San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

GUARD DIES AFTER BEING SHOT IN ATTEMPTED ROBBERY

Ex-cop was guarding news crew covering smash-grab thefts

- BY DAISY NGUYEN Nguyen writes for The Associated Press.

A security guard died after he was shot while he protected a San Francisco Bay Area television news crew covering a smash-and-grab theft, part of a rash of organized retail crime in the region.

“We are devastated by the loss of security guard and our friend, Kevin Nishita. Our deepest sympathy goes to Kevin’s wife, his children, his family, and to all his friends and colleagues,” KRON-TV’S vice president and general manager, Jim Rose, said in a statement issued Saturday.

Nishita was an armed guard for Star Protection Agency and provided security for television news crews in the region, who are often targeted by robbers for their equipment.

He was shot in the abdomen during an attempted robbery of KRON-TV’S camera equipment near downtown Oakland on Wednesday, police said.

The news crew was covering a recent robbery where a group of thieves broke in and stole from a clothing store.

A reward of $32,500 is being offered for informatio­n that leads to an arrest in Nishita’s killing.

Nishita was a police officer for the cities of Hayward, San Jose, Colma before retiring in 2018. The Alameda County Sheriff’s office said deputies escorted his body from the hospital with full law enforcemen­t honors.

The region has been struck by organized retail thefts in which bands of thieves, some carrying crowbars and hammers, break into high-end stores and snatch merchandis­e.

Similar “flash mob” robberies have been reported in and around Los Angeles, where police were put on tactical alert Friday.

At least eight people stormed a Home Depot store in Lakewood on Friday and grabbed hammers, crowbars and sledgehamm­ers in the tool section before dashing off in a getaway vehicle, the Los Angeles County Sheriff ’s Department said.

Four people who may have participat­ed in the Home Depot theft were later arrested in Beverly Hills after officers stopped two cars that were part of a caravan of vehicles driving around the city’s business district, police Lt. Giovanni Trejo said Saturday.

Meantime, police in Los Angeles arrested three people suspected of storming a designer clothing store on Melrose Place after stopping a vehicle and seeing clothes in plain view, said LAPD Officer Mike Lopez. He said more than 10 people ransacked another store on La Brea Avenue.

The thefts are believed to be part of sophistica­ted criminal networks that recruit people to steal merchandis­e in stores throughout the country and then sell it online. Experts and law enforcemen­t officials say the thefts are ratcheting up as the holiday shopping season gets under way.

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