Florida busts alleged $800K Home Depot theft operation

- Florida officials announced the dismantling of a retail theft ring that stole approximately $800,000 worth of smoke detectors from Home Depot stores.
- During a press conference, law enforcement also raised concerns about the use of illegal Chinese-made signal jammers by criminals.
- Officials stated these jammers, which can disrupt emergency communications, have been used in crimes by undocumented immigrants in several states.
State officials are raising the alarm about illegal Chinese-made signal jammers that they say are winding up in the hands of criminals and undocumented immigrants.
The concern came during an press conference in Tallahassee that was otherwise focused on organized retail crime that hit a number of Home Depots across several Florida counties.
Signal jammers are devices that deliberately block, interfere with, or disrupt wireless communications by emitting radio frequency (RF) signals on the same frequencies that communication systems use.
In most countries, including the U.S., private ownership or use of jammers is illegal because they can disrupt emergency communications used by police and fire departments, aviation, and other critical systems.

“Signal jammers are already being used in crimes in Florida, Illinois, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Texas, Vermont and Virginia, according to the Department of Homeland Security,” said according to Col. Rick “Lee” Adams, who heads the Office of Agricultural Law Enforcement in the Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services (FDACS).
“Illegal aliens from South America have used jammers to conduct home invasions and robberies to disrupt calls to and among our first responders.”
Florida “means business when it comes to organized retail theft,” said Adams’ boss, Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson said.
He said his department’s Ag Law Enforcement officers, working with local and state partners, led a months-long investigation that also “dismantled a major criminal enterprise stealing hundreds of thousand of dollars products from Home Depot stores across our state.”

Seven people are now charged for their alleged involvement in a multilevel criminal operation, specifically focused on stealing smoke detectors from the hardware store chain.
Investigators uncovered at least 44 smoke detector thefts at The Home Depot locations across 17 Florida counties: Pasco, Polk, Highlands, Hillsborough, Pinellas, Orange, St. Lucie, Brevard, Lee, Manatee, Flagler, Sarasota, Seminole, Duval, St. Johns, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties.
The Home Depot estimates the total amount of losses from the organized theft ring at around $800,000. The suspects face felony charges of conspiracy to commit racketeering, organized retail theft, and dealing in stolen property.
Arianna Otero is the trending and breaking news reporter for the Tallahassee Democrat. Contact her via email at AOtero@tallahassee.com and follow her on X: @ari_v_otero.