2013年3月19日星期二

They had staged the fake robbery to prevent the fake

A woman Sri Lankan manager from a rural bank in Ja-ela, a Colombo suburb, was the brain behind the fake robbery of jewellery worth over Rs20 million from the bank, ‘The Island’ newspaper reported.Looking for a women shoes manufacturer that can handle my designs of highly detailed.

With the assistance of her nephew and a notorious criminal,Find all the manufacturers of laser cutting machine and contact them.American tungsten jewelry for you and someone special, she had staged the fake robbery, police said.

According to a complaint lodged with the Ja-ela police, the alleged robbery took place on January 30 at Madama Junction, Ekala, Ja-ela.

After Sergeant Sudath Gunawardena of the Negombo District Crimes Detection Bureau(NDCDB) received a tip off that the robbery was staged to cover the pawning of fake gold jewellery to the bank by her nephew over a long period of time, the NDCDB took over the investigations.

They had staged the fake robbery to prevent the fake gold jewellery from being discovered. The person who acted as the robber was a notorious criminal from Ratnapura, police said.

This notorious person is in remand custody at the Kuruwita prison for four rape cases and for throwing acid on a person.

Investigators got the details of the robbery from the man in remand by using of decoy and have recovered part of the loot.Elastic Hair bands from Manufacturers and Suppliers around the World. Jewellery worth Rs4 million had been given to the notorious criminal as his share from the robbery.

The manageress and her nephew had gone to the bank with the notorious criminal on the day of the fake robbery and placed all the jewellery in a bag carried by the criminal by opening the safe.

The manageress then pretended to have fainted after being being assaulted by robbers.

Along with her nephew, she had paid Rs2.8 million, out of Rs10 million obtained, to two job agents to find them jobs abroad but the recruitment agents had vanished with the money. “Right now, this [design] is my preference,” she says, pointing to her hipbone, where they sit comfortably (and seamlessly, I might add). “They’re just so soft, and I feel like I’m wearing nothing.select a custom bobbleheads design to start to design your own personalized. I’ve got some that I’ve had for 10 years. I want to bring them in and frame them, but I feel kind of awkward about it—being my dirty old underpants,” she says with a laugh. “But they’re still in mint condition.”

Not too shabby for a $16 pair of panties. But then again, everything Ostler makes seems to be of the finest quality. As a bonus, she works with sustainable fabrics—something she started doing just before the green movement really took hold here.

“Early on, when I was doing a lot of custom orders for people and doing a lot of contracts, a lot of times I was working with whatever people brought me, and I developed an allergy to fire retardants and other starches,” Ostler explains. “So I had to find products that I could work with that weren’t going to put me out of a job.”

So now, many of her pieces are made with bamboo, including her signature cowl-neck T design ($48 to $50), another basic that’s been around almost since the beginning. She doesn’t mess with that recipe too much. But with her seasonal boutique collections, she tends to mix things up a bit more.

Instead of just making a straight-up navy-and-white striped T, for example, she’s incorporated an eye-popping cherry-red lace yoke ($50). And with her flowing, apple-green A-line bamboo dress, she’s added whimsical lilac spaghetti straps; both pieces offer a perfect hit of unexpected colour for spring.

If you’re not ready to bare your shoulders yet, Ostler also carries some cozy long-sleeve sweaters ($250) in the store, which she happily knits from scratch.

“I’m crazy about knitting,” she says. “If I could do one thing for a living it would be knitting, so these sweaters are hand-knit and it takes me about three months to knit one of them.”

She’s also enthusiastic about making reasonably priced jewellery. The majority of her individually handcrafted pieces are gold- and silver-filled and cost $20 to $100.

“When we opened this store, there was absolutely nothing on the market that I liked that was within a price point that I thought was affordable to my customer,” she says. “So I started making jewellery.”

Between the jewels, the lingerie, and the knits, Ostler doesn’t have a whole lot of time, but remarkably she somehow manages to make every single Devil May Wear clothing item herself.

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