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 11/25/25

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LPRC Study Reveals Dramatic Efficiency Gains with FaceFirst® Technology


Investigators using FaceFirst® solved cases faster, uncovered more value, and built stronger cases against organized retail crime.

A Loss Prevention Research Council (LPRC) case study has demonstrated the substantial impact of FaceFirst®’s facial recognition technology on organized retail crime investigations, revealing dramatic improvements over traditional CCTV methods.

The study compared two investigators with similar backgrounds working the same case: one using FaceFirst® and the other relying on traditional CCTV reviews. The results were striking.
 

Learn more
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Black Friday’s Flash-Crowd Challenge:
When Sudden Surges Become a Security Risk


By the D&D Daily staff

Black Friday has always brought operational pressure, but retailers are reporting a different kind of challenge emerging in recent years — one rooted not only in organized retail crime, but in crowd behavior itself.

State agencies like the Maryland Department of Labor have been warning retailers to take “greater precautions… to avoid crowd-related injuries” during Black Friday events. And industry observers note that when stores are overwhelmed by sudden surges of people, shrink can climb quickly — not necessarily because of boosters, but because chaos creates opportunity. Vanguard’s Black Friday risk bulletin points out that the “combination of chaotic store environments, overwhelmed staff, and an increase in foot traffic” opens the door for opportunistic theft.

This is where loss prevention teams are seeing what some are calling flash-crowd incidents: fast-forming pockets of disorder that develop when high-interest items, compressed space, and customer urgency collide. They’re not coordinated events, but the impact can feel similar to a grab-and-go loss. Crowds breach a queue rope, rush a doorbuster pallet, or push into an aisle, and within seconds the situation becomes difficult to control.

Retailers who successfully navigated last year’s Black Friday rush point to several mitigation strategies:

  • Proactive queue management. Setting physical barriers, staggering entry, and communicating limits before doors open.

  • Strong early-floor presence. Staffing high-interest zones with trained associates and LP professionals during the first hour — when flash-crowd behavior is most likely.

  • Environmental adjustments. Using micro-zoning or wider aisles around electronics, small appliances, and seasonal doorbusters to prevent pressure points.

  • Real-time surveillance support. AI-assisted video tools are increasingly helpful for detecting sudden density spikes or unusual movement patterns before they escalate.

  • Clear customer messaging. Transparency around restocking times, limits, and store flow reduces the misinformation that often fuels crowd surges.

LP leaders inside big-box, specialty, and off-price formats have noted that these strategies don’t just reduce risk — they support better customer experience and reduce liability exposure.

With another Black Friday cycle approaching, retailers aren’t just preparing for theft. They’re preparing for crowd-driven disruption, the fast-moving risk hiding inside the annual holiday surge. The retailers who plan for it now will be the ones who avoid becoming the next viral “rush moment” on social media.


Counterfeit Hot Spot Becomes ICE Target in NYC
ICE arrests Canal St. vendor in ‘targeted operation’ right after NYPD raids
Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents raided Canal St. in lower Manhattan Saturday afternoon again, arresting a West African migrant street vendor allegedly selling counterfeit goods.

The arrest, at Canal St. near Broadway around noon, came only about 15 minutes after the NYPD had completed its own vendor enforcement action on the bustling strip — known as the go-to spot for fake Louis Vuitton and Gucci handbags and Beats headphones.

Sending vendors fleeing, NYPD officers hit the location twice — starting at 11 a.m., making one arrest about a half hour later — in the hour right before the ICE arrest. But the NYPD had no interaction with the federal agents and the ICE investigation was unrelated to the NYPD, according to police sources.

Tricia McLaughlin, assistant secretary for the Department of Homeland Security, ICE’s umbrella agency, said the agents were specifically looking to arrest the man they grabbed. New York City generally does not honor ICE detainers unless the individual has been convicted of a serious or violent crime or is on a terrorist watch list and ICE has a judicial warrant.

After a day full of raids, the vendors were extra-vigilant — bordering on paranoid. Every few minutes, as a cop car would roll by or if they spotted someone they feared might be an undercover, they would hoist up their merchandise and get ready to bolt. Their goods are laid out on tarps, easy to grab up quickly in a bundle, if needed.  nydailynews.com


Reporting is Key to Fighting Retail Crime
District attorneys tell local retailers: ‘Report, report, report (crimes), and document, document, document’
Washington County District Attorney Kevin Barton and his family have a penchant for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. On three different occasions they have been shopping in area stores and witnessed shoplifters running out with stolen merchandise while store owners or managers did not call police.

