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California Store Owner’s Clever Anti-Theft Hack Stumps Robbers: “Well Played, Sir”
California Store Owner’s Clever Anti-Theft Hack Stumps Robbers: “Well Played, Sir”
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California Store Owner’s Clever Anti-Theft Hack Stumps Robbers: “Well Played, Sir”

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After burglars stole most of his inventory, a store owner in California devised a simple yet effective technique to prevent further robberies. The trick has already proven successful, as recent footage shows thieves scratching their heads upon realizing they would leave practically empty-handed.

Roman Gonzales owns DripOnDrip, a sneaker store at the outdoor River Park Shopping Center in Fresno. In November 2023, a group of thieves broke into his former location in River Park and stole a majority of the clothing items.

Highlights
  • Store owner Robert Gonzales came up with a simple technique to outsmart robbers.
  • Gonzales' sneaker store, DripOnDrip, was the target of a robbery in November 2023.
  • The Fresno, California, resident clears out the floor every night and only leaves right-foot shoes.
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    A shoe store owner in Fresno, California, implemented a simple technique to prevent robberies

    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

    On Monday (December 30), Gonzales was the victim of another break-in when two sedans drove up to the front of the store after 3 a.m.,KSEEreported.

    One of those vehicles rammed through the front of the store, shattering the glass and allowing both robbers to enter.

    However, their time and effort were pointless, as Gonzales had already anticipated the crime and cleared out the store’s display, as he does every night.

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    Robert Gonzales was the victim of an attempted retail crime when two masked thieves broke into his store at 3 a.m.

    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

    Security footage obtained by KSEE shows two masked, hooded individuals breaking into the store, only to realize there are noitems to take. One of them throws their arms up in disappointment while looking at the practically empty shop.

    “If they would have looked through the window, they would have saved themselves some time and energy from even trying to break in,” Gonzales told the outlet. “They would have noticed that there is nothing here on the floor for them to take.”

    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

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    In addition to clearing out the floor every night, the store owner leaves the empty cash register open next to the window to show potentialthieves there’s no money inside.

    Gonzales only leaves a wall display of right-footshoes. “There’s no value once you take this shoe. I mean, you can’t just buy a left-foot shoe online, either. So you’re not going to be able to use that item or even resell it. It’s just pointless,” he said.

    The thieves went home empty-handed, as Gonzales had cleared out the store a few hours earlier

    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

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    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

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    The only items the thieves took were some loose backpacks, shoes that he was planning to donate to the needy, and two right-foot shoes from the wall.

    Though he managed to be one step ahead of the criminals this time, he described the attemptedrobbery as “shocking.”

    “Seeing the building that you’re working out of almost every day…just be damaged. It’s shocking.

    “Let’s hope they get caught and learn from this situation.”

    In November 2023, robbers stole most of Gonzales’ inventory at a different store in Fresno

    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

    Gonzales closed thestore on the day of the incident and opened it on Tuesday, the following day.

    River Park security responded to the scene as soon as the alarm went off, he said, adding that they had the wall boarded up before he arrived at 6 a.m.

    A spokesperson for the outdoor shopping center toldYourCentralValleythey met to discuss future safety measures on Monday and will heighten their security overnight. 

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    Gonzales said River Park security is considering installing safety poles in front of his store to prevent cars from driving onto the sidewalk.

    Now, he leaves the cash register empty near the window and empties the store every night to prevent crimes

    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

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    “As a small locally owned business, we are standing up and applying pressure on these criminals,”the shoe store wrote on Instagram on Thursday (January 2).

    On social media, people expressed their support for the store owner and lamented that he has to work extra to take precautions against potentialcrimes.

    “Well played, sir. Well played. The confusion the criminals showed when they realized the store was empty is priceless,” one user wrote.

    “It’s sad to see the owner has to go all this way to protect his property,” another said.

    “A lot of work to remove all the merchandise every night. He should not have to do this. If we had some enforcement of our laws, this would not be necessary,” a third added.

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    “I passed by that store a few times,” a separate user shared. “I’m gonna make it a point to go in and buy something next time I swing through Fresno.”

    Image credits: CBS47 KSEE24

    “Such a calm, poised store owner …With the smarts to out smart, not to mention generous. God bless him,” commented someone else.

    In the last week, Adel Alsharay, who owns the 4M Market in Oakland, California, was the victim of a property crime after thieves rammed through the front of the shop with a car.

