May 18, 2023

USA: 141 People Part Of A Chilean Nationals Burglary Gang Here On Tourist Visas Charged In Connection With Orange County Violent Home Invasion Robberies, Burglaries In The Last Year.

🚨 NO WHITE SUPREMACISTS INVOLVED 🚨

ABC7 published May 17, 2023: String of recent burglaries in Orange County tied to international crime ring, DA says. More than 140 defendants have been charged with various types of burglaries and robberies in Orange County over the past year and some recent cases are now being tied to an international crime ring.

ABC7 News, Los Angeles local
written by Christiane Cordero
Wednesday May 17, 2023

SANTA ANA, Calif.-- More than 140 defendants have been charged with various types of burglaries and robberies in Orange County over the past year and some recent cases are now being tied to an international crime ring.

Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer and law enforcement officials held a press conference on the announcement in Santa Ana Wednesday.

Seven of the defendants have been charged with hate crimes enhancements for specifically targeting Asian homeowners, Spitzer said.

"We have burglary crews who are specifically targeting Asians, following Asians home, targeting their homes, because they believe they keep large amounts of cash, have property, have safes and the like," said Spitzer.

The latest case filed involves 12 people charged in 13 home invasion robberies and burglaries in Brea, Irvine, Yorba Linda, and Orange.

That crew, which has ties to Riverside and Los Angeles counties, according to the DA's office, is suspected of being involved in numerous other crimes across Southern California.

The DA's office said multiple defendants were taken into custody last week, including one suspect who livestreamed a portion of his arrest on Facebook, officials said.

Spitzer blamed a slew of policies on local, state and federal levels for the crimes, including a VISA waiver program known as Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA).

The program allows people from a list of countries to stay in the U.S. for 90 days. The application is not supposed to apply to those who have been convicted of a violent crime.

Twenty-one of the 141 defendants are from Chile, including three who were arrested and charged just last week.

"Defendants from Chile have posed a uniquely frustrating challenge because the Chilean government has refused to provide us with the criminal history of Chilean citizens utilizing the ESTA VISA Program to enter the United States," read a press release from the DA's office. "Without criminal histories, prosecutors have been largely handcuffed in trying to prove why these defendants pose a greater public safety risk beyond a single burglary charge."

Spitzer is pushing for Chile to be taken off of the list of eligible countries.

"Why is that problematic? Your honor, this person has been charged with these burglaries. Well what, Mr. Spitzer, is the criminal background of that particular person? Sorry your honor, they're a Chilean national, we do not know what their criminal history is," he said.

Meanwhile, a victim of burglary - who wished to be identified only as "M" for fear of retaliation - spoke out Wednesday and recalled her experience.

Burglars got into her home by shattering a glass door while she was at a doctor's appointment.

"I was gone for maybe about three hours and I received a phone call as I was driving up the street from our security company, letting us know that our alarm had gone off," she said. "My dog was in the home in her crate so that's immediately where my mind went to ... 'Was my dog okay?'" she said.

Her dog wasn't injured, but burglars did take valuable jewelry, bags and other items. She's working with insurance now to account for everything lost.

The monetary value is only part of the battle.

"We've lived in our home for at least 16 years, we've never had an incident like this," said "M." "We felt very safe in our home. For the most part, we felt safe in our neighborhood."

Now? She said not so much.
KTLA5 News published May 17, 2023: More than 140 people charged in Orange County burglaries and robberies in past year. More than 140 people have been charged in connection with Orange County burglaries and robberies in the last year, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office announced Wednesday. Chip Yost reports.
KTLA5 News published May 17, 2023: More than 140 people charged in Orange County burglaries and robberies in past year. More than 140 people have been charged in connection with Orange County, California burglaries and robberies in the last year, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office announced Wednesday. Of those, 24 defendants are allegedly part of five different burglary crews charged in the last two weeks alone. Additionally, seven newly charged defendants are facing hate crime enhancements for allegedly targeting Asian homeowners, officials said. Many of the crimes that were filed in the last year involve suspects with multiple strikes under California’s Three Strikes Law.

KTLA5 News, Los Angeles local
written by Cindy Von Quednow
Wednesday May 17, 2023

More than 140 people have been charged in connection with Orange County burglaries and robberies in the last year, the Orange County District Attorney’s Office announced Wednesday.

Of those, 24 defendants are allegedly part of five different burglary crews charged in the last two weeks alone.

Additionally, seven newly charged defendants are facing hate crime enhancements for allegedly targeting Asian homeowners, officials said.

Many of the crimes that were filed in the last year involve suspects with multiple strikes under California’s Three Strikes Law.

One crew tied to 13 incidents

In the latest case, 12 people were charged in 13 home invasions and burglaries in Brea, Irvine, Yorba Linda and Orange. Seven are facing hate crime charges and five are facing life sentences for kidnapping to commit robbery, officials said. That crew is believed to have ties to Riverside and Los Angeles counties and is suspected in other crimes across Southern California.

The arrests, which began last week, were the culmination of a nine-month investigation by the Brea Police Department, and one of the defendants allegedly live-streamed part of his arrest.

