New York City

Cops Hunt Quartet Of Heist Suspects Roaming Brooklyn And Queens

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Published on June 28, 2026
Cops Hunt Quartet Of Heist Suspects Roaming Brooklyn And QueensSource: X/NYPD Crime Stoppers

The NYPD’s Crime Stoppers unit released a batch of surveillance stills on Saturday, June 27, 2026, asking New Yorkers to help identify four people wanted in connection with a citywide commercial robbery pattern. The images show multiple angles of the same group, and investigators say the incidents stretch across several busy shopping corridors. Detectives are asking anyone who might have footage or eyewitness accounts that tie these scenes together to come forward.

In a post on X, NYPD Crime Stoppers tagged the 63rd, 69th, 83rd, 102nd, 106th and 109th precincts as part of the pattern and shared several still frames of the suspects. The bulletin urges anyone who recognizes the people in the images to contact investigators and, if possible, send along time-stamped video or other surveillance footage that might help connect the dots.

Where Police Say The Robberies Hit, And How To Help

According to the NYPD precinct map, the precincts flagged in the bulletin cover neighborhoods across Brooklyn and Queens, including Bushwick, Canarsie, Richmond Hill and Flushing. That mix of commercial strips right up against residential blocks is one reason officers are asking shop owners, building managers and even residents with doorbell cameras to comb through their footage for anything that might show the suspects coming or going.

Per the NYPD’s Crime Stoppers page, anyone with information or relevant footage can call the hotline at 1-800-577-TIPS (8477), use the Spanish-language tip line at 1-888-57-PISTA (74782), or submit an anonymous tip through the department’s online portal. Tips that lead to an arrest and indictment in qualifying cases may be eligible for a cash reward of up to $3,500, which is the NYPD’s way of encouraging New Yorkers to play amateur detective without leaving the couch.

Investigation Context

The department has, in recent weeks, circulated similar surveillance stills in an effort to link related robberies and identify repeat suspects. Reporting on comparable citywide patterns notes that investigators have repeatedly turned to the public, pushing out surveillance frames and asking for video leads to fill in blind spots between crime scenes.

Legal Note

The bulletin lists the people shown in the images as wanted in connection with an active investigation and does not include any formal charges. As with any wanted poster, those pictured are presumed innocent until charged in court, and it is up to prosecutors to decide whether to file an indictment.

Anyone who recognizes the individuals in the images or has video from a business or building in any of the listed precincts is asked to contact Crime Stoppers by calling the hotline, messaging NYPD Crime Stoppers on X, or submitting an anonymous tip through the department’s portal. Police say detailed information is especially helpful, so include dates, approximate times and any time-stamped footage that might help detectives line up incidents across different precincts.