ODDLY ENOUGH | Police make arrest in case of ‘polite’ armed robber


ODDLY ENOUGH

Police make arrest in case of ‘polite’ armed robber

SEATTLE

Authorities say officers have made an arrest in a weekend convenience-store robbery that a south Seattle store owner found remarkable for the robber’s politeness.

The robber also pointed a gun at White Center Shell station owner John Henry.

Sgt. John Urquhart, of the King County Sheriff’s Office, says officers quickly identified a suspect from tips received after surveillance video of Saturday’s robbery “went viral.”

Henry offered the robber $40, but the man took all the money, about $300, apologizing and saying he had bills to pay and children to feed.

As he left, he said if he ever got back on his feet, he’d pay the money back.

Urquhart did not immediately identify the man arrested Monday afternoon. The spokesman says the 65-year-old man arrested at a residence near the robbery site has convictions for armed robbery and forgery.

84-year-old burglar in Hungary strikes again

BUDAPEST, Hungary

Hungary’s notorious octogenarian thief is not ready for retirement.

The 84-year-old woman, known as “Flying Gizi,” whose criminal record goes back to the 1950s, is in custody again for suspected theft, police said Tuesday.

Fejer County Police spokeswoman Agnes R. Szabo said the burglar, whose real name is Gizella Bodnar, is suspected of taking about $75 from a home in Bicske, a town in central Hungary.

Bodnar, who has been convicted of more than 20 crimes and has spent nearly 18 years in prison, got her nickname because she enjoyed taking domestic commercial flights after successful break-ins.

She eluded capture for years, as police never imagined that the cat burglar would travel so far to commit her crimes.

This time, she got only as far as the Bicske train station before the police found her and the missing cash she took from a wallet on the house’s living room table.

Bodnar, who began her criminal activities shortly after World War II, published an autobiography in 2007, claiming she became a kleptomaniac as the result of a youthful bout with meningitis.

Bodnar also insists she has a special sense about finding hidden jewelry and other valuables quickly in her victims’ homes.

Old age has not deterred her. In the past few years, she has been fined several times for petty thefts around the country.

Based in Budapest, she now favors the railroad, where Hungarian pensioners travel for free, over airlines.

“She’s a unique case in Hungarian criminology,” Szabo acknowledged.

Associated Press