Metro

Looters ransack Soho stores during George Floyd protests

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Workers survey the damage done to the Balmain store in SoHo
Workers survey the damage done to the Balmain store in SoHoRobert Mecea
A looted Dior store in SoHo
A looted Dior store in SoHo Robert Mecea
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A ransacked Coach store in SoHo
A ransacked Coach store in SoHoAP
A ransacked Coach store in SoHo
A ransacked Coach store in SoHoAP
A smashed Dolce and Gabbana store window in SoHo
A smashed Dolce and Gabbana store window in SoHo.AP
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Looters being arrested at Broome and Broadway after breaking into a store
Looters being arrested at Broome and Broadway after breaking into a storeG.N.Miller/NY Pos
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Looters left behind a path of destruction in Manhattan on Monday morning — with some brazenly continuing the crime spree in Soho an hour after dawn.

At 6:45 a.m., a man with a seemingly empty backpack was spotted by a Post reporter ducking into Celine on Wooster Street through a broken glass window, as his three pals waited outside.

“Is there anything left?” the man said before heading inside.

After several minutes, he fled on foot from the high-end clothing store after apparently filling his bag. His friends followed behind him.

Witnesses said at least one other person was seen ducking into Celine and taking off with a shopping bag in hand.

Dozens of suspected looters were nabbed in Soho Sunday night as protests over the police-involved death of George Floyd raged on in the city. Twelve people were busted outside Nike Soho on Broadway, while other high-end shops like Coach, Chanel and Barbour were also targeted.

Storefronts in the neighborhood were smashed in and empty boxes and other trash littered the sidewalks early Monday morning.

The store window of Chanel on Spring Street was broken and appeared bloodied, with Chanel shoes scattered out front. A similar scene was spotted outside of British outerwear company Barbour on Wooster Street.

In front of Barbour, which also had its glass front window smashed in, a man was seen picking up stray shirts off the sidewalk.

Many of those stores had boarded up its storefronts ahead of the chaos Sunday night — but they were apparently torn off by looters.

Violent protests have been unfolding across the Big Apple and nation for the past four nights following the May 25 death of Floyd, who was black, in Minneapolis at the hands of white cop Derek Chauvin.