- Hunting Britain’s Parcel Thieves: Dispatches airs on Channel 4 on Friday at 8pm
Britain’s £650million-a-year parcel theft epidemic has been uncovered days before Christmas as a criminal was filmed unboxing stolen goods from kettles to heaters.
The brazen thief called ‘Jay’ bragged of using violence as an ‘element of surprise’ to target unsuspecting delivery drivers and said he felt ‘like a kid’ when opening goods.
He also claimed he now targets parcels as a ‘side hustle’ near the White City estate in West London because they are so easy to steal and potentially very lucrative.
Jay showed Channel 4 reporter Tir Dhondy some of the parcels still in their boxes including a Russell Hobbs slow cooker, Daewoo plastic kettle and 2kw fan heater.
In the clip, Tir asks Jay: ‘Have you any idea what’s inside them?’ He replies: ‘Not yet, but we’re gonna find out.’ Jay then confirms most of the parcels were on a doorstep.
When he opens a box of cleaning products, he says: ‘In this game you take what you can get your hands on. We’ll see what else we’ve got, we might get something better.’
He then finds a heater and a kettle within the next box, saying: ‘That will come in handy for someone.’ Tir asks: ‘How do you feel when you’re unboxing the packages?’
Jay replies: ‘Like a kid, I can’t wait.’ He is then asked by Tir: ‘Is it almost like opening a birthday present?’ Jay agrees with her, before going on to open more boxes.
A parcel thief called ‘Jay’ talks about his tactics at the White City estate in West London
Jay points to a Daewoo plastic kettle in a box which is among the stolen items he is handling
Jay (right) opens the boxes while speaking to journalist Tir Dhondy (left) for the documentary
Jay tells the programme that he feels ‘like a kid’ when he is unboxing the stolen items
The footage was shared with the Daily Mail ahead a Dispatches documentary airing at 8pm tomorrow which reveals a parcel is stolen every seven seconds in Britain.
The crime is now costing the UK an estimated £650million a year, with opportunistic thieves stealing from doorsteps and organised gangs using getaway cars with false numberplates and sophisticated tactics to hijack delivery vans in broad daylight.
Jay, who is wearing a Guy Fawkes mask throughout the episode, explains how he tracks and follows delivery drivers and has used the threat of violence.
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He also takes Tir to a busy area he says he uses to target delivery vans and shows her how to follow unsuspecting delivery drivers as they deliver parcels.
Tir asks him: ‘Do you ever use violence?’ He replies: ‘I can’t really answer that. If I had to, then yeah, what?’
She says: ‘Are there times where you have to?’ Jay responds: ‘Yeah.’
When Tir asks: ‘What’s that, like a knife or…’, he says: ‘I can’t really say too much. Element of surprise, you know, when you’re violent and you catch people off guard.
‘So it’s a lot easier, but at the same time, it’s a lot more commotion because it’s violence. If you can get away with doing something quietly, so be it.’
She asks him: ‘Do you want to do that, do you think?’ And he replies: ‘Who does and who doesn’t? You do what you do to get the reward. Y’know. You’ve got to risk it, if you really want to get it, you risk it.’
Tir also meets someone who claims to be a ‘fence’ – a criminal who buys and sells stolen parcels. He claims that the high-value items he handles are shipped out of the UK through established criminal networks, ending up in Africa.
‘Jay’ says he uses violence as an ‘element of surprise’ to target unsuspecting delivery drivers
Channel 4 reporter Tir Dhondy investigates parcel thieves in the new Dispatches documentary
A parcel thief is shown in action on a doorstep last month, caught on a Ring doorbell camera
Footage of another parcel thief in action which is shown as part of the Channel 4 documentary
The programme also features access to a Metropolitan Police Flying Squad operation tackling the crime.
Tir joins officers involved in Operation Soslink, which aims to tackle gangs targeting delivery vans in the capital, and watches police respond to two reports of vans being targeted by criminals.
The programme also includes new footage shared by the Met of the tactics used by an organised parcel theft gang last year on delivery drivers in broad daylight.
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The gang pleaded guilty last month to a series of thefts and robberies and are awaiting sentence. Over the past two years, the Flying Squad says it has identified 20 organised parcel theft gangs and made 48 arrests.
Detective Chief Inspector Laura Hillier says: ‘We’re seeing a level of sophistication, organization and gangs getting involved and using violence.
‘They’re going with a precondition that they’re going to either rob or steal items from the couriers. It’s brazen what they do – it’s really got a sophisticated nature to it.’
The documentary additionally shows the Dispatches team placing seven parcels containing secret tracking devices on doorsteps across London – five of which are stolen.
Expensive North Face jackets are in some packages and speaker systems are in others. All of the items are rigged with hidden high-tech trackers.
Five of the parcels are stolen, with doorbell cameras capturing two of the thieves in the act. Using tracking software, the team then follow the parcels to several blocks of flats across South and East London.
Amazon delivery driver Claudiu Carol Kondor (left) was killed while trying to stop thief Mark Ross (right) stealing his van in Leeds in August 2024
One parcel containing a set of speakers worth more than £150 appears to end up at a shop in Harlesden, North West London – although Tir cannot find it when she visits.
Dispatches also look at the toll parcel theft is having on delivery drivers, speaking to one courier whose van was stolen while he was delivering a package just yards away.
The film also reports on the murder of Amazon delivery driver Claudiu Carol Kondor, who was killed while trying to stop a thief stealing his van in August 2024.
Mr Kondor, 42, was delivering parcels in Leeds when Mark Ross climbed into his van and started to drive away.
Mr Kondor clung onto the vehicle for half-a-mile as the defendant hit speeds of up to 60mph and swerved from side to side before hitting two parked cars, all in an effort to knock him from the van.
Mr Kondor died from head and chest injuries from the second crash. Ross was later jailed at Leeds Crown Court for a minimum term of 30 years.
Hunting Britain’s Parcel Thieves: Dispatches airs on Channel 4 on Friday at 8pm
