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[Help] Missing Medals



Saladpack Seagull

Just Shut Up and Paddle
An ex-Sapper from East Grinstead has had his medals nicked from outside his home. This happened on Tuesday after the five medals were returned by DPD after mounting, but were not left in a secure place. They are mounted on black felt and have a large attachment pin. This guy served for eight and a half years, including in Bosnia and Afghanistan. He comes from a military family who have served our country for generations, and he is absolutely distraught at the theft of these hard-earned medals. He is not interested in having the culprit punished - he just wants them back. If anyone has any info, please contact the police or BBC Radio Sussex. They can be returned anonymously, no questions asked.
 




Hampden Park

Ex R.N.
Oct 7, 2003
4,989
That is so sad and upsetting. post it all over facebook and the other sites that people look at, twatter instagram etc. get this viral, thieving barstewards :censored::censored::censored:

:salute:
 


JJ McClure

Go Jags
Jul 7, 2003
10,838
Hassocks
Shared on my social media the other day (for what its worth). Hope he gets them back.

Seems that with the increase on deliveries over the pandemic that couriers are now increasingly doing a dump it and leg it scenario, which will inevitably lead to an increase in porch pirates nicking things from doorsteps.
 


Thunder Bolt

Silly old bat
Unlike WW2 medals, these will be engraved so easily traced when the thief tries to sell them.


On a happier note, a veteran Wren sold her medals a few years ago, because she fell on hard times, which were spotted in a Weymouth charity shop. Another veteran Wren saw them, noted the name, and asked on the Wrens Facebook group if anyone knew her. She was in the same group, so we chipped in to buy them back for her.
 


Gazwag

5 millionth post poster
Mar 4, 2004
30,137
Bexhill-on-Sea
Shared on my social media the other day (for what its worth). Hope he gets them back.

Seems that with the increase on deliveries over the pandemic that couriers are now increasingly doing a dump it and leg it scenario, which will inevitably lead to an increase in porch pirates nicking things from doorsteps.

Quite, the blame lies squarely on the lazy delivery drivers - if they did their job properly the opportunist thief wouldn't get the chance
 




Hampden Park

Ex R.N.
Oct 7, 2003
4,989
Unlike WW2 medals, these will be engraved so easily traced when the thief tries to sell them.


On a happier note, a veteran Wren sold her medals a few years ago, because she fell on hard times, which were spotted in a Weymouth charity shop. Another veteran Wren saw them, noted the name, and asked on the Wrens Facebook group if anyone knew her. She was in the same group, so we chipped in to buy them back for her.

Bravo Zulu, Jennies.

:salute::drink:
 












May 5, 2020
1,525
Sussex
It's a bit unfair to blame the delivery drivers.
They've been very busy and been out there working during all these lockdowns.

Covid has changed the mindset a little bit too with all the"leave the parcel outside,knock on the door and standback until the customer picks up parcel"

I'm sure the delivery driver is gutted about the medals going missing the same as the rest of us.

The blame is on the theiving toe rag who nicked the parcel.

But as the owner of the medals has said,he is not interested in prosecution or who's fault it was,he just wants the medals back and that will be the end of the matter.
Hopefully the thief was just hoping for a smart phone or tablet and now they know they are medals will just return them at some point.

But if not then we need to keep an eye out for them.
Thunderbolt made a good suggestion about e-bay and I will pop in there to have a look now and then and I'm planning a visit to Arundel at some point so I will have a nose around but I imagine the police will message any legit dealers and give them a heads up.
Markets and carboots could be a likely sales point so keep our eyes open.

I have found a picture of the medals in radio Sussex Twitter page but I can't post pics here but if anyone here with tech skills could post it then it may help.
 






Brian Fantana

Well-known member
Oct 8, 2006
7,240
In the field
A friend of mine who runs an antique shop near Arundel believes there’s been someone touting them around in the area. He had someone in his shop yesterday asking whether or not he would buy military medals. He thought it a bit of a coincidence as he’s had no one asking that question for several years.
 


May 5, 2020
1,525
Sussex
A friend of mine who runs an antique shop near Arundel believes there’s been someone touting them around in the area. He had someone in his shop yesterday asking whether or not he would buy military medals. He thought it a bit of a coincidence as he’s had no one asking that question for several years.

That's interesting.
Definitely worth your friend mentioning it to the police or the radio sussex if he hasn't already.
 






spongy

Well-known member
Aug 7, 2011
2,764
Burgess Hill
A friend of mine who runs an antique shop near Arundel believes there’s been someone touting them around in the area. He had someone in his shop yesterday asking whether or not he would buy military medals. He thought it a bit of a coincidence as he’s had no one asking that question for several years.

Does he have cctv in his shop and pictures of who it was?
 


Brian Fantana

Well-known member
Oct 8, 2006
7,240
In the field
Does he have cctv in his shop and pictures of who it was?

Unfortunately no CCTV as I understand it, but I believe he’s passed on a description to the police. It might be nothing, but it was the coincidence of the question that struck him when he subsequently saw the story online. That, and the fact that the person didn’t have the medals with them. He thought it unusual, even at the time, that someone would just come in and ask whether or not he’d buy a particular item but not actually said item to be appraised.
 


Saladpack Seagull

Just Shut Up and Paddle
Adam Hole's theory was that the opportunist thief who nicked them may have thought they were a phone or some other desirable tech item. What worries me is that, having discovered what was in the package, they simply dumped them and therefore they could be lying around in a garden or bin close to where the theft occurred. Of course that's just assuming it was someone with no idea of the worth of these medals, financial or sentimental; not that "sentimental" adequately covers what they mean to their rightful owner.
 




dejavuatbtn

Well-known member
Aug 4, 2010
7,192
Henfield
It’s sad when these things go missing. My great grandfather got killed at Passendaele and the medals and letters passed down the family. They were due to go to a specialist auction in Northumberland that would have enabled me to bid for them but they were put in a general sale some weeks previous and someone got a bargain and they moved out of the family. I was gutted.
Hope these ones find their way home.
 


swindonseagull

Well-known member
Aug 6, 2003
9,268
Swindon, but used to be Manila
It’s sad when these things go missing. My great grandfather got killed at Passendaele and the medals and letters passed down the family. They were due to go to a specialist auction in Northumberland that would have enabled me to bid for them but they were put in a general sale some weeks previous and someone got a bargain and they moved out of the family. I was gutted.
Hope these ones find their way home.

Bit confused.....if they were passed down the family why were they going to be auctioned?
 


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