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Roseville, CA- 5 men, 1 teen arrested in $1.5 million jewelry robbery at Roseville’s Westfield Galleria mall.

Roseville, CA- Five men and a Rocklin teenager were arrested in connection to a $1.5 million jewelry smash-and-grab robbery that took place last year at the Westfield Galleria mall in Roseville, police said Thursday. Three masked robbers smashed glass display cases Nov. 21 at S&L Gem Co. Jewelry using hammers and sledgehammers, said Lt. Chris Ciampa, a spokesman for the Roseville Police Department. The suspects face charges of robbery, conspiracy, vehicle theft and evading police, police said. Anuanu Tuiono, 20; Siafa Fifita, 23; Dahnavan Tuipulotu, 20 and Sione Halaapiapi, 18, all pleaded not guilty at their respective arraignments, according to Placer Superior Court records. It is unclear if a 15-year-old boy will face charges. He was not identified by police because he is a minor.

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Beverly Hills, CA- Five Arrested After Smash-and-Grab Robbery at Waldorf Astoria Retailer.

Beverly Hills, CA- On January 10, 2025, a smash-and-grab robbery of a luxury watch retailer on Wilshire Boulevard resulted in five arrests after a brief vehicle pursuit of the suspects. The robbery took place in the afternoon at Wrist Aficionado, which is located in the Waldorf Astoria Beverly Hills. One security guard sustained injuries during the robbery and is expected to recover. Police continue to search for additional suspects, according to Beverly Hills Police Department (BHPD) Public Information Office Lieutenant Kevin Orth.

A spokesman for the Waldorf Astoria told the Courier, “Upon being alerted to the situation, the hotel’s security team immediately contacted the Beverly Hills Police Department.” The spokesman said, “The safety and security of our guests and team members is always a top priority, and we continue to make every effort to ensure all practices and standards are in line with strict safety and security protocols. We are working with the third-party store and cooperating fully with local authorities.”

The suspects fled in several vehicles after the robbery. One of the vehicles, a black Mercedes sedan, was located by the BHPD shortly thereafter. When officers attempted to make a traffic stop, the vehicle did not yield. Officers pursued the Mercedes into Bel-Air, with the pursuit concluding on Sepulveda Boulevard and Moraga Drive. Five suspects were taken into custody, along with evidence and property connected to the robbery.

Orth told the Beverly Hills Courier that no officers were injured during the pursuit or arrests.

Arrested were Alexander Cash, 20; Kolion Beyan, 20; Jordan Jackson, 20; Kevin Turner, 23 and James Knight, 19. All are from Los Angeles. All were booked on suspicion of felony robbery, burglary, organized retail theft and criminal conspiracy. Beyan was additionally charged with resisting arrest, reckless evading, assault with deadly weapon or force likely to produce great bodily injury and receiving stolen property. Jordan was also booked on suspicion of reckless evading and resisting arrest. Turner was booked on suspicion of reckless evading and resisting arrest. Knight was booked on suspicion of resisting arrest and receiving stolen property.

The charges of organized retail theft are charges newly available to law enforcement pursuant to a statute that went into effect on Jan. 1. A conviction carries a maximum sentence of one year in prison.

The BHPD is still searching for one vehicle as well as several additional suspects.

Article provided by the Beverly Hills Courier, click here to view.

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Bloomington, IL- ‘Smash and grab’ burglary ignites false rumors of gunfire at Bloomington mall

BLOOMINGTON, IL- Bloomington Police are investigating a “smash and grab” burglary Saturday evening at an Eastland Mall jewelry store and at the same time trying to calm fears that a much worse incident happened there.

Police told 25News that someone entered Rogers & Hollands shortly after 6 p.m., smashed a glass display case, and ran off with an undisclosed amount of merchandise. At least some of the stolen items were recovered, according to police.

No employees or customers were injured, but the loud sound of breaking glass created confusion and led to rumors that shots had been fired at the mall.

Police turned to social media to assure the community that there was no gunfire there.

“There was a police presence at this location. Shots were not fired, and no evidence of gunfire was discovered. The investigation into this incident is ongoing,” the department said in a Facebook post. “We encourage everyone to verify information before sharing it online, as spreading false claims can cause unnecessary fear and confusion.”

Meantime, police provided a partial description of the burglar. He is a light-skinned male wearing dark clothing, and his face was covered, according to police.

Article by Howard Packowitz of 25 News, click here to view 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.

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Greece, NY: Thieves caught on camera stealing $90k from jewelry store at the Mall at Greece Ridge.

Greece, NY– (January 09, 2025) Police say eight suspects went into the mall, six went to Dubai Jewelry, and two stayed nearby. The suspects, ages 15-25, wore masks and gloves, jumped over the counter, and used a baseball bat to smash display cases.

