ai-benchmark/tests/summarization/www.404media.co_ohio-mail-theft-postal-worker-robbery.txt
second_constantine 25e0a2a96a Remove "Лог файл" column from report
Remove the "Лог файл" (Log file) column from the report generation as it's no longer needed. This simplifies the report structure and removes unused functionality.
2026-01-26 22:40:44 +03:00

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404 Media is an independent website whose work is written, reported, and owned by human journalists. Our intended audience is real people, not AI scrapers, bots, or a search algorithm. Become a paid subscriber here for access to all of our articles ad-free and bonus content. This article was produced in collaboration with Court Watch, an independent outlet that unearths overlooked court records. To subscribe to Court Watch, click here. A serial mail thiefs alleged robbery spree ended after he posted photos of stolen credit cards and bins of mail to his Instagram Stories on the same day he robbed a carrier at knifepoint. Jordan McCorvey, a 32-year-old man in Ohio, allegedly robbed a USPS letter carriers truck while they were on their delivery route on November 28. The carrier told investigators two men approached their truck with a knife and demanded access to the truck, according to the affidavit, and when the carrier unlocked the truck and gave them access, they took a tray of mail. The description of one of the suspects matched a man who investigators already knew as “a known mail thief with criminal history related to possession of stolen mail and bank fraud,” the complaint says. The same day as the theft, McCorveys Instagram accounts—with the usernames "2corkmoney," "Icorkmoneybaby," and "cork2saucy”—posted photos of him flipping through stacks of mail still in the USPS tray, showing the same zip code on the letters as the carriers stolen deliveries. For the next few days, more evidence appeared on McCorveys Instagram Stories, where he uploaded photos and videos “involving banking transactions and other various posts connected to financial institutions,” according to the complaint. “These posts included solicitations for individuals with bank accounts or other related financial information.” In one photo, a man—its not clear from the complaint whether its McCorvey— celebrates in front of a Wells Fargo ATM, holding a card in the air, with a Wells Fargo branch tagged as a location sticker on the photo. This isnt the first time an alleged criminal outed himself by bragging on social media and in public. Idriss Qibaa, the man who ran an extortion scheme called Unlocked4Life.com that promised to unlock clients social media accounts, admitted on the popular No Jumper podcast that he was the one locking peoples accounts to extort them out of thousands of dollars, which helped the FBI charge him. McCorvey was arrested on January 9 in Columbus. Mail theft is a federal crime and McCorvey could face fines and up to five years in prison. About the author Sam Cole is writing from the far reaches of the internet, about sexuality, the adult industry, online culture, and AI. She's the author of How Sex Changed the Internet and the Internet Changed Sex. More from Samantha Cole
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Огайо, 32-летний мужчина, Дордн МакКорви, был арестован за кражу почты, в том числе за кражу почтового сотрудника USPS, а также за публикацию в Instagram фотографий украденных кредитных карт и почтовых ящиков. МакКорви также использовал свою учетную запись Instagram для публикации информации о банковских транзакциях и финансовых учреждениях. Дело похоже на другие случаи, когда люди признаются в преступлениях через социальные сети.