Librarians: Book Bandit Robbing Libraries
Colorado Man Accused Of Checking Out And Selling Thousands Of Books and DVDs
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Librarians throughout Colorado suspect a prolific book bandit checked out and attempted to sell thousands of books, tapes and DVDs. Library losses are estimated in the tens of thousands of dollars. (AP)
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Librarians throughout Colorado suspect a prolific book bandit checked out and attempted to sell thousands of books, tapes and DVDs. Library losses are estimated in the tens of thousands of dollars.
"He stole from his neighbors. He stole from this community," said M. Celeste Jackson of the Denver Public Library.
Thomas Pilaar, 33, obtained seven library cards from the Denver Public Library by using different names, CBS4 investigator Brian Maass learned.
The library says Pilaar then checked out as many as 300 items on each card, selling many of them via the Web site Craigslist.com.
A woman who recently bought books from Pilaar through Craigslist noticed the library identification stamps and alerted authorities.
"It appears his intent was to sell 2,100 (items) from the Denver Library collection," said Jackson, who estimated the losses at about $35,000.
Denver is hardly alone. Librarians from Aurora, Arapahoe County and Douglas County say they too have been victimized in recent months by Pilaar. Arapahoe County library administrators said Pilaar obtained three different library cards and checked out between 250 and 300 items.
James Larue, Douglas County's head librarian, said Pilaar checked out more than 300 items from two Douglas County libraries, mostly DVDs and pricey coffee table books. He says the library system's losses stand at $11,000.
"At one point $11,000 worth of material was about to go overdue, did go overdue, and it turned out that all of us very quickly shared that information and decided, 'Oh, it looks like we have a problem with this patron, let's be careful about that,'" Larue said. "Just like any other system, it's possible to abuse it. And this guy, if he is who he claims to be, shows up at some of the libraries and developed very quickly a pattern of just not acting like an ordinary patron and checking out way too many DVDs."
The Denver District Attorney's Office is investigating the library thefts and is considering filing criminal charges against Pilaar. Prosecutors are asking anyone else who may have inadvertently bought library books via the Internet, or anyone who knows where these books might be, to contact the Denver D.A.'s office.
Authorites arrested Thomas Pilaar within the last week on an unrelated parole violation. He is being held without bond at the Denver County Jail. He declined a CBS4 request to discuss the library thefts.
For more news from this CBS station, visit cbs4denver.com.
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I'm a librarian, and was in charge of circulation at one time. We send the vastly overdue materials to a collection agency. It's no laughing matter.
When someone applies for a card at my library, we require either a photo ID, a utility bill, or a rent receipt showing that the applicant actually lives at the address on the registration application.
We have a cap on the number of individual items a person can check out. There's a flag in our computer system that pops up when someone tries to check out materials beyond the maximum. I wonder how the thief was able to check out hundreds of items on a single card.
Of course he didn't know how to cook the books and put a spin on it so he would never make a good neocon...
[Posted by neobrian at 02:22 PM : Aug 05, 2007]
make him read all the books he stole ... that should slow him down.
Then fine him and put him on parol with an ankle monitor that alerts the police when he comes within so many feet of a library.
Maybe this will stop others from doing the same thing.With almost everyone having access to the net now and the abundance of information you can find on the web,I foresee libraries will soon be a thing of the past.
So,What do we do with him ?He Pays each month,And works at libraries until he`s paid his restitution. Or ??