

Google Maps (left) versus Apple Maps (right) Jesse Hollington / Digital Trends

Apple Maps has finally gotten a fundamental but heavily requested and long-awaited feature: the ability to “Search Here” on Apple Maps. The new button comes with the rollout of iOS 18, and it allows you to search for a specific location on the map when it isn’t in your current location.

Read more
I can’t wait to make my iPhone look like Android with iOS 18
An iPhone home screen with iOS 18.

Apple’s WWDC 2024 keynote was quite a spectacle. It showed off a ton of new features coming to iOS 18, iPadOS 18, and macOS Sequoia, with most of it being powered with Apple Intelligence -- Apple’s own brand of AI.

But there were some other non-AI features, too, including some much-needed changes to the iPhone's home screen. It’s been a while since Apple really overhauled the home screen, the last time being iOS 14 and the ability to add widgets and create custom app icons through Shortcuts. With iOS 18, users can further customize their home screen with new ways to rearrange apps and widgets, plus the ability to theme app icons like never before.

Read more