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Timothy
Scott named Manager, Corporate Security for
Sobeys Capital Incorporated
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
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MAORCA & MRA ORC Conference: June 3 (Annapolis, MD)
The Mid-Atlantic ORC Alliance and
the MD Retailers Alliance will co-host an
exciting ORC Conference you won't want to miss. June 3, 2026
in Annapolis, MD. Featuring topics on important legislative
updates, the gift card fraud ecosystem, updates from the MD
State Attorney's Office, law enforcement coordination and
investigations across jurisdictional lines.
Register today, as spots are limited!
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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Retail Industry Urges the Senate to
Pass CORCA
Walmart, Target and Home Depot push for new law to stop store closures &
tackle dark networks
Retailers
pushing for a new federal law that would save their stores have secured
a key victory. Brands like Walmart, Target, and
Home Depot are advocating for the law, set to save them money
by addressing a growing issue.
The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, or CORCA, was passed by the
United States House of Representatives on Tuesday.
The bill, advocated for by major retailers like Walmart, Target, and
Home Depot via the Retail Industry Leaders Association, is now headed
to the Senate’s Committee on the Judiciary. CORCA would give federal
law enforcement the additional resources needed to effectively fight
organized retail crime.
This includes strengthening the legal tools used to fight interstate
retail crime, expanding money laundering statutes, allowing for
prosecution of organized retail and supply chain groups under new
contexts, and creating a crime center dedicated to fighting
organized retail crime.
The bipartisan bill has more than 200 House sponsors, with 348
representatives voting to pass the bill and 60 against it.
Retail industry leaders have said that organized retail crime has
become such a problem that stores could be forced to respond in drastic
ways if CORCA isn’t passed and signed into law.
“If [prosecution and enforcement isn’t] corrected over time, prices will
be higher, and/or stores will close,” said former Walmart CEO Doug
McMillon to CNBC in December 2022.
CORCA is set to begin addressing these issues by filling in the
jurisdictional gaps that allowed organized retail and supply chain
theft to reach such large scales in the first place.
NRF Executive Vice President of Government Relations David French said
this in a statement: "We now urge the Senate to act quickly to pass
this legislation and send it to the president’s desk to be signed into
law.”
the-sun.com
House Passes Funding to Fight Cargo
Theft
ATA Applauds House Appropriators for Approving $4 Million to Fight Cargo
Theft
The American Trucking Associations applauded the House Appropriations
Committee for passing the fiscal year 2027 Commerce, Justice,
Science, and Related Agencies funding bill, which
would begin the process of establishing a
unified, federal response to cargo theft. The legislation,
which must now be considered by the full House, would require the U.S.
Department of Justice to step up its enforcement of cargo theft cases as
well as make a $4 million down payment to prosecute these crimes.
This
initiative would complement the comprehensive framework created by
the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act that has been endorsed by
ATA and passed the House earlier this week. Together, the FY27 CJS
appropriations bill and CORCA would help counter the sharp rise in cargo
theft and broader supply chain fraud, addressing one of ATA’s top
strategic priorities.
“America’s trucking industry delivers billions of tons of goods to every
community, and those essential shipments have increasingly become prime
targets for organized crime, putting truck drivers at risk and raising
costs for consumers,” said American Trucking Associations Chief Advocacy
& Public Affairs Officer, Henry Hanscom. “ATA commends the House
Appropriations Committee for directing DOJ to leverage its enforcement
capabilities to pursue criminals operating across borders. This
directive and funding will strengthen the partnership between the
government, law enforcement, motor carriers, and our supply chain
partners to strike an effective blow against these organized theft
groups.”
Cargo theft is becoming increasingly prevalent and high-tech, and it
often originates overseas. The American Transportation Research
Institute calculated that cargo theft is costing the trucking industry
over $18 million per day. Strategic theft, a category of crime that uses
deception, identity theft, and fraudulent documentation to divert
freight, has surged by 1,500% since 2021 according to CargoNet.
Ninety percent of motor carriers are small businesses operating 10
trucks or fewer, and they are under enormous strain to counter these
technologically advanced adversaries. The transnational aspect of
cargo theft also poses a national security threat. The proceeds from
stolen goods finance other criminal activities, including drug
trafficking, organized crime, and even potentially terrorism.
trucking.org
'Hidden Anti-Theft Tactic'
Home Depot, Lowe’s hidden anti-theft tactic angers shoppers
Both retailers face scrutiny over a
security measure aimed at combating rising retail theft.
