Anonymous
(ID: YLayvnAY)
10/18/2025, 4:15:36 PM
No.519197092
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Millionaire filmed being robbed of his $600,000 watch
A California businessman was violently ambushed and robbed of his $600,000 Richard Mille quartz sports watch outside his Orange County office earlier this week.
The attack, captured on surveillance cameras, shows three masked men blocking the victim's pristine white Bentley, dragging him to the ground, and beating him before fleeing with the high-end timepiece.
The robbery occurred on Wednesday as the businessman, who owns a financial services company, was leaving work.
According to the victim, who spoke to KTLA but asked not to be identified on camera, the suspects used a light-colored SUV to trap his vehicle before pulling him out and pistol-whipping him.
He said two of the three attackers were armed.
'I'm in the car. I'm trying to hold the door with both hands and figure out the lock button. The guy with a white hoodie was sitting on my face screaming, "Shoot him! Shoot him!" he recounted of the vicious attack.
The victim said one suspect repeatedly tried to cock his gun but appeared to jam during the struggle - a malfunction he believes saved his life.
'I don't know why I'm alive right now,' he said.
Police believe the thieves may have staked out the businessman's office for up to four hours before the attack.
The suspects escaped after tearing off the victim's watch, a Richard Mille valued at nearly $600,000.
The victim, who admits to sharing images of his luxury possessions online, now believes his social media activity may have made him a target.
'I don't have a public page,' he said of his online presence. 'It's private but obviously, that was a mistake, posting anything.'
Irvine Police Department spokesperson Kyle Oldoerp has since warned that even private accounts can attract unwanted attention.
>video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WrG6Xbrqnhg
>not even a Rolex
>600k for that ugly quartz piece of shit?
The attack, captured on surveillance cameras, shows three masked men blocking the victim's pristine white Bentley, dragging him to the ground, and beating him before fleeing with the high-end timepiece.
The robbery occurred on Wednesday as the businessman, who owns a financial services company, was leaving work.
According to the victim, who spoke to KTLA but asked not to be identified on camera, the suspects used a light-colored SUV to trap his vehicle before pulling him out and pistol-whipping him.
He said two of the three attackers were armed.
'I'm in the car. I'm trying to hold the door with both hands and figure out the lock button. The guy with a white hoodie was sitting on my face screaming, "Shoot him! Shoot him!" he recounted of the vicious attack.
The victim said one suspect repeatedly tried to cock his gun but appeared to jam during the struggle - a malfunction he believes saved his life.
'I don't know why I'm alive right now,' he said.
Police believe the thieves may have staked out the businessman's office for up to four hours before the attack.
The suspects escaped after tearing off the victim's watch, a Richard Mille valued at nearly $600,000.
The victim, who admits to sharing images of his luxury possessions online, now believes his social media activity may have made him a target.
'I don't have a public page,' he said of his online presence. 'It's private but obviously, that was a mistake, posting anything.'
Irvine Police Department spokesperson Kyle Oldoerp has since warned that even private accounts can attract unwanted attention.
>video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WrG6Xbrqnhg
>not even a Rolex
>600k for that ugly quartz piece of shit?