Safety Warning - Be Vigilant
This article appeared in our local paper and I thought I would share it with you. Make your own mind up!
Comments
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They surely must have had a dog - why didn't it bark?
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They didn't stop at a Campsite, as stated, but at the Motorway Aire on the A10.
He stopped at around 5 – 6 pm at a Motorway Aire, as he knew about gassing and robberies it seems to me to be a poor decision to stay on high risk Motorway stops, when there must be some 'proper' campsites within a short drive – it doesn't go dark until about 10 pm giving ample time to find one.
Over €1000 in his wallet seems to be a fair bit of money to be carrying and no mention in this tale of terror about Credit cards, laptop or mobile phone stolen.
How did the robbers get in – unlocked door, open window and no mention of damage to either to gain entry?
Sorry mate, insurance claim seems likeliest – as the Police probably suspected when they only gave a reference number.
We wait for the next UK family to suffer a similar horror movie scenario as the word gets round about the 'unfortunate' couples event.
Perhaps stopping at a 'proper' campsite or Aire might reduce the risk, if it ever happened, and ensure we all get safely to our destinations abroad.
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Found the money without disturbing anything else???
Apologises to the couple if it's real but if I were handling a resultant claim I'd be asking loads of questions 😉. I'm surprised the newspaper ran the story without decent checks.
Edit why must they have had a dog? Some of us travel without!
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You would have thought with their medical backgrounds the first thing they would have done is to have taken themselves to a doctor/hospital for blood tests rather than wait until they got home? They may well have been robbed and I suspect a €1000 might not be out of the question, didn't we have a regular poster on here who said they always took much more than that with them to last the entire holiday? Being generous it could just be a case of FMS (False memory syndrome) where the information is factually incorrect but the victim strongly believes it to be true?
David
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I would be very surprised if that much cash is covered on a policy especially if it wasn't in a safe. Although we carry cash at home or away we don't have anywhere near that amount at any time during a trip. Free to use cards for cash and credit are widely available. Usual limit for cash in a vehicle is around £100.
Couldn't agree more re getting blood tests done - but they're not free abroad 😉
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I have £175 in my wallet at present - all in £5 notes. Not unduly bulky and especially with the new notes. Some 14 years ago I suppose I embarrassed OH I think. I was shopping for a new wallet in a leather goods shop. I had about £250 in my current wallet but was looking for a replacement. When I found some likely replacements I checked that they would hold the cash without trouble or bulking by transferring my cash. Probably tried half a dozen wallets until I found a suitable one. Bought 3 of the same. Been good wallets. Just started on the second one a couple of years ago.
I am not concerned at the prospect of having cash taken, It would be inconvenient but would not affect my life style. (Also keep £40 under the rear passenger foot mat. Need to remove coolbox first).
I have only once in my life taken cash from a 'hole in the wall' and that was when staying at Lidalia Site, Newcastleton, Scottish Borders. That was because the machine dispensed fivers and wallet was getting low. Usually I call in a bank either in UK or Europe (HSBC). I was glad to have plenty of cash on that trip, although sadly non in the car, as I had reversed into a guys motorbike and knocked it off the stand. I was able to get him to phone a dealership and get the cost of replacement parts, and paid out cash and some for his trouble. Saved a lot of faffing. After being originally very upset (I sent him for a walk round the block to calm down whilst his mate stayed with me so I didn't do a runner) he later treated me and OH to coffee and cake with is pillion rider. Hence I was short on cash!
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I don't believe it either, and in a post on another forum, the original posters asks:
Would people make a story up like this?
Would they prick their arms and bruise them just to get 1K of insurance money?Well yes, they probably would (especially if one was an ex-nurse and they thought they could get away with it).
