Protecting
Our National "Treasures": Taking a Bead
on an International Ring of Jewel Thieves
(FBI)
It began with a car chase: one cold January afternoon this
year, a handful of South American immigrants from New York City
stole nearly $100,000 worth of Rolex watches from a jewelry store
in Cranston, Rhode Island. They fled the scene in a minivan, with
local police in hot pursuit. Minutes later, they slammed into
a police cruiser. They jumped out of the van and fled on foot,
but four were immediately caught and arrested.
One lead
led to another... all the way to Operation Cut and Run, a
massive investigation by the FBI, the New York City Police Department,
the Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the U.S.
Attorney's Office in the Southern District of New York, the Queens
County District Attorney's Office, and other law enforcement partners.
In the end,
this multi-agency initiative uncovered and ultimately took down
a criminal enterprise that had stolen more than $3 million worth
of high-dollar pieces of jewelry across the eastern seaboard in
more than 90 separate thefts. So far, 16 members of the crew have
been arrested or indicted, and one has pled guilty.
For the FBI,
it's a textbook jewelry theft case, as you can see on their Jewelry
and Gem Program website.
The thefts
were orchestrated by a signature international enterprise:
a South American Theft Group, or SATG
that operated out of New York City, one of the common bases for
jewelry theft rings.
The ring
was sophisticated: the thieves would enter jewelry stores
in small groups, with some members distracting sales and security
personnel while others operated as lookouts. Once the coast was
clear, some of them would stand around a showcase to shield it
from view while others used a tool to cut the silicone holding
the case together and remove the goods. The group would then leave
the scene and meet a waiting get-away vehicle.
The thefts
extended across state lines, bringing in the FBI with its national
and international network of agents.
As usual,
fences played a role in receiving and moving the stolen goods.
Then, as we
do in all of these cases, we enter the intelligence gained--including
the modus operandi of the group and descriptions of suspects--into
the FBI's Jewelry
and Gem database. This information helps law enforcement partners
nationwide coordinate any related investigations and better understand
the jewelry and gem criminal enterprises operating in the U.S.
We also provide training to local jewelry professionals who are
targets of these crimes.
Interested
in learning more about the FBI's Jewelry and Gem Program? Please
Click Here
to visit their new and improved website