    “So they hit the whole front,” the owner toldCBS News. “We had to replace the whole window, the rolling doors. Even the counter, they pushed it all the way over there. The shelf was all the way over there. We had to push the whole counter back. Even the ice cream counter had to be redone.

    “We’ve been here since 1998. Yeah. We have a lot of people, old people. They need the store. It’s a lot of work.”

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    “If they would have looked through the window, they would have saved themselves some time and energy from even trying to break in,” the owner said

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    In August 2024, California Gov. Gavin Newsom signed 10 bills to combat escalating retail crimes, car thefts, and the sale of stolen goods.

    A newlaw taking effect in 2025, as part of the state’s efforts to crack down on property and retail crimes, makes a crime punishable by up to three years in jail for possessing more than $950 of stolen goods with intent to sell, exchange, or return the items.

    According to the California Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), crime in California has fallen to the lowest level ever recorded.

    Californians in 2024 reportedly experienced less than a third of the crimes per resident reported in 1980 and two-thirds of what they experienced in 2006.

    From 2018 to 2023, the property crime rate decreased by 3.8%. Larceny (theft without force) and burglary (entering a residential or commercial structure with the intent to steal) decreased by 2.4% and 6.7% in 2023.

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    In contrast, the violent crime rate is trending upward and increased by 15.1% between 2018 and 2023.

    People reacted to Gonzales’ technique and news of the burglary

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    Marina Urman

    Marina Urman

    Author, Entertainment News Writer

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    With a degree in social science and a love for culture, I approach entertainment journalism at Bored Panda with a research-driven mindset. I write about celebrity news, Hollywood highlights, and viral stories that spark curiosity worldwide. My work has reached millions of readers and is recognized for balancing accuracy with an engaging voice. I believe that pop culture isn’t just entertainment, it reflects the social conversations shaping our time.

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    Marina Urman

    Marina Urman

    Author, Entertainment News Writer

    With a degree in social science and a love for culture, I approach entertainment journalism at Bored Panda with a research-driven mindset. I write about celebrity news, Hollywood highlights, and viral stories that spark curiosity worldwide. My work has reached millions of readers and is recognized for balancing accuracy with an engaging voice. I believe that pop culture isn’t just entertainment, it reflects the social conversations shaping our time.

    Donata Leskauskaitė

    Donata Leskauskaitė

    Author, Community member

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    Hey there! I'm a Visual Editor in News team. My responsibility is to ensure that you can read the story not just through text, but also through photos. I get to work with a variety of topics ranging from celebrity drama to mind-blowing Nasa cosmic news. And let me tell you, that's what makes this job an absolute blast! Outside of work, you can find me sweating it out in dance classes or unleashing my creativity by drawing and creating digital paintings of different characters that lives in my head. I also love spending time outdoors and play board games with my friends.

    Read less »

    Donata Leskauskaitė

    Donata Leskauskaitė

    Author, Community member

    Hey there! I'm a Visual Editor in News team. My responsibility is to ensure that you can read the story not just through text, but also through photos. I get to work with a variety of topics ranging from celebrity drama to mind-blowing Nasa cosmic news. And let me tell you, that's what makes this job an absolute blast! Outside of work, you can find me sweating it out in dance classes or unleashing my creativity by drawing and creating digital paintings of different characters that lives in my head. I also love spending time outdoors and play board games with my friends.

    What do you think ?
    Barong
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My dance instructor said I have two left feet. This shoe store was so close to being perfect.

    Mason Kronol
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Always leave the cash registers open and empty at closing. Also keep the safe open during business hours. It’s hard enough to open the safe on a good day, in a panic it could be impossible and endanger everyone.I learned this working for a bar that respected the employees lives over the money. Make it easy for thieves to get the money and run, don’t fight back.

    Schmebulock
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Someone needs to invent automated tazer turrets!

    Rosie
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Why not get one of those pull down steel doors, and yes, safety poles too.

    R Dennis
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I knew a fast food restaurant that left their registers and safe open - no cash was left on the premises overnight due to numerous thefts. One day, I went there to evaluate it and there was plywood on the outside wall. Apparently a new manager closed the night before and thieves tore a hole in the wall to steal an empty safe.

    Ralph Vanloton
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Bollards would've saved lives in NOLA!

    Kim Kermes
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Apparently there were bollards that only held up to a 10 mph impact.

