Why shoplifting
is such a problem in LA
Crime rings
swipe goods off shelves, then resell them as new
Shoplifting is on the rise in the City of Los
Angeles.
There was a 3% increase in reported shoplifting incidents for the first six
months of 2019, compared to the same time last year,
according to publicly available LAPD data.
Reports of shoplifting in the city have also risen
steadily overall for the past nine years. The largest spikes in the crime came
in 2014 and 2015, when reports of shoplifting increased nearly 21% and 32%,
respectively, over the previous years. The highest total came in 2016, but 2017
saw a dip of 9.3%. The totals inched back up again last year.
Wonder
why all the razors and other items are locked behind thick windows in a
Walgreens or Target? They’re easy to steal and resell.
Beauty supply, clothing and department stores are hit the hardest by
shoplifting, according to LAPD’s publicly available data. But these are not
always one-off incidents of petty theft.
Retailers report having massive problems with
organized retail crime.
This includes companies such as The Home Depot, a nationwide home improvement
retailer. Its
Canoga Park
location showed up several times in LAPD data as the premise for a shoplifting
crime in the first six months of 2019.
Christina Cornell, corporate communications spokesperson for the national
company, said the mentions are likely due to organized retail crime.
“We have a team of investigators,” she said. “All they do all day is look at
this.”
There is plenty to keep them busy.
In 2018, the City of Los Angeles was No. 2 after New York City on the National
Retail Federation’s
list of top cities for organized retail crime. Return fraud, the crime of
stealing items to return for cash or store credit, was a major factor in retail
shrinkage. About 77% of retailers told the NRF they experienced return fraud,
according to a
2018 survey.
“Thieves have mastered the art of stealing things that are easy to grab and
reselling them through online marketplaces like eBay and Craigslist,” Cornell
said. “It wouldn’t be a patio set. We’re talking thousands of dollars worth of
power tools.”
Craigslist’s
terms of
use ban the sale of stolen property and any good, service or content that
violates the law. But there’s no way a buyer can know for sure the power drill
they purchased was stolen.
A
quick search of Craigslist reveals just how much power tools can fetch online.
In one posting, a collection of assorted power tools was listed by a seller
looking to fetch $750. In another listing, power tools were listed for $800.
At the beginning of this year, a
two-year pilot statute went into effect in California that slaps harsher
penalties for anyone charged with organized retail crime. Under the statute,
people charged with multiple instances of shoplifting can face felony charges
instead of misdemeanor. This new addition to the penal code does not just target
those who coordinate and organize the crime; if you receive stolen goods, you
can also be charged with organized retail crime.
Prop. 47, a 2014 ballot initiative meant to stop jailing people who commit
petty crime often tied to drug abuse or mental health issues, reduced some theft
crimes to misdemeanors.
Det. Steven Franssen, an investigator in the LAPD’s Commercial Crimes Division,
said an unintended consequence of Prop 47 is that it allows members of organized
crime rings to steal from stores without facing harsher consequences. His
sentiment was echoed in an interview Crosstown conducted earlier this year by
the City of
Glendale’s Chief of Police.
Neighborhoods with the biggest increases in reports of shoplifting during
the first six months of 2019 compared with the same period last year were
Studio City
and Sherman
Oaks.
Downtown and
Northridge
tied for third largest percentage increases.
Glassell
Park saw the biggest decrease in reports of shoplifting.
Legislators
drafted the bill with the intent of curtailing organized retail crime.
Individuals charged with theft can look like one-off incidents, a minor lapse in
judgement leading to softer punishments. Members of organized retail crime
previously benefited as long as they keep their stolen items under $950, despite
hitting up multiple retail stores.
“The new statute streamlined the court system so someone accused of shoplifting
isn’t in six different courtrooms, they’re in one,” said Franssen. Asked if the
pilot program will curtail the efforts of organized retail crime rings, he
replied, “Hopefully.”
How we did it: We examined LAPD
publicly available data on reports of shoplifting for the first half of
2019, which revealed an increase in incidents from the same time period last
year. For neighborhood boundaries, we rely on the borders defined by the
Los Angeles
Times. Learn more about our data
here.
LAPD data only reflect crimes that are reported to the department, not how many
crimes actually occurred. In making our calculations, we rely on the data the
LAPD makes publicly available. On occasion, LAPD may update past crime reports
with new information, or recategorize past reports. Those revised reports do not
always automatically become part of the public database.
Article originally published on
xtown.la
|