Pickpockets

A traveler's guide to dealing with pickpockets in Italy: how to foil them, and where to avoid them

Yes, tourists are easy marks for pickpockets in Italy
Yes, tourists are easy marks for pickpockets in Italy. (Technically, this sign in Venice is warning you that the knockoff handbag may only cost you €15, but the fine for being caught buying counterfeit goods is €10,000.)
It's no secret that pickpockets target tourists, especially the American kind. The United States is a rich country, and they know that American tourists carry the best cameras, the most money, and the latest, priciest electronic gadgets.

Be especially careful anywhere that’s crowded: buses, subways, train stations, street markets, exceedingly popular tourist spots. Also, be especially careful around gypsies, who only hang around tourist sights in order to beg (which is fine) or steal (not fine).

The solution is simple: Don’t tempt the thieves.

Leave all your jewelry at home, and don’t flash your wallet or valuables. When you aren’t using your camera, keep it stowed in a plain bag (a camera bag is like carrying a big sign that says to thieves “Yo! Over here. Steal this camera.”).

If your stuff does get stolen, see this page. Try to avoid that situation and make yourself theft-proof by following this advice (which may sound scary at first, but is really just a list of sensible precautions that quickly become second-nature).

Safety Tips

  • Keep everything valuable in a moneybelt (that means your passport, credit cards, driver’s license, insurance cards, plane tickets, rail passes, traveler’s checks, and excess cash) and wear this money belt at all times and UNDER YOUR CLOTHES AS IT WAS DESIGNED. » more
  • Make your wallet largely a dummy wallet: Keep in it just a day’s spending money (the equivalent of $40 or $50) plus a few expired library cards and such (so that it looks convincingly real to any muggers). That way, if you get pickpocketed, all you're out is fifty bucks and one wallet (great excuse to go buy a new one at the Florence leather market). Even so...
  • Carry this wallet either (a) in a front pocket with a rubber band wrapped around it (the rubber band makes it harder to slip the wallet out easily), (b) in a hidden zippered pocket (a common feature in travel specialty clothing), or (c) at worst a buttoned back pocket. Ride buses with one hand stuck nonchalantly in the front pocket, covering your wallet.
  • Sling your purse strap across your chest, not just hanging off one shoulder where it can be easily snatched. If the purse has a flap, keep the flap and latch side against your body, not facing out where nimble fingers can open it. On the sidewalk, walk against the wall instead of along the curb, and keep your purse on the side of you facing the wall. Beware of Vespa thieves who zip up on their scooters to snatch away purses.
  • Consider a security purse (or more manly shoulder bag) with a steel cable hidden in the strap so that slasher thieves can't razor it off and dash away. The newer, better security purses also have reinforced sides and bottom (sneaky thieves will often slit open bags in crowded areas like buses and empty them without even lifting the flap).
  • I often travel in a trench coat (good for warmth, rain, a makeshift blanket, and fitting into European crowds), or in warm weather a modified sports jacket with lots of inner pockets. With all my valuables in my inside coat or pants pockets and the coat wrapped around me, I feel pretty pickpocket-proof. I always button up the coat before stepping on a bus, subway car, or train.
  • Strap your luggage to the railing in the overhead bin of a train (and to the bed frame in your hotel room), to keep it safe from snatch-and-run thieves. If you are so inclined (especially in developing countries), consider carrying a tiny retractable cable lock instead (far sturdier and more secure than your bag's webbing straps).
  • Guard your hotel room against intruders. Some folks travel with a high tech door alarm, but I say it's easier just to lean a chair against the inside of the door so it will tip over and crash (hopefully waking you; helps to stack a few noisy items on top) if someone attempts to slip in.
  • Keep your wits about you, and be aware of your surroundings, and you'll be fine.

Proud (?) to be an American

Some travelers worry about being pegged as an American when they travel. They think it makes them a target, both for pickpockets and petty thieves as well as terrorists.

To some extent, the nervous nellies are right. Americans carry the best and most expensive stuff to steal, and, frankly, tend to be the most oblivious to the above safety precautions.

There's a bit of resentment out there, rightly or wrongly, regarding America's status as sole superpower and role as head of the global economic empire. There is also some resentment, latent or blatant, about how that power is often wielded broadly and, frankly, frequently obliviously to local sentiments. (I'm not passing judgment here; just noting perceptions.) I'm not trying to trash-talk my own peeps, just illuminate a point: Many bad guys take these resentments as an excuse (or at least a mitigating factor) for targeting Americans.

Repeat after me...
O Canada!
Our home and native land!
True patriot love in all thy sons command.
With glowing hearts we see thee rise,
The True North strong and free!
From far and wide, O Canada,
We stand on guard for thee.
God keep our land glorious and free!
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.
The result? Some Americans learn to fake Canuckness. You've seen them. They sew large Canadian flags on their pack, learn the words to "O Canada!," and train themselves to flatten their vowels and end all their sentences with "eh."

The problem with this is that we are now starting to give our honorable (oops, make the "honourable") neighbors to the north a bad rep. ("Wow, these Canadians are just as bad as the Americans...")

But seriously. In truth there are far more people out there who like Americans than hate us. The haters just yell more loudly.

A better solution: Prove the haters wrong by being the gosh darn best cultural ambassadors for your country that you can be.

Show them that Americans can, indeed, live up to our stereotype of being open, friendly, eager to learn, outgoing, guileless, warm, and just plain ol' aw-shucks nice—but not to the stereotype that we are arrogant, self-centered, ignorant, uncultured buffoons with a massive (and undeserved) superiority complex.

And if that doesn't work, you can always belt out a verse of "O Canada!"

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