Sign In  |  Register  |  About Los Altos  |  Contact Us

Los Altos, CA
September 01, 2020 1:26pm
7-Day Forecast | Traffic
  • Search Hotels in Los Altos

  • CHECK-IN:
  • CHECK-OUT:
  • ROOMS:

Florida family pulls teen from California college after losing thousands in 'bipping' car robbery

A Florida family is withdrawing their teenager from Lincoln University in California after they fell victim to a "bipping" robbery, losing thousands of dollars and personal documents.

A Florida family is no longer sending their teen to a California college after their car was "bipped" when they moved their son into his dorm on Saturday, costing them thousands of dollars in lost belongings and important personal documents. 

Rhomel Crossman had just graduated from a Florida high school and was slated to attend Lincoln University in downtown Oakland this fall – but after they were robbed, his family told KTVU FOX 2 San Francisco, his family intends to rescind his enrollment. 

"In Oakland, California, you just gotta be careful," Crossman's mother, Nerissa Murray Watson, told the outlet. "Everything is totally gone."

TEXAS POLICE ARREST MAN WHO ALLEGEDLY ROBBED BANK WITH YOUNG CHILD IN TOW

Crossman's family flew into Oakland on June 15 and rented a car with Thrifty, the mother said. After registering their son, the family left their rental car parked a block away from Lincoln University on the corner of 15th and Franklin Street to pick up food at a Jamaican restaurant nearby. 

When they returned 15 minutes later, the windows of the rented white Nissan Rogue were broken and their five suitcases stolen. 

Among their contents were "three thousand dollars in a bag my husband put under the seat with three passports, social security cards, and my son’s high school diploma and birth certificate," Watson said. 

SHOCKING VIDEO SHOWS SMASH-AND-GRAB BANDIT OVERWHELM CALIFORNIA JEWELRY STORE IN WILD HEIST

The family also lost a sleep apnea machine that they said they'd left in the car, per KTVU. 

"Bipping" is a slang term that comes from the police language "burglary in progress" and refers to smash-and-grab robberies from unattended cars, according to the San Francisco Standard. People commonly use a "bipping hammer" – a small, easily concealed tool used to easily and quietly break car windows without much force – to break the windows. 

Witnesses told the family they saw masked men driving in a car without a license plate in broad daylight, KTVU reported.

"I didn't know that these things happen in America so it's really strange to me," the Florida mother said. 

"To me, it's lawless because we even called the police station three times and they said they can't come," she said, telling the outlet that their family was told to file a police report at the station.

DELAWARE MAN STOLE $11K WORTH OF CIGARETTES FROM WALGREENS: STATE POLICE

"I have to bring my son to Florida because it's not safe here," Watson told KTVU. 

KTVU and Fox News Digital did not hear back from Lincoln University at press time. U.C. Berkley told the California outlet that they warn students not to leave belongings in their cars and educate them about safety practices during orientation. 

The city of Oakland has recently reported lower crime rates, KTVU reported, touting a violent crime rate that is 30% lower than in 2023 and a burglary rate reduced by 60%.

Data & News supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Stock quotes supplied by Barchart
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.
 
 
Copyright © 2010-2020 LosAltos.com & California Media Partners, LLC. All rights reserved.