Posted on 09/27/2010 12:06:04 AM PDT by nickcarraway
She has a five-decade history of shoplifting and faces theft charges in San Diego
When you think of an international jewel thief, you dont think of 79-year-old Doris Payne.
News articles detail her long criminal career. Shes been arrested in at least five states and served several prison stints.
Payne told one reporter she had given up her five-decade shoplifting career. Even so, she was in a San Diego court this week on a jewelry theft charge.
Police say she stole an $8,600 diamond ring from Macys at the Fashion Valley mall in January. She has pleaded not guilty.
Payne, who lives in Long Beach, was in San Diego County on Thursday for a Superior Court hearing. A West Hollywood film crew followed her around to gather footage for a documentary about her life.
Shes a fascinating character, said Matthew Pond, one of the projects producers. Doris is one of these people who never really stopped to think about the rules and whether they should apply to her. She just really does her own thing.
Published reports say Paynes illegal exploits took her from West Virginia, where she was born in 1930, to Europe and beyond. Always dressed-to-impress, she never resorted to violence in her heists. Instead, she distracted sales clerks at high-end stores before casually walking away with the goods.
She picked some of her targets by reading about them in Town & Country magazine, according to courtroom testimony.
Her lifestyle drew a lot of attention first from police, then the public. Theres talk of a Hollywood feature film starring Halle Berry.
Its a feel good family crime story, Pond said.
Judge Leo Valentine Jr. determined at Paynes preliminary hearing Thursday that she should stand trial on commercial burglary and grand theft charges.
She faces five years and eight months in prison.
Valentine ordered Payne to stay away from all Macys stores while her case is pending. Deputy District Attorney Kristie Nikoletich made the request after learning Payne may have recently been at a Macys in Arizona.
I have been there, Payne told a reporter later, gesturing toward her beige sleeveless shirt dress. I bought this there. For this court appearance.
Published reports say Payne was given a 12-year sentence for stealing a five-carat diamond ring from a Neiman Marcus in Denver . In 2005, she stole an $8,500 ring in Nevada and a $31,500 ring in Palo Alto, while on parole.
Payne was in an Orange County jail in late January when a San Diego police detective interviewed her about the Macys incident. She had been arrested on suspicion of stealing a $1,300 Burberry trench coat from a Saks Fifth Avenue in Costa Mesa. She pleaded guilty to grand theft in April and was placed on probation.
She is out of custody on bond in connection with the San Diego case.
Detective Thomas Jacques said he told Payne he saw her in surveillance video recorded Jan. 2 in the Macys fine jewelry department. He said she tried on a ring, switched it from one hand to the other, then walked away.
The detective testified that Payne was in the video but wouldnt admit straight up to taking the pear-shaped sparkler.
Defense attorney Gretchen von Helms argued unsuccessfully that the identifications of Payne by two store employees should be thrown out because they were tainted by stories and photos of Payne that they viewed online.
But the judge said the identifications were buoyed by the detectives testimony that Payne said she sold the bauble for $1,800 to a jeweler she found in the phone book.
A store sales manager and longtime Macys employee is not a fan of Paynes. She testified that the store put her on probation after the theft.
In other words, she's a Democrat.
some people just cannot retire...:O)
Doris Payne, 79, listens during her preliminary hearing Thursday in San Diego Superior Court on jewel theft charges. The judge found enough evidence to order her to stand trial.
One of the millions of parasites whose attitude toward other peoples' property put 0 in the white house. I'd just as readily shoot a 79 year old thief as an 18 year old thief.
There's a term for that, Mr. Pond: sociopath.
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