Video exhibiting a brazen Richmond Hill jewelry retailer heist featured an equally brazen bystander who taunted the culprits, calling them “losers” and “lowlifes” whereas they hammered away at show instances.
The theft passed off on Monday at round 4 p.m. at a Peoples Jewellers retailer in Hillcrest Mall.
The video begins with one in all 4 masked suspects hovering over a screaming worker as she lays on the bottom.
It then pans over to point out three different suspects hammering away on the retailer’s show instances and bagging gadgets.
“Call the police!” a person might be heard yelling repeatedly.
The identical man then begins reprimanding the crooks.
“Look at these f****n lowlifes, bro, look at these lowlifes,” he says.
When the felonious foursome begins operating out of the shop they’ve simply ransacked, the daring man chases after them and continues to barrage them with stinging barbs.
“Yeah, let’s run away,” he yells, accompanied by a string of unpublishable profanities.
“Get a f****n job, you losers!”
The unidentified man follows them to their awaiting getaway automobile, which speeds off, being attentive to the licence plate and car make and mannequin.
York Regional Police investigators say they’re on the lookout for 5 suspects — 4 who had been within the retailer and a getaway driver who remained within the car, which police say was beforehand stolen.
“One suspect assaulted an employee, while the three other suspects smashed open jewellery display cases,” a police launch states. “The suspects stole a quantity of jewellery and fled to an awaiting Nissan Maxima. The vehicle has since been recovered.”
Police stated a jewelry retailer worker obtained minor accidents and was assessed by paramedics on the scene. No different accidents had been reported.
The smash-and-grab theft at Hillcrest Mall comes days after an analogous crime was dedicated at Sherway Gardens in Etobicoke, the place a number of suspects allegedly entered a jewelry retailer on Saturday afternoon and started smashing the show instances earlier than making off with an unknown amount of things.









