The looters ransacking luxe stores
in Soho appear to be large, rival groups engaged in a “very
well-organized looting scheme,” according to a local who has been
watching them across several days.
Jarrod Jordan told The Post he has monitored two groups — one of
which has a caravan of luxury vehicles including Bentleys and Mercedes —
as they prowled the neighborhood and broke into high-end stores amid
the chaos of unrest over the police custody death of George Floyd.
“This is a real business. This isn’t angry protesters in any way
shape or form,” said Jordan, who is a chief digital officer of a
multinational food company.
“This is organized crime happening really, really well.”
He began to walk behind the looters Saturday night, staying up until
3:30 a.m. to figure out what they’re doing and how the operation was
organized.
“What I quickly realized is they’re running this four-tier system,”
said Jordan, who witnessed looting of stores including Chanel, Prada and
Ray Ban.
People in cars — some of which have out-of-state plates — come to
scout out the storefronts and take photos during the day. Then the same
group of vehicles returns later in the evening with tools to break into
stores, he said.
Meanwhile, there are younger members — he estimates between the ages
of 16 and 22 — who work to distract the police, while others driving on
motorized Revel electric scooters act as scouts, he said.
“They would relay information from where the distractors are [with
the cops] over to the cars — who would then call over and reorganize
other pods in other areas,” Jordan said, referring to the groups of
looters on the ground.
The small packs of five to eight young men on the ground then come
together, swelling to as large as 40 to attack the establishment, he
said.
Meanwhile, one person stands across the street directing the looters —
as someone on a CitiBike travels back and forth to inform them how much
time they have until cops arrive to the scene, Jordan said.
During the break-in, the groups form an assembly line to pass their bounty into five to eight cars, he said.
“When the looters looted, they filled up the cars and the cars drove
so the looters have their hands free to go on to the next place,” said
Jordan.
“Once they know they’ve moved the cops over, they’ll come back.”
He said both of the groups appear to have “some sort of mutual
respect to a certain extent” and are each running a “clearly, very
well-organized looting scheme.”
“But every now and then I’ll see one of them clock the other and steal a bunch of product,” he added.
Jordan said he turned over some of his dramatic videos of the
operations to NYPD — hoping they could help catch the roving gangs.
“I hope the crime bosses are stopped so the looting stops,” Jordan
added. “The looters are just a bunch of young kids recruited to do the
boss’ work.”
He believes the police need to surveil the cars entering the neighborhood instead of focusing on the looters on the ground.
“You’re playing whack-a-mole with them instead of setting up a
perimeter of everyone who comes,” he said. “The cars are the key.”
https://nypost.com/2020/06/02/how-nyc-looters-pull-off-a-well-organized-scheme-to-target-high-end-stores/
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