CHP recovers nearly $850,000 in stolen merchandise - California Hoy

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Aug 26, 2024

CHP recovers nearly $850,000 in stolen merchandise

 


SACRAMENTO — Governor Gavin Newsom lauded the work of the California Highway Patrol’s Organized Retail Crime Task Force, which shut down organized retail theft rings in Orange and Alameda counties in recent weeks. Officers seized nearly $850,000 in stolen merchandise and made multiple felony arrests.

The California Highway Patrol has dedicated organized retail theft teams in Orange County, Los Angeles, and the San Francisco Bay Area, which work with retailers to combat retail crime throughout the state. This month, Governor Newsom signed landmark legislation to strengthen California’s retail theft and property crime laws, including bills to maintain important organized retail crime statutes and the task force, authorization for which would have expired in 2026. Since January, the task force has made 884 arrests and seized nearly a quarter of a million stolen goods valued at more than $7.2 million.

Last week, the task force announced the results of the following operations:

Bay Area operation

Following a month-long investigation of a criminal network in the Bay Area, the task force recovered over $450,000 in stolen merchandise found at an Oakland residence and an Oakland storage facility. The operation uncovered suspects involved in an illegal fencing scheme targeting drug stores. The team announced the arrest of the leader of the operation, who was charged with multiple felonies, including organized retail crime, possession of stolen property, and conspiracy to commit a crime.

Orange County operation
The task force uncovered an organized retail theft ring as part of an ongoing operation in southern California. An Inglewood man and father-daughter duo were charged with multiple felony counts after the task force found nearly $400,000 in stolen merchandise, as well as counterfeit items, which the suspects were selling at an open-air market in Torrence. Officers arrested the leader of the operation in his home in Los Angeles and the father-daughter duo, who carried out the thefts, in Anaheim. The suspects were charged with multiple felony counts, including receiving stolen property, organized retail theft, sale of counterfeit items, grand theft, and conspiracy.

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