
Criminal gangs are recruiting children to prey on vulnerable tourists in Venice
The city, as one of Italy 's top tourist attractions, has long been a hotspot for criminal activity targeting unsuspecting vacationers.
A series of videos published on social media shows alleged pickpockets - often teenage girls and in some cases pregnant women - attempting to cover their faces as enraged citizens yell to draw attention to them.
The scourge has led furious residents to form their own associations to publicize the identities of those caught in the act and work as volunteer informants for police.
But even amid an increased police presence and efforts by citizen activists to catch opportunists, those under the age of 14 cannot bear criminal responsibility.
Gangs are therefore stepping up efforts to recruit 'baby borseggiatori' - or baby pickpockets - into their ranks.
The mayor of Venice, Luigi Brugnaro, has called for the existing legal framework to be adapted to give police and courts more powers to prosecute pickpockets.
'We cannot resign ourselves to the normalization of crimes that damage people's lives and the city's image on a daily basis.
'We need urgent corrective measures. The government has to listen to local communities and guarantee urban security.'
Meanwhile, Monica Poli, spokesperson for the association Cittadini Non Distratti (Undistracted Citizens), denounced the involvement of children in criminal activities.
'The problem is that there are many minors under 13, including girls (who are pickpockets).
'What drives us forward is above all to defend the most vulnerable groups, namely the elderly and disabled, who are the preferred victims of these increasingly violent pickpockets, and we do so out of civic duty.'
Poli has garnered significant notoriety on social media, particularly on TikTok, where she and her fellow citizen activists routinely post videos of suspected pickpockets.
Her catchphrase 'Attenzione, borseggiatori!' (Attention, pickpockets!) went viral in 2023 and has been remixed into dance tracks and used to mock everyday scenarios, like animals trying to nibble their owners' food.
The newfound social media fame helped to shine a light on the work Poli and her fellow volunteers, who first began combing the streets for pickpockets some three decades ago, have done.
Poli says that her group aims to protect tourists and raise awareness about pickpocketing in Venice, claiming her group protects U.S. and UK tourists from being targeted.
'I have been part of a group of disturbance against pickpockets for 30 years - together with 40 other people,' she told Newsweek shortly after erupting to social media stardom.
'People are pickpocketed for their American or English passport, then to return to their country they have to go to the embassy in [...] Rome.'
'This incurs additional expenses for them, so it is better to prevent this by warning tourists of the problem.'
Poli claims she has never been asked to stop by police, but runs a physical risk for her actions, adding she was once attacked by a group of women who fell foul of her vigilantism.
In the meantime, deputy police chief Ganni Franzoi laments that the rate of pickpocketing - which skyrocketed after the return of tourists following the lifting of pandemic restrictions - looks set to continue on its upward trajectory.
'This year we've intercepted 100 pickpockets, including several minors,' he told Italian media.
'Another interesting statistic is the number of wallets found in St Mark's Square: we'll reach 900 in 2025.'
Officials point out that without a change in legislation, citizen activist groups and individual victims will continue to carry out vigilante justice.
In some cases, such situations have led to violent assaults, some of which are perpetrated against innocent bystanders mistaken for thieves.
Last week, a 60-year-old German tourist was beaten by a group of angry citizens and holidaymakers who had reacted to warnings that a Spanish family had just fallen foul of pickpocketing.
The Spaniard in question grabbed hold of the ageing German and pushed him against the wall, before others rushed in to surround him.
He was ultimately pushed and struck several times as the crowd forced him to empty his pockets and open his bag before police arrived.
'I arrived on vacation in Venice three days ago,' he told police officers, according to Venezia Today.
'I never expected something like this. I was attacked, beaten, and called a thief. Now I want to file a complaint against those who attacked me.'
