“They might sue me.”
Ohio resident Jeff Rohr (@rohr_likealion) admitted that he unintentionally underpaid for a 5-gallon bottle of water at Walmart for two years—selecting the $3 refill option at self-checkout when the actual price was $7—until a door greeter finally pointed out the discrepancy. His reaction, part confession, part defiance, was an unconscious indictment of the special honor system established by big box retailers, high-volume retailers, and the goodwill they could lose.
“Well, I just got caught stealing water from Walmart,” he said nonchalantly.
Ohio man stole water from Walmart for years
Rohr explains a simple routine. He would take his five-gallon jug to Walmart, go to the self-checkout, type in “water,” and select the refill option. The machine chimed three dollars. He never questioned it—Walmart’s product shifts dwarfed those of its competitors. “Rollback prices” exist for a reason.
“Maybe they’re just giving people a deal because they sold so many [expletive] Everything,” he reasoned.
Two years later, and after numerous jars, he said the greeter at the door marked his receipt. Actual cost is $7. The discovery didn’t make him feel guilty, but rather a bewildering realization that he’d lost track of the largest retailer on the planet without even trying.
His response was, “God, if they see this, who knows? They might sue me.” And then here’s the kicker: “You know what? I should get a discount. [Expletive] Walmart. “
Peanut Gallery investigates accidental water loss incident at Walmart
People have different stories about their experiences with Walmart and Sam’s Club. One person said: “I use the cheapest apple code to get the nice, expensive apple.”
One woman chose a more gangster approach: “Your problem is you stop at the greeter to check your receipt. I just walk past them and walk out the door. They are greeters not security guards. And I’m a Walmart employee because I use the self-checkout.”
Another said Walmart was at fault, noting, “If people have to check their stuff, they have no responsibility to make sure the price is correct. If you scan it, that’s the price that comes up, and I don’t see what they have to say.”
Self-checkout clearing
Rolle’s unexpected discount falls into the larger cracks (if you want to call it that). A December 2025 LendingTree survey found that 27% of self-checkout users intentionally walked out with unscanned items, nearly double the 15% in 2023. A further 36% admitted to doing so unintentionally, with a whopping 61% of them retaining the item. In response, Walmart has begun removing kiosks at some locations, and one store in Missouri saw a drop in calls from 509 to 183 after removing the machines.
Rolle’s parting shot hit something other than his jug. The so-called “Wal-Mart effect” (research in the Journal of Urban Economics shows that opening a store reduces county retail employment by 2.7%, displacing 1.4 workers for every employee hired) has led to the collapse of small businesses across the country. While the giant absorbed a few dollars of losses on the kiosks it built, this broader erosion makes it hard to gain sympathy.
AllHipHop has reached out to Rohr via TikTok comments and private messages, as well as Walmart via email for more information. We will update this story if either party responds.
@rohr_likealion
Who knows🤷🏻♂️
♬ Original Sound – Jeff Rohr

