A top Hollywood entertainment lawyer has erupted at a luxury Malibu store after it shared surveillance footage of her allegedly switching prices on a pair of sunglasses before trying to buy them.
Kitson LA posted footage of a woman it branded “Malibu Bianca,” offering a $500 reward for the suspect seen supposedly changing the tags at its popular celebrity hangout last Monday.
The upmarket store launched an online witch hunt and later named Bianca Bezdek-Goodloe, managing partner at Goodloe Law, as the alleged culprit — and even outed her husband as the screenwriter J. Mills Goodloe.
Bianca admitted to the California Post on Monday she was the woman in the video but vehemently denied the claims she tried to dupe the shopkeeper.
In a long, furious statement, she attacks the “false accusations” and branded them “defamatory, misleading and inaccurate,” claiming the incident was a “reality show of Kitson’s making.”
The fallout started when the shop, which is renown for posted footage of alleged shoplifters and troublesome customers, posted a video on Instagram of a woman in their store.
It showed the suspect allegedly swapping sunglasses worth $58 sunglasses with a pricier Ray Bans pair worth $198.
At the checkout, when the price scanner failed, she excused herself, saying she would be at the nearby shoe repair shop.
When she returned, staff reportedly declined to assist her, leaving her visibly “perplexed.”
According to Kitson, staff tried to contact her through the shoe repair shop she had used, asking her to contact management. Kitson claimed she never responded.
The retailer raised the stakes by offering a $500 gift card to anyone who could identify her. On Instagram, they posted: “We have filed a police report. Let’s stop these rich bastards from trying to steal from a small business.”
The store also identified her husband as J. Mills Goodloe, a screenwriter and director behind Lethal Weapon 3, and noted that “the couple, who are both prominent fixtures in the entertainment industry, reside in Los Angeles.”
Bianca gave a lengthy statement to The Post denying wrongdoing over the incident, claiming she tried to point out to the store that the tag was wrong before she left.
She said: “Please note that the false accusations which Kitson has leveled at me are defamatory, misleading, inaccurate, with no evidence of any wrongdoing on my part.
“What this has turned into is a reality show of Kitson’s making. The facts they neglected to include are that 1. I brought to their attention I thought the tag was wrong. 2. I folded the tag on the glasses because it kept ripping my hair when I was trying them on. 3.
“I waited patiently and politely for Kitson to correct the tag. 4. I went next door for an errand and returned to the store to buy the glasses.
“Just as I said I would. Again, irrespective of the price. Instead, I was accused of theft and aggressively asked to leave the store.”
The entertainment lawyer claims a few days later she received a call from the shoe shop owner next door who claimed Kitson threatened him with court action if he did not share Goodloe’s contact information.
Bianca says she called the manager twice that same day, but the store failed to return her calls. She provided her call log to show her attempts.
After that, she says Kitson took it too far by portraying her as a criminal. She noted she is also a small business owner and has been stolen from, which can be infuriating.
She added: “I pay my taxes, I go to church, I attend my kids’ sports events and am a conscientious member of the community for over two decades.
“I’ve just returned from Ukraine as a volunteer. I provide pro bono legal services. Am I a saint? No, but I am not a thief, kleptomaniac, or larsonist.”
Malibu Police confirmed the store filed a report on Thursday over an alleged shoplifting incident involving a blonde female, between 5ft 5in and 5ft 7in, weighing around 140lbs.
Kitson has been approached for comment.
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By New York Post (U.S.) | Created at 2026-06-22 19:34:13 | Updated at 2026-06-22 21:29:33
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