Newport-Mesa a target for thieves
Paul Clinton
NEWPORT-MESA -- With high-end jewelry stores sprinkled throughout the
area, the twin cities -- and their toniest shopping centers -- are no
strangers to heists of expensive valuables.
As Newport Beach police launched their search for the masked men who
blasted out the windows of Fashion Island’s Traditional Jewelers late
Tuesday, the botched robbery serves as another reminder of a hard, cold
fact: Thieves target Newport-Mesa gem shops.
The three men, after opening fire on the shop’s security guards and
glass windows, didn’t get their hands on any of the valuables.
Usually they do, however. The incident was the fifth since May 1997,
when two armed men stole $325,000 in diamonds and Rolex watches from
South Coast Plaza’s Ben Bridge jewelry store.
Just last September, a pair of men wearing ski masks lifted several
Rolex watches from the Costa Mesa shopping center’s Torneau Watch Co.
The Torneau thieves have not been caught, said Costa Mesa Police Sgt.
Jack Archer.
In Tuesday’s Fashion Island jewelry store incident, authorities also
have no substantial leads.
In the hours after the robbery, police interviewed security guards,
witnesses and store employees, said Sgt. Steve Shulman, spokesman for the
Newport Beach Police Department.
Police collected ammunition shells and other evidence from the crime
scene. They’ll pool their data, then come up with a game plan to identify
the men, who escaped in a BMW.
While reluctant to attribute Tuesday evening’s Fashion Island robbery
attempt to a gang of thieves, police acknowledged that such crimes
usually take planning and, sometimes, experience.
“I would say it’s probably not their first time doing it,” Archer
said. “They don’t usually stop until they get caught. It’s a fairly
lucrative type of robbery.”
Among the most organized that police encountered was the South
American Theft Groups, a band of robbers who worked so boldly and
consistently that in September 1999 the Orange County district attorney’s
office created a two-man team to handle the cases.
Fashion Island has seen its fair number of jewelry store robberies
since opening in 1967.
In one of the largest, two traveling sales representatives were held
up in the parking lot in 1999, handing over $1.5 million in
diamond-encrusted loot.
Another time, four masked gunmen stormed Charles Barr Jewelers in
Newport Beach and escaped with several watches.
FYI
SOME BIG HEISTS
November 1990: About $1.3 million worth of cuff links and rings is
stolen from the back trunk of a salesman’s car in a shopping center
parking lot.
March 1990: Three masked men steal more than $1 million in fine
jewelry from a Newport Center jewelry store during an armed holdup.
October 1989: Three men wearing Halloween masks lifted $2 million in
valuables from Carol Klein Fine Jewelry near Fashion Island.
October 1979: Two gunmen robbed Newport Beach auction house owner
Robert Ogle of $2 million in rings, loose diamonds, watches and other
valuables as he waited outside a Hawthorne restaurant.
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