Home Depot and Lowe’s, like many retailers nationwide, have battled
elevated retail theft in recent years. Amid this trend, both
retailers quietly rolled out an anti-theft measure that is sparking
frustration and even pushing some consumers to shop elsewhere.
“We’ve invested quite a bit of technology at different parts of the
business in front of the customer and behind the scenes to help us
to manage this, and we take a unique and differentiated way,” Lowe’s CEO
Marvin Ellison said.
In response to these challenges, both retailers have quietly
implemented a new anti-theft system in store parking lots last year,
and it’s making some shoppers uncomfortable.
Home Depot and Lowe’s have rolled out AI-powered automated license
plate reading cameras developed by Flock Safety, an Atlanta-based
surveillance company, in their parking lots at multiple locations
nationwide.
These are the same cameras police use to detect stolen vehicles and
solve crimes. The cameras are mounted on poles with solar panels,
scanning cars and people as they enter and leave these store locations.
A report from 404 Media in August last year found that a Texas sheriff’s
office had searchable access to data from 173 license plate reader
cameras from different Lowe’s locations nationwide and could tap into
dozens from Home Depot stores in Texas.
thestreet.com
The Debate Over AI License Plate Cams
Engulfs Town
AI license plate cameras tore this town apart and led to a state of
emergency
In Troy, New York, residents and
city officials are at odds over police use of Flock cameras, which some
call a safety tool and others see as surveillance.
The cameras at the heart of the debate are run by Flock Safety, a
technology company that has built a network of automatic license
plate readers in more than 6,000 communities across the country in
recent years.
Flock’s system uses AI-enabled cameras to snap photos of every
vehicle that passes, creating a digital “fingerprint” that includes
data as personal as bumper stickers or gun racks.
Flock cameras are beloved by police because officers can use the
company’s national database to track vehicle movements to recover drugs
and stolen automobiles, and to solve even more serious crimes. A
company spokesman said in a statement that the devices support
“communities across the country in addressing crime and locating missing
people.”
“At Flock, we believe safety and privacy should go hand in hand,
which is why our technology is built around transparency,
accountability, and local control,” Chris Castaldo, Flock Safety’s chief
information security officer, said in a statement. “Our platform
includes safeguards like audit trails to help ensure accountability at
every step.”
Proponents say the cameras are a cheap and effective tool to aid
police, and they dismiss arguments by the American Civil Liberties
Union and others that the surveillance violates Fourth Amendment rights.
Flock noted in its statement that courts have ruled that there is no
reasonable expectation of privacy in public roadways.
washingtonpost.com
No More Open Carry in Florida's Publix
Stores?
Will Publix’s Reversal on Open Carry Policy in its Florida Stores Harm
Business?
With more than 900 locations across Florida, Publix serves a
large section of the state’s grocery shoppers — and now, the grocer is
making headlines for a reversal of its previous policy allowing open
carry of firearms at its stores.
According to FOX Business writer Sophia Compton, Publix now “kindly asks
that only law enforcement openly carry firearms in our stores.” This
is an about-face from a previous position adopted by the grocery chain,
when it said that it would allow for patrons to open carry within its
Florida locations following a state appeals court ruling which had
struck down the state’s existing ban as unconstitutional.
Publix was one of a few remaining grocers which permitted the practice
of open carry as it concerned shoppers, with competitors such as
Costco, Sam’s Club, Target, Walmart, and Winn-Dixie having already
requested that customers refrain from doing so while patronizing
their stores.
“In any instance where a customer creates a threatening, erratic, or
dangerous shopping experience — whether they are openly carrying a
firearm or not — we will engage local law enforcement to protect our
customers and associates,” Publix wrote in an October 2025 statement
to The New York Times, shortly after the ruling, while defending its
initial decision to allow open carry.
retailwire.com
Verify supply chain IDs, starting with drivers: logistics experts
Out shopping? Don't make your car an easy target.
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AI's Retail Job Threats
Which Retail Jobs Are Most Threatened by AI Replacements?