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Daily Mail
12 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
When Partick Thistle signed Pogba: Unfortunately it wasn't world-beater Paul... but the big brother who ended up in jail for trying to extort money from his famous sibling
Scottish football has long been in the grip of what we might call Prestwick Airport Syndrome. Elvis Presley touched down there for roughly 90 minutes back in March 1960, but that hasn't stopped the airport erecting several plaques and dedicating a themed restaurant to the King of Rock and Roll. Similarly, our football clubs have always been keen to grasp at any possible connection to greatness, no matter how tenuous. See Diego Maradona Junior's unsuccessful trial spell at Dunfermline in 2004, or Rodney Sneijder — younger brother of Wesley — playing one solitary game for Dundee United in 2015. With the benefit of hindsight, though, there is one entry in this particular chapter of Scottish transfer oddities that leaps off the page more than any other. Ten years ago this month, Partick Thistle swooped for Mathias Pogba, brother of World Cup winner and one-time most expensive player in the world Paul. Nowadays, Mathias is best known for his involvement in a bizarre attempt to extort money from his younger and more successful sibling. He was convicted along with five others last December and sentenced to three years in prison, two of them suspended (although he was permitted to serve the remainder on house arrest). When he arrived at Firhill aged 24, he was a Guinean international striker who had played Serie B football with Pescara and proved himself competent and moderately prolific at English lower-league level with both Wrexham and Crewe Alexandra. While the Jags undoubtedly thought there might be some benefits publicity-wise from his signing — with Paul fresh from participating in the Champions League final for Juventus in 2015 and being named best young player at the World Cup in 2014 — there was also some logic underpinning manager Alan Archibald's move for the older Pogba. At the time, Thistle were two years into a five-year stint in the Premiership, striving to put down roots yet constantly undermined by a chronic lack of goals. Jags fan and podcaster David Forrest recalls: 'The club felt like the most professional it had been in years, and we had a settled core of players who could be relied on, so there was a genuine feeling that we could consolidate our position in the Premiership and become a club like Kilmarnock or St Johnstone. 'This was also the same time as the Kingsford Capital Management deal so, in the space of a few weeks, a Californian investor had poured six figures into the club, then our mascot Jaggy MacBee was being replaced by a sun deity [Kingsley] straight out of an HP Lovecraft story, and now we were signing Paul Pogba's brother! 'It was a whirlwind time, but it was exciting. You'd go into work and people who never usually gave us the time of day were asking you about the latest mad Thistle development.' Given the chance, Mathias might just have wanted to talk about the natural splendour of Ruchill Park, or how excited he was to be teaming up with Stuart 'Banzo' Bannigan. But, from the off, it was clear that his famous brother would be dominating most of his conversations with the media. 'Everyone has been talking about my brother,' sighed Thistle's new No 99 in one of his first interviews. 'But it would be nice to say Mathias Pogba is here.' Forrest adds: 'For many Thistle fans, the first thing that sprung to mind was Jorge Cadete. He had signed with us in the early 2000s, straight out of Portuguese Big Brother, and we got a lot of press coverage about it. Not only did he never score for us, Thistle didn't score once when Cadete was on the field. It was a total disaster. 'That said, Pogba was a Guinean international, and we've had strikers with far more dubious goal records. We were so reliant on Kris Doolan up front at the time that we were crying out for someone to pick up the slack. We all knew we couldn't depend on Doolan forever, and if Pogba could be a quarter of what his brother was, it would work for us…' To put you out your suspense, it didn't. Mathias certainly spent a lot more time on the pitch at Firhill than poor old Rodney Sneijder did up at Tannadice the same season. Deemed worthy of 30 appearances in all competitions, it's clear that Archibald didn't consider him completely useless. In fact, there was even a period when Pogba seemed to have permanently ousted club legend Doolan from the lone striker role in Archibald's preferred formation, making six starts from eight league games during the spring. The goals wouldn't come, however. Pobga managed a total of two that term, both against Hamilton Accies — just to prove that the South Lanarkshire outfit had the same cursed energy back then as they do now. 'He was very good against Accies, every time we played away at Hamilton he would give them hell and score as well,' remembers Forrest. 