LOS ANGELES
– A federal grand jury today indicted five members of a robbery crew who
allegedly committed sophisticated heists by following wholesale jewelers and
bank customers – sometimes for days – and then robbing them, netting the
thieves more than $1 million worth of jewelry and tens of thousands of dollars
in cash over the past 18 months.
The five defendants, who all are in federal
custody after being arrested earlier this month, each are charged with
participating in a conspiracy to interfere with commerce by robbery. They are:
Federico Santiago
Quiroz Lucca, 51, of Los Angeles, the alleged ringleader of the scheme;
Roberto Melendez
Falcon, 51, of Los Angeles;
Roberto Alonso
Castellanos, 48, of Pomona;
Jose Oscar Cupitre
Nuñez, 47, of Australia; and
Jose Manuel Lopez
Molina, 45, of Colombia.
Lucca and
Nuñez are also charged in a second count with interference with commerce by
robbery.
According to
an affidavit previously filed in this case, from October 2017 until April 2019,
the defendants surveilled and conspired to rob a series of jewelry salespeople
and bank customers in the Los Angeles metropolitan area, the San Francisco Bay
Area and Denver. Lucca allegedly led and organized the crew’s activities,
enlisting help from several Colombian nationals who traveled to Los Angeles to
participate in the conspiracy and robberies.
The various
heists described in court documents followed a similar pattern: a member of the
crew known as a “scout” identified a victim who was likely to be carrying
jewelry or cash. The victims typically were jewelers conducting business at
jewelry stores or malls in Orange County, the Jewelry District in downtown Los
Angeles, or at various trade shows, the affidavit states. The “scout” followed the
victim, who often was carrying large amounts of jewelry or cash, and would wait
for an opportunity when the scout and co-conspirators could rob the jeweler.
The
co-conspirators followed victims to locations such as gas stations and hotels,
where the defendants allegedly used a ruse, such as puncturing a car tire, and
then posed as a Good Samaritan, or simply used force, to rob the victims.
For example,
on February 8, 2018, Lucca allegedly spent four hours following a traveling
jewelry salesman making rounds on behalf of his employer to jewelry stores in
Orange County. As the victim returned to his car after stopping in Cypress, he
was violently pushed from behind, falling into his car door, and his bag
containing approximately $400,000 in jewelry was stolen, court papers state.
In a January
2019 incident, a couple who operated a jewelry business in Connecticut was
participating in a jewelry show at the Los Angeles Convention Center, when a
man wearing a yellow and orange safety vest asked to help them pack up their
belongings. According to an affidavit filed in this case, the man in the safety
vest ended up pushing their large cart with all their belongings – including a
bag containing approximately $400,000 in jewelry – and the bag was later
discovered to be missing. Evidence subsequently developed by investigators
determined that the robbery crew had tracked the victims for days.
Earlier this
month, Lucca, Nuñez, and Molina were arrested in Northern California after they
allegedly surveilled various locations, including jewelry stores, a residence,
and the Santa Clara Convention Center, where a jewelry show was scheduled to
occur, according to court documents.
Castellanos
was arrested in Las Vegas, Nevada on April 12, and Falcon was arrested on April
13 in Los Angeles.
All five
defendants are scheduled to be arraigned in United States District Court in Los
Angeles on May 3.
An
indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a
reasonable doubt.
If convicted
in this case, defendants Lucca and Nuñez would face a statutory maximum
sentence of 40 years in federal prison, and the other defendants would face
statutory maximum sentences of 20 years in prison.
This matter
is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which is
receiving substantial assistance from the Los Angeles Police Department.
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States
Attorneys Khaldoun Shobaki of the Cyber and Intellectual Property Crimes
Section and Joshua O. Mausner of the Violent and Organized Crime Section.
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