In a lengthy report produced by Forbes contributor Catherine Erdly, the
topic that’s on many retail industry workers’ (and analysts’) minds was
examined: When AI comes to take retail jobs, which are most
endangered?
Perhaps unexpectedly consulting with Luna, the Andon Labs AI chatbot
famously charged with running the experimental Andon Market — with mixed
results, as we previously covered — in addition to a pair of human
retail voices, Erdly came to the conclusion that management roles are
more likely to be on the chopping block than jobs held by frontline
workers.
“While this experiment involves just one AI agent in one store, the fact
that Luna’s first act was to hire humans suggests that if other AI
managers follow suit, it is not the shop-floor workers whose jobs
will be eliminated, but the people who manage them,” Erdly wrote,
also citing Retail Economics data indicating that HR, finance,
compliance and reporting positions are more precarious in the AI era
than shop floor roles.
Erdly highlighted that Luna, when queried, was quick to note that an AI
was incapable of operating a retail store without human staff —
particularly in a boutique setting, where intangibles tied to human
connection and tastes become emphasized.
“They handle the human connection and the tactile, real-time stuff. They
handle the human side of things that I can’t: reading the room,
making people feel genuinely welcome, having real conversations,”
Luna explained.
While hesitant to directly state which positions might be threatened by
the rollout of AI replacements in the retail sphere, when pressed Luna
eventually admitted that “there are retail jobs—data analysis, some
operational tasks, maybe certain customer service functions—where AI
could theoretically do things more efficiently. That’s real.”
retailwire.com
Can Humans & Robots Coexist
Peacefully?
Philly is suddenly teeming with robots. Is resistance futile?
Will Philly defy
this new robot revolution — or is it already too late?
Like it or not, robots have officially arrived in Philly — in the
aisles of Giant grocery stores, delivering plates of dan dan noodles
to diners at EMei, and tidying the common areas of the city’s luxury
apartment buildings.
And with a fresh influx on the horizon — both Avride, the company that
produces the food delivery robots used by Uber Eats, and Alphabet
Inc.’s automated taxi service Waymo have announced plans to
expand service in the city — now seems as good a time as any to ask:
Are humans and robots capable of peaceful coexistence?
It’s a question that has spanned the depths of Reddit and the halls of
academia, where researchers have sought to suss out the intricacies of
Philadelphians’ penchant for robot-related violence.
A wariness toward new technologies is nothing new, explains
Philip Dames, an associate professor of mechanical engineering at Temple
University and director of the Temple Robotics and Artificial
Intelligence Lab.
In the early 1800s, Luddites in Northern England — fearing for their
jobs — protested the advent of new textile machinery by breaking into
factories and destroying it. As technological advances routinely
upended industries and displaced workers, including here in
Philadelphia, a former industrial hub once dubbed the “Workshop of the
World.”
More recently, the rise of artificial intelligence — as well as a
roiling distrust of Big Tech — has raised alarms.
inquirer.com
The Next Supply-Chain Headache?
Controversial The energy squeeze behind the Iran war and AI boom
Energy — whether it be oil for cars or power for data centers — is
suddenly the world's biggest constraint. Why it matters: Energy is
becoming the singular driver of both global stability and economic
growth. Oil shocks from the Iran war are rippling through inflation and
geopolitics. The AI boom is triggering a global race for electricity
that grids aren't ready for.
The big picture: Energy is the thing we all need but don't notice
until it's gone or expensive. We're confronting both unprecedented
scarcity and demand for energy on a timeline that's considered
remarkably sudden for the usually slow-moving energy sector.
Higher oil prices fueled by the Iran war are the main driver behind
inflation, with the Consumer Price Index rising 3.8% in April, new
data out this week shows. Higher energy prices accounted for the bulk of
the increase between March and April, Axios' Courtenay Brown reported.
Whether in our vehicles or our light switches, energy serves the same
purpose: it's the engine that makes things go — or the bottleneck that
mucks everything up. From battlefields to data centers, the next
phase of the global economy will be shaped by who has energy — and who
doesn't.
axios.com
Starbucks eliminating 300 U.S. corporate jobs, closing some regional
offices
Department stores losing market share to resale
The top supply chain priority is...