    Load More Replies...
    iseefractals
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah this kinda $hit is only going to get worse in the places where police budgets continue to get cut while California DA's actively refuse to prosecute thefts of less than $1000....and if they won't prosecute, there's absolutely nothing that police can do. On the surface a lot of people might not care about some soulless mega corp enduring shoplifters or thieves, including the mega corps themselves. Those things are factored into their budgets....this kind of a*s backwards virtue signaling nonsense is going to ensure that small business owners are hurt the most, and it's either going to result in those owners moving somewhere that isn't more concerned with the perceived plight of thieves, they'll just go out of business entirely, or they'll be forced into selling off the business to one of the mega corps that's deadest on ensuring that all the money anyone spends is ending up in the coffers of a handful of parent companies who own 90% of brands.

    Katchen
    Community Member
    10 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    “According to the California Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), crime in California has fallen to the lowest level ever recorded.“

    Load More Replies...
    Lori T Wisconsin
    Community Member
    10 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Wonder if Something like the exploding dye pack that banks use? Hidden in shoes. Step outside and boom!

    Kim Kermes
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I never hear about finding where the stolen items are sold. If there wasn't an easy market, there would be less motive to steal in bulk. They're not selling to their friends.

    Rahul Pawa
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He said the shoes they still were going to be donated to local teens in need...who wants to bet the thieves are local teens? There's a good chance they might have been given the same shoes they stole. --- I am curious how the boarding up happens. The reporter said he arrived to see a boarded up store. I would have guessed he arrived to a smashed front window and had to call someone to clean up the glass and install the boards.

    Thanos'Fingers
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'd bet it's the upper middle class teens more likely to plow their Kia Soul through the front window of a shoe shop than anyone else, especially those seeking shoe donations from local businesses.

    Load More Replies...
    Barong
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    My dance instructor said I have two left feet. This shoe store was so close to being perfect.

    Mason Kronol
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Always leave the cash registers open and empty at closing. Also keep the safe open during business hours. It’s hard enough to open the safe on a good day, in a panic it could be impossible and endanger everyone.I learned this working for a bar that respected the employees lives over the money. Make it easy for thieves to get the money and run, don’t fight back.

    Schmebulock
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Someone needs to invent automated tazer turrets!

    Rosie
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Why not get one of those pull down steel doors, and yes, safety poles too.

    R Dennis
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I knew a fast food restaurant that left their registers and safe open - no cash was left on the premises overnight due to numerous thefts. One day, I went there to evaluate it and there was plywood on the outside wall. Apparently a new manager closed the night before and thieves tore a hole in the wall to steal an empty safe.

    Ralph Vanloton
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Bollards would've saved lives in NOLA!

    Kim Kermes
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Apparently there were bollards that only held up to a 10 mph impact.

    Load More Replies...
    iseefractals
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Yeah this kinda $hit is only going to get worse in the places where police budgets continue to get cut while California DA's actively refuse to prosecute thefts of less than $1000....and if they won't prosecute, there's absolutely nothing that police can do. On the surface a lot of people might not care about some soulless mega corp enduring shoplifters or thieves, including the mega corps themselves. Those things are factored into their budgets....this kind of a*s backwards virtue signaling nonsense is going to ensure that small business owners are hurt the most, and it's either going to result in those owners moving somewhere that isn't more concerned with the perceived plight of thieves, they'll just go out of business entirely, or they'll be forced into selling off the business to one of the mega corps that's deadest on ensuring that all the money anyone spends is ending up in the coffers of a handful of parent companies who own 90% of brands.

    Katchen
    Community Member
    10 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    “According to the California Department of Justice and the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), crime in California has fallen to the lowest level ever recorded.“

    Load More Replies...
    Lori T Wisconsin
    Community Member
    10 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Wonder if Something like the exploding dye pack that banks use? Hidden in shoes. Step outside and boom!

    Kim Kermes
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I never hear about finding where the stolen items are sold. If there wasn't an easy market, there would be less motive to steal in bulk. They're not selling to their friends.

    Rahul Pawa
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    He said the shoes they still were going to be donated to local teens in need...who wants to bet the thieves are local teens? There's a good chance they might have been given the same shoes they stole. --- I am curious how the boarding up happens. The reporter said he arrived to see a boarded up store. I would have guessed he arrived to a smashed front window and had to call someone to clean up the glass and install the boards.

    Thanos'Fingers
    Community Member
    11 months ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    I'd bet it's the upper middle class teens more likely to plow their Kia Soul through the front window of a shoe shop than anyone else, especially those seeking shoe donations from local businesses.

    Load More Replies...
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