There was about $90,000 of jewelry stolen, and there was $3,000 in damages to display cases.

Store security tried to stop the suspects, but were threatened with a baseball bat. Suspects ran to the food court to the exit, another security officer was almost hit by a baseball bat by one of the suspects.

The suspects left in a dark Chevrolet Malibu. Rochester Police found the car empty on Lang Street. Article provided by NBC News 10.

To view a video of criminal act provided by 13WHAM ABC News via YouTube, click here.

If you have any information regarding this incident or information on any of the 8 suspects, please contact the Jewelers’ Security Alliance at jsa2@jewelerssecurity.org or 212-687-0328.

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Dallas, TX: Brazen $600K Jewelry Heist Shatters Family Business.

Dallas, TX– Multiple suspects are on the loose after a brazen smash-and-grab theft of about $600,000 worth of jewelry from a small family-owned business located inside an East Dallas supermarket.

The robbery took place at the El Rancho Supermercado on Gus Thomasson Road around 4:40 p.m. Sunday when at least four suspects targeted a jewelry display inside the store. Surveillance footage shared by the store’s owner with WFAA News shows the suspects smashing jewelry cases with a hammer and quickly making off with hands full of jewelry.

In one of the video clips, Angel Cuenca, the business owner’s son, stands behind the jewelry counter as the thieves approach from the front. Cuenca can be heard shouting, “Whoa!” as the situation escalates.

Cuenca was helping his mother run her jewelry business, Joyeria Princesa, inside the supermarket. He said his mother was in the restroom when the robbery began. In the footage, she can be heard crying and screaming as she rushes back to the robbery scene.

Cuenca told NBC 5 DFW that the thieves targeted the showcase with the most expensive jewelry, leading him to believe that the robbers had cased the scene in advance.

“It was like extremely premeditated,” Cuenca said.

The jewelry store, a family-owned operation, was built with years of hard work and sacrifice. Cuenca’s mother started the business with a $3,000 loan, working tirelessly, often putting in 80 hours a week. Tragically, the jewelry stolen was uninsured, leaving the family with a huge financial void, according to WFAA.

“When we got home, she was still crying for the rest of the night,” Cuenca told WFAA. “Unfortunately, a lot of the hard work she put into this store was thrown out the window yesterday in the span of 30 seconds.”

Cuenca and his mother are devastated by the loss, both financially and emotionally. The small family business had been a cornerstone of their lives, and the theft has left them feeling vulnerable.

Despite the dramatic footage, which captures the suspects in action, Dallas police have not made any arrests. Authorities are still investigating the incident and have not released any further information.

Surveillance footage of the suspects has been shared publicly in the hopes of generating leads on the robbery. Anyone with information can contact the Dallas Police Department directly to provide help. According to NBC 5, the associated case reference number for the theft is 193739-2024.

A similar robbery occurred in November at a Houston El Rancho supermarket, but authorities have not commented on whether the two robberies are linked, NBC 5 reported.

For now, the Cuenca family is left to rebuild after a robbery that has shattered not only their business but also their sense of security.

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

Article provided by Joe Edwards of the Dallas express. Click here to view article.

arlington

ARLINGTON, TX- SMASH AND GRAB ROBBERY

Arlington, TX- On December 20, 2024 at the Village by the Park mall, a jewelery store reported a smash and Grab robbery involving four male suspects at closing time on Dec 19th.
Four males ran into the store all covered in dark clothing with the exception of one wearing a green jacket. Upon entry the suspects directed the employees to stay down. One male suspect stayed at the door and acted as a lookout , The other three suspects used a rock and a type of claw hammer to get into the case housing gold chains. They removed an undetermined amount of gold product. The event lasted less than three minutes. Authorities were contacted and arrived on scene shortly. This investigation is on-going.

Suspect(s) limited Description:

  1. Black Male; 6FT Thin Build w Dark complexion; Possibly Mid-twenties.
  2. Black Male; Medium Build; 5’10 to 6Ft.
  3. Black Male; 5”10 to 6Ft; Thin to Medium Build.
  4. Black Male; 5”10 to 6Ft.

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.

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Westport, CT- Case closed: How cops cracked downtown smash-and-grab burglary.

WESTPORT, CT — They were the types of caught-on-camera crimes that shock and frighten, even when viewed on TV or computer screens. Fast, violent, pre-planned actions with bad intentions that, if they had escalated, could result in brutality, or even deaths.

Westport experienced two such incidents over the past 15 months. A smash-and-grab burglary this past May at the downtown Lux, Bond & Green jewelry store, and a car hijacking in a private citizen’s garage in September 2023.

Both times the assailants wore masks and hoodies, making facial recognition virtually impossible. All the lawbreakers made clean getaways. And yet both crimes were solved by dogged Westport police officers and detectives, with support from other police departments.

