DOJ

Las Vegas, NV- Felon sentenced to 26 years in prison for Las Vegas armed robberies, assault of federal officer.

Las Vegas, NV– A Las Vegas man who has prior felony convictions was sentenced Monday in two separate cases involving armed robberies of two jewelry stores and assaulting a detention officer while in custody.

Wyatt Scott Peterson, 42, received 26 years in prison to be followed by three years of supervised release, according to a U.S. Department of Justice release.

According to court documents, Peterson entered an EZ Pawn in Las Vegas on Dec. 12, 2016, and demanded the keys to the jewelry case. During the course of the robbery, he brandished a 9mm semi-automatic handgun to intimidate employees into not resisting and complying with his demands, authorities said. The firearm was discharged into a display case during the robbery.

Peterson stole at least $40,000 and left the store, according to prosecutors.

Nine days later, Peterson entered a Super Pawn in Las Vegas and demanded the keys to the jewelry case, prosecutors said. He stole 29 rings, three pairs of earrings, and five bracelets combined worth more than $20,000 before he left the store, the release said.

While detained pending trial for the armed robbery case at the Nevada Southern Detention Center in Pahrump, Peterson confronted and punched a detention officer at the stairwell.

Peterson has two prior felony convictions in Washington and one in in Clark County.

Article provided by Tony Garcia at tgarcia@reviewjournal.com.

Handcuffs

San Carlos, CA- : 18-year-old arrested in $56,000 jewelry store robbery.

San Carlos, California – An 18-year-old suspected of stealing $56,000 in jewelry from a San Carlos store in September 2024, along with two other people, was arrested this week.

The San Mateo County Sheriff’s office arrested the Oakland resident on Tuesday, according to a Friday news release. He was booked into the Maguire Correctional Facility on robbery, burglary and grand theft charges. The office is continuing to identify and locate two others involved in the theft.

On Sept. 25, 2024, San Mateo County Sheriff’s deputies assigned to the San Carlos Police Bureau responded to the report of a robbery at the Home Consignment Center located in the 1100 block of Industrial Road in San Carlos.

Three suspects smashed the door into the business, which was open at the time, and ran to the jewelry department. The suspects then used hammers to break jewelry cases, stealing approximately $56,000 in jewelry before fleeing the area, according to the release.

Following a months-long investigation from the sheriff’s office, that included assistance from the Milpitas Police Department regarding a similar case, officers identified the suspect. Investigators obtained a search warrant that led to the identification of evidence linking the man to the robbery, according to the release.

If you have any information regarding this incident or information on these suspects, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.

Article provided by Stephanie Lam of Bay Area News Group. Click here to view article.

texas

Harris County, TX- 4 ARRESTED in connection with a string of smash-and-grab robberies at several NW Harris County jewelry stores

HARRIS COUNTY, Texas — Four people have been arrested and charged in connection with a string of smash-and-grab robberies, according to Sheriff Ed Gonzalez.

The robberies occurred in November and December 2024 at several jewelry stores in northwest Harris County. Gonzalez said thousands of dollars worth of jewelry were stolen during these robberies. The suspects also allegedly caused thousands of dollars in damage.

The suspects, Dexter Mitchell, 51, his nephew, Reginald Mitchell, 22, Shonton Howard, 26, and Christian Venson, 25, are also suspected of carrying out similar crimes in other parts of Harris County and the Dallas area, according to Gonzalez.

They’re all charged with engaging in organized criminal activity while using a deadly weapon and aggravated robbery.

If you have any information regarding these incidents or information on these suspects, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.

Article provided by KHOU 11 News- Click HERE to view article.

violent

Los Angelas, CA- $100K in jewelry stolen in Violent Kidnapping, Robbery in Southern California

LOS ANGELAS (KTLA) – Two men are wanted in connection with a violent robbery in Los Angeles County, in which a victim was held at gunpoint and tens of thousands of dollars in jewelry was stolen, officials announced Thursday.

The terrifying incident unfolded on Jan. 11 at around 10:15 a.m. in the 7600 block of Firestone Boulevard in Downey, according to a news release from investigators with the Downey Police Department.

The two suspects, police said, entered Gold Dream Fine Jewelry and asked to see some merchandise, but as the sales associate was tending to them, one of the suspects tackled and gagged the associate, brandished a firearm and forced them into a backstock room while the other suspect ransacked the store.

In photos released by investigators, one of the suspects can be seen holding a handgun to the head of the victim as they are on the ground with their hands up.

Authorities said the duo was able to get away with gold, jewelry and watches worth more than $100,000.

Detectives believe the two suspects may be of Central or South American descent and should be considered armed and dangerous.

Article provided by KTLA 5, click here for view of article.

If you have any information regarding this incident or information on these suspects, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.

arrest6

BELLAIRE, Texas- ‘They knew what they were doing’: Bellaire jewelry store owner followed home and robbed.

BELLAIRE, Texas – Two men are under arrest after a Bellaire man was boxed into his driveway and robbed.

It happened around 5:15 p.m. on Wednesday in a neighborhood near the West Loop and Bissonnet Street.

