Thursday, 21st November 2024

Suspect in celebrity home burglary arrested by LAPD

A man has been arrested in connection with a series of burglaries targeting the homes of celebrities in Hollywood Hills: LA police

Thursday, 3rd January 2019

A man has been arrested in connection with a series of burglaries targeting the homes of celebrities in Hollywood Hills, Los Angeles police say.

An estimated 2,000 items, including jewellery and artwork, worth millions of dollars were seized during the investigation involving break-ins at luxury homes in the Hollywood area. The burglaries occurred in 2017 and 2018.

Among the victims are the musicians Usher and Adam Lambert, police said.

Thirteen victims have so far been identified.

Detectives received a break in the case when they noticed the same person signing in to multiple open houses where the burglaries occurred. The suspect was identified as Benjamin Eitan Ackerman, 32, of Los Angeles.

Announcing the arrest on Wednesday, Los Angeles Police Detective Jared Timmons said "high value" property was recovered by investigators from Ackerman's home and a separate storage unit.

Images of the items collected have been posted on a website to help police investigators identify any further victims in order to return them.

Ackerman allegedly pretended to be a real estate agent or potential home buyer to access the properties at open houses and on some occasions falsely claimed to work for an investment firm, police said.

"When he showed up he was dressed to the nines. He acted the part. He was very slick," Timmons said.

Timmons said the operation, which involved the "touring" of houses that would later be targeted, was "sophisticated" and included tampering with surveillance cameras.

"Sometimes they were just ripped out and other times the cameras would simply go black until several hours after the burglary occurred," he said.

Ackerman, who is from the Los Angeles area and has a criminal record, has "connections in New York", Timmons added.

The investigation is ongoing as authorities try to establish the extent of the operation and identify any others who may be involved.