This Google™ translation feature is provided for informational purposes only.
The Office of the Attorney General is unable to guarantee the accuracy of this translation and is therefore not liable for any inaccurate information resulting from the translation application tool.
Please consult with a translator for accuracy if you are relying on the translation or are using this site for official business.
If you have any questions please contact: Bilingual Services Program at EERROffice@doj.ca.gov
A copy of this disclaimer can also be found on our Disclaimer page.
Select a Language Below / Seleccione el Idioma Abajo
Organized Retail Crime is characterized by organized criminal rings that steal property with the intent to sell and distribute, or return stolen merchandise for value. Organized Retail Crime takes many forms—from coordinated thefts of specific goods to orchestrated, brazen attacks on local retailers. In whatever form it takes, these organized crimes are felonies – not petty theft or shoplifting. Organized Retail Crime incidents are often part of sophisticated criminal networks that plan their attacks weeks or months before they are carried out.
In a matter of minutes, hundreds of thousands of dollars in merchandise is stolen while employees and customers face threats or violence or in the worst cases, are actually harmed. Merchandise stolen from retailers, is often re-sold in online marketplaces.
Organized Retail Crime places the safety and wellbeing of California consumers, workers, and businesses at risk. It is a serious crime, and those who commit it that can face severe penalties under the law.
What are we doing to combat retail crime?
Attorney General Bonta and DOJ are committed to holding perpetrators accountable and preventing future retail crimes that endanger the safety of communities in California. The path forward demands action and collaboration. DOJ is collaborating and sharing intelligence with law enforcement partners on the ground, brick-and-mortar retailers, and online marketplaces in order to stop perpetrators from committing further crimes by:
Established Organized Retail Criminal Enterprises (ORCE) program through the creation of two investigative teams within the Bureau of Investigation’s White Collar Crimes Unit. The regional designation for the two teams, Los Angeles and Dublin, were established based on data collected from the National Retail Federations 2020 crime survey identifying the cities of Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Sacramento as three cities within the top 10 cities in the country for Organized Retail Theft.
Prioritized resources to detect, investigate, and prosecute high-level Organized Retail Crime rings.
Offered local law enforcement agencies support with Organized Retail Crime investigations.
Encouraged big box retailers to report theft early and to invest in security and surveillance technology.
Pushed online retailers to ensure their platforms aren’t being abused and used illegally by criminal rings. Doing so would help stop the demand for stolen goods by shutting down the resale pipeline.
See stolen goods online? Report them!
We all have a role in combating organized retail crime - if you see goods for sale online that you suspect are stolen, file a report using DOJ's online reporting portal. If the local jurisdiction of the criminal activity is known, please also file a police report with the appropriate local law enforcement agency. In accordance with AB 1700, DOJ's reporting portal allows Californians to report suspected stolen goods found on online marketplaces. Reports - which can be made anonymous - are shared with applicable local law enforcement agencies and regional property crimes task forces.
Additionally, the underlying facts of any report may be shared with the relevant marketplace or retailer, if DOJ determines that doing so will further DOJ’s purpose to detect and deter these crimes.