The victim, who asked not to be identified, had just parked in his driveway after coming home from the jewelry store he owns.

That’s when a silver pickup truck blocked him in, and Bellaire police said Timothy Singleton and Stafford Johnson had gotten out.

“I’m thinking, ‘What in the world? Who in the world are these guys?'” the victim told Eyewitness News.

Without so much as a word, he said the two suspects opened his doors and began picking through his car.

“They knew what they were doing. They came right to my car. One came on the right side, one came on the left side, got what they did, ran back in the truck,” he said. “Luckily, praise God, that they didn’t pull guns out.”

The men got away with one of the victim’s phones, his key fob, and 22 rings.

“My adrenaline kicked in. As soon as they pulled out of my driveway, I immediately called 911, and I started chasing them,” the victim said.

The accused thieves made it as far as Bellaire Boulevard, where they lost control of their car while trying to make a U-turn under the West Loop.

The victim said they bailed out and took off with the stolen items in hand.

Officers with the Bellaire Police Department’s Special Response Team just happened to be nearby. They were returning from the shooting that killed a deputy and injured a K-9 when the call went out.

“There’s always gonna be an element of luck, but when luck and preparation come together, then good things happen,” Chief Onesimo Lopez said.

Within minutes, the victim said a tow truck driver was able to direct officers to a parking garage, where police say they found the suspects hiding on the second floor.

Both already had open warrants for other crimes.

In May, ABC13 reported on a Meyerland man who was robbed after being followed home from the bank.

In June, the same thing happened to a Meyerland woman.

Police say to be on the lookout for people who may be following you. If you think you’re being followed, you can call law enforcement and go to the nearest police station.

“Take an indirect route home. Take a couple of rights, maybe a left, and make sure that you’re not being followed,” Lopez said. Singleton and Johnson have been charged with theft.

To view the article and video provided by ABC 13 News, click here

goons

Miami-FL- Feds arrest ‘goons’ they say plotted to kidnap, rob Miami jeweler: ‘One good bop should do it’

MIAMI, FL- A group of men identified by a ringleader as “goons” were plotting through a messaging app to kidnap a Miami jeweler and rob him of $2 million in cryptocurrency. But they didn’t know an informant was also in their group chat.

That’s all according to court documents obtained by Local 10 News on Wednesday, following the arrests of Zacary Briggs, 22; Aaron Hammond, 21; Tre’von Neal, 20; and Evan Puckett, 18, on multiple federal felonies.

The alleged plot


A federal criminal complaint authored by an FBI agent states that a “confidential source” informed authorities on Jan. 6 that a person named “Jack” was assembling “a group of people to kidnap a jeweler who worked out of the Seybold Building,” a well-known hub of jewelers at 36 NE First St. in downtown Miami.

The source told investigators that “Jack” had been in contact with the victim online and “was seeking to exchange a large amount of cryptocurrency for cash,” authorities said.

The next day, “Jack” told the informant that he would put him in a group chat with the “goons,” members of the kidnapping group, the complaint states. “Jack,” authorities say, also sent the source a screenshot of the victim’s digital wallet, showing he had about $2 million worth of crypto.

In the following days, “Jack” began a group chat via the Telegram app called “Play.” In it were “Jack,” along with participants identified as “Dot,” “Swipey” and “Tim.”

The informant was known as “D” or “Big D.” While the complaint doesn’t state who “Jack,” “Tim” and “Dot” were, agents said they were later able to identify “Swipey” as Puckett.

“Jack” would later tell the group chat, “(S)o I told them not to hurt or do shi (sic) to him. We just need to get him,” the complaint states,

“Jack” and his partner “Tim” ultimately agreed to provide the other members of the group $3,500 before the kidnapping.

Authorities said the group discussed plans to hold the jeweler until a crypto ransom was paid and it was decided that “Tim” would provide a vehicle for the kidnapping. The complaint states that “Dot” “later stated that they would be carrying firearms, including Mac-10s and .223 assault-style rifles for the kidnapping.”

The informant told agents that members of the group had asked him to provide a car prior to Monday, the planned date of the kidnapping, ”so they could drive around the area where the kidnapping would occur and scope it out beforehand.”

Authorities said “Tim” arranged to send the informant, “D” to meet with Puckett “near or around Palm Beach County” to pick up the car.

But instead of “D,” the complaint states that investigators sent an undercover agent posing as the informant to meet Puckett. He brought a black, 2023 Chevy Tahoe which was, unbeknownst to the crooks, outfitted with wires, authorities said.

After Puckett met with the agent and got the SUV, he told the group chat, “Big D was cool,” the complaint states. He was later heard, after moving the SUV to a Broward home, saying, “Oh, he’s not getting this back,” referring to the Tahoe.

Authorities said on Monday, they tracked Neal’s cellphone from central Florida as he and the other suspect headed from Ocala to Davie to meet with Puckett to commit the kidnapping.

