An 86-year-old woman who gained notoriety for her luxury jewelry heists has been arrested again.

Doris Payne, known as "Granny Gem Thief,” is well-known in fine-jewelry circles, and authorities say she has pocketed expensive jewels from stores around the world.

Her latest arrest, however, was at a Walmart in the US on Monday.

She was charged with four counts of theft by shoplifting and is accused of taking items that totaled $80.60 from the pharmacy and electronics departments.

Glasgow Times:

According to Chamblee Police Captain Ernesto Ford, a loss prevention officer recognized Payne, who was the subject of the 2013 documentary film The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne that detailed her feats.

"She didn't say anything," Ford said. "She gave us her information."

NBC News reported that Payne was released on a $607 bond and is at home.

Payne told NBC News that she forgot about the items and that theft was the furthest thing on her mind.

Payne was wearing an ankle monitor from her probation on other shoplifting charges when she was arrested.

Her attorney, Drew Findling said she was just two weeks away from completing the ankle monitoring and was complying with all aspects of her probation.

Findling said this recent incident is "very out of character for her" and that he wanted to review the video to see exactly what happened.

“This is a sharp contrast to all the cases in the past. We’re not talking about high-end jewelry,” he said. “We’re talking about what an 86-year-old woman needs to survive on a day-to-day basis, food supplies and medical supplies.”

Payne’s criminal career spans at least two continents and five decades. Payne had been nabbed in Atlanta in October 2015 after she was accused of shoplifting a pair of $700 earrings from a Saks Fifth Avenue.

She was arrested and charged with shoplifting after trying to seal a diamond necklace worth nearly $2,000 from a Von Maur store.

Payne was released on a $15,000 bond in that case and ordered not to travel outside the state of Georgia.

Her attorney told judges in Fulton and DeKalb County that she was too sick to stand trial. Earlier this year, Payne's attorney claimed she had cancer.

Her five-decade spree and 20-some arrests in countries around the world, including Greece, France, Britain and Switzerland, have made her something of a celebrity among thieves.

In a jailhouse interview with The (Palm Springs, Calif.) Desert Sun in May 2014, Payne said she began stealing watches to save her mother from an abusive relationship, but continued into her golden years so she could live a glamorous lifestyle.

Authorities have said she has used at least 22 aliases over the years and probably got away more often than she was caught, though she has done several stints in prison.

The Jewelers’ Security Alliance, an industry trade group, sent out bulletins as early as the 1970s warning about her.