Your daily adult tube feed all in one place!
A pair of robbery suspects have gone viral for displaying some manners while robbing a woman in Rio de Janeiro.
The perps were riding on a motorcycle when they intercepted the victim while she was on her way to work in the northern neighborhood of Olaria last Friday, surveillance camera showed.
The suspect sitting on the back of the bike walked up to the woman while his accomplice instructed him to 'get her phone.'
He apparently felt bad for their victim and said, 'Hey auntie, sorry about that. Thanks auntie.'
Two robbery suspects apologized to a woman when they intercepted her on a Rio de Janeiro street last Friday and stole her cell phone and handbag
One of the suspects (seen here next to the victim) told the woman, 'Hey auntie, sorry about that. Thanks auntie,' when he forced her to hand over her cell phone and handbag during a robbery last Friday in Rio de Janeiro
His cohort also appeared to show remorse and told the woman, 'It's our job.'
The woman, who was on her way to work, walked away before the thieves fled in the opposite direction.
Authorities in the state of Rio de Janeiro reported a significant rise in cell phone robberies and thefts during the first six months of 2024 in comparison with the same period last year.
Data released by the state's Public Security Institute this week showed 18,876 cell phone thefts and 10,195 cell phone robberies were reported from January to June - an increase of 40 percent and 20 percent, respectively, from the first half of 2023.
At least 937,294 cell phones were stolen throughout Brazil last year, an average of 107 per hour, according to an annual report released by the Brazilian Security Forum in July.
One of the robbery suspects who was riding the motorcycle also apologized to the robbery victim and told her, "It's our job," when he and his accomplice robbed her cell phone and handbag. No arrests have been reported
'To combat theft and robbery of cell phones, which is a problem that affects not only the State of (Rio de Janeiro) but the country, state forces have been acting in an integrated manner, with visible policing and investigations to identify receiving gangs,' the Rio de Janeiro Public Security Department said in a statement.
The statement also said that the state's Military Police force has stepped up patrol in areas that have been plagued by cell phone robbery and thefts. They have introduced an app that allows cell phone owners to register their device serial numbers to help investigators in the event their phones are stolen or robbed.
'The Military and Civil Police also exchange experiences with other security forces in the country,' the Rio de Janeiro Public Security Department said. 'They recently visited Piauí and Ceará to learn about the work carried out in these states and thus contribute to the investigations in Rio de Janeiro.
'The police stations developed methodologies to identify stolen and robbed cell phones that were activated in new accounts, as well as to locate these devices and their users.'