TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (WCTV) – A Tallahassee man and woman are accused of stealing and selling multiple Amazon packages totaling over a thousand dollars, according to a probable cause affidavit.
Aziza Rieara has been charged with dealing with stolen property, an organized scheme to defraud, using a two-way communication device to facilitate a felony and three counts of mail theft, per court records. The identity of the man allegedly involved is not revealed because he has been charged in a separate case, according to CJIS.
Court records show that the investigation began after an Amazon Loss Prevention expert submitted a report that a third-party delivery driver was stealing packages. The Amazon expert reported that 30 items listed as ‘missing, ‘damaged’ or ‘destroyed’ by a male delivery driver were actually stolen.
In surveillance footage provided by the expert, law enforcement saw the man uploading the Amazon items into his car. The Amazon expert also noted that the man’s partner, identified as Rieara, was selling the stolen items on Facebook Marketplace in Tallahassee.
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Law enforcement got a search warrant for Rieara ‘s Facebook account and found that six items listed for sale matched the list of stolen items provided by the Amazon expert, per court documents. They also found through a search on the North Florida Pawn Database that two items were pawned in Tallahassee.
On October 28, law enforcement went to Rieara’s address and saw the male delivery driver’s car that was used to offload the “missing” Amazon items and also saw multiple shipping boxes outside Rieara’s residence.
While Rieara and the man denied the claims, when law enforcement searched the residence, they seized 22 items and 7 of those matched the list of stolen items provided by the Amazon expert. The total value of those items was $945.89, according to court documents.
That same night, the man was arrested for grand theft for the seven items and Rieara was arrested for dealing in stolen property. On October 30, law enforcement found that “Twenty out of twenty-two items were confirmed to be Amazon items that should have been delivered by [redacted] and were stolen,” according to the affidavit.
It was later found that the items proven stolen by the man and Rieara’s scheme amounted to $1,602.71, per the affidavit.
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