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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Doris Payne, 83, notorious jewel thief, arrested yet again

Doris Payne, an 83-year-old international jewel thief who plied that illicit trade for five decades, is shown in her cell at Clark County Jail in Las Vegas in 2005. (Associated Press)
Kate Mather

PALM DESERT, Calif. – Doris Payne – demure, elegant and 83 – is a thief, as prolific and subtly conniving as they come. She doesn’t use muscle and she doesn’t rely on guns.

Instead, between numerous stints behind bars, for 50 years she has leaned on charming misdirection to steal pricey jewelry from unsuspecting merchants all over the globe.

Her most recent alleged theft found her on El Paseo, the luxurious row of shops in Palm Desert.

Jeweler Raju Mehta thought she fit right in with his customers.

All Mehta saw was an articulate, charming older woman who complained about her aching hip and asked if he would show her more and more of his expensive wares. She was wearing fashionable clothes, gold earrings and carrying a nice purse.

He watched as she tried on a necklace. She left for a while, then came back to try on more jewelry, including a ring for her pinkie finger. She left again, saying she would return the next day to finalize a purchase with proceeds from a $42,000 insurance check.

She never came back.

Instead, when Mehta arrived the next day at El Paseo Jewelers, his co-workers showed him a computer screen with a security alert: Payne had been seen at a local Saks Fifth Avenue store and may be on the prowl. The $22,500 diamond-encrusted ring he had shown the elderly woman the day before was missing.

“She knows what she’s doing,” he said. “I’ve been doing retail for a very long time and it’s never happened that someone stole right in front of me.”

Payne was arrested Tuesday and faced a judge Thursday. Instead of her sophisticated wardrobe, she was wearing a blue jail jumpsuit.

Police say Mehta was the latest in a long line of unsuspecting victims duped by Payne, who once described her profession in a court document as “jewel thief.”

“What she did in that store is exactly how she has operated for decades,” said retired FBI Agent Paul Graupmann, who first arrested Payne in the 1980s. “She comes in well-dressed and often says she is looking to buy something because she has come into some money.”

A byproduct of her unwavering devotion to thievery is a notoriety that now borders on fame. She has long been known to law enforcement, has been featured on TV and newspapers, and had her story told in a documentary. There has been talk of Halle Berry starring in a movie about her life.

Payne is from West Virginia, the youngest of six children born to a coal miner father and a mother who was a seamstress.

She said she realized she could become a jewelry thief as a teenager in Cleveland when she was trying on a watch and a store owner became distracted.

“She dreamed of this large life for herself. She said she developed a revenge mentality and she sought this life she was told she couldn’t have,” said Matthew Pond, co-director and co-producer of a new documentary titled “The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne.” “It is sort of this twisted take on the American dream.”

By the early 1970s, she wasn’t just plying her trade in cities throughout the U.S., she was jet-setting across the globe, stealing expensive diamonds in Paris, Milan, London and Tokyo. She even escaped from custody in the 1980s.

Before Payne emerged in Palm Desert, she was convicted in 2011 for stealing a ring in San Diego and another one in Santa Monica. She was released from prison this summer. Pond said she was living in a Riverside motel and was “very desperate financially.”

Back on El Paseo, news of the notorious jewel thief continued to spread and Mehta was the talk of the town.

Mehta shook his head, laughed and joked that maybe he could play a part in a movie about Payne’s life.

“The last chapter.”