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Illegal Aliens are Boosting for Billions, 60 Minutes
CBS News, 60 Minutes ^ | 07.10.04

Posted on 07/11/2004 4:43:20 PM PDT by Coleus

Boosting For Billions

July 11, 2004
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Approximately $10 billion worth of merchandise is stolen from stores every year.  (Photo: CBS/60 Minutes)

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“When you talk about shoplifting, not a lot of people think about organized crime. Most people think when you say shoplifting, it's the opportunistic shoplifter"
Craig Matsamato, security consultant for major retailers


Retailers are just beginning to realize that a huge chunk of stolen merchandise is being taken by well-organized gangs from South America.  (Photo: CBS/60 Minutes)


(CBS) "Boosting" is organized shoplifting, and if you think it's a petty crime, think again.

As Correspondent Steve Kroft first reported in February, approximately $10 billion in merchandise is stolen from stores every year -- and retailers are just beginning to realize that a huge chunk of it is being taken by gangs of highly skilled, well-organized professionals from South America.

Most of them started as pickpockets in places like Colombia, Chile, Equador and Peru, before being brought to the United States to ply their trade for what the FBI calls South American theft groups. The best of the lot move on to cargo thefts and jewelry heists.

But their bread and butter is "boosting." And you are most likely to cross paths with them, as 60 Minutes did, at a suburban shopping mall, where they steal crate loads of clothes, right off the racks.
Surveillance photos, taken by undercover police officers, show a team of seven South American thieves cleaning out an Old Navy store.

When they moved in to make the arrest, police found enough merchandise to fill a room, all taken in less than an hour, without anyone inside the store noticing a thing.

There may be as many as a 1,000 of these teams operating every day, and about the only the place they are ever captured is on the videotape in store security cameras.

Craig Matsamato was the head of loss prevention at T.J. Maxx and Reebok. He is now a security consultant for major retailers, and he has become well acquainted with the South American groups.

“You're finding them now out throughout California, Maryland, Chicago, Miami, New York,” says Matsamato. “When you talk about shoplifting, not a lot of people think about organized crime. Most people think when you say shoplifting, it's the opportunistic shoplifter.”

Like Winona Ryder?

“Winona Ryder, there you go. That's kind of how people look at shoplifting. Nobody really talks about the fact that, 'Geez, it's really organized, it's big business, and it's high loss to retailers,'” adds Matsamato, who says the South Americans usually work in small groups, relying on distraction, advanced planning and precision teamwork.

One or two people occupy the sales staff, while others go to work. And it doesn't take them long.

“They're professional at what they do,” says Sgt. Scott Guginski, who heads the New York Police Department’s Organized Theft Task Force, which focuses almost entirely on South American organized crime. He says they use specially-made booster bags, lined with foil or duct tape, to smuggle the stolen merchandise out of the store.

“The foil's on top of a piece of cardboard. And it's sewn into the linings,” says Guginski, who points out that the purpose of the foil on the inside is to throw off security at the doors. “If you're walking out with an item with a security tag, it won't set it off.”
South American shoplifting teams feed a black market for stolen goods that flourishes in most big cities. One discount outlet in Queens, N.Y., carried more than a million dollars worth of brand new, brand-name clothes, selling for half the retail price.

“It's known to certain communities where, if you live in that community, you know where you can go, and you can get a discount, a 50 percent discount, on clothing,” says Guginski.

Some of the loot turns up in other countries, and even online, where stolen merchandise occasionally finds it way onto eBay. For the South American gangs, Guginski says, boosting is a highly lucrative, low-risk criminal enterprise.

When he arrests somebody, are they cooperative?

“For the most part, no. They're trained and they know exactly what to say and what not to say,” says Guginski. “For the most part, you won't even get a name out of them.”

But he does get a picture. He has books containing mug shots, and surveillance photos of 2,500 South American gang members known to be operating in the United States. All of them have been arrested at least once; almost all of them are in the country illegally; and all have a number of different identities and aliases provided by the organization.

