After a string of high-profile smash-and-grab robberies targeting high-end shopping centers, Los Angeles area law enforcement officials said Thursday, August 17 they are creating a task force to deal with the problem.
Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass, flanked by leaders from LAPD and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, announced the task force made up of officers from around the region dedicated to targeting groups of robbers whose sudden stampedes into retail stores have been flummoxing business owners and police since Monday, July 3.
Among those robberies was the widely covered one on Saturday, Aug. 12, when 30 to as many as 50 people, all believed to be between the ages of 18 and 25, barged into the Nordstrom at the Topanga Mall in Canoga Park.
Also see: Smash-and-grab robberies take financial, emotional toll on businesses across LA County
The group rampaged through the store, ultimately grabbing around $300,000 worth of merchandise, police said.
There have been at least three other, similar robberies of high-end stores recently, including on Tuesday, Aug. 15 at a Ksubi clothing store on South La Brea in the Fairfax District.
Speaking Thursday at City Hall, Bass called the robberies “unacceptable.”
“No Angeleno should feel like it’s not safe to go shopping in Los Angeles,” she said. “Our No. 1 job is to keep L.A. safe.”
LAPD Deputy Chief Kris Pitcher, who oversees the department’s detective units, said police believe the string of robberies began in July, with two crimes involving between four to as many as 15 suspected robbers.
During the Topanga Mall robbery, one person attacked a security guard with bear spray.
Pitcher said the task force would be based out of the San Fernando Valley and would be on-call all day and night. He said it will be staffed with at least 22 full-time officers who will be able to call on a broad swath of law enforcement resources.
“We will be using cell tower dumps, computer information — we have…
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