The goods were pinched between June and October 2021 while Thomson worked at the Princes Street store. This included a £1250 stainless steel Swiss watch, a silver bracelet worth £155, a pair of 9ct yellow gold hoop-style earrings with a £205 price tag and a white gold diamond necklace costing £305 report the Record. Thomson, who now works at a make up stall in Harrods, appeared in the dock at Edinburgh Sheriff Court on Friday where she admitted stealing a number of items from the jewellers. READ MORE - Edinburgh Airport passengers waiting hours for luggage abandon bags at carousel After noticing ‘similar looking items’ being worn by Thomson in photographs, she called police who later cautioned and charged the 22-year-old. Store manager Emma Davidson concluded that the items must have been pinched by an employee and began scouring online accounts belonging to staff in a hunt for clues. Taylor Thomson fell under suspicion after an internal audit at Fraser Hart in Edinburgh discovered that several items were missing from their inventory in February this year. A handpicked selection of stories from BBC Future, Culture, Worklife and Travel, delivered to your inbox every Friday.A thief who stole almost £2000 of luxury goods from a jewellery store was caught after her boss spotted her wearing the goods in social media pictures. Īnd if you liked this story, sign up for the weekly bbc.com features newsletter, called The Essential List. If you would like to comment on this story or anything else you have seen on BBC Culture, head over to our Facebook page or message us on Twitter. Love film and TV? Join BBC Culture Film and TV Club on Facebook, a community for cinephiles all over the world. Released on 3 March in the UK, Ireland, Finland and Taiwan, and on 17 March in Sweden "Delicately tracing the emotionally deadening but invisible frameworks of conformity that are imposed on young people in their most formative years, it's a quiet tragedy that's rendered close to uplifting by its gentle grace and compassion." This sensitive peer-pressure drama from Lukas Dhont (Girl) is a "beautiful elegy of lost innocence," says Phil de Semlyen in Time Out. But at the age of 13, the boys enroll in a new school where their casual intimacy prompts questions and rumours that could push them apart. They spend every moment together in idyllic rural Belgium, and can't imagine life being any different. Léo (Eden Dambrine) and Rémi (Gustav De Waele) are as close as brothers, if not closer. Released on 24 March in the UK, Ireland, the US and Canada "I wanted to write something that would feel universal, so it wasn't necessarily about a horrific car accident, but rather about the audience's personal low point in their own lives." Could her salvation be her friendship with Daniel (Morgan Freeman), a widowed Vietnam veteran who would have been her father-in-law? "I wanted to write about grief and how people stand up after grief," said Braff. But after she is in a car accident that kills her prospective sister-in-law, she plunges into alcoholism and substance abuse. Florence Pugh (Braff's ex-girlfriend) plays Allison, a successful and happily engaged young woman. "I think both A Good Person and Garden State are authentically me in different times of my life," he told Nadia Khomami in The Guardian. And we've really been given the opportunity – while staying entirely true to Luther."Īlmost 20 years on from Garden State, Zach Braff's debut as a writer-director, the former Scrubs star has made A Good Person, another indie comedy drama inspired by his own life and his own hometown in New Jersey. He told Morgan Jeffery in the Radio Times: "What we've been able to do – having delivered every episode of Luther on budgets which are comically small – is to have a wider canvas and a bigger budget to tell the kind of stories that we we've always wanted to be able to tell. Can John catch the maniac before another police detective (Cynthia Erivo) catches John? The series' creator, Neil Cross, promises to answer that question with more locations and elaborate action sequences than the TV series ever had. Since we last saw John Luther, the disgraced police detective has been in prison, but he breaks out to track down a wealthy serial killer played by Andy Serkis. But they can console themselves with Luther: The Fallen Sun, a Netflix spin-off of the long-running BBC series. Now that Idris Elba is 50, his fans might have to give up on their dream that he will eventually be cast as James Bond.
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