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TPP27
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 6:42 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/stories.nsf/missouristatenews/story/2F37838AFD546C9A8625736D000B589F?OpenDocument


52? doughnut may cost man 30 years to life
By Todd C. Frankel — ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH


10/07/2007

FARMINGTON, MO. — Shoplifters at Country Mart tend to favor cold medicines and packaged meats. They used to steal cigarettes, too, until tobacco was moved behind the counter. But the doughnuts were never a target for thieves.

Country Mart's doughnuts — fried fresh daily in the store — sell for just 52 cents each. That is why the "shoplifters will be prosecuted" signs are displayed in aisle 4 with the pricey pain and allergy pills, and not in aisle 5 beside the glass doughnut case with its tiger tails, jelly-filleds and eclairs.

Then one man's sweet tooth got the better of him. He stole a doughnut. A single doughnut.

Authorities called it strong-arm robbery. The "doughnut man," as the suspect is now known, faces five to 15 years in prison for his crime. And Farmington, a town of 14,000 people about 70 miles south of St. Louis, has been buzzing about it ever since.Advertisement

"That someone would take just a single doughnut, not something very expensive or extravagant, that's unique," supermarket assistant manager Gary Komar said, smiling.

Scott A. Masters, 41, is accused of shoplifting the pastry and pushing a store worker who tried to stop him. The worker was unhurt. But with that shove, his shoplifting turned into a strong-arm robbery. Masters, who appeared in court Friday, is stunned. The prosecutor shows no signs of backing down. In fact, because Masters has a prior record, he could get a sentence of 30 years to life.

Lanell Gibbs was there the day of the doughnut heist.

"That was a first," Gibbs, 68, said.

She has worked for 11 years as a cashier at Country Mart, a regional supermarket chain. Next to her register, she keeps a clipping from the local newspaper about the doughnut man's case. He was indicted just last month, although the theft took place in December. She likes to show the article to customers as she recounts the story.

It was about 11 a.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 6. The store was in a lull. Gibbs, who could see the doughnut case from her station, said she saw Masters slip the doughnut into the pocket of his hooded sweatshirt.

She turned to a co-worker and said, "I saw him take a doughnut. Let's see if he pays for it."

They watched Masters as he strolled past the seven green checkout lanes and out a side door between the customer service desk and the pharmacy, passing under a giant "Country Mart Thanks You" sign.

Gibbs' co-worker followed Masters into the parking lot. The co-worker, a 54-year-old woman, demanded that Masters come inside, according to the police report. He offered to give the doughnut back. She declined and grabbed his arm.

That is when Masters allegedly delivered "a backhanded punch to the chest" and took off running, police said.

"That made her mad," Gibbs recalled.

The woman, who was uninjured, jumped in her car and called police as she chased Masters. He was arrested minutes later.

Farmington Police Chief Rick Baker said the two incidents taken separately equaled two misdemeanors: shoplifting and minor third-degree assault. Together, they make for second-degree robbery, a class B felony, defined in state law as forcibly stealing property. The amount of force and the amount of property does not matter.

"It's not the doughnut," Baker said. "It's the assault."

Masters is a small man, wiry, about 5-foot-6, with short-cropped hair, a graying goatee and hound-dog eyes. He is a "frequent flier" at the St. Francois County detention center.

"Yeah, Scotty is well known," said Deputy Sheriff Dennis Smith, reviewing Masters' criminal history.

Masters, who lives in the nearby town of Park Hills, has been arrested more than a dozen times: for being drunk, for shoplifting, for missed court dates, for marijuana possession. He spent most of the 1990s and a stretch from 2000 to 2004 in state prison for the felonies of torching a car to collect insurance and possessing methamphetamine ingredients.

In a jailhouse interview last week, Masters admitted he had taken the doughnut. Masters said he had been taking a break from his roofing job when he stopped into Country Mart. He was hungry. He fled the scene, but he said he did not lay a hand on the woman.

