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Learn about "jugging" - a growing theft trend where criminals watch victims at banks and stores before stealing valuables from their vehicles. Find out how to protect yourself.
Protect yourself from jugging, the rising crime by which thieves monitor ATM users and follow them to steal cash, with six practical safety tips to stay alert and secure.
Violent “bank jugging” robbery caught on camera. (KTLA) Authorities also recommend changing your banking routines to avoid being predictable and using online banking services whenever possible.
To help prevent jugging crimes, police urge residents to take extra precautions. They advise bank customers to leave the area quickly after making cash withdrawals and avoid lingering in parking lots.
Police around the country warn of a new crime trend called "jugging." Criminals will watch banks and ATMs, waiting for victims to withdraw money. Once they finish the transaction, they are ...
Police warn about "jugging," a crime where thieves monitor banks and ATMs, then rob victims who withdraw large sums of money, with cases spreading from Texas to South Carolina.
BEAUMONT, Texas — A rise in a crime known as "jugging" has put Beaumont Police on high alert, with criminals staking out ATMs and following unsuspecting victims to steal their money.
Police are issuing a public service announcement about a crime called “jugging” that is making its way into the Upstate.
This was not the first jugging case this week. Video from an incident on Monday shows a woman being dragged while she unloaded her groceries after going through an ATM.
The act of "jugging," which involves following someone who has just withdrawn money from an ATM or bank to steal it, is now a felony in Texas under House Bill 1 ...