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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Adam Gillham

Hunt for phantom book ripper who's torn more than 200 pages in shops in 3 months

A serial book ripper is targeting a library and a charity shop in a seaside town leaving staff baffled.

The mystery vandal has secretly tore pages of dozens of books for sale in a children's hospice charity shop.

And they have also targeted a town library run by the county council.

In each case pages have been horizontally ripped in half before being put back in place on the shelves in Herne Bay, Kent.

The bibliophobe - dubbed "the book ripper" by customers - has struck at the Demelza charity shop in the town.

The book ripper has been targeting the store since April and strikes in sections of the store out of sight from staff.

Up to 15 books are week are left ruined by their actions.

Store manager Nick Rogers says the slippery perpetrator tears the pages horizontally before putting them back on the shelf.

He told Kent Online: “We initially had the odd book getting torn, which we dismissed as being children or someone trying to prank us.

“But in the last couple of months, we’ve been finding about 10 or 15 a week. They can be worth anything up to £3.

“We wouldn’t sell a book with one ripped page, but in some of them it’s all the pages.

“It seems to be right round the corner where we can’t see them – in the true crime, sport, travel and miscellaneous sections.”

The store’s proceeds are donated to Demelza Hospice Care for Children, a charity that cares for youngsters battling serious, life-limiting or terminal illnesses.

Shop workers even came up with the novel idea of putting up signs to try to deter the sneaky saboteur - but so far this has been ineffective.

He added: “I’ve put signs up and we’re making our presence known. Other than that, though, we’re not really sure what we can do.

“It’s really sad and disappointing because we’re totally reliant on people donating them in good faith to raise funds – to then have someone destroy them seems so senseless.”

A number of books at Herne Bay Library in the High Street have also been damaged over the last six months.

Staff members have not identified a pattern to the vandalism as the defaced paperbacks have been from a variety of sections.

A Kent County Council spokesman said: “The damage to books at Herne Bay Library is obviously disappointing.

“However, we do not consider 20 books over six months to be an epidemic and not comparable to the situation at the Demelza charity shop.

“Members of staff are now being extra watchful to try to catch the person responsible or at least cut down on the opportunities to cause more damage.”

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