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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

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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.

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Fort Wayne, IN- Man charged with stealing $65k in jewelry from Hobart JCPenney’s

Fort Wayne, IN- A man is charged with stealing $65,000 in jewelry from JCPenney’s at Southlake Mall.

Matthew Popplewell, 50, was charged Tuesday with burglary, theft and auto theft.

Hobart Police responded at 2:35 a.m. Nov. 6 to the mall for a security alarm. The door was shattered.

The store’s security video from 2:22 a.m. showed a man on a bicycle hammering the glass door. He waited five minutes before carrying a white bag upstairs to the jewelry section.

Police responded just after 11 a.m. Nov. 6 to an apartment on the 2000 block of Dogwood Trail in Merrillville. A woman said someone stole her Toyota Rav 4.

Cops later found the vehicle speeding on I-80/94 westbound. After a chase, cops arrested the driver, Popplewell, on the 400 block of S. Clinton Street in Chicago. It had heavy front-end damage and several airbags deployed.

Cops found six gold and one silver necklace inside with tags attached.

They also recovered clothing, a drug pipe, a JCPenney shopping bag and a cellphone. Cops called 911 to figure out the number and matched it in jail call records to Poppelwell.

Store employees later found another necklace on the floor.

Poppelwell told cops he was high on cocaine and Xanax before he appeared to admit having the vehicle. He denied stealing the jewelry. He consented to a DNA swab.

His Uber account showed he booked a ride to the mall at 6:20 p.m. Nov. 5. Undated Google searches from his phone showed “Price of scrap gold” and “Southlake mall hours.”

Article provided by Meredith Colias-Pete, Chicago Tribune.

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Jeweler Killed- Ft. Lauderdale, FL- ‘Family friend’ killed Fort Lauderdale jeweler over Rolex deal ‘gone bad,’ cops say.

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. Ã¢â‚¬â€œ Arrest documents obtained by Local 10 News on Monday are shedding new light on the murder of a 73-year-old man in a Fort Lauderdale office tower. Police said it was all over a Rolex watch.

According to the newly-obtained Fort Lauderdale police arrest report, Anthony D’Amore was found dead last Monday inside his third-floor jewelry business within the tower, located at 6245 N. Federal Highway in the city’s Imperial Point neighborhood.

Police said D’Amore, of Pompano Beach, had been reported missing to the Broward Sheriff’s Office after having been last seen on Dec. 20. They said detectives responding to a welfare check at the behest of his wife discovered his body three days later.

Authorities said surveillance video would show that a man D’Amore’s wife described as a “family friend,” Nenad Milosevich, was responsible.

The report states that the CCTV footage showed Milosevich, 56, entering the building with D’Amore just after 10 p.m. on the night of the killing. Police noted that Milosevich had picked up D’Amore from his home earlier that evening.

Police said the two were seen exiting the third-floor elevator and entering the business, described as a “one-room workshop and showroom,” together. Only one of the men would exit alive.

The surveillance video showed Milosevich exiting the business just after 12:45 a.m. “carrying a small bag and a large square items (sic) covered in a towel or blanket,” the report states. He then “reached into the suite and locked the door from the inside,” police said. Authorities said there was a video camera within the business as well but its cables were detached.

Police said a Christmas Eve autopsy revealed that D’Amore had multiple neck, back and sub-scalp contusions, as well as abrasions to the back of his neck. A full autopsy report remained pending as of Thursday.

Authorities said they went to Milosevich’s apartment along Port Royale Boulevard, less than a mile away from the scene, on Thursday in order to speak with him. They said he wasn’t there but agreed to meet with detectives after a phone call.

The report states that Milosevich, also known by the alternate spelling Nenad Milosevic, sat down with detectives. It states Milosevich told detectives that he had dinner with D’Amore and they then went to his business because Milosevich “was hoping to get some jewelry for his girlfriend for Christmas.”

