TOP DOCTORS

Click here for our 2009 list, with 283 Denver doctors in 83 medical specialties. It's our biggest, most comprehensive Top Docs feature yet.

NEWSLETTERS

Sign up for 5280's weekly e-newsletters. Want the latest restaurant scoop? The latest happenings around town? Access to exclusive events and deals just for 5280 readers? Sign up today for our great 5280 email newsletters and you'll be in the know all week long.

TALK TO 5280

Tell us about it. Give us your restaurant feedback or submit your event for our online and printed calendar.

JOBS

Find out more.

A Pickpocket’s Heyday (Or How I Took Down the Guy Who Stole My Wallet at the DNC)

I don’t think of myself as a violent person. I’ve never been in a fight and tend to become uncomfortable around unsanctioned physical confrontations. But a funny thing happened on the way to an immigration panel on Monday that changed me.

This story starts at the bar of Osteria Marco, where I stopped for a quick lunch. Not long after I sat down, two shady characters pulled up on the bar stools next to me. The pony-tailed man sitting nearest me (let’s call him Dick) said he and his Heineken-drinking pal were from New York, in town for the convention.

I got up to find a quiet area to make a phone call, and when I returned, Dick and his buddy were gone.

We ate quickly, and when I reached into my bag, which had been unthinkingly placed on the stool between Dick and myself, to grab my wallet, it was gone. At first I wasn’t entirely sure that I hadn’t forgotten it at home. A quick call to my bank confirmed the card had been used at Virgin Megastore and the Sunglass Hut on the 16th Street Mall.

About $500 in all had been charged in a matter of about 30 minutes, but I was also carting $160 cash. And my driver’s license, which I’d need to show with my DNC credential to enter the convention and the week’s events, was gone.

The week that I’d been so geeked out about was just starting, and had been compromised by two stinky creeps posing as New York delegates, the only possible suspects. I was livid.

Seeing red, I headed for the Mall, hoping Virgin would have the guys on tape; the customer service rep at my bank told me that would help when filing the police report. Just a few blocks down the Mall, I ran into a packed group of anti-abortion protesters lined by geared-up policed officers. Annoyed, I took a quick right down Welton at about the same time that I answered a phone call from my boyfriend. I didn’t have a chance to say more than “hello” before I looked toward the sidewalk ahead.

And there was Dick, walking leisurely toward me, swinging his bag of goodies from Virgin.

(The next moments passed rapidly, but they have been corroborated by witnesses, including cops and security, who now think I’m kind of a badass.)

The first instinct was to yell. “You! … Give me my wallet back!”

The second instinct was to hit. I ripped the Virgin bag out of his hands and swung it at his mid-section a few times.

“Give me my wallet, asshole.”

I balled up a small fist and launched it at his face.

“Ow. Ouch!”

Still no wallet.

I grabbed at his T-shirt, right near his collarbone, and ripped, catching a little bit of flesh in the process.

“Ouch. Stop it!” he complained.

I switched back to the yelling, thinking a steady stream of “Help!” might get some attention. He reached into his pocket, threw a handful of cards to the ground, including my license, and started to run toward the Mall. Two women chased him, but the security officers on the corners of the surrounding blocks had also caught on. He was busted.

It took a little more than four hours to file reports with two agencies (DNC-hired security and the Denver police, all of whom were incredibly friendly and extremely apologetic for the time-suck), but I got my cards back. Even my wallet and all my cash.

Dick, a Denver shelter resident, tried to say that I randomly attacked him, but he’d been on a DNC picket-pocket spree, collecting wallets across the city. As the security officers told me, big events like this are a heyday for thieves, some of whom will potentially make out with as much as $10,000 before the convention is over.

Most of Dicks’ victims will not get their cash back (hopefully their card companies, like mine, will reimburse them), but they can rest somewhat assured. Dick will soon run out of things to pick in his jail cell, though I may have to go to court to make his felony charges stick. I think I can handle that.

I’ll just have to keep my hands to myself.

Share or Bookmark This Post:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Google Bookmarks
  • TwitThis

Posted 8/27/2008 at 2:25 pm by Vanessa Martinez
DNC :: Permalink :: Comments (5)

5 Responses to “A Pickpocket’s Heyday (Or How I Took Down the Guy Who Stole My Wallet at the DNC)”

  1. Kate says:

    5280 fights crime!!

  2. Maassive says:

    Rock on, VM. My editor told me to buy you a drink if I run into you. To claim said drink, just contact me through my blog. – Dave Maass

  3. Vanessa Martinez says:

    And we both know we should not let that editor down! I’ll be claiming that drink.

  4. Adam hdoak says:

    Vanessa,

    First off, I would like to say from what I hear you have an excellent right cross. Second, I was the bartender that day. I also got looked at when I called them F-ing D-Bag and Shady M-Er-F-Er’s, sorry about yelling abusive hyphens, that doesn’t detract from the fact that I believed you. I know that, [expletives deleted],got all he deserved. Vanessa that is a great story. I owe you a drink at Marco as soon as you come in. I feel terrible.

    P.S. I Seriously feel awful that happened on my watch.

    Why are the homeless buying virgin mega store albums, where do they plug in the dvd player?.

    -Adam Hodak-

Leave a Reply

Bad Behavior has blocked 3619 access attempts in the last 7 days.

ADVERTISING


Copyright 2005 5280 Publishing, Inc. | Advertising | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Subscriber Care | Download Flash | Sitemap | Search