Supermarket security guard reveals grim reality of working on ‘out of control’ high streets – including daily death threats from brazen shoplifting gangs

A supermarket security guard has revealed the terrible reality of England’s working on the high streets of the guilty.
27 -year -old Kane Manning described Britain’s theft problem as ‘out of control’ and claimed that he received daily death threats from brazen gangs.
Guard announced that these groups aim to play stores a lot of luxury goods, and every day they work with a supermarket £ 500.
The Minister claimed that the crisis had accelerated under the workers’ government last year.
Shop staff said: ‘The new government has worsened a hundred percent since the arrival.
They don’t do anything. As I confront people who are separated from the store with stolen goods, I receive daily death threats. ‘
Mr. Manning remembered a robbery that saw that he had shifted the Cadbury chocolate bar in a ‘high -plan’ operation in his store, which will not give his name in June 2025.
“ There were five of them, ” he said. ‘He was quite frightening.
Supermarket Security Officer Kane Manning revealed the terrible reality of England’s working on the high streets of criminals.
The guards in Gregg’s Wrestle are trying to cope with the food chain with a shop
A productive thief shifts luxury goods from boots. Mr. Manning argued that the crisis accelerated under the workers’ government last year.
“ They knew exactly where to go and set out for the highest chocolate value in the hallway. Really fancy chocolate.
“ They had a large cars and four big bags, and they were just pushing rods and bars.
“ I was patrolling and I caught them in action and they ran when they saw me. I frightened them.
“ These people had reports and explanations. They were going to different stores and stolen at £ 12,000 in a month. They were all interested. ‘
Security guard, up to 90 percent of thieves discounts for the bag for self -control codes that can be used in the widespread tiktok trends showed that the trends.
Mr. Manning added: ‘I will catch children almost every week between the ages of 12 and 16 almost every week. They play a lot of desserts. They think because Tiktok is not illegal.
“ Sometimes they use fraudulent coupons from Tiktok to get a discount. For example, a product of five kilos can occur as 45p.
“ Basically a scam. I’ve seen this a lot lately. ‘
Mr. Manning remembered a robbery that saw that Thiefes shifted a £ 1,100 £ Cadbury chocolate bar in the ‘high -plan’ operation that would not give his name in June 2025.
Brazen thieves were depicting playing things from Waitrose. Security guard Mr. Manning downloaded the fluctuation to Tiktok Trends.
A man who puts luxury candles in an empty Waitrose bag in Hersham
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He said that the secretion of the consistency was in danger the security guards like him and called on the government to enter.
“Wood never happens, but as it is in security, you know something as it might happen,” Mr. Manning added.
“ I’m not sure what to do until it arrives.
‘These situations fight or flight, so you just learn how to fall.’
Last month, a working minister admitted that theft that theft was ‘out of control’ that the theft said to thieves to avoid sharing photos of thieves.
An Knowledge Commissioner Office (ICO), a warning about the suspects “violating data protection”, bureaucracy retail theft scourge to deal with the efforts to deal with the efforts were seized.
When asked whether it was right to show the images of the thieves in the store windows, the workers ‘deputy Alex Davies-Jones said to Radio 4’s Today’s Today program:’ What we know is that the shops were disposed of in the country.
‘So we did the action we took on our crime and police bill.’
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In another image, it can be seen from Oxted that a man pushed into a bag of Sinsbury, a crouched and hurriedly four candles.
When asked whether the shops are correct to publish photos of the suspects, ‘I think it is on all of us to be aware of what is going on in our local communities.’
The theft figures published by the British Retail Consortium (BRC) this week showed that only 2.5 percent of the police were recorded each year.
The companies said that 50,000 thefts were not reported every day as they gave up the police.
BRC General Manager Helen Dickinson said: ‘Many retailers do not see the point of notification to the police.’




