Canada In 2012 and 2014 a baby Jesus was stolen from displays in
North Vancouver, the latter one a storied figurine that had been on display for 50 years in Vancouver's St. Vincent's Hospital. Father John Horgan, the pastor of the church which hosted the display, said "It’s a terrible day if we have to microchip the Christ child." In 2019 a baby Jesus figurine was stolen twice in one month from a church in
St. John's, Newfoundland.
Sweden , Sweden. During some Christmases of the first decade of the 21st century, a baby Jesus statue was often stolen from the outdoor nativity scene in
Jönköping in Sweden, once thrown into the nearby lake of
Vättern. This has led to the nativity scene, resembling a wooden stable, being closed by nights.
United Kingdom Nativity scene thefts, generally including the theft of the baby Jesus, have been reported across the United Kingdom. In
Wales, a baby Jesus was stolen two years in a row from a city center nativity scene in
Cardiff. In the village of
Abernethy, Perth and Kinross, the baby Jesus is replaced by a
Shrek doll as part of an annual tradition originating in 2020. On 22 December 2021, the baby Jesus from the nativity scene in
Preston, Lancashire was stolen as the display was vandalised and found without a baby Jesus the next morning. In hopes of the baby Jesus returning, local councillors published a tweet asking for the baby Jesus to be returned anonymously to the Town Hall before Christmas Day. The baby Jesus was found by local restaurant owners and returned in time for Christmas Day.
United States Many communities across America have experienced thefts of baby Jesus figurines, and, in some instances, entire nativity scenes. Periodically, it is reported that these are part of a regional or national trend, but as these thefts are inconsistently tracked, this may simply reflect trends in how they are reported. Some figurines have been defaced with
profanity or
Satanic symbols. In 2009 a wave of such thefts across the United States was reported in
The Guardian. Two men in Kentucky were sentenced to 45 days in jail for ripping a baby Jesus out of a scene installed at the side of a private house. In December 2015, as many as five baby Jesus statues were stolen from the lawns of churches in
North Jersey. In his autobiography,
The Long Hard Road Out of Hell, the American singer
Marilyn Manson admitted playing a
prank in which he and a few friends stole figurines of Jesus then replaced them with hams. They sent a communique to a newspaper posing as a black radical group saying that it was a protest against "the plasticisation of the black man's wisdom with the so-called 'white Christmas'." ==Security measures==