ugc_banner

Amazon packages, dozens of guns looted from Los Angeles trains: Police

WION Web Team
New DelhiUpdated: Jan 27, 2022, 05:32 PM IST
main img
Looted and discarded boxes can be seen lying beside railway tracks in Los Angeles. Photograph:(Reuters)

Story highlights

Looting of train wagons has been going for few weeks in Los Angeles. Amazon packages in-transit were stolen. Police has confirmed that guns have also been looted

Los Angeles police chief has said that in addition to Amazon packages, dozens of guns have been looted by thieves who have been breaking into train wagons.

Images of the detritus left behind by thieves who broke into stationary wagons in the middle of the second biggest city in the United States swept the internet this month.

Now the city's top policeman has said that the bandits got away with more than just Amazon packages.

"People were... breaking into these containers and stealing firearms, tens of firearms," Michael Moore told the Police Commission this week.

"That gave us great concern as a source again of further violence in the city."

An AFP team filmed thousands of gutted boxes on the stretch of tracks near the city center, many from major retailers like Target, and being shipped by carriers including UPS and FedEx.

The thieves wait until the long freight trains stop on the tracks and break the locks with bolt cutters. 

They then help themselves to parcels, ditching anything too difficult to sell.

The haul could include anything that moves around the country from or to retailers.

And, the police now say, guns.

Firearms purchased online in the United States cannot legally be shipped to the customer, but can be sent instead to a licensed dealer for pick-up.

Since December 2020, rail operator Union Pacific (UP), whose convoys are being targeted, has seen a 160 percent increase in thefts in Los Angeles County.

"In October 2021 alone, the increase reaches 356 percent compared to October 2020," the operator said in a letter to local authorities seen by AFP. 

The phenomenon was accelerated in the run-up to Christmas, as freight volumes rocketed.

According to figures reported by UP, more than 90 containers were vandalized on average each day in Los Angeles County in the last quarter of 2021.

The operator, which manages nearly 280 miles (450 kilometers) of track in Los Angeles County, puts the cost of the damage incurred over the course of 2021 at about $5 million.

(With inputs from agencies)