SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Families waiting for San Francisco's
cable cars on a recent morning couldn't help but notice Kenny the
Clown, who wore a curly rainbow wig as he twisted brightly colored
balloons into animal shapes for visitors, blasting Michael Jackson's "Smooth Criminal" from an iPad at his feet.
Little did the clown know that the tablet doubling as his stereo would turn out to have been stolen from the home of the late Steve Jobs.
"The thing that is embarrassing to me is I'm a huge fan of Steve Jobs," said Kenneth Kahn, 47, a professional entertainer who police say unwittingly received a silver 64GB iPad pilfered from the home of the Apple co-founder last month. "It's just bizarre."
Kahn's friend, Kariem McFarlin, 35, of Alameda was arrested on suspicion of breaking into Jobs' Palo Alto residence on Aug. 2.
The pair had been planning a vacation to Hawaii, and when their trip fell through, Kahn said McFarlin gave him the iPad in exchange for money he had borrowed.
"He
owed me $300 for the plane tickets, so he said he had an Apple computer
that he wasn't using anymore. I said fine, not having any clue what the
hell was going on," Kahn told The Associated Press on Friday.
Kahn,
a well-known local street performer who has also made unsuccessful bids
to become mayor of Alameda and San Francisco, said he never examined
the contents of the device and had no idea where it came from.
It was unclear if Jobs had ever used it.
Kahn
said he downloaded Dave Brubeck's "Take Five," the "Pink Panther," and
other tunes for his clowning routine, which includes magic shows and
torch juggling on a unicycle.
Kahn
said he played pop songs on the iPad for a few days at several San
Francisco landmarks and at an Alameda street fair before police came for
it. The device has been returned to the family of Jobs, who died last
Oct. 5.
Apple investigators
identified McFarlin after he used the stolen device to connect to his
iTunes account on the Internet, police said. He acknowledged to police
that he broke into Jobs' residence, as well as other homes, and wrote an
apology letter to Jobs' widow, according to a police report.
The
unoccupied Palo Alto home was targeted on July 17 because it was under
renovation, authorities said. When construction crews left, a burglar
hopped a fence and found a spare key, the San Jose Mercury News
reported.
The newspaper said the thief apparently didn't realize
he was in Jobs' house until he saw a letter addressed to the Silicon
Valley icon.
During the 15-hour overnight heist, Jobs' wallet and
driver's license were taken as well as iPhones, iPads, iPods, Mac
computers, champagne and $60,000 worth of Tiffany & Co. jewelry,
police said.
Kahn said he met McFarlin when he coached him on a high school basketball team in Alameda more than a decade ago.
"Kariem
and I used to talk about ethics all the time, so I thought we were on
the same page," Kahn said. "I guess he just got desperate, and made a
terrible decision."
McFarlin
remained jailed on $500,000 bail and was expected to appear in court
Monday. If convicted, he could face almost eight years in prison.
Kahn
said he has not been questioned in the case. Law enforcement officials
did not immediately respond to a request for further comment.
The
Santa Clara County public defender's office, which is officially
representing McFarlin, did not immediately provide comment. McFarlin has
recently hired a private attorney who wants to remain anonymous until
Monday's hearing.
Resource :Yahoo News
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