Looting of Apple Stores

Apple Retail Stores are targets of looting due to the high value of items that are on display.

History
Typical lootings are often carried out through smash and grab techniques by small parties. However, because Apple assigns unique serial numbers (such as IMEI) to its items, stolen items will often be blacklisted and "bricked". In 2018, seventeen suspects in California were arrested and charged with being part of a robbery ring to steal merchandise from Apple stores.

George Floyd protests
On May 30, 2020, Apple stores in the United States were targeted for vandalism and/or looted during protests over the death of George Floyd. On May 31, only 42 of 271 locations in the United States remained open out of concern for customer and employee safety. 56 were closed due to the conditions related to the protests while others remained closed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Damaged stores were closed for repairs, and high-risk locations were pre-emptively boarded up. Some boarded-up stores were decorated with murals and became gathering places for Black Lives Matter marches. Stores that were hit included:

May 30:
 * ‎Apple Scottsdale Fashion Square — Scottsdale, Arizona
 * ‎Apple Century City — Los Angeles, California
 * ‎Apple The Grove — Los Angeles, California
 * ‎‎‎Apple Carnegie Library — Washington, D.C.
 * ‎Apple Uptown — Minneapolis, Minnesota
 * Apple Downtown Brooklyn — Brooklyn, New York (vandalized)
 * ‎‎Apple Walnut Street — Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
 * ‎‎‎Apple Pioneer Place — Portland, Oregon
 * Apple King Street — Charleston, South Carolina
 * ‎‎‎Apple City Creek Center — Salt Lake City, Utah (targeted)

May 31:
 * Apple Georgetown — Washington, D.C.
 * Apple Union Square — San Francisco, California (reopening June 6, 2020)
 * Apple Bellevue Square — Bellevue, Washington

June 1:
 * Apple Main Place — Naperville, Illinois

Aftermath
Stores that were boarded up or barricaded, though not necessarily looted: