Steve Jobs' stolen iPad lands in the hands of "Kenny the Clown"
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs.
/ AppleProfessional entertainer "Kenny the Clown" reportedly received the hot iPad from a friend, 35-year-old Kariem McFarlin, who has confessed to the crime and is being held in jail in lieu of bail before he appears in court on Monday.
The late Apple co-founder's home was burglarized by an alleged thief who didn't even seem to know whose home he was robbing. The person who allegedly burglarized the home of the late Steve Jobs was apparently found when he connected the stolen Apple hardware.
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Kenny the Clown, whose real name is Kenneth Kahn, said he had no idea that the iPad was stolen or that it had belonged to Steve Jobs, according to the San Jose Mercury News. Kahn had actually been using the tablet to play songs for kids during his clown performances.
Reportedly, it wasn't until police took custody of the iPad and McFarlin was arrested for the crime that Kahn realized he was using stolen merchandise once owned by the late Apple chief in his act. He said he simply assumed that McFarlin had bought a new iPad and was giving away his old one to a friend, the Mercury News said.
The two men apparently met and became friends more than 10years ago when Kahn had coached McFarlin on the Encinal High School basketball team in Alameda, Calif. Kahn's Twitter page describes him as a professional clown, mayorial candidate, and substitute school teacher.
However, the story does seem a bit fishy.
After McFarlin was arrested, he reportedly said he robbed the house because he was homeless, in "dire straits," and living out of his car. But why would a supposedly homeless man give away his stolen goods for free? And if the accused McFarlin were homeless, wouldn't Kahn be a tad suspicious after receiving a free iPad from his friend?
McFarlin was also originally scheduled to be represented by a public defender.
But now the defendant reportedly will be represented by a private attorney, who wants to remain anonymous until Monday's hearing, the Mercury News added.
What started out as a seemingly simple robbery seems to be shaping up into something stranger and stranger.
This article originally appeared on CNET.
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I've posted why, with detail and with links to better-than-tabloid sources, in the past. I don't care to do so again, but did want to send my sympathy to the clown.
"What started out as a seemingly simple robbery seems to be shaping up into something stranger and stranger."
How is it strange? Somebody with not-your-everyday-profession bought stolen property.
Send him to jail for a long long time.
Or, rather, "unauthorized business" - the contextual differences between the two are remarkably small, sadly...