The complaint states that on a recorded call, Puckett was heard telling “Jack” and the informant that he had a “convoy of (N-words) doing this s— for nothing.” He would later send the group photos of “a handgun and an AR-Style pistol” that he had procured, agents said.

In another recorded call, three members of the kidnapping group were heard talking about the plot, the complaint states.

Authorities said a male voice is heard saying that “one knock” and “one good bop should do it” but that they did not want to give the victim “brain damage.”

“Another male voice can then be heard saying ‘I don’t want this (n-word) to stab me or f—ing shoot me,’ to which a third male voice then replies ‘Tre’von, I would kill that n—- dawg,’” investigators wrote in the complaint.

Authorities said they intercepted the men as they parked ahead of the kidnapping. They said they immediately captured Briggs, Hammond and Puckett and said they arrested Neal a short time later after he ran toward a nearby business.

Agents interview suspects


Authorities said they interviewed the suspects after taking them into custody.

Neal, they said, told investigators that “he was supposed to act as ‘security’ for the (group) and would protect the crew if (the victim) tried to defend himself with a weapon.”

Neal, who had a knife on him, said he “did not intend” to use it in the kidnapping and said “he had changed his mind about participating in the robbery and wanted to leave,” the complaint states.

Puckett, investigators said, admitted that the group intended to rob the victim for crypto and “admitted that he brought the guns the group members would possess during the robbery; however, he claimed that he intended to use them only in the event that he needed to defend himself.”

Investigators said Briggs first claimed that Neal had “hired him to drive him around and that he was going to get paid $500 a day” but that “he was asleep during the trip” and said that Puckett was “known to scam people for cryptocurrency.”

Briggs, the complaint states, “eventually admitted he was aware that the (group) was driving down” to South Florida “to participate in the kidnapping and robbery,” but “he only agreed to act as the ‘driver’ and he did not plan on getting involved in the violence against (the victim).”

It states he “also told law enforcement that if anyone threatened his safety during the robbery, he would have run them over with the truck” and said that the plan was for Puckett to meet with the jeweler “and pretend that he was going to give him a couple of watches in exchange for cryptocurrency.”

Hammond also admitted to the plot, agents said, and said the group’s “plan was to lure the jeweler to the car, rob him and then let him go.”

Investigators said he told them that “he was supposed to be the ‘jump out guy,’ which meant he would “bonk” the victim on the head and put him in the SUV.

They said Hammond told them when he arrived in Broward, he “saw the rifle in the vehicle and became worried because he was on ‘probation.’”

Charges and court dates

The men were initially booked into Broward Sheriff’s Office jail facilities following their arrests.

They are facing federal charges of kidnapping conspiracy, attempted conspiracy, Hobbs Act robbery and attempted Hobbs Act extortion.

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, the kidnapping conspiracy charge carries a potential life sentence.

Online records show that Briggs and Hammond were scheduled to appear in federal court on Friday for detention hearings.

Detention hearings for Neal and Puckett were scheduled for the following Tuesday.

To view the article and see the Federal Criminal Complaint Provided by News 10, click HERE.

Turlock robbery

UPDATE: Turlock, CA- Police seek Pawn Shop Robbery Suspects

Turlock, CA– The Turlock Police Department is seeking information on the suspects who conducted a takeover-style robbery of a pawn shop on Dec. 28.

No injuries were reported from the incident, though employees and customers were held at gunpoint for approximately two minutes and 30 seconds during the ordeal.

The robbery happened on Dec. 28 at Mid Valley Pawn at 270 W. Main St. Around 10:40 a.m. four men wearing masks came into the store. Almost immediately two of the suspects pulled out guns and ordered everyone on the floor and to hand over their cell phones.

The two other suspects started smashing cases and stealing the jewelry.

The armed suspects kept anyone from pushing the store’s panic button.

All four suspects fled the store in a black Honda Accord coupe, possibly a 2008 to 2010 model. The license plate was obscured. The vehicle fled the area southbound on Lander Avenue.

There was a fifth suspect who waited in the car and drove, according to the police department.

The four men were all described as having dark complexions. The masks covered the nose and mouth of each.

The group got away with several thousands of dollars in merchandise.

The suspects are considered armed and dangerous. If located, contact your local law enforcement agency, and do not approach.

“The Turlock Police Department is currently working with our law enforcement partners and utilizing all available technology resources for this investigation,” said “Turlock Police Sgt. Paul Inderbitzen.

If you have any information regarding this incident or information on the suspects or vehicle, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.

Article provided by Sabra Stafford of the Turlock Journal.

armed robbery

Turlock, California – Surveillance video shows employees held at gunpoint in Turlock pawn shop robbery of jewelry.

Turlock California – Mid Valley Pawn in Turlock reopened Thursday, for the first time after it was robbed. On Saturday, employees and customers were held at gunpoint. Surveillance footage captured the entire ordeal, which took just two minutes and 30 seconds. One of the owners Zach Gottlieb said it happened so fast. “There was a gun on me immediately within moments of it happening,” Gottlieb said.

To view video news footage provided by KCRA News 3, click here.

If you have any information regarding this incident or information on these suspects, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.