Grant said he was also carrying hard drives that contained “personal sensitive information for the musician Beyoncé,” according to police.
“The hard drives contained water-marked music, some unreleased music, footage plans for her show, and past and future set list,” an officer wrote in the report.
Other items listed in the report as stolen included laptops, clothes, Tom Ford sunglasses, a book bag and a pair of AirPods Max headphones.
The AJC has reached out to a spokesperson for Beyoncé, her choreographer and her dancer for comment.
Credit: Julian Dakdouk
Credit: Julian Dakdouk
Police said cameras managed to capture the theft at the entrance of the parking deck, and officers canvassed the area. Law enforcement then used the Find My app to search for the headphones that were pinging at an undisclosed location, where officers “conducted a suspicious person stop,” the report stated.
“After further investigation, a silver (redacted) which had also traveled into Zone 5 was moving at the same time as the tracking on the AirPods,” the report stated. “Larceny from automobile investigators were on scene and flagged the vehicle on the system.”
An officer dusted for prints and was able to “retrieve two very light prints,” though police haven’t confirmed if they were from the unidentified suspect who remains at large, the report said.
The theft happened as thousands of excited fans prepared to descend upon Atlanta for four star-studded nights of the star’s tour at Mercedes-Benz Stadium. The final show is Monday night.
It was the latest theft from a vehicle in the city. Through July 5, Atlanta police had investigated 3,185 cases of theft from vehicles, according to department data. That’s down about 16% from this time last year.
But Zone 6, which includes Krog Street, Inman Park and Cabbagetown, has seen a roughly 9% increase in thefts from vehicles, according to department data. Police have investigated 759 cases so far this year in that area, up from 698 this time last year. The majority of this year’s cases — 1,073 investigations — were in Zone 5, which includes most of downtown, data shows.
Atlanta police advised residents about the department’s Clean Car Campaign, which asks people to
remove valuables from their vehicles
.
—Staff writer Alexis Stevens contributed to this article.