But Milosevich, police said, still had outstanding payments to be made on a $20,000 Rolex. He told detectives that he had paid about $16,000 on the watch up until that point.

“The deal for the Rolex had gone bad and (D’Amore) was upping the price because Milosevic was not paying fast enough,” a detective wrote. “(D’Amore) would also not give him other items in exchange for the monies already paid. This caused an argument between them.”

Police said Milosevich admitted to hitting D’Amore twice in the throat, then “found himself on top” of him on the floor, where he “choked” him.

Authorities said as D’Amore lay unresponsive on the floor, Milosevich told them he grabbed about 20 pieces of jewelry and put them in a bag. The report states he also admitted to unplugging the video recorder and wrapping it in a blanket before leaving the office.

The report states that Milosevich later threw the stolen jewelry and DVR off a bridge.

He was arrested on a charge of second-degree murder.

As of Monday, Milosevich remained held without bond in the BSO Main Jail.

Article provided by WPLG Local10.com, click here to view.

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Victorville, CA- Teen stole necklaces worth $52K from jewelry store, police say.

A 17-year-old boy was arrested after he allegedly stole two necklaces from from a jewelry store at the Mall of Victor Valley.

The boy, whose identity has not been released, entered Valliani Jewelers at about 5:20 p.m. on Nov. 16, asked about two necklaces, then ran toward the exit with the jewelry, the San Bernardino County Sheriff’s Department said in a news release.

The boy made it to his vehicle and drove off with the necklaces, which are worth about $52,000, authorities said. He was taken into custody at his Victorville home on Thursday and faces charges of robbery and grand theft.

Article provided by KTLA 5 News.

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Rochester Hills, MI- 2 accused of killing jeweler after posing as DTE workers at Rochester Hills home bound over for trial.

Rochester Hills, MI– The widow of a slain Hamtramck jeweler repeatedly asked two men who posed as DTE workers checking for a supposed gas leak in their Rochester Hills home where her husband was after he went to the basement with the duo, but didn’t return when the pair came back upstairs.

“I started asking: ‘Where is my husband? Where is my husband?’ And I didn’t get a response,” Linda Murray testified Tuesday during a preliminary exam in 52-3 District Court in Rochester Hills for two men charged in the Oct. 11 death of her husband, Hussein (Sam) Murray, to whom she was married for 54 years.

District Judge Laura Polizzi bound over both men — Carlos Hernandez, 38, and Joshua Zuazo, 39, both of Dearborn — to stand trial in Oakland County Circuit Court. Each is charged with one count of felony murder and two counts of unlawful imprisonment.

To view the article, provided by the Detroit Free press, click here,

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College Point, NY- Siblings charged in connection to violent Astoria jewel heist: NYPD

Queens, NY– (December 22, 2024) A pair of siblings from College Point were arrested in Bayside on the morning of Friday, Dec. 13, and criminally charged in connection to a violent jewel heist in Astoria hours earlier.

Brayan Pulido-Pineda, 23, and his sister, Sandy Pulido, 21, both from the same address on 11th Avenue in College Point, were taken into custody by police from the 111th Precinct in Bayside after a brief car chase.

Investigators determined they were in possession of $500,000 worth of jewelry stolen from a 50-year-old man who was beaten and robbed by three masked men in Astoria.

The victim was transporting a large inventory of jewelry on the night of Thursday, Dec. 12, when he got out of his vehicle in front of Rosa’s Pizza at 31-01 21st St. just before 10 p.m. He noticed three masked men exiting a vehicle who proceeded to punch and kick him and forcibly remove a bag containing the jewelry, according to the criminal complaint.

Police from the 114th Precinct in Astoria responded to the scene. The victim told them the bag also contained an Apple AirTag tracking device. The victim sustained minor injuries but refused medical treatment.

A detective from the Queens Borough North anti-crime unit tracked the stolen briefcase to the intersection of 217th Street and 48th Avenue in Bayside hours later. A cop from the 111th Precinct went to investigate and spotted a black 2014 Mazda sedan stopped at the location with the engine running.

