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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Burglary victims, detectives sort through raided goods

Darian Jorden, a store manager for Aspen Sound on North Division Street in Spokane, inventories material stolen from the store in the front yard of a home at 415 E. Montgomery Avenue. (Colin Mulvany)
One Spokane County sheriff’s deputy commented it looked like a store threw up on a lawn. Washing machine-sized boxes filled with shoes. Electronics stacked waist-high. Landscaping equipment scattered across the grass. Passers-by in vehicles slowed to check out the inventory. But this was no yard sale. Sheriff’s deputies raided a housing unit at 415 E. Montgomery Street on Tuesday, and on Wednesday they were still sifting through $200,000 in stolen goods found inside the house, sheriff’s Deputy Craig Chamberlin said. “This is the largest recovery in (money) and property that anyone can remember,” Chamberlin said. He said the resident of the unit, Troy Baumgardner, 37, was in the Spokane County Jail on Wednesday on charges of second-degree burglary, first-degree theft and second-degree malicious mischief. Chamberlin called the charges the “tip of the iceberg” and said they stem from a May 29 burglary at Discount Lumber, 8003 N. Market St., where $10,000 worth of goods were stolen. That burglary was followed by a break-in at Aspen Sound on Division Street over the Fourth of July, when more than $150,000 of electronics – essentially the store’s entire stock – were stolen. On July 30, Payless Shoes in the Shadle area was hit for more than $40,000 worth of shoes. Chamberlin said the investigation into the first burglary led deputies to Baumgardner, but he would not say how he was identified as a suspect. Deputies executed a search warrant on the house at 10:45 p.m. Tuesday and found goods from all three burglaries, he said, adding that Baumgardner fled the residence when law enforcement arrived but was quickly apprehended. Chamberlin said the investigation is ongoing and it is unclear if Baumgardner worked alone in the thefts. He said Baumgardner is from the Fresno, Calif., area and was “prominent” in thefts in that area. He said investigators thought they might find items from more than just the one crime inside the house, but they “had no idea there was going to be this much.” Inside Baumgardner’s residence, “investigators had to maneuver around all the stolen property, there was so much,” Chamberlin said. Once deputies identified many of the items’ original owners – which wasn’t a hard task since they said Baumgardner labeled almost every item with a sticky note – representatives from each store were on hand to take back their inventory. Darian Jorden, store manager for Aspen Sound, said he was the first to enter the business the morning of July 5. Normally, he said, an alarm sounds when the first person enters. “I heard nothing,” he said. He walked into the stock room and saw empty shelves. “That’s when I realized it was all gone,” he said. Just as shocking, perhaps, was the phone call Wednesday that much of the stock had been recovered. “It was pretty relieving and pretty exciting to show up and see so much stuff,” Jorden said. The alarm didn’t notify police during the theft because a cable to the system had been cut, Jorden said, and the locks on a rear door were drilled. “With how well they did the job getting in, I thought we’d never see it again,” he said.