Barton explained the retail owners and managers are afraid their employees might get hurt if they intervene in these situations or they fear prosecution because of bias. “Anyone can call the police, but people aren’t doing it,” he said. “We all have an obligation to take ownership of this situation. We need stores to report these crimes.”

Wentworth added that “the state is invested in clamping down on organized theft and provides funds for stings.” He said that “crooks know they can get away with crime in Multnomah County, which has taken a hands-off approach to crime. We can only take action if someone throws us a pitch. Two of the safest counties in Oregon are Clackamas and Washington.”

Barton said it is frustrating to see the same criminals come through the system again and again and that the recidivism rate (the tendency of a convicted criminal to re-offend) can be lowered by incarceration. “If people knew they will be punished, they are less likely to do the crime,” he said.

Barton’s final words were: “Report, report, report, and document, document, document.” tualatinlife.com


Why ‘clearance rates’ don’t tell the whole story about solving crimes

Violent crime rate in South Carolina dips in 2024, SLED report shows
 



Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade


Behind the Balloons:
The Safety & Security Engine Powering the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade

By the D&D Daily staff

Long before millions tune in to watch Snoopy glide down Sixth Avenue, an army of safety, security, and operational teams has already put in months of work to ensure the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade unfolds without incident. For all the holiday magic the public sees, it’s the disciplined planning behind the scenes that makes one of America’s most complex entertainment events feel effortless.

The preparation begins nearly a year out. Macy’s partners with the NYPD, FDNY, the Department of Homeland Security, the FAA, private security firms, traffic engineers, and emergency management officials to build a multilayered safety plan. Every balloon, float, marching band, and performer must be accounted for. Every intersection along the 2.5-mile route must be mapped for crowd flow, vehicle restrictions, emergency access lanes, and potential choke points.

Balloon safety alone is an operation unto itself. Giant character balloons undergo wind-speed monitoring, structural testing, and detailed handler training. The NYPD’s Aviation Unit tracks real-time weather conditions; if sustained winds exceed thresholds, balloons are lowered or pulled from the lineup entirely. It’s a highly choreographed process that demands constant communication between ground teams and command centers.

Crowd management is another cornerstone. With more than 3 million spectators lining the streets, the NYPD deploys thousands of officers to manage viewing areas, prevent overcrowding, and maintain clear emergency corridors. Barricades, sand trucks, and vehicle mitigation barriers protect the parade from unauthorized entry points—an increasingly important layer in an era when vehicle-based attacks remain a global concern.

Technology has also become central. Surveillance cameras, drone restrictions, radiation detection tools, and real-time communication platforms make situational awareness stronger than ever. Macy’s also trains thousands of volunteers on emergency procedures, suspicious-activity reporting, and evacuation protocols, ensuring that safety culture reaches every corner of the event.

The end result is the part the world sees: smiling children, towering balloons, marching bands, and holiday nostalgia. But behind it is one of the most complex safety and security operations executed on American streets each year—quietly ensuring the parade remains not only iconic, but safe.

Source for context: NBC New York reporting on NYPD/Macy’s parade security planning.


The D&D Daily's Previous Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade Coverage





Macy's Annual Thanksgiving Day Parade:
How an Old-School Tradition is Meeting Modern-Day Security Threats

2018 | 2019 | 2020 |
2021| 2022| 2023| 2024
 



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2025: A Transformational Year for Retail
Retail Leftovers: The Disruptive Trends We Can't Afford to Leave Behind

By Tony D'Onofrio - President, Sensormatic

As we approach the USA Holiday of Thanksgiving where there will lots of leftovers, it is time to revisit and summarize some key data driven retail trends from this year that were left behind. Although we are looking backwards into the year, these trends are actually critical for the setup into a successful new year.

2025 to date continues to be a transformational year for the retail industry. Artificial intelligence continues its march to disrupt all industries including retail. Tariffs brought new headwinds impacting consumer confidence. The physical store continues to grow in importance in an omnichannel shopping world. Retail media and social commerce are increasing their retail industry presence. Change remains the new normal.