When he approached the car on foot, the vehicle took off. He gave chase in his vehicle and watched as the Mazda sped through numerous red lights until it crashed into a fence in front of a home at 42-02 217th St. at 1:16 a.m.

The officer saw Sandy Pulido emerge from the driver’s side and Brayan Pulido-Pineda emerged from the passenger side and attempted to make a run for it. He was apprehended in front of a home at 42-12 217th St. He then found his sister behind that home, hiding underneath a truck, according to the criminal complaint.

The bag containing the stolen jewelry was recovered from the vehicle and returned to the victim, police said Sunday.

The siblings were booked at the 111th Precinct in Bayside, where Sandy Pulido told detectives her brother had called her and asked to be picked up near the Whitestone Bridge.

“He told me he took something and that he was in trouble,” she said. “The police stopped us and I was driving. I drove away from the police because I was nervous because he told me that he was in trouble.”

She added, “I tried to get away from the police, and I crashed the car. I ran out of the car and hid under a truck,” according to the criminal complaint.

The brother and sister were arraigned in Queens Criminal Court on Saturday, Sept. 14. Brayan Pulido was charged with criminal possession of stolen property, Sandy Pulido was charged with criminal possession of stolen property, and they were additionally charged with reckless endangerment, reckless driving, and driving with tinted windows.

The other two suspects in the Astoria jewelry heist remain at large, police said.

Article provided by the Astoria Post, click here to view entire article.

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

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Jacksonville, FL- Jewelry Store Robber Sentenced To Over 12 Years For East Coast Robbery Conspiracy.

Jacksonville, Florida – (December 20, 2024) U.S. District Judge Harvey E. Schlesinger today sentenced Jameise Vaughn Christian (22, Washington, DC) to 12 years and 10 months in federal prison for conspiracy to commit Hobbs Act robberies in New Jersey and Florida, and for brandishing a firearm during the robberies. 

According to court documents, Christian and his co-conspirators planned and executed a series of jewelry store robberies in New Jersey, Florida, and the District of Columbia. Based in the Washington, D.C. area, the group targeted predominantly South Asian jewelry stores along the East Coast. Wearing disguises and armed with firearms, they used hammers to smash jewelry display cases and steal valuable items. These stores were specifically chosen because they sold high-purity gold, which yielded higher proceeds when sold for cash.

On October 25, 2022, Christian, along with Trevor Wright, William Hunter, Keith McDuffie, and an unindicted co-conspirator, traveled in two vehicles from Washington, D.C., to a jewelry store in Paterson, New Jersey. Upon arrival, Christian and two accomplices exited their vehicle wearing masks and carrying firearms and a hammer, while the other two remained outside to serve as lookouts. Inside the store, the group used the hammer to smash display cases and brandished a firearm to force employees to lie on the ground. In less than two minutes, the group stole approximately $1.9 million worth of jewelry before fleeing the scene.

Less than two months later, in early December 2022, Christian and his co-conspirators—Trevor Wright, Avery Fuller, Antonio Tate, and Jaylaun Brown—planned another robbery, this time at a jewelry store in Jacksonville, Florida. To prepare, the group coordinated travel from Washington, D.C., to Miami, Florida, where they rented a black BMW and a white Mercedes. On December 6, 2022, they drove these vehicles to Jacksonville. Upon arrival at the jewelry store, Christian and three others exited the black BMW, entered the store wearing disguises, and brandished firearms. Christian ordered store employees to kneel behind the counter with their heads down while the group used a hammer to smash glass display cases. Meanwhile, two accomplices remained in the white Mercedes to monitor the store’s entrance.

After approximately three minutes, one of the conspirators exited the store and drove the black BMW directly in front of the store, honking the horn to signal the others to exit. Before leaving, Christian approached the store employees kneeling in the corner, pointed his firearm, and stole the store owner’s wallet. The group then loaded the stolen jewelry into the trunk of the black BMW and fled the scene, with the white Mercedes traveling in the same direction. The group stole approximately $880,000 in jewelry from the jewelry store.