'He clearly had something about him. But ultimately, he was one of many underfiring strikers we had around that time, alongside Ade Azeez, Nathan Eccleston, Ryan Stevenson, etc. They all blend into one a bit, but Pogba stands out because it was so odd that he was there in the first place.' And what about Paul? Mathias made the following claim during his early days Firhill: 'Of course Paul is a Partick Thistle supporter now, and he follows our results closely from Italy.' As pleasant as it might have been for Thistle fans to entertain daydreams of the former Ballon d'Or contender swinging by Munn's Bar or Maryhill Lidl, actual spottings were rare. 'Paul was definitely about once or twice to watch us get absolutely hammered by Celtic at Parkhead, it was a big talking point,' laughs Forrest. Mathias' final four appearances in a Thistle jersey took place in the group stage of the Betfred Cup the following summer. His third and final goal on Scottish soil (an impressive diving header from a Callum Booth cross) was scored at Ochilview in a 4-1 hosing of Stenhousemuir. Having hit the threshold of 25 appearances during the 2015-16 campaign, the striker actually triggered a contract extension. Nonetheless, when transfer deadline day came, he was off, having somehow parlayed himself into an eye-catching move to Eredivisie outfit Sparta Rotterdam. Of course, the reason Mathias' name is still never far from the lips of Thistle fans like Forrest to this day is nothing to do with the four goals he mustered in the Dutch top flight, or indeed anything that happened at clubs like Manchego Ciudad Real or Tabor Sezana during a subsequent nomadic period. 'People definitely kept up with him when he went to Rotterdam, then ended up being rejected by [German third-tier side] KFC Uerdingen for being overweight,' adds Forrest. 'He then went on a proper journeyman phase, touring about Spanish non-league before ending up in Slovenia of all places. Certainly, it was fun trying to figure out where he'd end up next. 'His, shall we say, 'family quarrel' was big news, as you'd expect. Even though he was away from us for years, the second we heard about it (his attempt to extort money from his brother), people thought: 'This is so Thistle'. You're never getting an ex-Hearts or Aberdeen player doing that!' Two years on from Mathias' abrupt departure, and partly due to the Jags' ongoing failure to find a reliable goalscorer not named Kris Doolan, Thistle were relegated, and are yet to return to the top flight. Veteran midfielder Stevie Lawless is now the only player from that era still on the books. Mathias Pogba was convicted in a Paris criminal court and sentenced to three years in prison As for their former No 99? The latest news is that he has rocked up at Belgian minor league outfit Sint-Niklaas, for whom the 34-year-old scored a late match-winning double on his debut in March. Wherever Mathias winds up next, he can be sure that a small community of football trainspotters scattered around northwest Glasgow will be watching with interest. 'I don't know if everyone is watching him as closely as me, although I am very much in the top percentile of Mathias Pogba enthusiasts amongst the Thistle support,' admits Forrest. 'I would certainly say he is somewhat fondly remembered. 'He wasn't very good, but was at the very least quite amusing. Non-Thistle fans still bring him up to this day. 'If you can't be good, be funny, and Mathias nailed the brief on that one. If he ever fancies another run-out when Accies are back at New Douglas Park, I'll be the first in line to buy a ticket.'


BBC News
42 minutes ago
- BBC News
RAF Croughton's 'golf ball' structure to be dismantled
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Times
2 hours ago
- Times
Conned by the Tinder Swindler: how his victims took revenge
If Simon Leviev were to enter the busy north London café in which I'm sitting with Cecilie Fjellhoy and Pernilla Sjoholm, 'He would wet his pants and run,' Sjoholm says. Posing as a diamond heir, Leviev — better known as the Tinder Swindler — has defrauded victims around the world out of more than $10 million. While the 2022 release of the smash hit Netflix documentary The Tinder Swindler laid bare the women's devastation — the crippling debt they were left trying to escape, and, for Fjellhoy, the marriage and baby-filled future Leviev had promised being exposed as a sham — now they say the tables are finally turning. 'I have way more power than he does,' Sjoholm, 38, says with a smile. 'He's not a real man; he's scared of two blonde women.' The enormous reach of the documentary — the most watched in Netflix's history on its release, racking up 166 million hours of viewing time within its first month on the platform — made Leviev recognisable to many would-be victims. 'He's really angry with all the successes that we have had,' Fjellhoy, 36, says. 'I think he really wanted us to be miserable for the rest of our lives.' Instead, the women say they are in a strange way grateful for the Leviev-shaped wrecking ball that tore through their worlds nearly a decade ago. Both now travel the world giving talks about online safety and romance fraud, while Sjoholm has cofounded IDfier, an identity verification platform designed to weed out those lurking beneath AI and deepfakes. It has also strengthened their determination to seek better protections for victims. 'We want the laws to change. This is not just money loss,' Sjoholm says. It's on a par with 'murder, in my eyes. This is emotional abuse; people take their lives due to this. It's a serious, serious crime.' Fjellhoy says that the way the likes of banks and police treat victims of romance fraud can be worse than the original deception. 