The Mercury News Weekend

Rug heist strikes Madonna Inn Steakhouse 4 years in a row

- By Chloe Jones The Tribune (San Luis Obispo)

For four straight years, the Madonna Inn has been the victim of an unusual heist.

A group of young men — seemingly college-aged — walks into the steakhouse and go down the stairs toward the gift shop. The group lingers for a bit before returning up the stairs, grabbing the steakhouse welcome rug and then dashing to a getaway car waiting in the parking lot.

During the most recent theft — which occurred March 9 — the men pushed two customers out of the way as they ran between them before jumping into a dark-colored Subaru and speeding off, Madonna Inn Steakhouse manager Connie Pearce told The Tribune.

The car nearly collided with another vehicle on the way out.

“It's a serious problem,” Pearce said. “It's something that is getting out of hand, and I don't want to see one of them hurt. I also don't want to see them running over a small child. The way that they leave out of here is really dangerous, and somebody could get run over.”

An employee that chased the suspects to the car said the partial license plate number was 0859A and does not believe it was a California plate, Pearce said.

The men wore face masks during the first three incidents, but not during the March 9 theft.

This most recent incident was reported to Cal Poly, who told The Tribune the university is “looking into the matter.”

Police seeking help

The San Luis Obispo Police Department said they saw the March 9 incident on Facebook and reached out to the Madonna Inn Steakhouse to help investigat­e the theft.

The rug thefts began four years ago.

The first occurred Sept. 25, 2021, around 10:45 pm.

A Madonna Inn spokespers­on said the inn's management spoke with Cal Poly at the time because the management believed it could be a student life organizati­on pledge or initiation prank.

The inn decided to go straight to the university “in hopes that it would not repeat itself,” and nothing further was pursued.

Then about a year later, on Oct. 28, 2022, at around 10 p.m., thieves struck again.

That time, surveillan­ce video shows two young men — one wearing a sailor's hat — walking into the inn, going downstairs, then returning back upstairs to snatch the rug and run to a getaway car.

This time, one of the men was wearing a sweatshirt with duct tape covering everything except “Pi Kappa Phi,” a fraternity that has a chapter at Cal Poly.

Denying involvemen­t

Giancarlo Galli, president of Cal Poly Pi Kappa Phi, told The Tribune that the fraternity had no involvemen­t in the thefts and does not know who could be committing them.

“My understand­ing of the situation is that over the last couple years there have been multiple occasions of nonmembers of our fraternity wearing makeshift letters to burglarize items from the Madonna Inn, namely rugs from what I have heard,” Galli said in the emailed statement.

Fall fraternity rush at Cal Poly typically begins in late September to early October, and winter rush typically takes place in mid-January.

After the second theft, the Madonna Inn spokespers­on said the inn contacted Cal Poly again and the university said to file an incident report with the Office of Students Rights and Responsibi­lities.

The report was filed Nov. 2, 2022, but the inn spokespers­on said the establishm­ent did not receive any other follow-up from the university.

The in did not file a police report with SLOPD because the management, again, was hoping to handle the situation directly with the university, the spokespers­on said.

The third incident occurred Oct. 21, 2023, around 5 p.m.

Because of the time the men arrived, the parking lot was much busier than the first two incidents. The Madonna Inn spokespers­on said the footage she reviewed showed the men spending more than 40 minutes on property “to get up the nerve to take the carpet and run.”

At one point, footage shows the men going back out to the getaway car where those inside the car physically pushed them back out to return to the inn and take the rug.

The getaway car that

year — a tan Toyota Tacoma — nearly hit another car as it “bolted” out of its parking spot, the spokespers­on said. This incident was reported to SLOPD through the neighborho­od liaison, the inn said.

The most recent incident March 9 was “the most aggressive,” according to both Pearce and the spokespers­on.

The getaway car waited directly in front of the steakhouse entrance, the thieves pushed through two guests and they almost caught a Madonna Inn employee in the car door before speeding through the lot and cutting off a car at the exit.

This incident was reported to both Cal Poly and SLOPD, the spokespers­on said, adding that they are working with three Cal Poly student organizati­ons to discuss the issue in person.

“It is no longer simply a nuisance to the business,” the spokespers­on said. “It needs to stop. “

The inn is currently looking at options to prevent future rug thefts as it continues to cooperate with investigat­ions, the spokespers­on said.

Anyone with additional informatio­n is asked to contact the San Luis Obispo Police Department Community Services Officer Henderson at 805-594-8061 or anonymousl­y to Crime Stoppers at 805-549-STOP (7867).

 ?? LAURA DICKINSON — TNS ?? The entrance to Madonna Inn's Alex Madonna's Gold Rush Steak House in San Luis Obispo. For four straight years, the Madonna Inn has been the victim of an unusual heist.
LAURA DICKINSON — TNS The entrance to Madonna Inn's Alex Madonna's Gold Rush Steak House in San Luis Obispo. For four straight years, the Madonna Inn has been the victim of an unusual heist.

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