Due to the collaborative efforts of multiple law enforcement agencies, this complex investigation resulted in the identification of these six individuals. They were eventually traced back to Miami and observed on surveillance at a Miami condominium, where they were seen exiting their vehicles unmasked and carrying the stolen jewelry.

To date, all individuals involved in the Jacksonville and New Jersey robberies have been arrested and face pending federal cases in Jacksonville and Washington, D.C. In Jacksonville, Delontae Martin and Antonio Tate pled guilty to brandishing a firearm in furtherance of the Jacksonville robbery. Martin was sentenced to 108 months’ imprisonment, and Tate was sentenced to 120 months. Avery Fuller pled guilty to conspiracy to commit robberies in Jacksonville and New Jersey and to brandishing a firearm in furtherance of the robberies. He faces a minimum of seven years, up to life, in federal prison. Trevor Wright and Jaylaun Brown are in custody and awaiting trial in Washington, D.C., for robbery and firearm offenses.

This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office, the Miami Police Department and U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. It is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Kirwinn Mike.

This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

Click here to view DOJ press release.

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Beverly Hills, California – Suspect sentenced in Federal Court for robbery at Beverly Hills jewelry store.

Beverly Hills, California– A Long Beach man was sentenced on Dec. 12 to six years and eight months in federal prison for a March 2022 smash-and-grab robbery at a jewelry store on South Beverly Drive.

United States District Judge George H. Wu sentenced the defendant, Jimmy Lee Vernon III, 33, and ordered Vernon to pay more than $2.6 million in restitution. Vernon pleaded guilty on Aug. 1 to one count of interference with commerce by robbery. He has been in federal custody since September 2022.

“This defendant took part in a blatant assault on a store operating in daylight hours, believing he could rob and intimidate others with impunity,” United States Attorney Martin Estrada said. “Now, he will serve a lengthy sentence in federal prison. Our office and our law enforcement partners will not tolerate these sorts of brazen attacks on our community.”

Vernon was among a group that robbed Luxury Jewels of Beverly Hills at 203 S. Beverly Drive on March 22, 2022. Vernon used tools to smash the store’s display case while employees were present, causing fear and injuring people inside the store, authorities said. Vernon removed jewelry and other items valued at $2,674,600 from store display cases. The merchandise consisted of approximately 19 bracelets, seven pairs of earrings, four necklaces, a pair of obelisks, eight rings and 20 watches, authorities said.

After the robbery, Vernon and his accomplices ran out of the store and left behind their vehicle – a Kia that had been reported stolen out of Long Beach four days before the robbery. During the crime, Vernon’s cellphone fell out of a pocket in his sweatpants as he smashed the jewelry store’s window. The cell phone was recovered by law enforcement officials.

Two days after the robbery, one of Vernon’s accomplices posted numerous photographs on his Instagram account that included large stacks of money and a message praising his “robbery gang,” according to court documents. Also charged for the crime were Deshon Bell, 22, of Long Beach, who pleaded guilty in December 2023 to one count of robbery and is serving a federal prison sentence of one year and one day. Ladell Tharpe, 39, of Long Beach, pleaded guilty on Sept. 30 to one count of robbery is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 6.

The FBI and the Beverly Hills Police Department investigated the robbery.

Article provided by the Beverly Press.

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UPDATE: Germantown, TN- 3 arrests made in attempted smash-and-grab at Germantown jewelry store, police say

GERMANTOWN, Tenn. – Three people have been arrested after the Germantown jewelry store robbery Monday, police said.

Johnathan Spates, Jackie Spears, and Trayneisha Hurt were all charged with aggravated robbery, aggravated assault, and felony vandalism. Hurt has also been charged with false reporting. In addition to the arrests, Germantown Police said they have recovered both vehicles used in the robbery.

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