“What they do is, they come here and they'll either do jewelry theft or boosting and they'll work for six months and they'll go back to their country (and take the money they gleaned with them)."
Sgt. Tony Ojeda of Miami's Dade County Police Department has been following these groups for 14 years. He's arrested and interrogated hundreds of members, and says they have one thing in common: Almost all of them start off as pickpockets.

“That is their foundation. It doesn't matter what their specialty is, that is their foundation. They all learn the art of pickpocketing,” says Ojeda. “Obviously, No. 1, they wanna get money. But the second thing, even more important, is they're looking for travel documents to smuggle more of the criminal element into the United States.

South American thieves have been sneaking into the United States using phony passports and visas since the '70s, when informants used to talk about a now-defunct college for thieves called “the school of the seven bells.”

They would dress up a mannequin and they would attach sleigh bells to all the pockets. For the student to be able to graduate, he actually had to lift a wallet from all seven pockets – without ringing the bells.

Those most likely to succeed tend to gravitate toward jewelry theft, which is the most lucrative business the South Americans are in involved in.

Surveillance photos show a jewelry team casing out a store in Boston, looking for a jewelry supplier, or courier, making a sales call. They've been known to follow a victim for weeks or even months, learning their routines, waiting for the right time to strike.

“This is not something that happens occasionally. It's pervasive. It's an epidemic,” says Rich Loebl, vice president of Le Vian jewelers in New York. He says the thieves are so brazen, they'll even target jewelers in the city’s heavily fortified diamond district.

“They say there are more police officers on the street here than anywhere else in New York. And the reason is, it's not safe to be out here without a police officer,” says Loebl.

Turns out he was right. But Loebl learned all of this the hard way. In 1999, he was followed leaving a department store in Cincinnati. After waving off his police escort, he stopped at a restaurant. When he came out, a van with five people screeched up beside his car.

“They got over $5 million,” says Loebl. “That’s a frightening haul.”
Last year, the South American gangs were responsible for 195 jewelry robberies, stealing an estimated $75 million in merchandise.

One surveillance video, taken from a police helicopter, shows one of their favorite tactics. A gang member gets out of his car and sneaks up on a jewelry salesman's vehicle to puncture his tire.

“What we're seeing is they'll pop your tire, you'll have a slow leak, you'll be driving, you'll pull over because you have a flat tire,” says Guginski.

Then, the thieves strike with paramilitary precision. In fact, police believe some of the leaders may be former military members or ex-policemen.

Guginski says they'll rely on surprise, but if there is any resistance, they'll resort to violence: “We've had one individual that was followed from Long Island back into the city, where they actually cut him from ear to ear, cut his throat. He had the jewelry bag wrapped around his hand, and they actually took, like, a hatchet and tried to take off his wrist to get that bag.”

Within 24 hours, the gems will have been re-cut and the precious metals melted down. Then, they're recycled back into the legitimate jewelry industry.
Guginski took 60 Minutes out on one of his operations, looking for South American thieves "shaping up," or meeting, on the streets.

“Sometimes you might not be sure what type of crime they're gonna go out that day to commit. And you'll have to surveil them and actually watch them for a little while,” says Guginski.

This morning, Guginski became suspicious of some people inside a white minivan, which 60 Minutes was shadowed for several hours through New York City, across the entire state of New Jersey and into eastern Pennsylvania.

The South American crews from New York travel as far as the Midwest, and can be gone for more than a week. Lieutenants in the organization, who are called hombres, select the types of crime, and the targets. They also supply the vehicles, expense money, and shopping lists.

The white minivan finally pulled into an outlet mall in Tannersville, Pa. It turned out to be a boosting team made up of three women. After several forays into the store, they spotted the camera, so Guginski, assisted by local police, moved in for the arrest.

They were all illegal aliens from Colombia. One was a fugitive, having jumped bail on a California burglary charge. Another had been arrested for shoplifting four months earlier and deported, but somehow got back into the United States. Because shoplifters are not considered serious criminals, they rarely spend much time in jail.

“These groups predetermine and have plans if somebody's arrested. If a team of eight goes out and two of those people are arrested, it's the responsibility of the other six to get the money together to bail 'em out and get 'em back out on the street,” says Guginski.

