Crime & Safety

LA County Police Agencies Create Task Force to Combat Smash-and-Grabs

Law enforcement agencies across LA County are partnering on a task force to investigate, apprehend and prosecute smash-and-grab suspects.

Law enforcement agencies across LA County  are partnering on a task force to investigate, apprehend and prosecute smash-and-grab suspects.
Law enforcement agencies across LA County are partnering on a task force to investigate, apprehend and prosecute smash-and-grab suspects. (Paige Austin/Patch)

LOS ANGELES COUNTY -- Law enforcement agencies across LA County have partnered to establish a task force to investigate, apprehend and prosecute suspects who have committed retail theft as businesses grapple with an uptick of smash-and-grabs in recent weeks.

In a press conference Thursday morning, Mayor Karen Bass announced the Organized Retail Crimes Task Force that will focus on the organized retail crimes in the county. The task force will include detectives and investigators from the Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department, California Highway Patrol, Glendale Police Department, Burbank
Police Department, Beverly Hills Police Department, Santa Monica Police Department, U.S. Marshals Apprehension Task Force and Federal Bureau of Investigation Task Force.

Prosecutors from the Los Angeles County District Attorney's Office, Los Angeles City Attorney's Office and the California Attorney General's office will join the task force as well to ensure suspects are prosecuted to the ``fullest extent of the law,'' Bass said.

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The Southland has been subject to an increasing number of retail thefts by large groups of suspects targeting retail locations. The suspects often target specific malls with high-end merchandise, according to the LAPD.

Suspects grab a large quantity of merchandise often using tools to break glass display cases and cut security cords, an act known as smash-and-grabs. Each incident has resulted in several hundreds of thousands of dollars loss to retailers, according to an LAPD statement.

Find out what's happening in Los Angelesfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

``Each of these acts takes away from our piece of mind or our sense of our security when we want to go out and (shop) in retail communities,'' LAPD Deputy Chief Blake Chow said during the press conference in City Hall. ``The Los Angeles Police Department will not tolerate these acts. We
will not stand by idly while these acts continue.''

-- City News Service