Starbucks Cashier Gets Busted for Stealing Customer’s Credit Card Information
Seconds later she then approaches the the window where the teenage cashier greets her.
The unidentified employee even admitted to the wrongdoing.
A California woman confronted a Starbucks employee who allegedly stole her credit card information and used it on a $200 spending spree.
Ms Martinez told the young woman she had filed a police report and meant to press charges. She explained what was about to happen and let it be known that a confrontation was about to occur.
As Martinez chewed out the worker, she said that the Ralph’s store in the 20100 block of Pioneer Boulevard caught the employee on camera using the card’s information.
She said: ‘So we got you on camera yesterday at Ralph’s for $212, so just know that the cops are coming up here.
Her next stop was back to the Starbucks.
Becerra doesn’t stop there, though. I nearly feel bad for the girl, but she robbed the wrong person.
“Are you sorry you’re about to lose your f– job ’cause f– corporate knows?” That you took f**king money from me and my kids? “What are you sorry about?”
Credit card and bank information theft constitutes about 85% of all identity theft cases in the U.S.in 2012, according to data reported by the Bureau of Justice Statistics. That you took _ing money from me and my kids? I’m sorry that this is inconvenient for you”, the girl said, adding: “I’m so sorry, ma’am. For good measure, she swears on her life that lightning should strike her down if she is lying. I really do go to school. “I’m 19. I play soccer”, the worker says. She noticed the cashier right away since she goes there regularly.
The cashier pleads with the woman to not press charges and goes on to offer the woman $250.
Starbucks may be a popular coffee joint choice, but it might not be so popular in the near future, after a credit card fraud incident involving a particular Starbucks employee has come to light.
Ms Martinez, from Victoriaville in California, then reveals she is going to confront the cashier insisting: “We’re gonna get even, that’s what we’re gonna do”. A few days later, an unauthorized $212 transaction was made from her account.
“You come to Starbucks to get coffee, not to get robbed”, Elizabeth Becerra said in a video posted on her Facebook page.
After asking the cashier how she copied the card, the employee admits that she wrote down the card numbers.