A family in Tampa, Florida, is teaching porch pirates a lesson they probably didn’t expect to get by leaving packages filled with dirty diapers outside their home.
It all started when the Saleep family say they noticed packages missing, including food and one of the baby’s gifts, Tampa Bay television station WFTS reported Wednesday.
“I wanted them to get a taste of their own medicine,” Sharly Saleep told the station.
So, the family took matters into their own hands.
First, they installed a surveillance camera to see if the packages were actually delivered.
“It was really disgusting, but I figured, you know, if they take it they deserve it,” said Jacky Saleep.
Then, they put out a decoy package to see if porch pirates were at work. But what they say they put inside the decoy package, probably wasn’t anything a package thief might expect to find — dirty diapers from Nora, their 9-month-old baby.
“It was kind of like a team effort, like he sealed it up, made it look less suspicious, made it look like something you’d want to take, and she provided the diapers,” said Jacky Saleep.
She said they filled the package with three-day-old dirty diapers and in about two hours, they believe someone took it. They found surveillance video showing someone run up to the front door, and quickly run away.
The family filed a report with Tampa police.
“Whoever these porch pirates were, they fell for it,” said Tampa Police Department Officer Sarah Michelson.
While the holiday season is typically expected to see an increase in package thefts, Michelson said they’re down across Tampa this year.
There were 25 package thefts in November 2018 compared to 10 in November 2019, according to police.
“Residents are a lot more aware of what’s going on, our officers are definitely out there and visible,” Michelson said.
The Saleeps told the station they’re more aware, too. Out of safety concerns, they’ve installed additional surveillance cameras.
But in a twist of events, they said they later discovered their original missing packages were delivered to the wrong address.
They plan to tell Nora about this when she’s older.
“Just tell her it’s not right to take other people’s things and just be careful, because it might not be what you’re expecting when you open it up,” said Jacky Saleep.
They may not be done teaching this lesson just yet, though.
“We’re gonna have an upgrade, like cat litter now,” Sharly Saleep said.