Rash of burglaries targeting Asian homes spreads to Lone Tree

Rash of burglaries targeting Asian homes spreads to Lone Tree

A trend of burglaries targeting the homes of Asian families across metro Denver has spread to Lone Tree, the police department said Friday.

Over the past several weeks, Lone Tree has seen a “noticeable increase” in residential burglaries that “seem to be part of a growing pattern in the Denver Metro area,” the police department said in a news release.

Many of the burglaries have targeted the homes of Asian residents and the thieves take cash, purses, jewelry and other high-dollar items, police said.

Investigators believe the suspects enter houses by shattering large windows or sliding glass doors on the back of the home, according to the release. The houses also generally border commercial property, open space or a golf course.

After two burglaries in the Heritage Hills neighborhood on Nov. 12 and Dec. 3, Lone Tree officers were able to identify a “vehicle of interest” using security camera and doorbell footage.

Police said a gray GMC Envoy with no license plates, significant damage to the front driver’s side, non-matching wheels and a sunroof was caught on cameras near two Lone Tree burglaries in the past month. (Photo courtesy of the Lone Tree Police Department).

The car, a gray GMC Envoy that has significant damage to the driver’s front side, non-matching wheels and a sunroof, was spotted at the scene of both burglaries, police said in the news release. The vehicle was not bearing any license plates during both burglaries.

“If anyone sees this vehicle, we ask that you call 911 immediately,” police said in the release. “We are also asking for area residents with camera systems to check their camera footage for this vehicle.”

So far, no one has been home at the time of the burglaries.

Douglas County sheriff’s deputies noticed a similar pattern in early November, noting burglars have specifically targeted the homes of Asians who own businesses while they’re out of the house.

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Deputies said the burglary ring may be part of an organization known as the South American Theft Gang, where people enter the U.S. on short-term visas, create webs of false identities and target high-end retail stores and homes.

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