Marysville Appeal-Democrat

A new breed of brazen takeover robbers hitting California luxury retailers, raising ire

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

The mayhem began Friday night, when thieves smashed a Louis Vuitton storefront window in San Francisco’s Union Square and ransacked the store. Criminals also targeted about a dozen nearby stores for theft and vandalism, police said, including a Burberry and Hermes store, as well as an eyeglass shop and cannabis dispensari­es.

On Saturday night, the raid of the Nordstrom in nearby Walnut Creek was even more audacious: Just before closing time, some 80 people jumped out of a pack of cars, flash-mob style, and swarmed the aisles, many escaping with merchandis­e. Two employees were assaulted, one of them pepper sprayed.

And just after midnight Sunday, criminals used a sledgehamm­er to smash storefront windows at a Louis Vuitton and Saks Fifth Avenue in Beverly Hills, police said, but patrol cars arrived to scare the thieves off before they could get inside. Late Monday, another group attempted to break into the Nordstrom at the Grove shopping center in Los Angeles before leading police on a highspeed chase.

Organized retail theft is nothing new. Over the last few years, rings have targeted Rolex watches, fine jewelry and Apple products at multiple locations.

But a weekend in which highend stores in famed shopping districts were hit by large and seemingly sophistica­ted theft rings has generated national attention as the holiday shopping season begins and retailers are hoping shoppers finally return as the coronaviru­s crisis eases.

Gov. Gavin Newsom described the incidents as “people smashing and grabbing, stealing people’s items, creating havoc, terror in the streets.” Newsom said he was speaking not just as governor but as a business owner.

“My business has been broken into three times this year,” said Newsom, who owns a hospitalit­y company including wine shops and restaurant­s. “I have no empathy, no sympathy for these folks, and they must be held to account.”

The reaction to the thefts has followed now-familiar political lines, with some conservati­ves blaming California’s criminal justice reform policies.

But though the incidents were terrifying to those caught in the middle of them, they don’t point to a massive increase in such crimes.

Robberies in 2021 are up

3.2% in Los Angeles compared with 2020, but are 14.1% lower than in 2019. In and around Union Square in San Francisco, robberies fell nearly 5% from 2020 to 2021, while burglaries fell 2.3%.

Still, the lawlessnes­s met with outrage in liberal San Francisco, with some keenly aware of the message it might send.

“What happens when people vandalize and commit those level of crimes in San Francisco? We not only lose those businesses, we lose those jobs,” Mayor London Breed told reporters. “We lose that tax revenue that helps to support our economy that helps to support many of the social service programs that we have in the city in the first place. We can’t allow that to happen.”

Newsom said the state would be more aggressive in helping to catch and prosecute retail-theft rings, and will allocate more money for the job in next year’s budget.

He touted the successes of the state’s retail crime task force, which he reestablis­hed in July amid criticism about his record on criminal justice and a recall campaign that derided him as “soft on crime.”

Newsom said the task force had conducted 773 investigat­ions and recovered nearly $20 million worth of stolen merchandis­e.

The California Highway Patrol would immediatel­y increase its presence “in and around areas that are highly trafficked” as the holiday shopping season reaches it apex, the governor added.

Greg Totten, executive director of the California District Attorneys Associatio­n, said most shopliftin­g cases can be charged only as misdemeano­rs, even when it is clear that organized retail theft is at work.

“There are now huge hurdles to overcome to demonstrat­e it rises to the level of organized retail theft,” Totten said. “These poor retailers are suffering. We are not just talking about the big stores and luxury retailers, but small businesses.”

LAPD Capt. Jonathan Tippet, who leads the department’s Robbery-homicide Division, said it appeared there were multiple groups committing such robberies, some of them copycats inspired by social media.

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