Metro Nashville police say a months-long retail theft spree that cleaned out Lululemon racks across Davidson County has finally hit a wall. Detectives arrested 35-year-old Michael Mitchell this week after an Organized Retail Crime investigation linked him to a string of shoplifting incidents that investigators say include more than $30,000 in Lululemon gear. The probe stretches back to July 2025. Mitchell remains in jail on a $101,000 bond while prosecutors sift through the case file.
According to NewsChannel 5, Violent Crimes Division detectives picked Mitchell up Tuesday night after the Organized Retail Crime Unit tied him to more than a dozen incidents. Investigators told the station he is suspected of thefts at several Lululemon locations totaling more than $30,000 since Jan. 30, along with additional alleged shoplifting at Lowe’s, Old Navy, Home Depot, and Target over the last nine months. WTVF reports he faces 12 counts of theft, with more charges expected, and that he is being held on a $101,000 bond.
How detectives say the case came together
The Metro Nashville Police Department’s Organized Retail Crime Section works closely with store loss-prevention teams, pooling surveillance footage, receipts, and resale data to spot patterns that might slip past any single store. That setup is designed to pull together repeat incidents into larger cases once losses cross felony thresholds under state law.
Police say that playbook is what allowed investigators to connect Mitchell to multiple thefts scattered across Green Hills, Madison, and other parts of Davidson County, treating them as one coordinated case instead of a handful of small shoplifting hits.
Retail theft crackdown continues
The arrest lands in the middle of a broader crackdown on serial shoplifting in Nashville. WSMV reported that MNPD’s Organized Retail Crime Unit made 265 arrests in 2025 as detectives focused on flagging repeat offenders. Retail investigators say bundling a series of smaller thefts into one case not only pushes the total loss into felony territory, it can also boost the chances that prosecutors take the case forward…