
Diamond heist takes a wild turn as suspect swallows $700K worth of gems in bizarre attempt to evade arrest
Jaythan Gilder, a 32-year-old man, stole $770,000 worth of diamond earrings from a Tiffany & Co. store in Orlando. To evade capture, he swallowed the gems, leading to a two-week wait for their retrieval from his digestive system. Gilder, a repeat offender, faces robbery and grand theft charges in Florida and is wanted in Colorado for a similar 2022 incident.
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Tired of too many ads?
Remove Ads
Gilder has done this before
Current situation
FAQs
A man named Jaythan Gilder, 32, stole diamond earrings worth $770,000 from a Tiffany & Co. store and then tried to escape by swallowing the gems before police could arrest him. He stole the diamond earrings from a store in The Mall at Millenia in Orlando. Gilder pretended to be a representative for an NBA player to gain access to the diamonds, as per reports.After being shown the jewelry in a private room, he grabbed two sets of earrings worth $609,500 plus $160,000 and ran away. Hours later, Florida Highway Patrol pulled over Gilder on Interstate 10 near Chipley in a rented Mitsubishi Outlander, as stated in the report by The Smoking Gun.While arresting him, officers saw Gilder moving something in his mouth and refusing to spit it out. Cops warned him he'd get tased if he didn't open his mouth. He said through clenched teeth, 'I don't have to.' At first, police thought he was swallowing drugs. He claimed the white stuff on his lip was Abreva. A test showed no drugs, according to the reports.Inside his car, cops only found price tags and earring cards from Tiffany's, no diamonds. Cops guessed he had actually swallowed the diamonds and sent him to the hospital. Gilder refused an X-ray and didn't want treatment, as per the report by The Smoking Gun.At jail, a body scan showed foreign objects in his stomach. He asked, 'Am I going to be charged with what's in my stomach?' He refused laxatives and told jail staff he was Muslim observing Ramadan, so he only ate after sundown. Police waited 2 weeks for him to pass the diamonds.On March 10, he passed two earrings, but they weren't the Tiffany ones, police are still checking where those came from. Later that same day, he passed three Tiffany earrings, and the last one came out on March 12. Tiffany's Master Jeweler cleaned and confirmed the diamonds before giving them back to the store's security team, according to the report by The Smoking Gun.In 2022, Gilder swallowed earrings again after robbing a jewelry store in Colorado Springs. That time, the store owner shot him in the back during the escape.At the hospital, while under guard, he swallowed the earrings so police couldn't take them. Cops searched his poop but never found them, and scans showed nothing either, as per the report The Smoking Gun.Gilder is now locked up without bail in Florida, facing robbery and grand theft charges. He is also wanted in Colorado for felony charges from the 2022 robbery. His lawyer tried to get him temporary release to attend his mom's funeral, but a Florida judge said no.The lawyer said he has PTSD and depression and needed to grieve. Prosecutors refused, calling him a habitual offender and an escape risk. Back in 2022, he had slipped handcuffs in a hospital and tried to escape through the ceiling, causing damage. His lawyer also claimed he had a 'limited criminal history,' but cops say his record is 20 years long, covering many states, as per the report by The Smoking Gun.Jaythan Gilder, a convicted jewel thief, swallowed the diamonds to hide them from police.The stolen Tiffany & Co. diamonds were worth about $770,000.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Time of India
4 hours ago
- Time of India
Azam Khan has only 3 options to get justice, says Akhilesh
Lucknow: Samajwadi Party chief Akhilesh Yadav has said that jailed party veteran Azam Khan has only three options to get justice — change of govt in UP, court of law, and divine intervention. Akhilesh's reaction came after Azam's wife and former SP MP Tazeen Fatima in an apparent reference to the party leadership said she had no hope from anyone to secure her husband's release from jail. "Humein kisi se bhi nahi umeed hai … agar umeed hai to sirf Allah se (We don't have any hope from anyone … God is our only hope now)," an emotional Tazeen had told reporters after meeting her husband in jail on Thursday. She had added that Azam Khan (76) suffers from several ailments and needs better medical care in the jail. Asked to respond to Tazeen's statement, Akhilesh, too, sounded helpless. "Hum kis se kahen? (Whom do I go to?)," he told reporters on Friday, adding that under the present circumstances the veteran politician could get justice under three scenarios. "One: If there is a change of govt," Akhilesh said, suggesting that situation will change if SP forms govt after 2027 assembly polls. During his Rampur visit in Nov 2022, Akhilesh had announced that all false cases against Azam Khan would be withdrawn once SP forms govt. According to Akhilesh the other two scenarios under which Azam Khan can get justice was through