The two accomplices, a man and a woman, were arrested at the scene of the car crash. Police declined to give their identities Monday.
Glendale and Burbank police set up a perimeter around the mall and closed several streets to traffic as SWAT and canine teams tracked the man to a stairwell in the parking structure.
“They picked up his scent right where he jumped out of the car,” Glendale Police Sgt. Tom Lorenz said.
Burbank police chased the car after the man allegedly robbed the GlenMar Liquor store in Burbank at gunpoint. He may be responsible for a series of recent armed robberies in Burbank, police said, including a robbery at GlenMar on Jan. 22. If he is linked to the robberies, about four or five of them in the last two weeks, he could face 10 to 15 years per charge, police said.
At minimum, he will be charged with armed robbery, resisting arrest and evading police, Burbank Police Sgt. Robert Quesada said.
Lody Abdulnour, owner of GlenMar Liquor on North Glenoaks Boulevard, said she was able to warn the cashier from a back office after seeing the man act suspiciously on a security camera outside the store.
The man, described by police as being 18 to 25 years old, 5 feet 6 inches tall with shoulder-length curly hair, walked in, pulled out a gun and demanded cash and cigarettes, Abdulnour said.
The cashier, who is seven months’ pregnant, complied, she said.
“Thank God no one was hurt,” Abdulnour said.
Police arrived as the suspects were fleeing GlenMar, which set off a high-speed chase through North Hollywood and Burbank that eventually ended at the Americana. The mall reopened at 2:50 p.m., police said.
Video footage from news helicopters showed the man, who was wearing a white T-shirt and gray slacks, cutting across the Americana green and into the multistory parking garage. At the time, police thought he was armed.
He was arrested without a weapon, but police said they found a gun outside the liquor store.
Joyce Cuaresma was having lunch at Katsuya with a friend when she saw him run by, she said.
“He ran right past us. It went by really quick,” Cuaresma said.
She and other customers were locked in the restaurant for about an hour before police said they could safely leave.
“It ruined my day basically,” said Tatyana Melnyk, who was having lunch at Frida when the lockdown happened. “No one can say how long until we can get our car.”