Any place that attracts a
large amount of people with money to lose attracts thieves.
In the first six weeks of play in Atlantic City, there
were two armed robberies in the rest rooms. I found out
what was possible quite by accident once while seeing
a show at the Stardust in Las Vegas.
Our party had excellent seats at the Lido show, a table
at center stage front. One of the acts was a French pickpocket
who could take anything. He was walking by where we were
seated and suddenly dropped the mike. I grabbed and caught
it, and as a reward was invited onstage. Here I was, a
winning Blackjack player trying to take money out of the
casino in obscurity up onstage during the Lido show! I
thought I was going up to hold the mike for him, but instead
found that I was to be part of the act. The pickpocket
pointed to a spot on the stage and asked me to stand there.
I remember being terribly nervous because I noticed I
was standing directly on a trap door. He began to ask
me questions and walk around me as I answered. Suddenly
he whispered for me to hold onto my pants, which made
me even more nervous. I knew he could take my belt off
and drop my pants if he wanted to.
The next thing I knew he was holding a bag of jewelry
(souvenirs for the home folks) I had in my inside coat
pocket, my watch, my wallet, and my book with all the
little phone numbers in it. All I could think about was,
"When do I go through the trap door?" He finally
let me step down and the act got a big hand. After the
show, people were complimenting me because they thought
I was part of the act, even though I tried to convince
them that I wasn't. What started me thinking was the ease
at which my valuables had been taken and how open an available
purse or a rear-pocket wallet is to nimble and dishonest
fingers.
Sometimes a little clever daring is all you need. A woman
told me of losing an entire fifty-dollar jackpot at the
dime slots. She had just finished filling up two cups
with dimes from the jackpot and had begun playing again.
Suddenly a well-groomed man immaculately dressed in an
expensive-looking suit walked up, grabbed the cups, and
said, "Let me cash these in for you." He then
quickly turned and walked down the line of slots toward
the cashier's cage.