San Francisco Chronicle

Crime ring accused in Bay Area store thefts

- By Nora Mishanec Reach Nora Mishanec: nora.mishanec@ sfchronicl­e.com

An alleged San Diego crime ring selling stolen goods online stretched into Northern California, where suspected thieves targeted beauty supply stores in Alameda, Contra Costa, Napa and Marin counties.

Michelle Mack, her husband and eight accomplice­s are accused of organized retail theft for conspiring to steal and resell an estimated $8 million worth of beauty products from Ulta Beauty and Sephora, the California Attorney General’s Office said.

Ulta Beauty stores across the Bay Area were targeted, according to a criminal complaint filed in San Diego County, with thieves allegedly carrying out “crime sprees” to steal thousands of dollars worth of cosmetics from each store.

Mack, the suspected “ringleader,” allegedly paid the accomplice­s to steal the cosmetics that she later sold at a discount on her Amazon storefront, prosecutor­s said.

Local news organizati­ons in San Diego reported this week that Mack, dressed in pink pajamas, was handcuffed and escorted into a police squad car from the San Diego-area mansion she shared with her husband, Kenneth Mack, who was also arrested.

“Organized retail crime has significan­t financial and safety implicatio­ns for businesses, retailers, and consumers,” said Attorney General Rob Bonta, who called the allegation­s “an audacious instance of organized retail theft.”

Police who searched Mack’s San Diego mansion found at least $400,000 worth of makeup still in its manufactur­er packaging that had been stored, organized and prepared for shipping to Amazon customers, prosecutor­s said. Ulta and Sephora employees helped police inventory the products recovered in the search.

The suspects accused of carrying out the thefts from December 2021 to October 2023 were allegedly captured in surveillan­ce footage, prosecutor­s said.

They later shipped the stolen makeup to Mack’s home, prosecutor­s allege.

Mack allegedly sold the stolen goods on her online Amazon storefront for a “fraction of the retail price,” prosecutor­s said, and “recruited many young women to enter makeup stores and commit bulk thefts of specific high-demand makeup product to supply her with inventory for her online store.”

Dan Petrousek, senior vice president of loss prevention at Ulta Beauty, said in a statement that organized retail crime affects “all retailers, consumers, and communitie­s.”

“Not only does organized retail crime jeopardize the safety of our store associates and guests, but it also results in potentiall­y unsafe or damaged products being resold online to consumers under false pretenses,” Petrousek said.

 ?? Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press ?? An accused California retail theft “ringmaster” had teams of thieves steal from Bay Area stores before selling the products online, the attorney general’s office said.
Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press An accused California retail theft “ringmaster” had teams of thieves steal from Bay Area stores before selling the products online, the attorney general’s office said.

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