A roving network of sometimes violent robbers stole cellphones from people near bars in downtown Minneapolis and Dinkytown for nearly a year, draining their transaction apps of money totaling more than $275,000 and routinely selling the phones to a man who ships them to buyers overseas, according to charges filed Tuesday.
Charges of racketeering were filed against 12 people "following a groundbreaking and extensive joint investigation" by the Minneapolis Police Department and the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, which looked into 65 cases during the past year, the Hennepin County Attorney's Office said in a statement.
The defendants who worked the streets often targeted intoxicated people as they left bars at closing time as far back as June 2021, the charges read.
One of the defendants questioned by police said a group of roughly 15 people from St. Paul has been coming to the downtown Minneapolis bar district for the past three to four years to steal cellphones from people, according to the charges.
In some instances, the defendants took phones by means including intimidation, "trickery and violence" that left people with serious injuries, the charging document read. At other times, the defendants approached people in a friendly manner and asked them for their phone on the pretext of adding themselves to a social media platform. The defendants made sure the victims unlocked their phone before handing it to accomplices who would transfer money from the victims' accounts to the thieves' accounts using mobile payment services such as Venmo, Zelle and Coinbase.
The amount of money taken from 40 or more victims' apps totaled $277,000, according to the charges, with the value of the stolen phones topping $25,000.
Charged with felony racketeering and with warrants issued for their arrest are: St. Paul residents Aaron Johnson, 25; Sharlotte Green, 21; Charlie Pryor Jr., 18; Charlie Pryor Sr., 41; Alfonze Stuckey, 23; Sherrod Lamar, 23; Emarion White, 18; and Antonio Green, 19; Minneapolis residents David Mullins, 26; Zhongshuang Su, aka Brandon Su; and Heiron Birts, 26; and Bloomington resident Lawrence Miles, 22.
Su is accused of being the man who others in the scheme called the "iPhone Man," who bought the stolen phones and sent them to buyers overseas. In total, prosecutors believe Su has made 40 shipments of 1,135 phones to addresses in Hong Kong. Prosecutors put the value of those phones at more than $800,000.