ROANOKE TIMES

                         Roanoke Times
                 Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc.

DATE: MONDAY, July 23, 1990                   TAG: 9007230042
SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL                    PAGE: A/8   EDITION: METRO 
SOURCE: VICTOR MERINA LOS ANGELES TIMES
DATELINE:                                 LENGTH: Long


ROLEX HAS BECOME A STATUS SYMBOL AMONG THIEVES

As he sat in the lounge of a West Los Angeles Cadillac dealership, working a crossword puzzle and waiting for his car to be fixed, Carroll Adams didn't notice the smartly dressed gunman headed his way. But he heard with awful clarity the demand for his diamond-studded gold watch.

"No one gets my Rolex," the retired school official replied. "I'm sorry."

Seconds later, Adams was locked in a fierce struggle with the assailant. He wound up bleeding on the floor with three gunshot wounds - and without his $18,600 watch.

"I know I'm lucky," said the 59-year-old Adams, who seven months later is still recovering from his wounds. "But if I had to do it again, I think I would act the same."

Across the United States, stealing Rolexes has become a dangerous and - for some robbers - lucrative practice. In addition to strong-arm robberies, police agencies in cities from Washington to Houston to Beverly Hills report a rash of Rolex-related crimes: "snatch and grab" thefts at jewelry stores; women who slip Mickeys to Rolex wearers; con artists who prey on people attempting to sell their Rolexes through newspaper ads.

While most victims survive, it can get deadly. Only a month before Adams' violent encounter, another Rolex wearer was shot and killed outside his West Los Angeles home during an altercation with a gunman, police said. And last month, a man was fatally shot and robbed of his Rolex after being accosted in his newly purchased Beverly Hills home.

"Rolex used to mean only class and luxury and the fact that you were a success," said Roger Grafstein, owner of Grafstein & Co., a Santa Ana, Calif., jeweler whose own executive was recently robbed. "Unfortunately, one of the world's most desirable status symbols now also can mean death and violence."

There are no comprehensive nationwide statistics charting Rolex robberies, but over the last few years such thefts have been reported in New York, Chicago, Houston and other major cities, and in smaller cities such as Louisville, Ky., and Scottsdale, Ariz., as well.

In some of these cities, the robberies appear to be on the wane, according to police. In others - and especially in Los Angeles' pricier neighborhoods - Rolex cases appear to be on the rise.

In the Los Angeles Police Department's Wilshire Division, where a restaurant owner was fatally shot last year by killers believed to be Rolex-style bandits, detectives report two such robberies a month. Since last September, the West Los Angeles Division of the Los Angeles Police Department has handled 49 Rolex robberies, and Detective Ronald Phillips said as many as eight victims have been injured in the incidents.

"There's no set pattern to the crimes," Phillips said. "The victims may be riding in their cars or walking around a shopping mall, but there are criminals driving around just looking for people who wear a Rolex."

In nearby Beverly Hills, where robberies have soared nearly 41 percent over the last year, Lt. Robert Curtis said his city has averaged more than one Rolex robbery a month. Most involve victims who were followed home, he said.

"I have heard that some people are now so worried," Curtis said, "they are reluctant to wear their Rolexes. People should be cautious, but they don't have to be paranoid."

What feeds those fears, however, is a police blotter full of crimes committed largely by young men lured by the luxury watches:

Last September, a manager in a fashionable West Los Angeles clothing store was dragged across the floor by an armed robber who held on to her $8,000 Rolex until he snapped the bracelet - then calmly walked out the door.

Last January, a man entered a phone store in the Westwood area of Los Angeles and was asked the time by a fellow shopper. After checking his Rolex, he found himself staring at a gun and quickly surrendered his $10,000 watch.

A day later, a 46-year-old man was robbed of his Rolex after being accosted in the parking lot of a West Hollywood hotel. That same month, outside a West Los Angeles shopping mall, a businessman was opening the door of his Rolls-Royce when a man put a gun to his head and announced: "It's Rolex time."

Such anecdotes are chillingly familiar to jewelers like Roger Grafstein, whose company has offices in Orange County, Beverly Hills, New York and Belgium.

"Barely a week goes by that we don't have a client calling us up and telling us that their Rolex was stolen," he said, adding that some of his clients are concerned enough that they have sold their Rolexes for other - equally expensive but less identifiable - watches.

Other jewelers, however, insist that the stolen Rolex phenomenon is overblown and has not affected their business. Company officials also maintain that the theft problem is not limited to their brand of watches.

"We're concerned about the rise in crime in general; I don't think we've felt that Rolex has been targeted," said Brian Brokate, a partner with the law firm of Gibney, Anthony & Flaherty, general counsel for Rolex Watch, U.S.A. Inc.

Calling the thefts "isolated incidents," Brokate said the company is assisting law enforcement in investigating the robberies when asked but has not taken any special steps to combat the problem.

Los Angeles Detective Dan Andrews agreed that the company name perhaps has been unfairly battered by the publicity. "Frankly, I think Rolex is getting a bad rap because there are other expensive watches that people would like to have," Andrews said. "It's the money behind the watch that's the target."

The robbery rampage is reminiscent of past crime waves when luxury items such as Mercedes hood ornaments and Blaupunkt car stereos were the rage among thieves. But the Rolex carries a much loftier price tag.

"From America to Afghanistan to Zaire, on any street corner, if you can prove that your Rolex is real, there's a buyer for it," said jeweler Grafstein.

Easily distinguishable and relatively easy to resell, the Rolex name - originally coined by founder Hans Wildorf because it was short enough to fit on the watch face and could translate to other languages - has become the equivalent of a blue-chip stock on the streets.

Said Diana Pristoop of the Metropolitan Police Department of Washington: "A Rolex has become a status symbol, even among the drug dealers. And if you steal one, you can make a lot of money selling it. The name commands money."

While some thieves may only make a few hundred dollars with their black market Rolex, others can net 10 times as much.

The popularity of Rolexes among criminals almost rivals their acceptance among the well-to-do who are attracted to their enduring mystique and status. Rolex users include athletes, corporate executives, rock stars and heads of state - a clientele drawn to its image as an expensive but rugged instrument, symbolizing a sense of accomplishment.

Sir Edmund Hillary wore one climbing Mount Everest. Company officials say Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev and Pope John Paul II wear Rolexes. Ballerina Cynthia Gregory and golfer Arnold Palmer are Rolex owners. And so was the suave fictional spy James Bond.

The President Model - Lyndon B. Johnson wore one - sells for $11,700 but customers can pay from $1,000 for the simplest, stainless steel Rolex Oyster to as much as $165,000 for a jeweled Rolex featuring diamonds and emeralds.

Asking for the time or merely shadowing a Rolex owner is a well-worn ploy, but some Rolex robbers have resorted to other tactics.

In Washington, where jewelers can require customers to produce a driver's license for identification, Pristoop said that robbers have used a fake license to gain access to local jewelry stores, ask to look at Rolexes and then grab the watches.

In Houston and other cities, detectives have responded to reports of women who have targeted Rolex wearers in bars and nightclubs, often during major conventions or sporting events. After doctoring the man's drink, a woman will steal his watch and other valuables. In Los Angeles, Detective Doug Sims said he has investigated four cases this year where women have used muscle relaxant drugs to incapacitate their victims. He suspects the caseload is only a small percentage of the actual number of these crimes.

"The victims," Sims said, "run the gamut from judges to athletes to top CEOs from major companies, so many men will never report this kind of crime."

Tracking down the nomadic women involved in such a robbery can prove difficult, but when suspects are found, police say they are often linked to dozens of related robberies.



 by CNB