HomeNewsTrendsBengaluru techie loses Rs 16,000 shoes outside temple. Priest's slippers stolen twice

Bengaluru techie loses Rs 16,000 shoes outside temple. Priest's slippers stolen twice

CCTV footage from the temple entrance showed the thief walking barefoot, posing as a devotee, before leaving with the shoes.

November 16, 2025 / 09:16 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
'I returned within five minutes after offering prayers and found my shoes missing,' the complainant said. (AI-generated image)
'I returned within five minutes after offering prayers and found my shoes missing,' the complainant said. (AI-generated image)

A routine temple visit turned costly for a Bengaluru software engineer after his branded shoes worth Rs 16,000 were stolen outside Shri Ganesha Temple in Banashankari III Stage on November 6. The Girinagar resident, who had bought the Asics shoes just six months ago, insisted on filing an FIR when police initially hesitated, saying footwear thefts were common near temples, Times of India reported.

The complainant told police he parked his motorcycle around 7.20 pm and left his shoes at the entrance, where other devotees had kept their footwear. “I returned within five minutes after offering prayers and found my shoes missing,” he said. When he approached the temple priest and management, they admitted thefts were frequent—even the priest’s slippers had been stolen twice. Several devotees shared similar experiences but had never reported them.

Story continues below Advertisement

CCTV footage from the temple entrance showed the thief walking barefoot, posing as a devotee, before leaving with the shoes. Police said a case has been registered under BNS section 303 (theft), and efforts are on to trace the culprit. “We have collected CCTV footage and are working to identify the suspect,” a senior officer confirmed.

Past arrests reveal that footwear thieves often sell stolen items for Rs 20– Rs 50 to buy liquor. “If small thefts are ignored, the same person will commit bigger crimes, so they should be taught a lesson and reformed,” the complainant told the publication.