Furniture factory didn't know what it was missing.

AuthorSpeizer, Irwin
PositionTAR HEEL TATTLER

Johnny Cash once had a hit about a Detroit autoworker who for decades smuggled parts out of the plant in his lunchbox until he had enough to build his own Cadillac. That guy had nothing on eight former employees at Bassett Furniture Industries' Mount Airy factory. They're accused of taking thousands of pieces of finished furniture from their plant.

According to an investigator with the Surry County Sheriff's Office, about 1,250 pieces of new furniture--beds, dressers, nightstands, tables, chairs--vanished each year for at least the last six. No one at the company's Bassett, Va., headquarters even knew the stuff existed until an anonymous tipster called last spring.

The former workers--including the plant manager and other top supervisors--were arrested in November. Sheriff's detective Steve Halasz says investigators focused on the last six years but found evidence the scheme might have been going on more than 15. With the industry's tight margins, how could so much furniture disappear year after year without someone noticing? "It was a very elaborate scheme," Bassett spokesman Jay Moore says. "Some of the people responsible for preventing this from happening were involved."

Even annual audits didn't show that the plant was making more...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT