The FBI just released a new report on “flash mob shoplifting”—what law enforcement calls “flash robs.” And the numbers are shocking.
Between 2020 and 2024, organized groups of people (usually teenagers) coordinated attacks on retail stores across America. They stole more than $8 million in merchandise. They destroyed another $51,000 worth of property. They injured victims. Some of them used weapons.
And it’s happening more in 2024 than it was in 2020.
What Is Flash Mob Shoplifting?
It’s not what it sounds like. It’s not a bunch of people dancing in a store. It’s organized criminal theft.
A flash mob shoplifting incident (or “flash rob”) happens when an organized group—usually teenagers wearing similar clothing to conceal their identities—targets a specific retail store and collectively steals from it at the same time.
They coordinate on social media. They plan which store. They plan what merchandise. They plan the time. Then they show up, grab merchandise, and leave. It’s over in minutes.
The Numbers Are Staggering
More than 3,600 people were arrested in connection with reported flash mob shoplifting incidents over the five-year period of 2020-2024.
Let that sink in. Three thousand, six hundred arrests. For organized theft targeting retail stores.
Over $8 million in stolen merchandise. Over $51,000 in destroyed property. Clothes and furs were the most targeted merchandise.
The Violence Component
Here’s what makes flash mobs more dangerous than regular shoplifting: they use weapons and force.
Flash mob shoplifting incidents were more likely to involve weapons or force than non-flash mob shoplifting incidents. Victims were more likely to be injured in flash mob incidents than in regular shoplifting.
Store employees aren’t just losing merchandise. They’re getting threatened. They’re getting assaulted. They’re getting weapons pulled on them.
In 2016, a flash mob attack in Philadelphia injured a police officer, his wife, and others. This isn’t a victimless crime.
The Trend
More flash mob shoplifting incidents were reported in 2024 than in 2020.
The report says there wasn’t a “continuous year-over-year increase,” but the bottom line is the same: we’re not trending downward. We’re trending upward.
That means more organized groups are adopting this tactic. More teenagers are participating. More stores are being hit.
Why Flash Mob Shoplifting Is Hard to Prosecute
Here’s a frustrating reality: flash mob shoplifting is not a specific offense that law enforcement agencies report in the National Incident-Based Reporting System.
That means when a flash mob hits a store, individual shoplifting charges get filed—but there’s no specific crime called “flash mob shoplifting.” The organized coordination aspect doesn’t get captured in official crime statistics the way it should.
This makes it harder for law enforcement to track the trend. It makes it harder for lawmakers to address it specifically. It makes the problem seem smaller than it actually is.
Who’s Doing It
The report identifies participants as “usually teenagers.” But it doesn’t get more specific than that.
However, social media analysis and news reports suggest this is becoming more organized. Older criminals are coordinating with younger ones. Adults are sometimes present. This isn’t just kids being kids—this is organized crime with young participants.
The Impact on Retail
For small retailers, a flash mob hit can be devastating. A store that operates on thin profit margins loses thousands of dollars in minutes. Employees get threatened. The store gets damaged.
For big retailers, it’s a different problem: theft becomes part of the operating cost. Stores close in neighborhoods where flash mob incidents are frequent. Prices go up for customers to offset losses.
This isn’t just about merchandise. It’s about the deterioration of retail environments and community safety.
What Can Be Done
The FBI’s report suggests law enforcement and businesses need to “better understand the events” to “deter these thefts.”
That means:
- Better coordination between stores sharing information about planned flash mobs
- Increased security presence during peak theft times
- Social media monitoring to identify planned incidents
- Prosecution that treats coordinated theft as organized crime, not just individual shoplifting
Read the Full FBI Report
The FBI released the complete “Reported Flash Mob Shoplifting Incidents: 2020-2024” report on December 3, 2025.
You can read the full report with detailed data, charts, and analysis here: https://cde.ucr.cjis.gov/LATEST/resources/reports/Reported_Flash_Mob_Shoplifting_Incidents_2020-2024.pdf
The report contains:
- Number of incidents by year
- Locations targeted
- Merchandise most frequently stolen
- Weapon involvement
- Injuries reported
- Arrest demographics
- Time of day analysis
The Bottom Line
Flash mob shoplifting is organized retail theft. It’s coordinated. It’s violent. It’s increasing.
More than 3,600 arrests. Over $8 million in stolen merchandise. More incidents in 2024 than 2020.
This isn’t a small problem. This isn’t teenagers being teenagers. This is organized crime targeting retail stores across America.
And it’s getting worse.
For the complete data and analysis, download the FBI’s full report at the link above. See it for yourself.