Then, he says, they disappear, traveling to another city or assuming a new identity. The few cops who follow these groups say they've carved out a criminal niche, exploiting a system that lets people who commit property crimes off easily.

60 Minutes also talked to a retailer in California who said it's not uncommon to arrest these people and find them with plane tickets in their pocket for Kansas City or Chicago. And they'll check and four days later, some of them have been arrested out there.

“I don't think anybody really has a good grasp on how central and how organized it really is,” says Matsamato.
Special task forces are springing up in big cities such as Los Angeles, Miami and New York. And retailers are trying to push a bill through Congress that would treat shoplifting by these rings as a federal felony with penalties of up to 10 years in jail.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; US: Arizona; US: California; US: Florida; US: Illinois; US: Maryland; US: Massachusetts; US: New York; US: Pennsylvania; US: Texas
KEYWORDS: aliens; boosting; bushamnesty; columbia; crime; druggangs; hispanic; hispanics; illegalalien; illegalaliens; illegaliens; illigration; immigration; immigrationlist; police; shoplifting; southamerica; theft
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To: Barlowmaker; Ajnin
Why don't you and Marine Inspector identify yourselves so you can have both the standing and the accountability?

Standing and accountability for what?

101 posted on 07/11/2004 6:21:12 PM PDT by Marine Inspector (Stan Barnes for Congress (http://www.stanbarnes.com/))
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To: Always Right
This is outrageous, don't we have enough outsourcing without having to use foreign theives.

Maybe we should just call the flood of illegals inshoring.

102 posted on 07/11/2004 6:22:03 PM PDT by Colorado Buckeye (It's the culture stupid!)
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To: DoughtyOne
"We are living in some parallel universe, to the one where the law used to be something to be respected."

True

103 posted on 07/11/2004 6:22:46 PM PDT by prognostigaator
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To: JackelopeBreeder
So what are these guys supposed to do when their food chain -- all the way to the top -- is totally non-responsive?

Uh ... act like men of honest integrity and quit their command? Get off the public payroll? Conduct themselves openly and ethically with respect for their superiors and mission parameters like professed former Marines and active Federal Agents should?

Concepts foreign, I know, to you seige junkies.

104 posted on 07/11/2004 6:22:49 PM PDT by Barlowmaker
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To: Barlowmaker

Your holier than thou crap is not appreciated.


105 posted on 07/11/2004 6:25:04 PM PDT by dennisw (Once is Happenstance. Twice is Coincidence. The third time is Enemy action. - Ian Fleming)
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To: Coleus

Something like 70% of Americans want illegal immigration stopped cold. After 9/11, Bush had a golden opportunity to shut down the borders. Instead, he proposed an amnesty program to please corporate fat cats who rely on the cheap labor illegal aliens provide. The Republican and Democratic parties have colluded to keep the Border Patrol and the INS underfunded. Now we have 15 million illegals pigging out on social programs and keeping our tax rates artificially high. But Bush doesn't give two craps about his conservative supporters. To him, we are just a bunch of nitwits and yokels who can be distracted by another orange alert. Well, come November, Bush is going to join the unemployed Americans who have been displaced by the illegal aliens he has helped sneak into this country.


106 posted on 07/11/2004 6:25:07 PM PDT by Holden Magroin (Liberalism is not a philosophy; it is a mental disorder)
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To: Barlowmaker; JackelopeBreeder; Marine Inspector; Ajnin
Uh ... act like men of honest integrity and quit their command? Get off the public payroll? Conduct themselves openly and ethically with respect for their superiors and mission parameters like professed former Marines and active Federal Agents should?

These men are laying their lives on the line to keep us safe.

Exactly what, if anything, are you doing???

107 posted on 07/11/2004 6:26:37 PM PDT by SCalGal
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To: Barlowmaker
Who are you?

Who are you?

108 posted on 07/11/2004 6:26:41 PM PDT by Marine Inspector (Stan Barnes for Congress (http://www.stanbarnes.com/))
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To: dennisw

I'll make a note.


