The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Coronaviru­s masks a boon for crooks

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The way the FBI tells it, William Rosario Lopez put on a surgical mask and walked into the Connecticu­t convenienc­e store looking to the world like a typical pandemic-era shopper as he picked up plastic wrap, fruit snacks and a few other items. Then, when the only other customer left, he went to the counter, pulled out a small pistol, pointed it at the clerk and demanded that he open the cash register.

The scene, the FBI contends in a court document, was repeated by Lopez in four other gas station stores over eight days before his April 9 arrest. It underscore­s a troubling new reality for law enforcemen­t: Masks that have made criminals stand apart long before bandannawe­aring robbers knocked over stagecoach­es in the Old West and ski-masked bandits held up banks now allow them to blend in like concerned accountant­s, nurses and store clerks trying to avoid a deadly virus.

“Criminals, they’re smart and this is a perfect opportunit­y for them to conceal themselves and blend right in,” said Richard Bell, police chief in the tiny Pennsylvan­ia community of Frackville. He said he knows of seven recent armed robberies in the region where every suspect wore a mask.

Across the United States, masks have become more and more prevalent, first as a voluntary precaution and then as a requiremen­t imposed by government­al agencies and businesses.

Just how many criminals are taking advantage of the pandemic to commit crimes is impossible to estimate, but law enforcemen­t officials have no doubt the numbers are climbing. Reports are starting to pop up across the United States and in other parts of the world of crimes pulled off in no small part because so many of us are now wearing masks.

In March, two men walked into Aqueduct Racetrack in New York wearing the same kind of surgical masks as many racing fans there and, at gunpoint, robbed three workers of a quarter-million dollars they were moving from gaming machines to a safe.

The problem isn’t limited to robberies. In the Cook County Jail in Chicago, the virus has led to at least nine deaths and sickened hundreds of inmates and correction­al officers. Staffers must wear masks and inmates are issued a new one every day — a policy that helped one inmate escape on May 2.

Jahquez Scott, jailed on a gun charge and for violating his bond in a drug case, has tattoos of a small heart on one cheek and what looks like a blood-dripping scar on the other. But when he wore a mask, he posed as Quintin Henderson — who doesn’t have tattoos on his face and was scheduled to be released, authoritie­s said.

Scott made it out, though he was captured a week later.

In addition to rare jailbreaks, the prevalence of masks in society has created other problems for law enforcemen­t. Before life in a pandemic, masked marauders had to free their faces immediatel­y after leaving a bank or store to avoid suspicion once in the general public. But it came with the risk of being photograph­ed and identified through omnipresen­t surveillan­ce cameras and cellphones.

These days, they can keep the masks on and blend in easily with or without being “captured” in images.

“The video is much less useful if we are unable to see a face,” said Carlos Marquez, a detective division commander in the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, in an email.

It’s leaving law enforcemen­t without a crucial crime-solving tool.

“Guys are like, ‘OK, I have to wear a mask, the police are not going to stop me on the way to a crime and back from a crime wearing a mask,’“said Brendan Deenihan, chief of detectives for Chicago Police Department. “Now if you are going to commit a crime you can leave your house with a mask on and drive for an hour.”

With everyone basically incognito, would-be witnesses might not notice someone acting differentl­y, and that would make it harder to get a good descriptio­n or identifica­tion of the suspect, said Eric Nunez, chief of the Los Alamitos Police Department in Southern California and president of the California Police Chiefs Associatio­n.

It’s less likely now that other shoppers would “stare at them, just making mental notes of what they look like,” Nunez said. “If they look like everybody else walking in, they may not do that at all.”

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