1966 – World Cup Stolen
Working to a brilliant plan – walk in to exhibition, pick up Jules Rimet trophy, walk out with it – a thief or thieves got away with the trophy which had been on show at Stampex, a stamp collecting event in Central Hall Westminster. The golden sculpture was even in 1966 said to be worth £30,000, so it was surprising that security measures regarding it amounted to two guards who didn't notice anything happen.
Visitors to the exhibition described a shady looking character seen there at the approximate time of the crime: scar on his face, greasy black hair, thin lips; all that was missing was a bag marked swag and a hooped shirt. Nobody reported him saying: "You'll never take me alive coppers," but we can surmise that he did so.
The theft was a national embarrassment with the World Cup in England just months away. A massive police operation was put into action, to zero effect, unless it was to scare the criminals into dumping what they undoubtedly called 'the gear,' which was discovered by a dog going walkies in South London. Bobby Moore collected it from the Queen when England beat Germany 4 – 2 on July 30 to win the tournament.
An interesting footnote: then holders Brazil complained such an outrage could never happen in their football-loving country. It was stolen in Rio in 1983 and never seen again.
So what was the name of the dog that found the World Cup?
The dog was called Pickles
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