In this article, we summarize the latest list of the world's largest retailers, including who is winning or losing in the global expansion wars. We next assess the technologies being prioritized to improve the profitability of the physical store and the latest retail crime trends. Finally, we close with Gartner's latest hype cycle of retail technologies.

The World's Largest and Fastest Growing Retailers

Every year Deloitte publishes one of my favorite industry reports analyzing the top 250 global retailers. Highly recommend you read the global retail economic outlook written by Dr. Ira Kalish.

As above summarizes, no change in the latest report in the ranking of the Top 6 global retailers with Walmart remaining at Number 1 followed by Amazon and Costco. Aldi rose two spots in the top 10 rankings while JD.com and Walgreens Boots both dropped one. This year, Target completely fell out from the top 10.
 
   Click here to read Tony's full article


'Buy-In' Protest Freezes Business at Home Depot
Anti-ICE protesters clog up California Home Depot with ‘buy-in’ stunt involving 17-cent ice scrapers
Anti-ICE protesters tried to freeze business at a Southern California Home Depot Saturday by gobbling up cheap ice scrapers and then returning them en masse to denounce immigration raids at the hardware chain.

The demonstration, known as a “buy-in,” clogged up registers at the store in Monrovia, when nearly a hundred activists snatched up the 17-cent ice scrapers, only to turn around and return them immediately.

Some of the demonstrators waved signs with the orange and white Home Dept logo reading “ICE out of The Home Depot,” “No Secret Police,” and “No to ICE,” according to video posted on Reddit.

The protest came in response to claims that the company has allowed Immigration and Customs Enforcement to raid parking lots at the big-box chain, which for decades has been a hub for work-for-hire day laborers, many of whom are illegal immigrants.

Home Depot denied it was cooperating with the feds. nypost.com


Amazon Self-Serve Kiosks Boosting In-Store Traffic?
Amazon pilots return kiosks at Seattle Goodwill stores to cut costs and boost traffic
Amazon has launched a pilot program installing self-serve return kiosks inside 21 Evergreen Goodwill of Northwest Washington thrift store locations in the Seattle region. The initiative represents an expansion of the e-commerce strategy to utilize third-party retailers to manage the high volume of online returns.

The new kiosks allow Amazon customers to drop off packages without having to use a shipping box. The process involves scanning a QR code provided by Amazon, packaging the item in a supplied plastic bag, and attaching a printed label before depositing the item into the unit. Returns through the kiosks are offered at no charge to the customer.

This partnership is the latest in a series of similar agreements Amazon has established with brick-and-mortar chains, including Kohl’s and Staples.

The strategy benefits Amazon by reducing internal return-processing costs and utilizing existing retail space, mitigating the need to acquire new real estate. For Goodwill, the objective is to increase in-store traffic. seattlered.com


Shein's First Physical Store Sparks Backlash
Shein's first bricks-and-mortar shop highlights department stores' existential pain
Shein's move into the flagship BHV in Paris has added political heat to the troubles of department stores, which are facing an existential threat from shoppers' shift to online retailers offering ultra-fast fashion.

The Chinese budget retailer opened its first bricks-and-mortar shop in the BHV department store on the Rue de Rivoli in central Paris earlier this month, triggering an outcry from lawmakers and other retailers, who say Shein's low-cost business model has hurt French shopping streets. reuters.com


Value City Furniture owner files for bankruptcy citing housing crisis
American Signature Inc. plans to close 33 stores in Chapter 11 and expects to enter into a stalking horse purchase agreement with current equity holders.

New Standard to Address Workplace Suicide
In an effort to provide organizations with practical and evidence-based recommendations to help plan for, respond to, and support people affected by suicide or those with thoughts of suicide in the workplace, a new international standard, BS 30480, was issued by BSI, a UK national standards body.

Almost all Gen Zers plan to shop Black Friday week

Kohl’s stays the course with CEO choice
 



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Retailers Use AI to Analyze Massive Amounts of Data
EXCLUSIVE Q&A: Retailers need to take big step into agentic AI

Agentic artificial intelligence solutions are becoming critical across the retail enterprise.

Chain Store Age recently spoke with Mark Simon, VP of strategy for AI integration platform provider Celigo, agentic AI activities in retail. Simon works with major retailers in leading data integration and automation strategies.