Trump Truth Store is reopening after abrupt closure amid drop in sales,
Iran war
Last week's #1 article --
Massive Victory for the Retail
Industry
House Passes Combating Organized
Retail Crime Act
Organized retail crime bill passes House in bipartisan vote, heads to
Senate
Industry groups have lobbied
Congress to pass this legislation for years.
An
anticrime bill targeting organized retail theft easily passed the
U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday in a bipartisan vote. The
legislation now goes to the Senate.
The vote is a milestone for the National Retail Federation and Retail
Industry Leaders Association, which have pushed for this legislation
for years.
The bill targets “organized crime involving the illegal acquisition
of retail goods and cargo for the purpose of selling those illegally
obtained goods through physical and online retail marketplaces” and
aims to address “the cross-jurisdictional, interstate, and international
aspects of these crimes,” according to its text.
To combat theft and violence in stores and at cargo points, the bill
would create an “Organized Retail and Supply Chain Crime Coordination
Center” under the Department of Homeland Security for federal,
state, local, territorial and tribal efforts. A director for the office
would be appointed by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
In separate statements Tuesday, both the NRF and RILA urged passage
of the bill in the Senate.
“NRF has been leading the fight on behalf of retailers for passage of
this legislation through direct engagement with federal, state and
municipal law enforcement, coordinating fly-ins for lobbying by home
state retail asset protection professionals, providing expert testimony
and conducting fact-based research,” NRF chief lobbyist David French
said.
retaildive.com
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
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How to Streamline Management With
Advanced Convenience Store Security

The United States convenience store industry has seen rapid
expansion and transformation in recent years. Market data shows that convenience
stores were the
fastest-growing retail channel in the US from 2023 to 2024, with 1.5%
year-over-year growth. Across the nation, over 150,000 convenience stores are in
operation. However, as growth accelerates, businesses find themselves struggling
to effectively scale their operations with the addition of new locations,
employees, and systems.
For these multi-location convenience store businesses, bottlenecks arise as
their existing security infrastructure creates disconnected stores and isolated
management, which inhibit productivity and impact business performance. To solve
this, organizations can turn to centralized cloud video security to unify
locations, users, and devices, improving operations and security in a single
pane of glass.
In this article, we explore the challenges facing convenience stores and
highlight how an open platform cloud video surveillance solution can help
organizations overcome these obstacles, unify operations, and prepare for
scalable, flexible growth.
How a Disconnected Organization Hurts Convenience Store
Operations
Convenience stores often operate across a wide range of areas, serving diverse
customer bases with unique needs and expectations, creating a phenomenon known
as “market-type
dispersion.” Research shows when store units are isolated in their different
market types, the organization tends to see overall diminished performance at
both chain and single store levels. To address profitability and reduce
operational costs, many companies have pursued standardization of processes
across locations. However, these initiatives frequently encounter obstacles such
as inadequate tools and outdated infrastructure, making it difficult to
efficiently meet each location’s unique needs and increasing the risk of costly
errors in daily operations.
Below, we’ll examine the three sides of this issue and how they create more work
for location-specific operators as well as the entire organization, negatively
impacting the bottom line and creating less support for team members.
Fragmented, Isolated Convenience Store Locations
One of the most pressing challenges for multi-location convenience store
organizations is the fragmentation of systems and operations across their
stores, created by outdated security systems without remote access. District
managers often need to visit each site in person to ensure operations are
running smoothly or to review security footage, creating extra time and effort
to managing these locations.
Fragmented operations is a problem that only gets compounded when you factor in
the high rates of staff turnover within the industry. According to the
NACS SOI Compensation Report of 2022, average turnover rates for store
associates have reached 141%, up substantially from previous years, and have
consistently exceeded 100% since 2016. For those managing security systems,
constant staff changes require frequent updates as to who can access cameras and
security systems across locations, increasing the number of overall site visits.
If store managers fail to remove access promptly, it can create security gaps
and increase risk.
Continue Reading
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Cyber Risks Meet Retail Loss
Prevention
Why Retailers Need to Treat Cybersecurity Like Loss Prevention
By
the D&D Daily staff
For years, retail loss prevention focused primarily on physical
threats — shoplifting, organized retail crime, fraud, and workplace
safety. But as retail operations become more connected through cloud
platforms, mobile devices, self-checkout systems, and smart store
technology, cybersecurity is increasingly becoming a frontline retail
protection issue as well.
