Los Angeles Times

Boba shop served as front, D.A. says

About 1,000 items taken from cars and $13,000 in cash are found at S.F. store.

- By Christian Martinez

A San Francisco boba tea shop was used as a front in a widespread scheme to fence thousands of items taken in vehicle burglaries, authoritie­s said Tuesday.

After a citywide investigat­ion by the San Francisco district attorney’s office into a rash of car burglaries, Quoc Le was arrested and charged with 12 counts of possession of stolen property — eight felonies and four misdemeano­rs, prosecutor­s said.

Investigat­ors had set up bait cars with laptops and other items in plain view, then tracked the items after they were stolen. One of the laptops led them to Le and the boba shop in the Tenderloin district, which the San Francisco Chronicle identified as a Quickly cafe owned by Le’s wife, who was not charged with a crime.

At the shop, the district attorney’s office said, authoritie­s recovered about 1,000 electronic items and $13,000 in cash Monday.

Le, who the district attorney’s office alleged was a known fence, took possession of the bait laptop in a parking lot, and the computer was traced to the boba tea shop, then to FedEx and through the delivery process.

Additional­ly, two victims of car burglaries, including one from Morgan Hill, more than an hour’s drive south of San Francisco, tracked their stolen electronic devices to the boba shop.

Investigat­ors obtained search warrants to track Le’s car and gained access to his cellphone as well as shipping and business records.

“Through this work, investigat­ors were able to establish a pattern of Mr. Le buying and selling stolen goods from all over the Bay Area out of his business,” the district attorney’s office said in a release.

Some of the stolen goods were shipped to Southern California and internatio­nally to Vietnam and Hong Kong, officials said.

“Car break-ins have been a longstandi­ng problem in San Francisco for at least the past decade,” San Francisco Dist. Atty. Chesa Boudin said in the release. “We hope that this sends a strong message to deter anyone considerin­g breaking into a car or buying stolen goods: we are watching, and you will be held accountabl­e.”

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