'A far tougher pill to swallow — and why I'm still traumatised — is the treatment of me after it,' she says. 'No victim should be placed into a courtroom and have to defend themselves. And the criminal who started everything, he's just been taken out of the equation.' • Read more expert advice on sex, relationships, dating and love Though it was affecting, the film inevitably couldn't capture the complexity of the women's relationships with Leviev — real name Shimon Hayut (he has no connection to the Leviev diamond dynasty after which he renamed himself to bolster his credentials) — nor the aftermath. And so Fjellhoy and Sjoholm have written Swindled Never After: How We Survived (and You Can Spot) a Relationship Scammer, an unflinching account of their brushes with suicide and bankruptcy, global fame and public blame, along with online safety tips and expert insight from criminologists and psychologists. The goal, the women say, is to try to stem the rapidly rising tide of romance fraud, which cost the UK £106 million last year. It is also their chance to reframe the victim-shaming that so often follows crimes of this kind. For them, the question is not why do people fall for such scams, but rather why do perpetrators prey on innocent victims in the first place? And why does it remain nigh-on impossible to bring them to justice? Fjellhoy was 29 when she swiped right on Leviev, who told her he was visiting London, where she lives, on a business trip. They met for coffee at the Four Seasons and, within 24 hours, she was boarding a private jet to his next meeting in Sofia, Bulgaria, along with his young daughter, her mother and a smattering of 'business associates'. She liked his 'magnetism' and style, she says, and, having grown up on a diet of Disney fairytales, was earnestly looking for everlasting love. But her 'prince of diamonds', as he dubbed himself, would within months lose his sparkle, his penchant for Rolls-Royces and five-star hotel stays quickly becoming Fjellhoy's problem. Leviev, now 34, made her acquire a platinum Amex card — so former acquaintances wishing to do him harm, he said, couldn't track his movements — and maxed it out immediately. He urged her to meet him in Amsterdam with $25,000 (some £18,000) in cash, and requested similarly vast sums on so many occasions that she ended up taking out nine loans totalling $250,000. When he sent her a cheque for $500,000, which then bounced, it occurred to her that 'the man who held me in his arms, kissed me on the forehead, shared a bed with me and planned a future with me… All that was a lie.' That realisation 'makes me tear up, even today'. Fjellhoy, then working in tech with a full social life and strong support network back in her native Norway, considered herself an unlikely victim of such deception. But between the deep sense of violation at the hands of a master manipulator and being hounded by creditors (four took her to court), 'I felt like I was drowning; someone was dragging me to rock bottom,' she writes in Swindled Never After. In one particularly dark moment, a lorry driving towards her in the next lane gained a sudden appeal. 'Wouldn't it be better to end it here?' she wondered, before forcing herself to return home, visit the local hospital and get a referral to a psychiatric unit. After three weeks there, and seven years of therapy and medication, it is only in recent months that she has come off antidepressants. 'I never wanted to be on them,' she says. But, 'I needed them. I was thinking of stopping a couple of times, but then when you get hit with a lawsuit [by creditors], or police officers barging in, you need antidepressants,' she says. 'I tell you, that is not something that is for the faint of heart.' Sjoholm, the more voluble of the two, was also left contemplating suicide after learning of Leviev's lies. Their platonic nine-month relationship involved her being flown via jet to parties in Mykonos and Rome (in some cases, unknowingly paid for by Fjellhoy), and the offer of a $15,000 monthly rental budget so that they could move in together. Rather than being 'gold-diggers', as internet critics have suggested, Sjoholm says they were 'milking cows' for Leviev, whose network of victims doesn't discriminate against gender, individuals or companies, or global location. Sjoholm lost $45,000 funding his playboy lifestyle — the deposit she'd saved for a home — an amount then doubled by legal fees when she unsuccessfully attempted to take the bank who had wired her payments to Leviev to court. The course of their lives would be altogether different had Fjellhoy not contacted a Norwegian newspaper in 2019. Its journalists found Sjoholm waiting outside the Mandarin Oriental in Munich as she met Leviev. When he left and saw the cameras, he turned aggressive, issuing death threats that 'were not cryptic; they were spoken as if they were a done deal: 'I've paid a price for your head. It wasn't even that expensive — it only cost €1,000 because you aren't worth any more.' ' • Sweet Bobby and me: the catfishing that shocked the world The fallout left Sjoholm questioning not only 'what I would do to myself; I didn't know what Simon might try to do to me.' Those feelings worsened following the film's release. During what she now looks back on as 'the lowest point in my life', she began making fake posts on Instagram to mislead the now millions of people watching her every move, in case Leviev's threats — or the legions of 'incels' she says were now supporting him — led to a nasty end. Today Sjoholm, who is Swedish but lives in Spain, is in a far better place. She was introduced to her partner via mutual friends four years ago and, as mother to their two-year-old twins, has found her 'life's purpose'. (They call Fjellhoy, who spent three months at their home after they were born, 'auntie'.) Moving on has been crucial, she says. 