One growing concern is the rise of “blended threats,” where
cybercriminals and organized theft groups use both digital and physical
tactics together. In some recent retail investigations, criminals
have reportedly used phishing emails, stolen employee credentials, or
compromised vendor accounts to gain access to systems that support gift
cards, refunds, loyalty programs, and even inventory management. In
other cases, cyberattacks have disrupted store operations entirely,
temporarily affecting payment systems, online ordering, or supply chain
visibility.
For retailers, the operational impact can be just as damaging as the
financial loss. A ransomware incident or major system outage during
a busy shopping period can create long lines, frustrated customers, and
overwhelmed associates. At the same time, retail employees are
increasingly becoming targets themselves through social engineering
schemes designed to trick workers into transferring money, changing
account information, or bypassing security controls.
The challenge for many organizations is that cybersecurity and loss
prevention often operate in separate silos despite facing overlapping
risks. Experts say stronger collaboration between IT, cybersecurity,
fraud prevention, and store operations teams can help retailers identify
unusual activity faster and respond more effectively when incidents
occur.
Training is also becoming more important at the store level.
Associates who understand how to recognize suspicious emails, fake tech
support calls, or unusual register activity may help prevent both cyber
and operational losses before they escalate.
As retail technology continues evolving, cybersecurity is no longer
just an IT issue behind the scenes. Increasingly, it is becoming
another essential layer of modern retail protection strategy — right
alongside traditional loss prevention efforts.
Humans Are Still Key to AI-Powered
Cybersecurity
Tapping the powers of Mythos-like models still requires human
intervention
Anthropic and OpenAI's cyber-capable AI models may still require
significant human expertise to operate effectively, according to new
findings from users testing the systems in real-world environments.
The new phase of AI-powered cybersecurity may
depend less on fully autonomous hacking and more on how effectively
humans can direct, validate and operationalize increasingly powerful
systems.
When Anthropic unveiled Mythos Preview to the world, it warned that the
model was so powerful that it found tens of thousands of bugs
spanning nearly every operating system.
Third-party testing suggests that OpenAI's GPT-5.5-Cyber is roughly as
powerful as Mythos at finding bugs and writing exploits, though Mythos
may have an edge in some more elaborate attack scenarios.
Major companies and governments around the world have been clamoring
to get their hands on these models to understand what they'll be up
against once similar capabilities fall into the hands of attackers.
Vendors consistently found that the models performed best when paired
with experienced security researchers who could validate findings,
guide workflows and distinguish exploitable vulnerabilities from noise.
axios.com
Underground Marketplace That Monetizes
Stolen iPhones
Thieves unlock stolen iPhones using cheap tools sold on Telegram
Helping a friend recover a stolen phone, Infoblox researchers uncovered
a thriving Telegram-based underground marketplace selling unlocking
tools and phishing infrastructure used to monetize stolen iPhones.
Activation Lock can remotely disable a stolen iPhone and prevent
normal resale, with owners also able to lock individual components.
Even with those protections, more than 7.35 million iPhones are
reportedly stolen each year in the United States alone.
“A locked device is almost worthless on the black market, while
an unlocked, high-end model is easy to resell and can fetch hundreds
of dollars. With this in mind, an underground marketplace has
emerged which covers the entire digital supply chain from cracking to
smishing,” the researchers wrote.
“We initially assumed thieves would be interested in the phone’s data.
Those devices, after all, hold potentially priceless personal and
corporate information. Interestingly, we discovered the opposite.
Thieves are after a quick buck, and the value of the data is secondary
to the value of the hardware,” they added.
helpnetsecurity.com
Closing the AI governance gap in your enterprise
Deepfake detection is losing ground to generative models |
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Most Shoppers Have Used AI for
Shopping Research
EXCLUSIVE: The most popular AI tool for shopping research is...
Consumers use a number of advanced artificial intelligence platforms to
perform due diligence for purchases, but one stands out from its
competitors.
Eight-in-10 (81%) U.S. consumers have used AI to research a purchase.