the Court of Law and by the intervention of the Almighty. Azam, a founding member of the party and its prominent Muslim face for three decades, has been in jail since Oct 2023 and has over 89 criminal cases pending against him. This is not Azam's first stint in jail. He spent 27 months in jail before the Supreme Court granted him bail in May 2022. Most of the 89 criminal cases pending against Azam were lodged within the first two years of the BJP forming the government in UP in 2017. Tazeen Fatima and her son — disqualified SP MLA Abdullah Azam — too had been in jail in some cases and are currently out on bail. While SP has always maintained that Azam Khan has been implicated in false cases by Yogi govt, the party had ben accused of not standing by Azam Khan "as strongly as it should have had". During 2022 assembly polls, CM Yogi Adityanath had claimed that Akhilesh Yadav did not want Azam Khan to come out of jail as that would put SP chief's position in danger. During his stint in BSP, now Congress MP from Saharanpur, Imran Masood, had said that only SP was to be blamed for Azam Khan's troubles. The SP, on the other hand, insists that it has always stood by Azam's family. Party functionaries cite Akhilesh Yadav leading a 1km cycle rally in Rampur on March 12, 2021 to highlight the plight of Azam Khan; visits by Akhilesh Yadav and Shivpal Yadav to Azam in jail, and party functionaries submitting memorandum with UP governor, raising the issue in the Assembly as some of the initiatives taken by the party and its leadership to express their solidarity with the veteran leader. Senior functionaries claim that the party leadership had a role in senior lawyer Kapil Sibal pleading Azam Khan's case before the Supreme Court in May 2022. Sibal had put up some strong arguments and the SC granted bail to Azam. In May 2022, Sibal contested the Rajya Sabha elections as an independent candidate. He was supported by the SP and won the seat. Akilesh Yadav and party's principal general secretary Ram Gopal Yadav had accompanied Sibal during filing of his nomination papers.


Time of India
6 hours ago
- Time of India
Kanwar route eatery staff stripped to ascertain faith
1 2 3 4 5 6 Agra: Members of a Hindu outfit allegedly tried to forcibly verify the religious identity of a dhaba worker by attempting to strip him during an 'identity campaign' near the Kanwar Yatra route on Saturday at Pandit Ji Vaishno Dhaba along Delhi-Dehradun National Highway 58 in Muzaffarnagar. The confrontation began when the team scanned the eatery's QR code and claimed, erroneously, that the owner belonged to the minority community. The employee at the receiving end of the assault, Gopal, said, "I work here and live at the hotel. These people tried to take off my pants. First, they asked for my Aadhaar card, but I don't have it. They were intent on stripping me naked. I'm unwell. I told them I'm not a Muslim, I am a Hindu. I didn't lie." Police soon reached the spot and brought the situation under control. However, no formal complaint was filed by Gopal or the dhaba owner. New Mandi SHO Dinesh Chand said, "We controlled the situation and no police complaint was filed by anyone in the matter." Self-styled seer Swami Yashveer Ji Maharaj, who runs an ashram in Muzaffarnagar and led the 'Pehchan Abhiyan' (identity campaign) said several food outlets on the Kanwar route use Hindu names despite being run by individuals from other communities, which could "mislead pilgrims." by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Plastic Surgeon Reveals The 1 Thing Every Woman Should Be Using Instead Of Moisturiser New Skin Discovery Undo He said, "We have warned this dhaba to change its name within 24 hours or face a protest starting tomorrow morning. This is not a Hindu-run establishment and is misusing the name 'Pandit'." He referred to state govt directives requiring eateries to display the owner's name and warned of legal action under Section 420 for misrepresentation. Multiple dhabas operate along NH-58 in Muzaffarnagar, many of which shut during the Kanwar Yatra if they serve non-vegetarian food. Last year, similar pressure was applied on fruit sellers and dhaba owners to display their names. However, in July 2024, Supreme Court issued an interim stay on such directives from the UP and Uttarakhand govts. The court held that eateries and shops could only be required to indicate whether they serve veg or non-veg food, not display names of owners or staff. The directive, which had emerged during last year's Yatra, had led to harassment of Muslim shopkeepers and staff. Several establishments were reportedly forced to shut, dismiss Muslim workers, or alter names to avoid targeting. Opposition leaders and rights activists termed the orders discriminatory and said they risked marginalising specific communities economically. Muzaffarnagar borders Uttarakhand and serves as a key passage for lakhs of devotees from UP, Delhi, Rajasthan, and Haryana, who collect Ganga water from Haridwar during the Shravan month. When asked about the ongoing identity campaign, SP (city), Satyanarayan Prajapat, said, "The guidelines of the Supreme Court will be followed."


