![]() In response to Keith on the rolex robberies, you realize there have been 100’s of these in the state, and the people caught up here in the bay were linked in a criminal gang. Got to say I find the comments from the 2 people flat out ridiculous and IMO probably both know each other with an Agenda. ![]() Not reporting crime makes the thieves brazen and bold, and having an unaware public helps aids them as well. People don’t want bad news to hurt their property values. The media in my opinion is currently doing much more harm than good. Media coverage does impact the amount of crime, but much more importantly they have led the society into mass hysteria over race and insurrection, and very purposely manufactured division among the different groups such as political parties. Now the media wants to create narrations and political statements. They wanted to get the truth out, who what where when why. The media is not what it was when I took a journalism class at UCLA in the aftermath of the Woodword-Berstein era. You should in my mind not attempt to defend the indefensible. And the media that you are a part of currently has a reputation among many of purposely making things worse. My introspection is that I worked for a slimeball company. I knew it, and in my little corner of the company I did my best and never personally did anything wrong given my constraints. I worked in finance for decades, and they have just as bad of a reputation, and I worked for what some would call one of the worst of the slimeball companies. You are part of an increasingly dysfunctional and sick, and some would call slimeball industry. I have a response to several of the points above and your offense about being associated with an increase in crime. “It makes me wonder if this kind of smash and grab theft so common that it is no longer news.” “I understand that Apple wants to keep its customers and staff safe but it is curious that there has been no coverage of this event,” a witness wrote. It was not known how much merchandise was stolen, though past robberies have netted thieves upwards of $20,000 in phones and computers. We did so by exiting the back of the store.” My wife wanted us to leave as quickly as possible. I believe I saw some taking iPhone pictures as they left but I did not take any. “Many of the customers ran away from the area where it was going on. “We were at the east entrance of the store while the thefts were occurring at the west entrance (along South Main),” a witness wrote. ![]() If there was any store security present, witnesses said, they didn’t see them. No one tried to stop them or as far as I know even said anything…”Ĭustomers said the thieves were young males wearing masks and hoodies. There were many staff and customers in the shop at the time. Some iPads and or MacBooks may also have been taken but I was not close enough to see. ![]() “The thieves cleaned off several tables each of which contained over a dozen iPhones. “My wife and I witnessed a group of about four or five people steal essentially all the Apple iPhones that were on display,” one person said. Saturday.Ĭustomers, at least one of whom expressed surprise to find no mention of the commercial burglary in the local press, contacted this site to share eyewitness accounts. Main Street, said they scattered or stood by as a crew of thieves descended on the store to steal phones and computers from the business at 11:23 a.m. Shoppers at the Walnut Creek Apple store, 1200 S. Frame capture of suspect in previous robbery.
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