'I don't let this consume my life. Because if I were to sit there and just look into what [Leviev's] doing every day, and be angry and be annoyed, then I am continuing to let him defraud me.' Although defiant, she concedes that the anger still eats at her sometimes. There are 'days where I feel like I'm struggling; that I would have loved to give all this money, for example, towards my children and their future. And I gave it away to a criminal instead.' She is, at least, free from the choppy waters of the online dating pool, which is 'definitely worse' now compared with when the women met Leviev. • The handsome army hero who turned out to be an AI dating scam Fjellhoy has returned to the apps — 'I still love love' — albeit with more caution. 'Of course, I have my guard up; I haven't been in a long-term relationship since then. So I think it has had a bigger impact than I would like to say,' she admits. Now, her swiping comes with extra mental gymnastics: is this person who he says he is? Or, 'Are they just going on a date because they think it's interesting to hear the Tinder Swindler story?' (She is not worried about being financially duped again, she says, as, 'There's nothing left. I'm bankrupt. I can't even get a credit card.') She toyed with avoiding mention of the documentary to potential suitors entirely, but has opted to list it on her dating profile — her way of avoiding what she thinks will otherwise lead to 'draining' conversations down the line. 'It's not baggage,' Fjellhoy says of her unique backstory — although one match did immediately block her on learning of her Netflix fame. 'But before this, it was just so much easier.' It is unclear what struggles, if any, Leviev has been left to face. In 2019, he was jailed for 15 months in his native Israel for using a fake passport, but was released after just five. Aside from a 2015 conviction for defrauding three Finnish women — one of whom Fjellhoy met on that first private plane ride — he has mostly evaded justice. He has repeatedly alleged that he is making a documentary with Netflix (the platform says this is not true), was selling personalised video messages on Cameo for $200 and has threatened to start a podcast. Last year he said that the women's claims were 'all a big show and will eventually fall apart… I'm like Trump. I can't be knocked down; I'm invincible.' His victims believe he has evaded prosecution and punishment thanks to the complex nature of his frauds, plus the fact that they span numerous countries and jurisdictions. That so many people continue to get in touch asking whether Leviev has finally been caught and charged only highlights how broken the system remains, the women feel. 'Not to have had justice in this case is a disfavour for the fraud community as a whole,' Fjellhoy says. 'Because if you can't even get him' — someone whose case is highly public and is known to authorities the world over — 'what are you even talking about?' All the while, his victims continue to contact Fjellhoy and Sjoholm — most recently, a man who said he'd been working as Leviev's driver in Dubai, where he now lives, posting photos of his lavish lifestyle. 'He [the driver] wrote to me in dire straits,' Fjellhoy says. 'And that's the issue. People reach out to us and then it's, 'Oh, shouldn't you just let it go, Cecilie? Shouldn't you not look up what [Leviev's] doing?' Well, we're being approached by his victims today,' she says of the dozens of other victims who have contacted her since The Tinder Swindler aired. 'So when people ask me to move on, I get a bit annoyed. Because it's impossible when you haven't received justice and he's still out there. I think there are very few victims who have their criminal so blatantly shaming them and going out in public, telling us that we're liars.' Neither of the women, who are in daily contact and consider themselves 'sisters', has spoken to Leviev for years. Sjoholm's last communication with him was before the documentary aired, while Fjellhoy confronted him in Israel in 2022. 'There have been no repercussions for him; he's never felt any uneasiness with anything. So to see him be that uneasy for once and not knowing what to do, for me that was more than enough.' What do they think drives him to pursue such an appalling line of 'work'? 'Narcissism', they speculate; and 'control… [to] hurt people'. They plan to continue campaigning for harsher punishments for fraudsters and for social media sites to better scrutinise those on their platforms. 'Everyone deserves to feel safe online,' Fjellhoy says. 'We have to fight. It's a marathon. In the end, we will win.' Swindled Never After: How We Survived (and You Can Spot) a Relationship Scammer by Cecilie Fjellhoy and Pernilla Sjoholm (Podium Publishing, £15.99) is published on August 19