Tide laundry detergent is meant to be used for household cleaning purposes, but thieves are turning it into something dirty. Authorities are reporting a spike in thefts of Tide, and in some cities they are setting up task forces where the detergent is sold to track the number of bottles in stores. Police believe thieves are using the soap on the black market, which retails for $10-$20, to buy drugs. On the black market, Tide is often referred to as "liquid gold" and can go for $5-$10 per bottle.
Last year, in St. Paul, Minnesota, a man is alleged to have stolen $25,000 worth of Tide over 15 months before authorities captured him. Stores such as CVS have amped up security measures to prevent theft; at some locations the detergent is kept in a locked container and an employee must retrieve it for customers.
So why is Tide the only detergent being targeted? Authorities list several reasons: Tide is instantly recognizable because of its Day-Glo orange bottle; it is one of the most expensive brands of laundry detergent; and it does not have serial numbers, so it cannot be tracked.
On social media, people are calling the theft trend "bizarre" and many are blaming it on the tough economy and rising gas prices. One person tweeted that the thefts are "a result of inflation."
A spokesperson for Procter & Gamble, the manufacturer of Tide, called the thefts "unfortunate."
Poster Comment:
Tide brought in a whole bunch of Yahoo punsters and this:
Ḏ±√їḓ San Antonio, Texas Tide is stolen and then sold at Thrift stores and Flea Markets all over San Antonio. Also, make up, tooth brushes, bath soap, shampoo and pirated DVD's. When something is free (stolen) any amount it is sold for is pure profit. I thought it was strange that people at flea markets were selling Cigarettes and house hold cleaners until a friend told me that everything I was seeing was stolen. If Americans would stop buying stolen Tide, this would stop and Tide would get cheaper. Well maybe not cheaper, but it wouldn't keep going up