![]() ![]() She quickly grabs a snow shovel off Welles' front porch, then goes back to her car to shovel it out. In a video that he's pieced together, you can see a woman walking her dog outside, checking out her snow-covered car. He's got a huge setup of security cameras around his house, and they caught quite the drama outside his Humboldt Park residence during the height of the blizzard.įirst, somebody took his snow shovel. When he took the bait, she says she tipped off bounty hunters to capture him.ĭon't mess with David Welles, because it's his business. Cortes figured Goins set up another business in Florida under another name.Ĭortes used the Facebook page to get control back, offering to meet him at the Fort Lauderdale airport. Goins flirted with “Tatiana” for days, making offers to meet her and sending pictures of himself holding wads of cash. “I sent him a friend request, and he accepted within two minutes,” Cortez said. “Tatiana” described herself as a model and an exotic dancer. The alluring fictitious decoy was named Tatiana La Coneja, which is Spanish for “The Rabbit.” She was invented by Cortes, who assembled composites of sexy, come-hither poses of women from Puerto Rico. “Even though he was gone, I knew he was still on Facebook, under his own name,” Cortes said. “He owes me $3,500 in unpaid wages,” said Victoria Laird Cortes, who worked for one of Goins' debt collection services. One of Goins' former employees told KIRO 7 that, months after he disappeared from Snohomish County, she lured him out of hiding by using a sexy decoy on Facebook. When wanted fugitive Randall Goins was being hauled through Seatac airport by Bounty Hunters live on KIRO 7 W, Goins may have wondered how they found him hiding out in Florida. Roy Simpson said several calls to police and to Venter had named the same man as the possible thief, and he was now being sought by police. So, when the photographer offered pictures of the thief in action it cost Venter nothing to mount the images on four city billboards with following inscription: "Who is this Thief? Reward $500." The photographer knew the pillaged sign belonged to Mark Venter, who runs OTW Advertising, one of New Zealand's oldest billboard companies. The unidentified thief was photographed by a suspicious onlooker as he uncoupled 15 electrical transformers used to boost the lighting on a billboard in Auckland. The thief was caught on camera stealing expensive equipment, but he'd picked the wrong target – because now the billboard company he was stealing from has plastered his image around Aukland, New Zealand's largest city, seeking his capture. The number one rule of burglary is " don't get yourself photographed." Meanwhile, another important rule is "don't make an enemy of someone who owns billboards all around your city." Unfortunately for one New Zealand thief, he broke both those rules. ![]()
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