Miami Herald

A Home Depot security ‘specialist’ made $260,000 in tool thefts possible, Dade cops say

- BY DAVID J. NEAL dneal@miamiheral­d.com

A gang of thieves swiped hundreds of thousands of dollars in tools from Home Depot stores around Miami-Dade County since April 2023, according to arrest reports. The man who cops say was at the center of making all the thefts possible: a Home Depot losspreven­tion officer.

South Miami-Dade resident Lazaro Echevarria was arrested last week along with 44-year-olds Jose Bello-Valdez and Yoannys Montano-Solano after Miami-Dade police say search warrants at two places discovered “1,240 items valued at over $260,000. Some of the items were still in the original packaging.”

Obviously, the search warrant wouldn’t have included items already sold as hot goods. Also, that value estimate didn’t count the items used in an alleged side-hustle fraud involving refunds.

The group made another $49,000 by printing out receipts from past sales, swiping matching items from the store with the same UPC codes and “returning” the items for the cash value, according to arrest reports.

All three remained in Miami-Dade Correction­s custody as of Wednesday afternoon.

Echevarria, 37, had the biggest bond, $98,000, after being charged with one count of organized fraud; one count of unlawful use of a communicat­ions device; six counts of dealing in stolen property; six counts of petit theft; and 17 counts of third-degree grand theft. He has pleaded not guilty.

Home Depot said Echevarria has been fired but wouldn’t say how long he had been working for the company nor confirm any of his positions held.

Bello, a Hialeah resident, received a $85,500 bond after being charged with one count of organized fraud; one count of unlawful use of a communicat­ions device; five counts of dealing in stolen property; six counts of petit theft; and 15 counts of thirddegre­e grand theft.

South Miami-Dade’s Montano, alleged to be the seller of stolen goods on Facebook Marketplac­e and OfferUp, faces one count of organized fraud; one count of third-degree grand theft; one count of unlawful use of a communicat­ions device; and 11 counts of dealing in stolen property. His bond is $82,500.

An “unidentifi­ed white male” also joined the group, police said.

As described in arrest reports, their scheme for hitting Home Depot locations in Kendall (15750 SW 88th St), West MiamiDade (11305 Bird Rd.) and Hialeah (1590 W. 49th St.) started with Echevarria, a Home Depot “asset protection specialist.”

Detectives say Echevarria “facilitate­d the thefts by opening locked tool cabinets; most likely, furnishing keys and/or combinatio­ns to the tool cabinets; and staged various items to be later stolen” such as putting them in predetermi­ned places.

“Once the thefts concluded, he would leave the store still on shift to sell the stolen items.”

Once, the “asset protection specialist” had to protect his partner, an arrest report noted, when a sharp-eyed senior citizen in a Kendall parking lot almost got everyone caught five months ago.

Stolen tools, a black Chevy and Home Depot

Bello-Valdez strolled into the aforementi­oned Home Depot in Kendall at around 10:40 a.m. on Nov. 3 and went to the gift center. He picked out tool combinatio­n sets from Dewalt and Milwaukee and put them in an empty box on a flatbed cart. Bello-Valdez strolled into the parking lot with the tool sets without pausing to pay.

An “elderly male customer” told store management he saw this. Management told the store’s asset-protection specialist — Echevarria.

Meanwhile, Bello-Valdez was putting the stolen tool kits into the a black Chevrolet SUV when an off-duty Miami-Dade officer came over to him before he ran toward a nearby Walmart “leaving his vehicle abandoned.”

Bello-Valdez got away and “Echevarria, who was working and present at the time, had no choice but to generate an internal incident report. But he never filed a police report with Miami-Dade police despite finding 19 Dewalt Atomic 20-volt cordless combinatio­n kits; five Milwaukee M18 Fuel 120 mph Handheld Blower

Kit; four Milwaukee M18 fuel hatchet pruning saws; a 20-volt Max 23 Gauge Pin Nailer Kit; and one Kitchen Cabinet.” Total value: $6,250.

“The incident was captured on closed circuit TV,” the arrest report said. “Echevarria’s report is not consistent with what occurred during the incident.”

David J. Neal: 305-376-3559, @DavidJNeal

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