Flash mob thefts terrorize US retailers
US retailers are adding security and locking up goods after
flash mob heists involving dozens of thieves at once stunned luxury stores in
the San Francisco area and beyond, as the holiday shopping season opens. In the
most shocking of recent thefts, around 80 masked people in 25 cars raided a
high-end Nordstrom department store in Walnut Creek, California east of San
Francisco on Saturday, plundering its first-floor luxury goods counters in just
a few minutes before fleeing.
That took place one day after 40 people drove up and swarmed
a Louis Vuitton store in San Francisco’s Union Square, emptying its shelves in
seconds before jumping in cars to speed away. And near Chicago, also hit by a
series of similar thefts, a gang of 14 crooks swept into a Louis Vuitton store
in the Oak Brook suburb, snatching more than $100,000 worth of luxury bags and
garments. It was the third such attack on a Chicago-area Vuitton outlet in a
month.
Retailers around the country are taking notice and precautions
against possible copycat hits as the sheer size of the robbery gangs and their
ability to plan secretly have made them nearly impossible to halt. “The level
of organized retail theft we are seeing is simply unacceptable,” California
Governor Gavin Newsom said Tuesday.
“Businesses and customers should feel safe while doing their
holiday shopping.” The thefts come at a key moment on the shopping calendar.
Yesterday was Thanksgiving, and the day after the holiday has been nicknamed
“Black Friday,” the traditional kickoff to America’s frenzied Christmas
shopping season. Newsom ordered a special task force in the California Highway
Patrol to work with local officials to address the theft problem.
Despite the action, the number of flash mob thefts multiplied,
with a jewelry store in Hayward near San Francisco hit by a group of between 30
and 40. In nearby Oakland a streetwear store was cleaned out: security video
shows more than 30 masked, hooded people squeezing into the small shop,
grabbing collectable shoes and garb and rushing out in under a minute.
Flash mob thefts, also dubbed “flash robs,” have been around
for years, but have accelerated in 2021, besetting owners of small pharmacies,
mid-level chain clothing stores and top-end luxury goods alike. But the sheer
size and speed of the Nordstrom attack in Walnut Creek stunned many. “I
wouldn’t even characterize that as organized crime, that was domestic
terrorism,” Rachel Michelin, president of the California Retailers Association
told Fox40 television in Sacramento.
Brazen and graphic
Jeffrey Ian Ross, a criminologist at the University of
Baltimore, said there is nothing indicating that overall retail theft in the
country has risen significantly. But he said the spread of video footage of the
heists on news and social media may have inspired others to copy them. “It’s
brazen, it’s graphic,” he said. Ross said that police, already burdened by
rising murder cases and other violent crime, “just can’t keep up” with the
volume of stolen goods and the people who resell them. What remained unclear
are the ties if any between the multiple group thefts in the San Francisco
area, how the participants communicate and coordinate, and how any organized
fencing operation might work.
Only three people have been confirmed arrested in the Walnut
Creek robbery, out of the estimated 80-plus people who took part. On Tuesday
San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin announced felony charges against
nine people in store robberies, including the Louis Vuitton store in Union
Square. Michelin, though, said that California could need tougher laws against
this kind of crime, where social media appears to be used to coordinate the
culprits. “We’re going to have those uncomfortable conversations and have a
look at some of the laws on the books,” she told Fox40. “Obviously they aren’t
working.”
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