The latest wave of artificial intelligence development, agentic AI builds upon the prescriptive capabilities of generative AI to streamline enterprise workflows even further by analyzing massive amounts of data in near-real-time and then automatically taking action based on the results.

For example, an agentic AI pricing solution could adjust prices based on factors specific to a local store or an agentic AI chatbot could automatically issue a customer refund or flag a complaint for fraud depending on its deep-dive analysis of the situation.

What impact is agentic AI having on retail?

Agentic AI represents the next evolution in in online commerce. It is going to have the potential to completely change retail in a way, while also keeping things the same. Customers are still going to want to touch and feel products. The value of the in-person buying experience is still quite valuable, even as the online experience is going to very rapidly change.

The foundational buying experience is still going to be there, but with augmentation from the continued evolution of AI. There are going to be some winners here; companies that figure out the ‘secret sauce’ of agentic AI. They will embrace agentic AI and lead and invest in leveraging the emerging AI mechanisms and new buying patterns surrounding it and agentic-led purchasing to become big winners.

And there will be other companies that are going to fall behind the script. The future of agentic AI has yet to be written, but there's opportunity for both growth and falling by the wayside as retailers look at the emerging prospect of agentic AI. chainstoreage.com


Cyberattack Hits Banking Industry Vendor
Hackers steal sensitive data from major banking industry vendor

The incident highlights how supply-chain compromises threaten even well-defended industries.

One of the banking industry’s biggest vendors is responding to a cyberattack that has compromised some of its clients’ sensitive data.

SitusAMC, which major banks use to manage their real-estate loans and mortgages, announced on Saturday that hackers broke into its systems on Nov. 12 and stole data that included banks’ “accounting records and legal agreements,” as well as information belonging to some of those banks’ customers.

“The incident is now contained and our services are fully operational,” the company said in a statement, adding that the attack, which remains under investigation, did not involve ransomware. cybersecuritydive.com


#1 Entry Point for Compromise
Email blind spots are back to bite security teams
Email remains the primary entry point for compromise. Malware in email increased by more than 130% year over year. Scams rose by more than 30% and phishing increased by more than 20%. These categories continue to drive most of the operational impact that organizations experience, including account compromise and business disruption.

TXT files grew more than 180% as a malicious carrier, and legacy DOC files grew more than 118%. These are file types that many security teams no longer view as high risk. Their resurgence reflects an attacker strategy to exploit blind spots in filtering and inspection. ZIP archives remain common, while formats like HTML and RAR declined.

Attackers increasingly use forged headers, obscure top level domains, URL shortening, and HTML techniques that confuse filters rather than readers. The goal is to slip past controls, avoid early detection, and begin multi step intrusion chains.  helpnetsecurity.com


Black Friday 2025 cybersecurity deals to explore

Startup firm called Factory disrupts campaign designed to hijack development platform

 


 

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ChatGPT & Target Partnership
Target to Launch First-of-its-Kind Conversational, Curated Shopping Experience in ChatGPT

Target's new app experience in ChatGPT will stand out by offering curated browsing, multi-item purchases in a single transaction, fresh food shopping and multiple fulfillment options

Target Corporation announced that consumers will be able to discover and shop Target right inside ChatGPT, part of an effort to reimagine AI-powered shopping as a curated, conversational experience — and just in time for holiday shopping.

Launching next week in beta, Target will offer a complete shopping experience through its app in ChatGPT, with the ability to purchase multiple items in a single transaction, shop fresh food products, and select drive up, pick up or shipping fulfillment options. Shoppers will also soon be able to request personalized recommendations, browse and build baskets from across Target's full assortment, and purchase seamlessly through their Target account. It's designed to deliver what consumers already love about Target: curation, convenience and value.

This partnership with OpenAI is part of Target's broader investment in technology designed to elevate the experience for guests, team members and vendor partners.

Teams across Target are using ChatGPT Enterprise, which is designed for use with the retailer's proprietary data, to increase speed, simplify workflows and create more space for creativity. More broadly, Target uses AI to enhance operations across the company, from improving supply chain forecasting to simplifying store processes and personalizing the digital experience.

"Technology is helping define Target as a company that doesn't just use AI, but runs on AI," Vemana said. "It's enabling faster response to trends, powering guest interactions with more ease and joy, and giving teams intelligent tools that reduce friction so they can focus on what matters most: serving our guests." corporate.target.com


More Amazon Cuts
Amazon cut more than 1,800 engineers in record layoffs, despite saying it needs to innovate faster

Nearly 40% of the roughly 4,700 positions eliminated across Washington, New York, New Jersey and California were engineering jobs.

