Jewelers on high alert
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT BEACH -- The botched robbery at Traditional Jewelers put
others in the gem trade on guard Wednesday, less than 24 hours after the
Fashion Island shootout.
Edis Florimon, a sales associate at South Coast Plaza’s Ben Bridge
jewelry shop, said he was reluctant to discuss the matter.
“I don’t like to talk about it,” Florimon said. “If it happens, it
happens.”
Over at Carol Klein Fine Jewelry on Bayside Drive, a saleswoman who
wanted to remain nameless said the store was on red alert.
“Everybody’s on pins and needles,” she said. “Just talking on the
phone makes me nervous. It’s a very risky business.”
The local jewelers contacted Wednesday said they could not disclose
details about their security measures. Some said they use electronic
alarm systems. Others, including Traditional Jewelers, hire armed guards.
At Tuesday night’s near-miss robbery, one of the store’s guards was
shot as three masked men opened fire on the shop with automatic weapons.
For former Newport Beach Mayor John Noyes, who owns a jewelry store on
Balboa Island, the robbery attempt has made him reassess his own security
measures.
“It’s always a wake-up call to all of us,” Noyes said. “It’s hard
enough to be in business [and then] to have somebody come in and try to
take it away.”
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