I have just read something that makes me so angry I say we declare war on Canada and invade tonight!
Ok seriously my buddy Tiberius over at DSOTW dug up this story somewhere.
It seems this woman named Judith went to Hawaii on vacation and lost her expensive camera with over 500 of the pictures she had taken on her trip. So she created a blogspot blog called “Lost Camera” (another great blog name!) and loaded up a bunch of pictures that strangers had taken of the places she visited to kinda sorta keep a journal of the places she had seen.
Then the story takes an interesting twist. Her next post about 2 weeks after the original starts like this:
I hadn’t posted here in a while, because just after the last post, I got a call from an excited park ranger in Hawaii that “a nice Canadian couple reported that they found your camera!” She gave me their name and number, and I eagerly called to reclaim my camera.
Sounds like good news she is gonna get her camera and all her pictures back right?……WRONG!
The post goes on:
“Hello,” I said, when I reached the woman who had reported the camera found, “I got your number from the park ranger, it seems you have my camera?”
We discussed the specifics of the camera, the brown pouch it was in, the spare battery and memory card, the yellow rubberband around the camera. It was clear it was my camera, and I was thrilled.
“Well,” she said, “we have a bit of a situation. You see, my nine year old son found your camera, and we wanted to show him to do the right thing, so we called, but now he’s been using it for a week and he really loves it and we can’t bear to take it from him.”
I listened, not sure where she was going with this.
YEAH Where the hell is she going with this?
“And he was recently diagnosed with diabetes, and he’s now convinced he has bad luck, and finding the camera was good luck, and so we can’t tell him that he has to give it up. Also we had to spend a lot of money to get a charger and a memory card.”
It started to dawn on me that she had no intention of returning the camera.
“We’d be happy to return your photographs…”
I was incredulous. “This is an expensive camera, you know.”
“Oh, we know, we looked it up.”
“I was hoping to offer a reward for it, but I was also hoping to get my camera back.”
Silence. It is now clear I will never see the camera again. I’m shocked at what seems like an utter moral failure on her part, despite her claim to want to “do the right thing.”
“Ok,” I say. “Why don’t you send me my memory cards, and, say, $50 and we’ll call it even.”
I give her my address.
I don’t hear from her for nearly two weeks. Friends suggest filing a police report.
Finally, I get a package in the mail.
“Enclosed are some CDs with your images on them. We need the memory cards to operate the camera properly.”
I call, furious. “I was shocked to get your package today. Our agreement was that you were to send me my memory cards, not that you would keep an additional $120 worth of my property on top of the valuable camera you already chose not to return.”
“You’re lucky we sent you anything at all. Most people wouldn’t do that.” We go back and forth a bit more. She eventually hangs up on me. I call the police department in her town (in Canada) but they tell me that it’s a U.S. issue, since that’s where the property was lost.
I am out $500 and some measure of faith in humanity.
I do, however, have the photos. Thanks again to the Flickr community for loaning me yours in the interim.
Now are you as sputtering mad as I was when I first read this?
If you are gonna keep the camera why get this womans hopes up?
How can anyone think this is teaching their child how to do the right thing?
What kinds of low down Canadien piece of crap has the chutzpah to tell someone over the phone “we are stealing your stuff and there isn’t a damn thing you can do about it?
Needless to say Judith got lots of comments with lots of suggestions on ways to get her camera back or at least get back at these scumbags. More than a few of them were over the top and she has since turned comments off.
It looks like she is going to get the local press to run her story and hopefully shame these folks into doing the right thing.
So this is my little part in getting the word out. If you know any Cannucks next time you see em sucker punch em just in case their the one with Judith’s Camera. (I’m Kidding!)
But seriously this is one of those stories that needs to be told to as many people as possible in the hopes that someone knows these folks and lets them know just how infamous they have become. If you have a blog please pass it on.
By the way am I the only one who thinks the idea of creating a blog about your lost camera shows just how fantastic blogs are?
Lost Camera if of course a Blog Of The Month.
Blog On!
This post is also linked to the following exceptional blogs who are providing open trackbacks this weekend: Don Surber, Wizbang, Stuck On Stupid, Blue Star Chronicles, Voteswagon, Adam’s Blog, The Uncooperative Blogger, Oblogatory Anecdotes, Point Five,
Linking Posts



Who links to me?




wow…actually Pre sept 11 days I lost a camera in Spain and someone actually was comin to the States from the Tour bus co. where I left it..duh@ me!..and they met me and returned it!..but alas that was PRE 9-11 Islamo fascist world………sigh.
Comment by Angel � February 26, 2006 @ 9:13 am
I lost my wallet on a trip to Mexico in the sand on the beach. About 2 months later someone found it and mailed it back to me using about $6 inside for postage. They included a little note that said they hoped I had had as much fun on my trip as they had on theirs.
I am not sure how much fun they had but I know I had a lot of fun
ie. loosing my wallet.
Comment by The Ugly American � February 26, 2006 @ 10:43 am
Thanks for emailing me this story, I wrote about a different aspect of this story and linked back to you. Ironically yesterday my husband found a debit card when he was walking our puppy. He called the management of our complex gave them the name on the card and they called the guy who didn’t even realize he had lost his card. Those are the honest types like my husband.
Then there are the jerks like the ones that broke into my daughter’s house while she was sleeping and stole not only her purse but her car keys and her car as well as items that belonged to her boyfriend and their roomate, a video recorder, playstation, a laptop and her boyfriends wallet. Thankfully she was not hurt since she slept thru it all because items can be replaced, kids can’t. 8 days later they found her car and she is still fighting with the insurance company to fix it so she can drive it again.
Comment by Lisa Renee � February 26, 2006 @ 11:45 am
I cannot believe some people! I left my camera years ago hanging on a redwood tree in northern Calif, and luckily, had some masking tape on bottome w/address on it, and it came in the mail with a nice note..left an expensive piece of lapis jewelry in Utah, and the motel maid returned it…left the camera (a great old Pentax 35mm) again in Colorado, was returned…this was before the internet. I thought, “Americans are pretty honest”, and to think that woman said “You are lucky..blah blah..most people WOULDN’T do anything”>!>!! I disagree. It is wrong to teach her boy that type of behavior. As a mom, I would never let my child decide he was going to keep it…ill or not! Thanks for the story, though..there IS a lesson here…
Comment by PennyLynn � February 28, 2006 @ 12:00 pm
What a horrific example to set for your children… and what an amazing reach to justify your theft! Interesting to see considering two other recent run-ins I’ve had with Canadians… it really isn’t stereotypical, is it?
1) in the Forum in Rome, Italy, some badly dressed, boisterous and loudly swearing men were speaking English and one of our party quietly asked if they were American. Their shouted answer was “F—, no! We’re Canadian!” We made sure everyone we passed knew.
2) in an intersection in Florida, traffic was stalled blocking oncoming cars; a woman drove into the stopped cars and tried to push them out of the way with her car. When she failed to move the other cars she backed up and tried again. By this time she attracted a crowd and tried to drive away but was stopped by onlookers. She claimed that since she was Canadian she didn’t have to wait in traffic or deal with our police.
Comment by sb � March 1, 2006 @ 1:16 pm
Where the story falls apart is that people who find a $500 camera and keep it do not inform park rangers of their find. They certainly would not give their name and address, or any other contact information such as an e-mail address, to the park rangers. The other dead giveaway is that the couple had to be Canadian or German or French, one of the countries which refused to participate in the Iraq misadventure. The whole thing is an experiment to see if people will believe lies, and apparently they will.
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