Hindustan Times
11 hours ago
- Hindustan Times
Meghalaya: 2 active cadres of banned HNLC surrender before police
Shillong: Two active cadres of the banned Hynñiewtrep National Liberation Council (HNLC) have surrendered before Meghalaya police, officials said on Friday. Police said the surrender of two cadres comes at a time when intelligence agencies are increasingly alarmed by the HNLC's pivot to online radicalisation. (Representational image) The cadres have given insights into the proscribed outfit's recruitment strategy, online radicalisation methods, and ongoing efforts to regroup across the border. The two cadres, Dibarius Jyrwa (32) and Ridor Lyngdoh Nonglait (30), both residents of Mairang, told police during preliminary interviews that they were misled by one Samuel Wahlang Pahsyntiew, a key accused in the 2024 Shillong Syndicate Bus Stand IED blast case, to join the HNLC. They admitted they crossed over to Bangladesh with him, where they were housed in a mixed Hindu-Muslim locality but could not identify the exact location. Once in Bangladesh, they were assigned cultivation duties—primarily areca nut farming—which they said had no relation to the political or ideological aims they had been sold. Disenchanted, they escaped the camp on June 20 and surrendered six days later, expressing regret for joining the outfit and a desire to return to mainstream life. The duo has since been handed over to East Khasi Hills police, where they are being debriefed further by a senior officer of the rank of SP. EWKH superintendent of police (SP), Dangsan Khyriem, confirming their surrender, said, 'The two individuals were misled and later found themselves engaged in activities that had no ideological value. Their surrender is a reflection of how disillusionment can set in when the reality doesn't match the rhetoric. We're hopeful their decision will encourage others to come forward.' Their surrender comes at a time when intelligence agencies are increasingly alarmed by the HNLC's pivot to online radicalisation. Authorities believe the group, whose top leadership remains holed up in Maulvi Bazar, Bangladesh, is attempting to rebuild its cadre base using encrypted messaging platforms, social media outreach, and cross-border propaganda—all with low overhead and high reach. These developments have gained sharper focus in the wake of a political shift in Bangladesh, following the fall of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina's government. Reports of renewed militant activity, insurgent regrouping, and potential alliance-building between outfits like HNLC, ULFA-I, and NSCN have prompted security forces to raise their guard across the Northeast. While many of these recruitment efforts have failed, officials say even a handful of successful radicalisations can pose serious security risks. 'The internet has become a force multiplier for insurgent groups. Their traditional networks may be fractured, but digital platforms now offer a wider net with fewer risks,' a senior intelligence officer said. In fact, the HNLC's growing reliance on digital radicalisation and extortion tactics was a key point in the Centre's case before the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Tribunal, which recently upheld the Union Home Ministry's November 2024 notification banning the group for another five years under the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) originally passed in 1967. It was later amended several times, with significant changes in 2004, 2008, 2013, and most notably in 2019. The Tribunal, presided by Justice Soumitra Saikia of the Gauhati high court, issued its final order on May 10, 2025, after hearing arguments from Subhash Chandra Keyal, Advocate for the Union of India, and Nilutpol Syngkon, appearing for the State of Meghalaya. No representative appeared on behalf of HNLC. The Tribunal held that HNLC's continued engagement in armed insurgency, extortion, threats, and its digital outreach posed a 'clear threat to India's sovereignty and territorial integrity'. In its submission, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) cited that from November 16, 2019, to June 30, 2024, a total of 48 criminal cases had been registered against the HNLC and its cadres, including nine incidents involving IEDs. During this period, 73 cadres were arrested, three surrendered, and 14 weapons, 2,741 rounds of ammunition, 23 detonators, and one hand grenade were recovered. Despite its diminished firepower and cadre strength, authorities say the HNLC still maintains seven transit and training camps in Bangladesh. While most of these are not full-fledged facilities, their continued existence—especially in areas like Pucthichera, Phanai Punaee, Arusumer, and Islapunjee—remains a cause for concern, a senior officer of the BSF Meghalaya Frontier confirmed. Former HNLC chairman and ex-MLA Julius K Dorphang, who surrendered in 2007, had once famously declared, 'HNLC is nothing now.' But with shifting tactics and digital expansion, authorities say it would be dangerous to underestimate the outfit. 'They may be fewer in number, but they're still in the game—and adapting,' noted a senior BSF officer. As of now, both State and Central agencies have renewed their efforts to monitor sleeper cells, disrupt recruitment chains, and intensify surveillance on digital platforms. The Meghalaya Police have reiterated that while HNLC's activities in Khasi Hills remain subdued, they are 'not being taken lightly.'