
Greggs makes major change to stores in bid to tackle soaring shoplifting rates
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GREGGS is ditching its self-serve fridges to try to tackle soaring shoplifting rates.
Items such as sandwiches and bottled drinks have been moved behind the counter in at least five of its branches.
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Greggs is ditching its self-serve fridges to try to tackle soaring shoplifting rates
The trial follows a Sun investigation which showed that brazen thieves were targeting some shops every 20 minutes.
A Greggs in Whitechapel, East London, is one where customers now have to ask for a chilled item.
A worker said: 'The stealing before was so bad.
"I couldn't put a number on how many thieves came in every day.'
A local, Abdeslam Saadons, 58, said: 'A couple of months ago I saw a guy take a whole case of Coca-Cola.'
Other shops have been fitted with bank-style screens at the counter or introduced full-time security guards.
Greggs said of the fridge move: 'This is one of a number of initiatives we are trialling across a handful of shops which are exposed to higher levels of anti-social behaviour.
'Safety of our colleagues and customers remains our number one priority.'
Shocking moment Greggs manager takes on shoplifter as customers just stand by and watch
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Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 14 Tom Conti believes there may be as many as 30 long-term inmates in the UK who have committed no crime Credit: Getty 14 After starring in Twelve Angry Men, Conti started tyring to identify potential real-life miscarriages of justice Credit: Supplied 14 Tom as Albert Einstein in Oppenheimer Credit: Alamy 14 Tom with Pauline Collins in Shirley Valentine Credit: Alamy But it was a stage role in Twelve Angry Men that led the Oscar-nominated actor to discover a passion that few movie fans know about. Conti privately spends hours poring over legal documents and court transcripts to try to identify potential real-life miscarriages of justice, with the hope of freeing those wrongly imprisoned. The actor — once described as the thinking woman's crumpet after starring in 1989 romantic comedy Shirley Valentine — believes there may be as many as 30 long-term inmates in the UK who have committed no crime. 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