One of the incidents tied to the crew occurred on May 31, 2022, when Darrell Hollowayne allegedly broke into a Brea home and was rolling a large safe down the stairs when he was interrupted by the son of the homeowner, who alerted police.

Hollowayne allegedly had five additional suspects return to the home that same night with guns to break into the home and steal the safe.

During the second incident, a friend of the victim ran out of the house, but the victim was captured and hit multiple times, officials said. The defendants then allegedly threatened to kill the victim if he couldn’t open the safe, which he could not do because his mother was out of town and he did not have the code.

The friend eventually returned to the home, where he was captured, dragged back into the house and robbed, officials said.

The defendants ended up taking the safe and later photographed themselves sitting on top of it, authorities allege.

Violent encounters

Many of the charged crimes involved violence.

In another incident in Fountain Valley, four masked men broke into a home, pistol-whipped a man and punched his wife after forcing open a locked bedroom door and holding her at gunpoint. The couple’s two young kids were in the house at the time of the attack, officials detailed.

The suspects in that case were arrested after a high-speed chase in one of two vehicles they allegedly stole from the home. Three of the four defendants charged in the case had served time in prison for previous residential burglaries, including Dreonte York, 28, who was described by authorities as a three-striker.

In another incident, a college student in Irvine had just finished showering when two masked men walked into her bathroom, ordered her to get dressed and walk around the house from room to room and point out where every piece of valuable bag or jewelry and cash was located.

Many of the defendants charged in Orange County have also been charged in connection with crimes in other Southern California counties, or are being investigated for crimes in those jurisdictions, officials said.

In fact, an “overwhelming majority” of the defendants live outside of Orange County, including as far away as South America, officials said.

Spitzer said prosecutors face hurdles with Chilean suspects because the government of that country doesn’t provide criminal histories of some of the people his office prosecute.

HEIST Unit

As a response to the “onslaught” of home invasions, commercial burglaries and smash-and-grab robberies in the region, District Attorney Todd Spitzer created a vertical prosecution unit last year to prosecute such crimes.

The Home Invasion Eradication Interdiction Strike Team is made up of four veteran prosecutors and four DA investigators.

Additionally, law enforcement throughout the region have regularly exchanged information about the robberies and burglaries to “increase cross-jurisdictional awareness and to ensure suspects are being charged with every incident that can be proven beyond a reasonable doubt,” officials said.

“We are seeing sophisticated burglary crews working to take as much property as possible in as little time as possible,” Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes said. “Then, when our deputies catch them and take them to jail, they are released by the courts back into our community and often go right back to committing the same crimes. This is unacceptable. We know that one of the biggest deterrents to crime is an engaged community, and we are committed to partnering with you to keep our communities safe.”

Spitzer indicated that these types of crimes are not crimes of opportunity.

“These are carefully calculated and planned attacks on what should be our safe place – our homes. These crews are waiting, they are watching our every move, and when they think the timing is just right, they are smashing their way into our lives – and carrying out whatever cash, jewelry, and other expensive items they can find. And when they get it wrong – and someone is home – they do whatever it takes to terrorize their victims into telling them where the money is,” he said.

Spitzer added that judges and the legislature have “failed” those in law enforcement. He claims people who already served time re-offend because there are “no consequences.”

“That’s exactly why there are people with five, six, and nine strikes breaking into our homes instead of serving time behind bars. The criminals are getting a strong message – the reward is far greater than the risk – and crime literally pays in California,” the district attorney stressed. “If you come here to commit crimes, we’re going to arrest you and we are going to prosecute you to the fullest extent of the law.”

🚨👇 BONUS RELATED INFO 👇🚨
I decided to get more information about the Chilean crime burglary ring entering the U.S. on 90 day tourist visas. I had no idea this has been happening for years. Why isn't anybody stopping the spigot?  Stop them from entering the United States? (emphasis mine)

👇 3 MONTHS AGO 👇
NBC News published March 1, 2023 San Diego police investigating Chilean burglary ring accused of stealing millions, 21 burglaries since December. Police in San Diego are on a manhunt for a criminal gang they claim is from Chile who is coming to the U.S. on temporary visas and breaking into wealthy homes. NBC’s Dana Griffin has the details.

👇 6 MONTHS AGO 👇
KCAL News published November 10, 2022: Riverside police searching for group of burglars connected to South American crime ring. Riverside police are seeking public assistance in locating a group of suspects that have been repeatedly burglarizing homes throughout Riverside County, 17 homes in total in Riverside, many of whom they believe are connected to South American crime rings. Nicole Comstock reports.

👇 1 YEAR AGO 👇
ABC7 published March 18, 2022: 'Crime tourism' bringing burglary crews from South America to affluent California communities. Law enforcement agencies call it "crime tourism" -- groups of thieves from South America traveling to California to burglarize homes. Surveillance video released by Hillsborough police in Northern California shows a burglary crew believed to be from South America targeting a luxury home. It's just one in a series of crimes involving burglars from out of the country, hitting homes in affluent communities up and down the state. 100 cases alone in Camarillo, Ventura County.

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