The $285,000 Bust — But What About Surrey?
This week, Vancouver police proudly announced a successful raid, recovering $285,000 in stolen luxury goods from houses and cars. The haul? Lululemon, Versace, jewelry, liquor, baby formula — all prime resale items in today’s underground market.
Great. But it raises a bigger question:
Why was nothing done about the woman in Surrey who, not long ago, was openly organizing and orchestrating shoplifters, repackaging goods, and selling them back into the community?
We wrote about her before. She had a system. A team. A supply chain. She was profiting off theft, but instead of jail time or police press releases, she seemed to just... disappear from the conversation.
👁️🗨️ Selective Justice?
There’s something unsettling in watching police pose with piles of stolen goods like trophies in one city while completely ignoring nearly identical activity in another. Is it about optics? Location? Political pressure? Media presence?
And deeper still: What determines who gets busted and who gets ignored?
🚨 Real Questions That Deserve Answers
- Why are certain theft rings targeted while others are allowed to flourish?
- Is enforcement being used to perform safety rather than deliver justice?
- Are some neighbourhoods or populations considered more “worthy” of policing than others?
- What happens when justice becomes performative — a photo-op instead of protection?
- Who profits when stolen goods are repackaged and sold openly online or on street corners — and who gets blamed?
🧭 Think About This:
- If someone is running a theft-based business, shouldn’t they face consequences — regardless of where they’re operating?
- If the police can act swiftly in Vancouver, why didn’t they in Surrey?
- How many “small crimes” are tolerated simply because they serve a larger economic system that thrives on inequality and desperation?
✊ We Need Consistency, Not Just Crackdowns
Retail theft is a growing concern. Yes. But so is public trust in fair policing.
You can’t just throw a net over one side of the city and leave the other side tangled in corruption, poverty, and political neglect.
If we want real solutions, we need equal justice, transparency, and systems that stop treating low-income communities like disposable zones.
Reflective Questions:
- Who decides when a crime is “serious enough” to warrant police attention?
- What does it say about our justice system when organized retail crime is only stopped when it becomes too loud to ignore?
- Are press releases about busts just distraction tactics from bigger systemic failures?
- If some people profit off crime while others are punished for it, is that justice — or hierarchy?
Let’s not let selective enforcement blind us to the bigger picture.
➡️ Share your thoughts. Talk to your community. Demand clarity — and justice that’s actually just.
#Zipolita #TinaWinterlik #VancouverCrime #SurreyStories #JusticeWatch #RetailTheft #SelectivePolicing #DigitalHorizonZ #ReflectiveTruths
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