Amazon’s 14,000-plus layoffs announced last month touched almost every piece of the company’s sprawling business, from cloud computing and devices to advertising, retail and grocery stores. But one job category bore the brunt of cuts more than others: engineers.

Documents filed in New York, California, New Jersey and Amazon’s home state of Washington showed that nearly 40% of the more than 4,700 job cuts in those states were engineering roles. The data was reported by Amazon in Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification, or WARN, filings to state agencies.

The figures represent a segment of the total layoffs announced in October. Not all data was immediately available because of differences in state WARN reporting requirements. cnbc.com


Family Dollar teams up with DoorDash ahead of the holidays

Looking out for potential online shopping scams


 


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In Case You Missed It
Jacksonville, FL: Florida launches task force to crack down on organized retail theft
Attorney General James Uthmeier announced the creation of the Retail Theft Investigative Special Task Force to combat organized retail crime in Florida. “Instead of having toothpaste locked behind plexiglass like CA & NY, we are taking decisive action to combat organized retail theft,” said Attorney General James Uthmeier on Friday. “Shoppers suffer when retail thefts drive up prices. This partnership between law enforcement and the Florida Retail Federation will help keep prices down and put criminals behind bars.” The task force equips law enforcement with tools and resources, removes jurisdictional barriers, and lets investigators close cases with stronger charges. Officials say the goal of the task force is to ensure action against organized theft rings and take down repeat offenders. n 2024, Governor Ron DeSantis signed HB 549, increasing penalties for organized retail theft and making some repeat offenders eligible for up to 30 years in prison. Since then, Attorney General Uthmeier’s Office of Statewide Prosecution has dismantled major theft rings and filed multiple felony charges. Since Uthmeier’s appointment, prosecutors have charged 55 defendants with organized retail theft and secured 52 convictions.  cbs12.com


Tucson, AZ: Oro Valley Police arrest nearly a dozen suspects in retail theft operation
The Oro Valley Police Department says officers arrested eleven suspects during a two-day operation to crack down on retail theft. The OVPD says they used research and crime trends to identify where local businesses were experiencing high levels of Organized Retail Theft. Officers used that information to conduct a two-day ORT Blitz. The OVPD says the eleven suspects face charges ranging from felony shoplifting, misdemeanor shoplifting, drug paraphernalia, outstanding warrants, and multi-state fraud.  kold.com


Annapolis, MD: Woman charged with stealing $31K in merchandise from Annapolis Lululemon

Waterloo, IA: Police investigate Casey’s burglary: $11,000 of cigarettes, alcohol stolen

Aberdeen, NC: Man facing charges in $1,700 Walmart theft

Vacaville, CA: 2 women arrested following $700 retail theft at Vacaville Premium Outlets

Waldorf, MD: $400 Target Store Theft Charge Leaves Accokeek Woman Held Without Bond; pending theft case in Charles County
 



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Shootings & Deaths


Evergreen Park, IL: Teen Fatally Shot Outside Of Walmart Shopping Center
A Lynwood teen was fatally shot Saturday night during an armed robbery near the shopping center at 95th Street and Western Avenue, according to Cook County Medical Examiner reports and police information obtained by Patch. The Cook County Medical Examiner gave the incident address as 2500 W. 95th St., which is the address of Walmart. The victim was identified as Justin Bell, 18. The teen was taken to Little Company of Mary Medical Center in Evergreen Park, where he was pronounced at 8:43 p.m. An autopsy report noted the victim died of multiple gunshot wounds as a result of a homicide.  patch.com


Savannah, GA: Update: 5 suspects plead not guilty in Savannah mall shooting
Five suspects charged in connection with a shooting at Oglethorpe Mall over the summer pleaded not guilty Monday during a court hearing. Six men total are charged in relation to a shoot-out at the Oglethorpe Mall on July 2. One woman, Tina Smith, died following heart complications after running from the shooting. The sixth defendant, Franklin James Jr., will enter his plea on Dec. 2. All defendants are facing multiple charges, including felony murder.  wrdw.com


