STOLEN WATCHES:
Please be aware that the stolen merchandise listed below might be offered for purchase and
immediately contact us or your local police station in case you can identify or locate any
of these watches:
_______________________________________________________________________________________________Marcello C. "Tridente", silver dial /
bezel (#2005.3), S/N 2329
Marcello C. "Tridente", black
dial / bezel (#2005.2), S/N 1786, S/N 1986
Marcello C. "Tridente Chronograph",
silver dial / bezel (#2010.3), S/N 0240
Marcello C. "Aviator Chronograph",
black dial (#2015.2), S/N 0229
Please note: You are hereby
officially notified that the watches identified above are stolen property. Possession of
stolen property or trading stolen property are criminal offenses. Receiving stolen goods
is generally buying or acquiring the possession of property knowing (or believing in some
jurisdictions) that it had been obtained through theft, embezzlement, larceny, or
extortion by someone else. The crime is separate from the crime of stealing the property.
To be convicted, the receiver must know the goods were stolen at the time he receives them
and had the intent to aid the thief. Paying for the goods or intending to collect the
reward for returning them are not defenses. Depending on the value of the property
received, receiving-stolen-property is either a misdemeanor or a felony. There are also
numerous federal laws that make it a federal crime to receive stolen property if the
property received was or had been in interstate commerce.

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