Scottish Honor Box Heist Crime of the Century for Wee Town

Jun 18, 2015

The Scottish honor box heist in the tiny island town of Canna has all 20 of its residents eyeing each other with a wee bit of suspicion now. 

The brazen burglary of the hamlet’s general store this month is the first serious crime that’s happened there since someone stole a plate from the church in the early 1960s.

In fact, it could even close the shop down because it’s been all but wiped out of supplies as a result.

Hundreds of dollars worth of goods were pilfered from the community’s only retail outlet by petty thieves, including candy, coffee, toiletries, hand-knit hats, and money from the honor box.

The store has no full time clerk on duty or regular hours, but instead remains open 24/7, with payment made through an honor system -- customers are trusted to write a list of their purchases and leave exact cash for them.

In an isolated community that has roughly two-dozen citizens at any given time and no police force, that method of self serve has worked just swimmingly for decades … until last Friday night.

Locals haven’t a clue who the cheeky thugs might be, but investigators from the mainland think the timing of the Scottish honor box heist with the arrival in Canna of a small fishing vessel might not be just a coincidence.

The suspect boat had been docked for hours at a pier near the general store on the night it was robbed.

@EponymousRox

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