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Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
Ruby Flanagan Money Reporter Lucy Farrell Trainee Trends Writer & Rebecca Sherdley

Warning over using woman's 'deceitful' and illegal self-service hack

Two lawyers have slammed a shopper's "deceitful" supermarket trick. The woman's money-saving "hack" at the check-out was called illegal by experts.

The 'hack' has been described as "fraud" - and is actually against the law. With food prices rising, everyone is trying to save cash on their weekly shop and there are many tips circulating that claim to keep costs down.

But it is important to be able to recognise which tips are actually useful - and which actually may not be so smart - reports The Daily Record. One woman who disagreed with her pal's tip for saving at a supermarket's self-service tills felt compelled to seek advice.

Read more: Nottinghamshire householder used hammer to fight off burglar armed with a bottle and snooker cue

She wrote into News.com.au 's Sisters In Law column, which sees people share their legal problems with lawyer sisters Alison and Jillian Barrett.

She told the siblings her friend rings up expensive fruit and vegetables at the self-service till as cheaper options, the Mirror reports. This means she swaps more costly foods like avocados for cheaper brown onions, but she doesn't think this is wrong.

The shopper believes because she is still paying something it doesn't qualify as stealing. Claiming "everyone does it", the woman thinks supermarkets already include costs of check out fraud in their prices.

The Barrett lawyers, however, disagreed and said the 'hack' was "fraud" and was actually against the law. They said: "It doesn’t matter how your friend tries to justify her behaviour, her deceitful conduct in intentionally not paying full price is against the law.

"Your friend’s technique of using the self-service checkout to pass off more expensive items as cheaper ones cheat the system by underpaying. Her fraudulent behaviour is just one of many tricks employed by self-service thieves to avoid payment."

They warned if the friend was caught doing this the excuse of "getting avocados confused with brown onions" would likely not cut it and she could face a range of severe repercussions from it.

They added: "You have to ask, is saving a few dollars on avocados worth the risk?"

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