Naperville police say three people were seen on security footage leaving a jewelry store with stolen loose diamonds. Police said the theft occurred about noon Monday, Aug. 26 from the Precious Fine Jewelry store on the 2800 block of Showplace Drive …
Beverly Hills Pawn Shop, 8801 Wilshire Blvd. Known for fine jewellery. 2. Beverly Loan Company, 9440 Santa Monica Blvd. Diamonds are this shop's best friends. 3. The Dina Collection, 249-251 S Beverly Drive. Watch this space. 4. Joe's Gold and Silver, …
… an autographed “Triple Crown Winner” Miguel Cabrera baseball, one-of-a-kind Meadow Brook Hall experiences, VIP Red Wings tickets, WXYZ station tour, fishing gear, European spa packages, fine jewelry, golf and hunting get-aways and much more.
But that has worked out fine as she now says that everyone she has met here is so nice and she loves the community. And since having … Using her artistic creativity, Hong sometimes mixes the glass pieces with vintage jewelry, beads, and found objects.
Though in its infancy, Hughes is starting a grassroots campaign, collecting dresses, costume jewelry, accessories and makeup with the offer that any young woman attending special functions can get a dress and made up at no cost. “I have just always …
This offers a beautiful international fine-art gallery featuring pastels by Beth Kaminstein, Dirk Verdoorn's ships on canvas, paintings by Italian Franco Passalacqua and Antarctic ice paintings by Xavier Cortada. It's at mile marker 97.8 of … Island …
A Bay Area man accused of the daytime heist of a downtown Vacaville jewelry store made a brief appearance in Solano County Superior Court on Friday. Jacobi A. Sanford, 17, of San Francisco, appeared in the Fairfield courtroom of Judge Donna Stashyn for …
“The ordinance says precious metals and jewelry, but it doesn't specifically say paintings,” she said. “We're still investigating, but they likely will be cited and with that citation comes a fine and goes against their business license.” Pacheco said …
“Some items include Jewelry, watches, glasses, and cell phone cases,” said Dennis Ulrich, special agent in charge at Homeland Security Investigations. … The men face up to ten years in prison and a maximum fine of $2 million dollars if convicted.