Here's what I posted in reply - and will do to every such poster who asks a similar question:
Yes, people do make up this sort of stuff just to get the insurance money.......... our very nice caravanning neighbours did exactly that many years ago. They are lovely people, and we shared caravanning stories with them about our hoidays over several years. When they returned one time from holiday they told us that they had had a great time, lovely holiday, great campsites.......! So we were very surprised to read a letter in a Caravanning magazine alleging that they were gassed and robbed near Bordeaux, and that money, wallets, laptops, cameras, and some antique paintings (!!!) plus a substantial amount in cash which was a deposit on their planned French house, had been stolen. They hadn't mentioned any of this to us when talking about their holiday, so we thought it was a bit odd.
Obviously with such a large insurance claim the details were checked, and eventually they were prosecuted for insurance fraud, both by their travel insurers and their household insurance. They had tried to claim from each for the 'stolen' items, they had never bought the large amount of euros that they alleged, nor could they prove ownership of other items. They were sent to prison! To speak to them, and to live next door but one to them, you would never consider that they would do 'that sort of thing' but they did.
I reckon at any one time, OH and I would be very lucky to have more than fifty euros in cash between us. Years ago we used to buy euros before setting off, and hide them in a variety of places. These days we use our bank cards just as we would at home, our credit cards just as we would at home, and draw out a very minimal amount of cash at any convenient ATM - perhaps enough for the odd coffees, market day shopping, etc. I'm surprised that these days insurers will insure the amounts of cash people are saying they carry. I can understand it in areas when ATM's are thin on the ground, but in most of Europe.................??
PS - We rarely carry much cash in this country either.3 -
If it is a scam (which I too tend to think it is) they've got bottle (or similar) to actually report it to a newspaper and have their photos taken and published in a large city publication for all to see. It would be good to hear any followup.
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To try and stay on topic David it is surprising that there was no mention of laptops, tablets/I pads, camera, cards, passports etc going missing.
With regard to the motorcycle I really felt for the lad. It was pretty much a classic Kawasaki and he had stripped it down completely and rebuilt and it was his first trip out with his mate as pillion since the rebuild. At first he was jumping up and down but in no way aggressive. I put my arm around his shoulder and suggested he walked around the block and that his mate would stay with me. The poor guy was just understandably gutted. I insisted that he checked every inch for damage and got prices for all from a main dealer. I think the fact that as an ex-biker I was getting on well with his mate helped. He was happy that I paid about £40 over the parts for his trouble, I would happily have paid a little more but had emptied my wallet having just done some local shopping as well. .
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We rarely carry much cash in this country either.
I have no worries about carrying money Val. Admittedly on our tours mine is split between Wallet, car and caravan and so unlikely to loose more than £250 which would not be life changing.
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Some of the other stories in this publication appear to be short on veracity.
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Totally ridiculous make-believe. Why would robbers hang around to inject an anaesthetic? From personal experience I know that burglars can ransack a Caravan in a few seconds. It would take longer to administer the injections than to grab valuables.
Many thousands of people (including yours truly) use autoroute aires to sleep overnight including lorry drivers. They are a lot safer than many camper aires I have seen located next to busy towns.
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i must be mad, weve done 16 weeks in France/Spain over two trips this year....are we asking for trouble?
of course, we dont stop on motorway aires (why would anyone do this despite this being the only place where these 'horrific' events ever 'occur'...)....
im afraid i (and many other 'proper aires' users) would disagree with Hitch on this one....give me a quiet town aire (or even a town/village public car park) over a busy morotway aire with ready made fast exit for those wishing to try their luck..
nor do we take vast sums of money, and like AD and many more, we dont need too much cash, withdrawing it from cashpoints as required and only for stuff where we cant use a card....
if the title of the thread suggests being 'vigilant' then Id suggest not sleeping on a motorway services in Fance, spain, UK or anywhere.
only my opinion but i prefer an aire where folk arrive, stay the night (quietly) and leave in the morning, not one where traffic is coming and going all night long...and fast getaways are the norm.
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nor do we take vast sums of money, and like AD and many more, we dont need too much cash, withdrawing it from cashpoints as required and only for stuff where we cant use a card....
Whether you take a lot of cash or very little will not affect the likelihood of being broken into of course. The thief won't know.
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