Usually the public reads about a crime and perhaps sees it from a surveillance recording, then weeks or months later learns about arrests. Rarely are the details of how the perpetrators were hunted and caught released. Until now…..

Police Chief Foti Koskinas, Detective Bureau Commander Lt. Jillian Cabana and Lt. Eric Woods met with Westport Journal to explain in detail how investigations unfolded and the suspects were arrested. Through coordinated efforts with other law enforcement agencies, the use of surveillance footage, digital evidence, relentless investigation and utilizing tips and information provided by the public, detectives were able to identify and apprehend the suspects within days in both cases.

“These cases are still active; they’re not completely adjudicated,” noted Koskinas. “Some of the stuff is still pending, and there could potentially be more suspects.”

What follows is the narrative of the smash-and-grab crime. The carjacking story will be published in the coming days, followed by a conversation with the three principals focusing on how the Police Department has an impact on the community in a variety of ways.

Smash-and-grab recap

Two masked thieves wielding sledgehammers shattered display cases at Lux, Bond & Green on Main Street, stealing merchandise valued at over $100,000, Woods said. The burglary took place about 3:10 p.m. Thursday, May 9.

Employees retreated to the rear of the store, and there was no physical or verbal contact with the intruders, who fled from the store, entered a black BMW sedan and were seen heading on the Post Road East toward Fairfield.

In late May, the first of two suspects was arrested and charged with first-degree larceny, first-degree conspiracy to commit larceny, first-degree criminal mischief and first-degree conspiracy to commit criminal mischief. A second man was charged in late October.

So what happened in the time between when Westport police first learned of the crime and the subsequent first arrest?

Cabana: “First, we got a ton of information from dispatch. We want to know are they still on the scene? Have they fled? Is there a suspect description, direction of travel, all that stuff. Patrol officers generally respond first. If it’s determined that a detective is needed, then we respond.”

Woods: “We know that the time of day that this happened in downtown Westport, we’re thinking that there’s going to be a lot of witnesses. We don’t need everybody converging at the scene. We need to send officers to entrance and exit ramps at I-95 and the Merritt Parkway. So if you see a patrol car not going toward the crime scene, it’s not because they’re just driving away. We send people to different areas of town and go there to look for witnesses.”

Cabana: “And that actually happened in this case. Officers were working a construction job close to the Sherwood Island Connector and they announced a black BMW just flew by in the wrong lane. I think it was even on the wrong side of the road.”

Before continuing, the officers indicated they had confidence the investigation into this crime would be a successful.

Cabana: “It depends on the solvability factors. Do we have witnesses? Is there surveillance video? Are the items stolen serialized? Do we have a license plate? Do we have a good video of a suspect? The more of those we have increase our chances of getting it solved.”

Koskinas: “We had suspects with masks and gloves on. They arrived and left in a stolen car. That’s it. So right off the bat you probably don’t have physical evidence, you don’t have fingerprints. You’re not going to get DNA if there are gloves, and it’s very hard to identify somebody who’s masked. The car is going to give you very little, even if you get to it in a timely manner, because it’s a stolen car. So at face value, you’re looking at this as, what do we really have? It’s like we don’t have anything.”

But investigators maintained a confident mindset, knowing there were other avenues to travel.

Woods: “A witness took a picture of a car that was parked on Elm Street and he saw someone run into it. So we had that.” Video technology allowed the police to zoom in and read the license plate.

Cabana: “There was video store surveillance related to this type incident in other towns. And then there are technologies like traffic cameras that we’re able to use. The biggest break we had was we got the license plate from the suspect vehicle and learned that that plate had been stolen earlier in the day from a corporate park in Trumbull.

“Our law enforcement contacts in other towns, they have their own liaisons and sources of information. It can then be like, ‘Hey, we’re hearing on the street from one of our sources that it’s this person.’ We were contacted by the Jewelers Security Alliance, a private organization for jewelry stores. They heard about our case and said, ‘Hey, this is a pattern. There’s been eight similar incidents in Connecticut since the beginning of the year.

“We knew about one in Trumbull the month prior. There was one in Farmington and they were all the same. Two or three men run in, smash with hammers, grab stuff and take off. We got a tip from Waterbury, that they’re hearing it was Javon Thorbourne, who’d been arrested before (for smash and grabs). Then with our law enforcement techniques, we were able to place him in Trumbull when the license plate was stolen, and in Westport.”

Cabana explained that traffic cameras and personal data were factors, but did not want to get more specific. So, the case was basically cracked within 24 hours.

“He happened to be a convicted felon, and had an active warrant in Waterbury, so we teamed up with Waterbury police and the U.S. marshals and they went to his house to arrest him. They knew about our (jewelry store) larceny and what we’re looking for. When they arrested him, they patted him down and he had a Rolex tag from one of the watches that were stolen, a little lanyard that describes what the watch is, the number, the cost and other identifiers.”

