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Tag: police custody

  • LAPD detains woman who allegedly tried to kidnap 4-year-old boy from Target

    LAPD detains woman who allegedly tried to kidnap 4-year-old boy from Target

    A woman who allegedly grabbed and then tried to run off with a 4-year-old boy from an L.A. Target store earlier this week is now in police custody.

    The unidentified woman was found and taken into custody shortly after 11:30 a.m. Wednesday in North Hollywood near the intersection of Magnolia Boulevard and Tujunga Avenue, the Los Angeles Police Department announced on X.

    On Sunday, a woman allegedly tried to kidnap the child — grabbing the boy forcibly from behind and carrying him out of a Koreatown Target store, according to the LAPD.

    She put the boy down outside the store after his parents confronted her and then ran away.

    The incident is under investigation, and the suspect’s name has not been released. As of early Wednesday evening, she had not yet been arrested but remained in police custody, according to the LAPD.

    Nathan Solis

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  • Police bust illegal Manhattan street vendors, seize $10M+ worth of luxury knock offs

    Police bust illegal Manhattan street vendors, seize $10M+ worth of luxury knock offs

    MANHATTAN, New York (WABC) — More $10 million worth of bogus goods were taken off the streets in New York City, thanks to a big bust by police.

    The corner of Canal Street and Broadway in Lower Manhattan is a New York City tourist destination for all the wrong reasons, but it was deserted Monday night.

    The fake Rolex watches were all gone, along with the Gucci handbags, and the Louis Vuitton shoes.

    NYPD officers carted away three truckloads of luxury knock-offs, while arresting the brazen street vendors who sold them.

    “Sidewalks were blocked, there was property everywhere, merchandise everywhere, and this really impacts local businesses in a negative manner,” NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey said.

    Fake Rolex watches were selling for $75. Even at that price, authorities say the counterfeit goods they seized had a street value of more than $10 million.

    One man said he saw the raid, as officers swept in and made the arrests.

    “All you saw was NYPD jumping out unmarked cars, marked cars, paddy wagons,” an unnamed witness said. “They cleared the whole thing from here to here. And these guys used to sit up all night. Rolex watches, everything you can imagine. Yves St. Laurent? All this stuff.”

    The original complaint came from a shopkeeper on Broadway who asked not to be identified.

    The shopkeeper told Eyewitness News reporter N.J. Burkett off camera that the illegal vendors had taken over the streets, that the sidewalks were, at times, impassable, and that he begged the precinct to do something about it.

    In planning the raid, police worked with luxury goods manufacturers who examined the merchandise in advance to certify it was counterfeit.

    “He or she will look at the property and say, ‘This is this is not authentic. This is a knockoff bag. This is a fake pair of sneakers.’ And that point, we make the arrest,” Maddrey said.

    A total of 17 vendors were arrested.

    If convicted, they face felony charges that, on a first offense, carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison. Although, the actual sentence would be determined by a judge.

    ALSO READ | 16-year-old stabbed by another teen inside Staten Island Mall

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