"Strong-arm robbery? Over a doughnut? That's impossible," Masters said, exasperated. "I've never had a violent crime in my life. And there's no way I would've pushed a woman over a doughnut."

After his arrest, he forgot all about the case. He assumed it had been dismissed. He spent the summer in jail on outstanding warrants. Just before he was to get out, he was indicted Sept. 14 in the doughnut case. His bail was set at $25,000 — well beyond his means.

Masters briefly appeared in court Friday. His case was continued until next month. He is shaken by the possibility of a third felony conviction. A prosecutor could pursue an enhanced sentence. As a persistent offender, Masters could face a murderer's term.

"I can't believe this crap," Masters said.

A grand jury agreed with police on the strong-arm robbery charge. County Prosecutor Wendy Wexler Horn said that it was "way too early to know how it is going to play out" but that the charge seemed appropriate given the allegations. She was aware that some people seemed shocked by the case.

"People are missing the point," Horn said. "It is not about the doughnut."

But to many people here, it is all about the doughnut.

Still, for all the attention paid to the doughnut incident, one detail may never emerge: the kind of doughnut Masters stole.

Country Mart stocks everything from simple glazed ring doughnuts to gooey butter squares to filled cream horns and danishes. But the police report makes no mention of the doughnut style. Gibbs said she could not recall it. Other workers, too, drew a blank.

Even Masters, sitting in jail with only time to think, said he could not remember. It is a detail that seems lost to history.

And Masters never got a chance to enjoy that fateful doughnut.

He said he threw it to the ground when he fled.

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Two-One
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 6:48 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Wow...Are system is so fucked up. So worried about eh fucking 52 cent doughnut.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 7:21 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

People and system are really fucked. 52 cents wow he really put a dent in there stock market. And damn man thats ripping the store off a shit load of money. 52 cents wow.
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PostPosted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 7:30 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

This is pretty old now, but i'm still going to use the same comment. Its not the fact that he stole the donut, as it is he had a prior record to begin with. So its like a snowball effect. Obviously he isn't the type of chap ya want living in society, so he deserves some jail time. Maybe it'll smarten him up a bit.

Obviously if this was a first offense, and buddy got 30 years for it, that'd be wrong, but its not his first brush with the law.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 12, 2007 8:07 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

(DD)JiffyWhip wrote:
This is pretty old now, but i'm still going to use the same comment. Its not the fact that he stole the donut, as it is he had a prior record to begin with. So its like a snowball effect. Obviously he isn't the type of chap ya want living in society, so he deserves some jail time. Maybe it'll smarten him up a bit.

Obviously if this was a first offense, and buddy got 30 years for it, that'd be wrong, but its not his first brush with the law.


True.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 11:45 am Reply with quoteBack to top

shiroregano wrote:
(DD)JiffyWhip wrote:
This is pretty old now, but i'm still going to use the same comment. Its not the fact that he stole the donut, as it is he had a prior record to begin with. So its like a snowball effect. Obviously he isn't the type of chap ya want living in society, so he deserves some jail time. Maybe it'll smarten him up a bit.

Obviously if this was a first offense, and buddy got 30 years for it, that'd be wrong, but its not his first brush with the law.


True.


Still seems rather extreme .... Doctors who malpratice get less time then this!

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 1:18 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

some guy that went to get some petrol for £20. as he was in hurry he didn't realise that the petrol meter went to £20.15 so he quickly went to the counter paid a £20 note and drove off. week later he had to go court then was fined and had to do some community service. Confused

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 15, 2007 2:47 pm Reply with quoteBack to top

Doctors who malpractice generally don't do it on purpose either... This guy has made a decision to break the law... In multiple situations, and thus it warrants a stepper punishment then a first time offender would receive.

Its all about owning up and accepting responsibility. I don't agree that he should get 30 years over stealing a donut, but I am saying that he made his own bed, and now he's going to have to lie in it. I don't feel sorry for people who do things to themselves.

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