Clinton Township, MI: Teen injured in shooting outside MJR Theatre at Partridge Creek mall
One person was injured in a shooting at a Macomb County mall where a tree lighting took place on Sunday, Nov. 23. The open-air Mall at Partridge Creek in Clinton Township had a tree lighting set for 4-7 p.m. The shooting is believed to have taken place after a verbal fight escalated outside the entrance to the MJR Theatres at the mall. About 7:13 p.m., gunfire was reported to the Clinton Township Police Department, according to a news release from the department. A 17-year-old from Mount Clemens was found with an apparent gunshot wound and was being treated by Medstar Ambulance workers, police said. The individual was taken to a hospital and was in stable condition on Monday, Nov. 24.  freep.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


York, NE: Young man allegedly intentionally set fire inside crowded Walmart, caused extensive damage
A man allegedly confessed to lighting a Walmart on fire while knowing it was full of shoppers and employees, destroying almost $15,000 in product. The York Police Department responded to a Walmart on November 16 for a report of a fire, according to a release. In the release, police asked for help gathering information regarding 20-year-old William Regan Young Eckman, who they had connected to the crime. Local outlet KOLN specified the fire broke out at 11:27 a.m. while the store was open and full of customers and staff members. As the building was being evacuated and officers were checking for any victims, York County Communications allegedly received a call from Eckman, who identified himself as the arsonist. Eckman was reportedly discovered near the supermarket's dumpsters and arrested. Authorities reviewed security cameras and were able to corroborate Eckman's confession, per the release. Not including the damage done to the Walmart building itself.   local12.com


Viknius, Lithuania: Court sentences Ukrainian to prison for arson of IKEA store
A Lithuanian court has sentenced Ukrainian citizen Danylo Bardadym to three years and four months in prison for setting fire to an IKEA store in Vilnius on May 9, 2024. About reports LRT. The sentence was originally supposed to be five years, but it was reduced as the case was considered under a shortened evidence procedure because the suspect pleaded guilty. At the time of his arrest, the Ukrainian was 17 years old. "Bardadym was found guilty of long-term criminal activity, preparation for terrorist acts and arson of the Ikea store," the judge said.  news.liga.net


Memphis, TN: Man arrested, charged in Armed Robberies of Family Dollar and Dollar General stores

Whitman, MA: CVS robbed in Whitman, police seek 2 armed suspects


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C-Store – Memphis, TN – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Visalia, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Tulsa, OK – Burglary
C-Store - Waterloo, IA - Burglary
C-Store – Albany, GA – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Memphis, TN – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Memphis, TN – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Colleton County, SC – Armed Robbery
Dollar - Tuckasegee, NC – Burglary
Jewelry - Joliet, IL – Robbery
Jewelry - National City, CA - Robbery
Jewelry - Hanford, CA - Robbery
Jewelry - Dartmouth, MA - Robbery
Jewelry - Paramus, NJ - Robbery
Jewelry - Riverside, CA – Burglary
Jewelry - McLean VA – Burglary
Liquor – Monterey County, CA – Armed Robbery
Pharmacy – Whitman, MA – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Linthicum, MD – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Fort Smith, AR – Armed Robbery
Shoe – Merced, CA – Robbery
Target – Waldorf, MD – Robbery
Tobacco – Norwalk, CT – Armed Robbery  

 

Daily Totals:
• 18 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



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Manager Field Loss Prevention
Arizona (Remote)
The Field Loss Prevention Manager (FLPM) coordinates Loss Prevention and Safety related programs intended to protect Staples assets and ensure a safe environment for associates and customers within Staples US Retail locations. FLPM’s support the Field and are relied on as a subject matter expert in operations, audit, training and investigation...




District Asset Protection Manager
Jacksonville, FL
As a District Asset Protection Manager, you will develop, teach, and lead the implementation of the company’s asset protection, shortage control and safety programs for all stores in your district. You will train, mentor, and collaborate with store management and shortage control associates to ensure the effective execution and proper implementation of company policies, while driving improvements in inventory management and loss prevention...




 


Director, Safety
San Francisco, CA
The Director of Safety is responsible for developing, implementing, and overseeing comprehensive safety programs across all retail locations, corporate offices, and some distribution operations. This leadership role ensures compliance with federal, state, and local safety regulations while fostering a culture of safety excellence that protects employees, customers, and company assets...

 



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