Doris Payne is a woman whose life would make a great movie. In fact, there are rumors that her life is going to made into a movie. Seemingly sweet, charming and rich, Doris Payne is a woman that no one would suspect of wrongdoing. That fact has kept her in the international jewel thief business for roughly 50 years.
Doris Payne was raised in West Virginia. She was the youngest of six children born to a poor coal miner and a housewife. Growing up, she learned that being a black woman, or girl at the time, she did not draw the type of attention that a well-to-do white woman did. In other words, clerks did not pay enough attention to her to notice if she was stealing from them or not. She did not use this knowledge until she realized something else. Clerks paid her the right kind of attention if she dressed like a rich black woman. Money talked and, if she pretended she had it, she could get clerks at jewelry stores to make every effort to impress her. If she played her cards right, she could wow them with her charm and well-to-do looks and then walk right out of the store with expensive jewelry - typically diamond rings.
After Doris Payne graduated high school, she was pregnant, working at a nursing home and trying to help her mother after her parents' divorce. She already knew her con; she just had to put it into action. Once she did, she became a prolific thief, stealing rings that were worth tens of thousands of dollars and selling them for a fraction of the retail value. She never went back to having an honest vocation again.
Interpol has reportedly been on to Doris Payne since the 1970s. She has allegedly had as many as 20 identities, at least five with their own social security numbers. She has worked in several of the United States and countries abroad. She has also been arrested countless times and has been jailed at least six times. She is currently 80-years-old and serving a five-year prison sentence.
On January 1, 2010, Doris Payne stole a diamond ring worth 9,000 dollars from a department store. As usual, she dressed like a rich woman and conned the clerk into showing her numerous pieces. She then simply walked out of the store with the ring. She was caught and in February of 2011, she was sentenced to five years in prison for the theft. She will be 85 when she gets out. Authorities believe that she will not stop stealing until she is dead. It looks like they are right.
As much of a career criminal as Doris Payne is, she is not a violent woman. All of her cons have simply been cons and thefts. She has never used violence to steal. That is probably what has kept her from serving longer jail sentences. Her crimes appear to be compulsory. It may be that she is simply addicted to the con. In that case, she is not a very bad person. She is just a person who makes very bad choices.
Sources
ABC News, International Jewel Thief, 80, Sentenced to 5 Years, retrieved 5/21/11, abcnews.go.com/Blotter/international-jewel-theif-doris-payne-80-sentenced-years/story?id=12883316
MSNBC, 75-Year-Old Jewel Thief Looks Back, retrieved 5/21/11, msnbc.com/id/10072306/print/i/displaymode/1098
Doris Payne was raised in West Virginia. She was the youngest of six children born to a poor coal miner and a housewife. Growing up, she learned that being a black woman, or girl at the time, she did not draw the type of attention that a well-to-do white woman did. In other words, clerks did not pay enough attention to her to notice if she was stealing from them or not. She did not use this knowledge until she realized something else. Clerks paid her the right kind of attention if she dressed like a rich black woman. Money talked and, if she pretended she had it, she could get clerks at jewelry stores to make every effort to impress her. If she played her cards right, she could wow them with her charm and well-to-do looks and then walk right out of the store with expensive jewelry - typically diamond rings.
After Doris Payne graduated high school, she was pregnant, working at a nursing home and trying to help her mother after her parents' divorce. She already knew her con; she just had to put it into action. Once she did, she became a prolific thief, stealing rings that were worth tens of thousands of dollars and selling them for a fraction of the retail value. She never went back to having an honest vocation again.
Interpol has reportedly been on to Doris Payne since the 1970s. She has allegedly had as many as 20 identities, at least five with their own social security numbers. She has worked in several of the United States and countries abroad. She has also been arrested countless times and has been jailed at least six times. She is currently 80-years-old and serving a five-year prison sentence.
On January 1, 2010, Doris Payne stole a diamond ring worth 9,000 dollars from a department store. As usual, she dressed like a rich woman and conned the clerk into showing her numerous pieces. She then simply walked out of the store with the ring. She was caught and in February of 2011, she was sentenced to five years in prison for the theft. She will be 85 when she gets out. Authorities believe that she will not stop stealing until she is dead. It looks like they are right.
As much of a career criminal as Doris Payne is, she is not a violent woman. All of her cons have simply been cons and thefts. She has never used violence to steal. That is probably what has kept her from serving longer jail sentences. Her crimes appear to be compulsory. It may be that she is simply addicted to the con. In that case, she is not a very bad person. She is just a person who makes very bad choices.
Sources
ABC News, International Jewel Thief, 80, Sentenced to 5 Years, retrieved 5/21/11, abcnews.go.com/Blotter/international-jewel-theif-doris-payne-80-sentenced-years/story?id=12883316
MSNBC, 75-Year-Old Jewel Thief Looks Back, retrieved 5/21/11, msnbc.com/id/10072306/print/i/displaymode/1098
Published by Shelly Barclay
Shelly Barclay writes on a variety of topics from animal facts to mysteries in history. Her main focus is military and political history. She is the Boston History Examiner, Military History Examiner and the... View profile
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5 Comments
Post a CommentYou write such fascinating things...:) You're like my favorite teacher!
I'd love to see her in action to see how she gets away with it! She must be quite charming.
LOL my pet name for my wife is "Doris" too!
Love this... :o)
sticky fingers