Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office

Pamela Brooke Schronce, and “Bandida das Boutiques”
The owner of a luxury children’s clothing store, nicknamed “the Boutique Bandit” on social media, is accused of scamming customers, causing losses of more than US$10,000 in children’s clothing that they ordered but never received. Your “mugshots” are already enough for a calendar.
The North American Pamela Schronce she has been arrested 17 times since New Year’s Day. It’s not a typo. On average, there is one arrest every 8.5 days, in several counties, in a single state, and always for the same type of problem.
Schronce is the owner of Thomas and Turner Children’s Boutique, South Carolina, and customers from various parts of the state have filed complaints alleging they paid for items that were never delivered and that they never received any refund.
Apparently, the authorities have been busy, says .
The arrests started on January 1stin Anderson County, from where she was extradited to Fairfield County and formally charged. Six days later, she was arrested by Easley police.
In February, the situation reached an almost caricatural level. On the 5th, she was arrested by the Spartanburg County Sheriff’s Office, released at 6:25 p.m., and again arrested less than an hour laterby Easley police. On the same day. In another county. With just an hour apart.
For the rest of February, he passed through the dungeons in 7 counties. In March, he added charges in Newberry and, again, Anderson counties. In April, two more joined, in two other counties.
The 30-year-old didn’t stop. On May 1, she checked into a cell, for the 17th time this year, at a detention center — this time in Pickens County.
The case generated enough attention that a local prosecutor asked the South Carolina attorney general to take on the accusation in at least one of the processes, invoking a conflict of interest.
Shelter was being transferred between detention centers as cases progress through the judicial system. This is, without a doubt, a remarkable logistical operation, taking into account the number of counties involved.
According to the magazine, Schronce’s alleged scheme, which allegedly occurred between September 2023 and December 2025, resulted in a total loss of US$10,491 to customers — approximately 9 thousand euros.
Some of her glamorous “mugshots” caught the attention of social media — and, like on Facebook, there are so many that you can officially make a calendar.

Pamela Brooke Schronce’s mugshots are enough to make a calendar