
Two Texas Truck Drivers Charged After England World Cup Gear Theft
US prosecutors have charged two drivers with receiving stolen property after more than $18,000 of England squad equipment vanished en route to their Kansas City base.
American authorities have formally charged two Texas men in connection with the theft of England football team equipment worth over $18,000, a brazen incident that briefly disrupted preparations for the 2026 World Cup. Mustafa Salik and Erfan Kamal, both of San Antonio, face felony counts of receiving stolen property after gear vanished during a commercial road shipment from Florida to the team’s training base in Kansas City. Jackson County prosecutor Melesa Johnson announced the charges late on Saturday, declaring that her office ‘will not tolerate any criminal activity that targets World Cup visitors.’ Bond was set at $75,000 for each defendant, and a conviction carries a maximum sentence of seven years in prison.
The theft occurred as the England squad moved from a warm-weather camp in Florida to the Swope Soccer Village, where they were due to begin final training ahead of the tournament. The gear, packed in a commercial vehicle, arrived on the evening of 13 June with items missing. Kansas City police, state investigators and the FBI swiftly launched a probe, underscoring the sensitivity of a crime that threatened to embarrass hosts just days before the world’s most-watched sporting event. Mayor Quinton Lucas publicly confirmed the incident, while local and federal officers worked to track the missing equipment.
Detectives recovered nearly all of the stolen property within hours, including four pairs of football boots, five pairs of trainers, signed national team shirts, a World Cup match ball, goalkeeper gloves, and even two stuffed lion mascots. England goalkeeper Dean Henderson told reporters that at least part of the material had been returned, enabling practice sessions to proceed without major disruption. Viewed from the Indonesian news desks, the episode was framed less as a security scandal and more as an operational hiccup typical of large-scale sports events; an academic in Surabaya remarked to local media that such incidents are part of the ‘dynamics of organising a tournament.’
From London, football officials expressed quiet relief that no sensitive tactical data or critical medical supplies had been compromised, though the episode raised questions about logistics security for high-profile teams. Russian outlets listed the eclectic stolen items, including a JBL speaker and a Lego model of Nike Air sneakers, which lent the affair a faintly comic edge. Yet the swift arrests sent a sharp deterrent message. Legal observers in Missouri noted that the charges—felony receiving stolen property, rather than theft—suggest prosecutors focused on those who handled the goods after the fact, possibly indicating a wider inquiry. With the tournament just days away, the resolution reinforced confidence that local law enforcement would act decisively to protect visiting teams. The incident, now largely a footnote in England’s World Cup preparations, may serve as a cautionary tale that even a globally televised mega-event is not immune to common property crime—but that the justice system is prepared to move quickly when it strikes.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 4 languages
The theft of England's equipment is portrayed as a dramatic incident that required top-level involvement from FBI and local authorities. The story highlights the shock and disruption to the team's preparations, with a sense of urgency in catching the thieves. Local academic commentary adds a touch of local perspective, emphasizing the severity of the crime.
The report is extremely brief and straight to the point, merely stating that two men were charged with theft of England's equipment. There is no emotional language or background context; it's a simple news update.
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