Back in July, someone sent in this photo described as portraying a prototype phone, presumably iPhone 5, in the hands of an Apple employee on his way from work in San Francisco.

We find it hard to believe Apple would be foolish enough to lose another iPhone prototype – and at a bar, too – but this comes from CNET and they’re vouching for it. An iPhone prototype – probably for an upcoming model,  allegedly went missing last month in Cava22, a Mexican restaurant and bar in San Francisco’s Mission District.

The device may have been already sold on Craiglist for $200, the publication has it. CNET has learned that the errant phone “sparked a scramble by Apple security to recover the device over the next few days”. Apple representative allegedly contacted the police, the story goes, to tell the device was “priceless” and that Apple “was desperate” to see it recovered. No details were provided about the phone’s looks or what iOS version it was running. Here’s the thriller part:

And this is where the story gets interesting:

Could it be just us or does that last bit make the entire story less believable. Apple last year pushed the police and FBI into raiding a journalist’s house and now they bribe someone to get their stolen property?

But let’s step back for a moment and consider other scenarios that could be at play here. First, a sane person like our writer Jordan Kahn would ask who could possibly be CNET’s source for this story if not Apple? If it were police, CNET would have hinted that police confirmed that the phone was lost and there would have been some paper trail to follow. It surely wasn’t the guy who reportedly found the phone. Of course, we’ve been through all this before…

Apple last year famously lost an iPhone 4 prototype encased in an iPhone 3GS-like shell at a German beer bar in California. The finder shopped the prototype around until Gizmodo, a Gawker-operated tech blog, ran a video clip showcasing the phone and racketing up its page views sky high in the following days and weeks. Apple pressed charges, the FBI stepped in, the journalists’ house was raided… In short, this had gotten the media to talk about Apple’s upcoming iPhone. Even Steve Jobs joked when he put up a slide of then new iPhone 4 at the summer developer conference last year: “Stop me if you’ve already seen this”, he quipped. It took more than a year to settle the case with two misdemeanors filed against the finders.

So, where do we go from here? Meet us in comments…

  • Here we go again: Apple apparently loses another iPhone prototype – at a bar, too! (9to5mac.com)