Who are the California Girls? Inside the women’s gang that stole $8 million in cosmetics and clothing

By Abby Amoakuh

Published Mar 14, 2024 at 01:46 PM

Reading time: 2 minutes

55862

53-year-old mother of three Michelle Mack has become everyone’s favourite new millionaire queenpin following a raid on her sprawling mansion in San Diego, California on 6 December 2023. The criminal mastermind stands accused of heading up a large-scale theft ring of 12 women known as the “California Girls.” According to authorities, Mack’s operation has stolen up to $8 million in cosmetic goods and designer clothing over the past few years.

As stated by the New York Post, Mack recruited up to 12 young women to steal from stores across the country and mail the loot back to her $3 million mansion in California.

@dailymail

Glamorous millionaire 'queenpin', 53, is accused of running crime ring of 12 women called 'California Girls' who stole $8M in cosmetics and designer clothes, storing them in 4,500 sq ft mansion and selling them on Amazon. #fyp #crimetok #california #truecrime

♬ original sound - Daily Mail

The scheme started to unravel when two alleged gang members were arrested in an Ulta store on the East Coast. Upon the arrest, one of them told officials that she was working for a certain woman in California who provided her with a list of stores to target. The list would also contain the prices she would pay for hot goods.

From there, the elaborate crime began to surface. Mack would supply her ‘workers’ with the list and even pay their airfares to more than a dozen states nationwide to execute the tasks. The queenpin also provided funds for hotel rooms and car rental costs for up to a dozen operatives, who would then post their loot to her home. The last stage of the devious plot was to resell the items through a front company on Amazon Marketplace at a large discount.

A ‘mini-store’ of goods worth around $350,000 was found during the early morning December raid on Mack’s $3 million and 4,500 square feet mansion, according to the authorities.

Prosecutors have charged Mack, her husband Kenneth, and seven of their known associates with 136 felony counts of grand theft.

One alleged member of the California Girls, Alina Franco, reportedly had $67,000 worth of stolen beauty products at her home in Colton, San Bernardino. Franco’s home was raided on the same day and appeared in court on 27 February denying multiple felony counts.

Investigators said that they spent more than two years trying to “break the gang,” which was tasked with clearing entire shelves of goods and concealing them in Louis Vuitton bags.

Many netizens immediately started to draw references to the 2013 movie The Bling Ring. It tells the real-life story of a group of high-school students, who broke into the homes of major celebrities, such as Paris Hilton, Orlando Bloom and Miranda Kerr, and Lindsay Lohan. The goal was to rob them of millions of dollars in clothes, shoes and jewellery and keep the goods for their own personal enjoyment. Their activities resulted in the theft of about $3 million in cash and belongings and shed light on the brutal envy the public feels about the glamorous and exclusive lifestyle of the rich and famous.

“She’s queen girl boss,” one TikTok user said of Mack, the mastermind behind the ‘California Girls’ operations. “And the next Hollywood movie is…” another user joked. Others pointed out similarities to TV shows such as Good Girls and Inventing Anna. The Daily Mail also described Mack’s lifestyle as “glamourous” and extensively wrote about her mansion which reportedly had a chapel and a vineyard.

Another TikToker added: “Like that one girl on Oceans 8,” while a further netizen simply stated “Queen.”

Overall, the comment section was rich with users who drew cinematic parallels and celebrated, as well as glamourised, Mack’s crimes and lavish lifestyle.

This case serves as a reminder about the allure and fascination that surrounds women who commit elaborate high-stakes crimes, as well as how easily the public trivialises these and co-opts them into a ‘girlboss’ narrative.

Keep On Reading

By Alma Fabiani

Chinese police used mosquitoes to help solve a home robbery case

By Jack Ramage

The rich are once again stealing from the working class: this time, it’s football

By David Lukić

TikTok and identity theft: Is TikTok stealing your online identity?

By Charlie Sawyer

Will Greta Thunberg reach Gaza safely amid Israel’s aid blockade?

By Charlie Sawyer

This Oscar-winning actor is the top pick to play Voldemort in HBO Max Harry Potter reboot

By Charlie Sawyer

Trump administration announces plan to offer US immigrants $1,000 to self-deport

By Charlie Sawyer

Mexican beauty influencer Valeria Marquez killed during TikTok livestream in alleged femicide

By Charlie Sawyer

Johnny Depp plays the victim once more and anoints himself crash test dummy for #MeToo

By Eliza Frost

Netflix’s new Trainwreck documentary exposes the rise and scandalous fall of American Apparel

By Amna Akram

Hira Anwar’s tragic story: How a teen’s fight for identity sparked a call to action to end honour killings

By Charlie Sawyer

Aldi just became the first UK supermarket to provide free in-store period products and transphobes are mad

By Charlie Sawyer

Emma Watson reveals disgusting paparazzi ambush on her 18th birthday

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Are Aimee Lou Wood and Walton Goggins feuding? Fans freak out after The White Lotus co-stars unfollow each other

By Charlie Sawyer

First look at $1 billion UK mini city where controversial HBO Harry Potter series will be filmed

By Abby Amoakuh

MrBeast faces new backlash as fans demand refunds for disastrous Las Vegas immersive experience

By Eliza Frost

American Eagle and Sydney Sweeney face backlash with employee’s LinkedIn post adding fuel to the fire

By Eliza Frost

Taylor Swift is engaged to the boy on the football team, Travis Kelce 

By Charlie Sawyer

President Trump and JD Vance angry over the DNC setting up a taco truck outside RNC headquarters

By Fatou Ferraro Mboup

Could the next pope be Black? Peter Turkson’s papal bid could rewrite over 1,500 years of Vatican history

By Eliza Frost

What is Banksying? Inside the latest toxic dating trend even worse than ghosting