109 posted on 07/11/2004 6:27:05 PM PDT by Barlowmaker
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To: Holden Magroin

a golden opportunity to shut down the borders>>

especially our northern borders with Canada where most of the 9/11 terrorists came from. It would have been a start in the right direction. And the Army could have been used, the Posse Comitatus would not have applied in this case since we were at WAR with terrorists and in a state of emergency.


110 posted on 07/11/2004 6:29:14 PM PDT by Coleus (Abraham Lincoln was a trial lawyer.)
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To: SCalGal
These men are laying their lives on the line to keep us safe

And their govt. union does not say one bad word about such democrats in the mass media as Joe Baca(D-CA) who intiated the protest to stop the sweeps.

111 posted on 07/11/2004 6:29:19 PM PDT by Dane (Trial lawyers are the tapeworms of a wealth creating society.)
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To: Dane

You are now being silly, illogical and irrational and this is where I stop.


112 posted on 07/11/2004 6:30:51 PM PDT by Coleus (Abraham Lincoln was a trial lawyer.)
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To: Dane
And their govt. union

My Union does not say a bad thing about any Government Official, regardless of their position.

113 posted on 07/11/2004 6:31:06 PM PDT by Marine Inspector (Stan Barnes for Congress (http://www.stanbarnes.com/))
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To: Dane
And their govt. union does not say one bad word about such democrats in the mass media as Joe Baca(D-CA) who intiated the protest to stop the sweeps.

REPEAT: I am ignoring you. You don't debate or discuss issues. You repeat the same thing over and over and over and over and over.

114 posted on 07/11/2004 6:32:00 PM PDT by SCalGal
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To: Coleus
You are now being silly, illogical and irrational and this is where I stop

Yep you always hit a brick wall when defending the trial lawyers.

115 posted on 07/11/2004 6:32:11 PM PDT by Dane (Trial lawyers are the tapeworms of a wealth creating society.)
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To: SCalGal
These men are laying their lives on the line to keep us safe.

Gracias.

116 posted on 07/11/2004 6:32:49 PM PDT by Marine Inspector (Stan Barnes for Congress (http://www.stanbarnes.com/))
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Comment #117 Removed by Moderator

Comment #118 Removed by Moderator

To: Marine Inspector
Really, maybe you should send a note to your union spokesman, Shaun Moran.

I've just been listening to Shaun Moran, an agent with the Border Patrol talk to Roger Hedgecock on his San Diego show (AM600, streaming audio available at the link). Moran says the Border Patrol has informed him and all agents that, contrary to policy up to now, there will be no more paid media appearances. Moran has been the official spokesman for the union representing Border Agents, and has made many paid appearances to inform the public in that capacity, most recently in regard to the illegal alien sweeps that the Border Patrol has recently made. Moran says he's sure this new policy is retaliation for the heat and embarrassment that's been generated as a result of these sweeps and the consequent banning of same by the DHS after the illegal alien advocacy groups started screaming about it. Moran says the public is entitled to the truth and that his union is going to make sure that they get it, despite this new policy. Moran says that, if necessary, his union will pay for his appearances (or Moran will do as he did today and make them while on vacation, before work, etc.) just to make sure the word gets out. If you'd like to register your objection to the banning of the sweeps and/or the attempts to stifle the dissemination of information regarding same, there's contact information for Asa Hutchingson's (Under Secretary for Border & Transportation Security) office at NBPC1613.org. Click on the "U.S. citizens: please help us protect you and your family - click here - LINK

And not a word on Hedgecock's show of Joe Baca(D-CA) who intiated the protests of the sweeps, by Mr. Moran.

119 posted on 07/11/2004 6:36:53 PM PDT by Dane (Trial lawyers are the tapeworms of a wealth creating society.)
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To: Dane
it makes dane feel good to say: There are people in every ethnic group that are bad and yes shoplifting is a serious problem and should be cracked down on, but let's be serious and admit that shoplifters are in every ethnicity.

i ask dane: if you can reason that people of an ethnic group are diverse.. some bad and some good, why cant you see that same diversity amongst ethnic groups? some are good and some are bad. or better put perhaps.. some are better than others and some are worse than others.

120 posted on 07/11/2004 6:49:58 PM PDT by eleven_eleven
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