Port Alberni teen clerk puts down hapless robbery attempt - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 04:34 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Port Alberni teen clerk puts down hapless robbery attempt

A hapless Port Alberni criminal's would-be robbery was foiled when her plastic pistol was challenged by the teenage clerk in a smoothie shop.

Hapless Port Alberni thief left resum near crime scene and went on to steal costume jewellery

Toy guns like this one may look fake, but they will still earn a robber jail time if used in the commission of a criminal offence.

Tara Patricia Miller's first mistake was trying to rob a Port Albernismoothie store with a toy gun.

Writing a hold-up note on her resum wasn't such a hot idea either.

"At the risk of some understatement, those actions might be described as ill-considered," Judge Ted Gouge wrote in sentencing the 28-year-old.

Gouge gaveMiller a total of 111 days fora crime spree that included the foiled robbery of the smoothie store in July 2014 and culminated in the theft of $5.97 worth of costume jewellery from Walmartin May 2015.

'It kind of looked a little bit fake'

According to the reasons for judgement, Miller entered the smoothie store wearing large, dark sunglasses and hair extensions.

"She had in her hand a plastic toy pistol," Gouge wrote.

She ordered a smoothie and gave the teenage cashier a note which read:

'BE QUIET

SLOWLY

GIVE ME ALL THE MONEY

B4 I SHOOT EVERYONE.'

MahoNakamura was working the till. The 15-year-old says she was "kind of shocked." But then she took a closer look at the weapon.

"In a way, it kind of looked a little bit fake," she said by phone. "So then I stood there telling her, 'No.'"

That's when Nakamura's mother emerged from the kitchen.Abrief altercation ensued.

"Ms. Miller fled the scene, taking the 'gun' and the note with her," Gouge wrote.

Police later found the note in a trash bin: "the obverse of the documentbore Ms. Miller's typewritten curriculum vitae."

"It was written on aresum, and I was wondering: 'What is she doing?'," said Nakamura.

"There was a picture and it had her name, her address and her work skills."

That was last July. In May, while on bail and awaiting sentencing, Miller stole the costume jewellery.

Despite the hapless nature of her offences, Crown counsel still sought a two-year attempted robberysentence for the mother of two, who struggles with cocaine abuse.

Gouged noted the trauma that can result in victims with the use of a real firearm or reasonable facsimile.

"There was no such risk in this case," he wrote.

"Neither the cashier nor the owner thought for a moment that the object in Ms. Miller's hand was anything other than a toy."

Miller was released as she had already spent the length of her sentence in pre-trial custody. She was also given three years probation.