-
Showdown looms after judge sets hearing to close L.A. juvenile hall - 5 mins ago
-
AOC’s Oversight Committee Seat Bid Divides Democrats - 13 mins ago
-
McConnell Defends Polio Vaccine, an Apparent Warning to RFK Jr. - 26 mins ago
-
California couple killed in violent Mexican town were visiting for holidays - 45 mins ago
-
Mercedes CLA Is the Entry-level EV Other Automakers Wish They Had - 48 mins ago
-
Hochul Launches Investigation Into Drone Sightings in New York - about 1 hour ago
-
Map shows which states will help Donald Trump with mass deportation plan - about 1 hour ago
-
Ventura County man who beat daughter into coma gets life in prison - about 1 hour ago
-
Conan O’Brien’s Parents Die 3 Days Apart - 2 hours ago
-
Donald Trump Pushes to End ‘Inconvenient’ Daylight Saving Time - 2 hours ago
Thieves steal 1,200 pairs of Air Jordans from a train in California
Three men accused of stealing more than 1,200 pairs of Air Jordans from a train in the Mojave Desert were foiled by a GPS tracker hidden inside the shipment, authorities said.
Authorities were notified by BNSF Railway police Friday that a shipping container had been moved from a train near Amboy in San Bernardino County, the Orange County district attorney’s office said in a release.
Nike had placed a GPS tracker in the shipment of 11 Retro shoes, which was worth about $311,000. Authorities did not say whether the shoes were a new color, which would retail for around $230 a pair, or a different model.
Police tracked the GPS signal to a U-Haul truck at an Anaheim parking lot and found 1,278 pairs of shoes inside, prosecutors said. The suspects are believed to be part of an organized theft ring, according to a district attorney’s spokesperson.
Bryan QuinteroEcharravia, 18, of Mesa, Ariz.; Bernardo Romeroquintero, 34, of Phoenix; and Olegario Flores, 26, were charged with felony counts of grand theft and receiving stolen property. The two older men also were charged with possession of burglary tools. They face a maximum sentence of three years if convicted on all counts.
“Organized theft rings are no match for the sophistication and determination of law enforcement to track down these thieves, arrest them and prosecute them to the fullest extent of the law,” Orange County Dist. Atty. Todd Spitzer said in a statement.
Source link