Why would Thorbourne have the tag on his person?

Koskinas: “Well, there’s a couple of things. We can’t read into their minds. It could be complete carelessness. The other part is you don’t want to have the actual merchandise on you, but if you’re going to try to sell it, you need to have the identifiers of what you’re trying to sell. So if you’re going to call somebody who’s a high-value customer or potential high-value customer, they’re going to ask what you have. You don’t want to have the watch on you because it might get stolen, lost or damaged. But you can have the tag.”

This particular investigation went smoothly. Some do, some don’t, but a dead end for one lead means there will be another path for investigators.

Woods: “It was very fast. We don’t know what he was thinking or why he was thinking it, but our detectives have a playbook in which we’re going to go down this road until this play doesn’t work anymore or until it pans out for something. In this case, they followed this playbook, identified him and showed up at his house.”

Cabana: “When Waterbury police arrested him, they see the stuff that matches our crime. They take him and do their thing with him. He’s wanted on other stuff there. We get a search warrant and go back into his room. It was kind of like a flophouse. He was renting one room and we ended up finding more stuff to link him to the crime. They also seized a firearm and he’s a convicted felon and prohibited from possessing that. So Waterbury took that end of that. We do an arrest warrant because we have enough to link him here.”

There was another suspect left to track down. While it didn’t take long to identify who it was, it was extremely laborious to follow the guidelines necessary to make sure the arrest would hold up in court. One of the items seized from Thorbourne was his cellphone, but it took long hours to be able to utilize it.

Woods: “First the detectives have to write search warrants for each number, find judges, get judges to sign the warrants and execute the warrants. Then it’s hours upon hours upon hours … days of scrolling, not on the phone but on our software. You can imagine the amount of stuff they’re looking at. And they finally came upon a conversation.”

Cabana: “Two of our detectives are forensic digital examiners. They have all the best training. So they look through all the digital media that we get. This time we ended up finding conversations between Thorbourne and other players. We ended up talking to Waterbury again and got information about this one person, this name, this phone number, that’s actually Joshua DeJesus. And then we talked to someone who confirmed the cellphone number he’s been using. So we just build these puzzles.

“There were text conversations between Thorbourne and DeJesus. Planning it, talking about it, talking about where they’re going to sell stuff, talking about all that. So we know he’s in on it. And he fits the description of one of the people involved.”

Did the police talk to Thorbourne and try to get him to give up DeJesus to save them all the time of having to catch him themselves?

Cabana: “Oh, absolutely. We always try and interview, but we can’t force anybody to talk to

us. They interviewed him and he was just concerned about what happened to his money. Proceeds of crimes are also seized under the search warrant. So we seized a gold necklace and money that was in his house that we believe was probably from the sale of Rolexes. He was asking about the necklace. It was stolen from a smash-and-grab in another town. He wasn’t getting that back.”

Article provided by Michael Catarevas, who is a freelance writer for the Westport Journal.

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Massapequa, NY- Masked men seen running out of Massapequa jewelry store and sped off after suspected smash and grab robbery.

There was a heavy police presence Friday evening outside a Massapequa jewelry store.

The area around Forever Diamonds on Sunrise Highway was roped off as police surrounded the area.

One eyewitness told News 12 that she saw three masked men running out of the store and then jumping into an awaiting car before speeding off.

Another witness said that they saw a sledgehammer and thought it was a smash-and-grab robbery.

Police are not saying if anything was taken from the store if anyone was hurt.

To view the video news article provided by News 12 Long Island, click here.

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

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Jackson Heights, NY- Police investigating smash-and-grab robbery at jewelry store.

JACKSON HEIGHTS, Queens (WABC) — Police are investigating a smash-and-grab robbery at a jewelry store in Queens.

It happened just before 6:30 p.m. Friday at the store on 34th Ave. and 74th Street in Jackson Heights.

Three men in black hoods were seen taking hammers to the front display windows and then grabbing everything inside without setting foot into the store itself. The owner says he watched it all unfold before his eyes.

“We are inside and they are outside. They break from outside. I just opened the door and after they run,” he said. The owner says this is the first robbery he has had since the place opened 20 years ago. There is no word on the value of the jewelry taken.

To view the news video provided by Eyewitness news 7, click here.

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

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College Station, TX- Police investigating robbery at jewelry store in mall.

COLLEGE STATION, Texas- The College Station Police Department is investigating a robbery inside Post Oak Mall on Monday. Police responded to a jewelry store near the food court around 5 p.m. Details of what happened were not immediately available, but photos sent to KBTX from customers inside the mall show a shattered glass case and a hammer left at the scene.

Article provided by Rusty Surette of KBTX News.

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