Crosswords1 min ago
Items stolen from my luggage!
Hi all,
I have jsut returned from a weekend in Prague (which was great by the way) and found that some dirty little b'stard has been into my luggage and stolen 200 cigarettes and a brand new bottle of aftershave!
Does anyone know if i can receive compensation for this from the airline etc and or who to complain to?
in all honesty i'm not that fussed about the monetary element, i'd much prefer the airline to catch the little buggers so this kind of thing stopped happening.
I have jsut returned from a weekend in Prague (which was great by the way) and found that some dirty little b'stard has been into my luggage and stolen 200 cigarettes and a brand new bottle of aftershave!
Does anyone know if i can receive compensation for this from the airline etc and or who to complain to?
in all honesty i'm not that fussed about the monetary element, i'd much prefer the airline to catch the little buggers so this kind of thing stopped happening.
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That's what I was going to ask, wasn't your case padlocked? You can certainly claim if the case was damaged to steal the stuff, but you need to report it at the airport as soon as you collected the bag. Worth trying your travel insurance though, but it'll be hard to prove, only your word for it (sorry) if your stuff was in an unlocked bag.
Makes no difference if you have a lock for your suitcase or not. The official line is that a lock stops your suitcase from opening accidently while it is in transit. US security are expert at opening suitcases as are some baggage handlers. If you have a hard suitcase they can open it by taking the hinge spine out and they don`t even have to touch the lock.
As others have said, customs and thieves are not deterred by padlocks - my padlocked case was returned to me open and missing items from an Alitalia flight from Milan - apparently renowned for theft. Not wishing to diss anyone in the trade but I think a combination of luggage appearance and interesting stuff showing on X-rays attracts the light-fingered brigade.
You`re right Mosaic. My suitcase was "done" going into Mauritius last year. I had a miniature jewellery case with a couple of cheap bead-like necklaces in. I`m sure it was the x-ray people who raided it. Nothing else was touched. On the x ray the necklaces could have appeared as more expensive jewellery. The suitcase was a hard Delsey with a combination lock. It was all closed up and re-locked when I got it to my hotel room. I phoned the airline asset protection group but they tend not to deal with individual cases. I reported it because they can trace if there is a pattern involved ( a certain person on duty at a certain time). If it`s not reported they will never know and the thieving bar stewards won`t be caught.
I have seen Customs open a 2 combination and 1 padlocked case in less the 20 seconds.
We came back from Andorra via Toulouse, and those that have vodka and cigarettes in their cases lost them (Toulouse apparently is notorious for it). We reported it to the Police at Gatwick, and they did everything they could not to make a report. The main argument was it was over the duty free limit. Even when it was pointed out that going through the green channel was not a problem as it was obvious by the weight that things were missing.
Ancedotal experience suggests its baggage handlers, and they take mid-value items, as anything expensive is more likely to trigger an investigation
We came back from Andorra via Toulouse, and those that have vodka and cigarettes in their cases lost them (Toulouse apparently is notorious for it). We reported it to the Police at Gatwick, and they did everything they could not to make a report. The main argument was it was over the duty free limit. Even when it was pointed out that going through the green channel was not a problem as it was obvious by the weight that things were missing.
Ancedotal experience suggests its baggage handlers, and they take mid-value items, as anything expensive is more likely to trigger an investigation
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