More than seven-in-10 (72%) have used ChatGPT, well ahead of
second-place Google Gemini (58%). Consumers who participated in a
recent CouponFollow survey exclusively released to Chain Store Age have
also used AI platforms including Microsoft Copilot (21%), Claude
(14%) and Grok (9%).
The survey asked respondents about a variety of other aspects of
AI-enabled shopping.
What consumers use AI to do while shopping
-
Summarize or analyze
product reviews (55%).
-
Compare prices across
multiple retailers (52%).
-
Identify a cheaper
alternative (37%).
-
Find the cheapest price
(32%).
-
Ask, “Is this a good
deal?” (31%).
What first motivated AI adoption
Reasons for hesitating
-
Almost seven-in-10
(68%) respondents who are hesitant to use AI for shopping prefer
traditional research methods (68%).
-
More than half (55%) of
hesitant respondents question the reliability of AI-generated
information.
-
Roughly half (51%) of
hesitant respondents feel their current approach already works well
enough.
-
Respondents who are
open to trying AI but hesitant want clear proof of better deals
(33%), improved accuracy (24%) and stronger privacy protections
(19%).
chainstoreage.com
Amazon Foregoes Tariff Refunds
Amazon accused of keeping hundreds of millions in tariff costs to curry
favor with Trump administration
The Supreme Court ruled in February
that Trump lacked authority under IEEPA to impose certain tariffs on
imported goods
Amazon is facing a new class action lawsuit accusing the company of
failing to refund tariff-related costs it passed on to consumers
through higher prices in order to appease the Trump administration.
Consumers allege in a proposed lawsuit filed in Seattle that the tech
giant collected hundreds of millions of dollars in unlawful tariff costs
by raising prices on imported goods before the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
in February that President Donald Trump lacked authority under the
International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) to impose certain
tariffs.
While thousands of companies have sought billions of dollars in
refunds from the government following the ruling, Amazon has failed
to do so, the complaint states, "not because it lacks a legal basis to
do so, but because it seeks to curry favor with Trump by allowing the
federal government to retain the funds."
"Amazon’s decision to forgo recovery serves its own political and
commercial interests at the direct expense of the consumers who bore the
tariff costs in the first place," the lawsuit alleges.
foxbusiness.com
Walmart set for robust Q1 report as e-commerce growth offsets weaker
physical store sales |
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Hillsborough County, FL: Florida theft ring accused of moving $7 million
in stolen goods across multiple states
The Hillsborough County Sheriff’s Office has arrested 14 people and
seized an estimated $5 million worth of stolen merchandise after
uncovering what investigators described as a large-scale organized
retail theft and fencing operation spanning multiple states. The
investigation, known as “Operation D-Fence,” began in November 2025
after detectives received information about a possible fencing location
connected to stolen property. While working to verify the tip,
investigators say they uncovered a much larger operation. Detectives
described it as a coordinated criminal enterprise responsible for the
theft, transportation, storage, and resale of stolen home improvement
and construction materials for profit. On May 4, 2026, HCSO’s Property
Division Organized Retail Theft Unit served four search warrants tied to
the operation. Authorities seized:
-
Approximately $5
million in stolen merchandise
-
Approximately $220,000
in cash
-
Seven vehicles
connected to the enterprise
According to detectives, the group used multiple methods to obtain
merchandise from major retailers including The Home Depot and Lowe’s,
along with construction sites across several states. Investigators say
suspects stole products directly from stores, used fraudulent invoices
to obtain goods at lower prices, and manipulated refund systems. In some
cases, detectives say the suspects returned stolen merchandise for
refunds before stealing the same products again. Investigators also say
members of the organization cut locks on storage containers at
construction sites to access valuable materials and equipment.
freightwaves.com
Las Vegas police: Man operated illegal online marketplace for stolen
merchandise
A Las Vegas man is facing charges after police said he bought stolen
items and sold them on various online platforms. Roberto Fuentes, 49,
was booked into the Clark County Detention Center on charges of
participating in an organized retail crime theft ring involving more
than $10,000, and buying, possessing, receiving stolen property valued
at more than $100,000, according to a Metropolitan Police Department
news release. Detectives from Metro’s Organized Retail Crimes Section
began an operation at various stores on March 28 in effort to combat the
theft of high-value merchandise, police said. On May 7, detectives
served a search warrant at Fuentes’ residence in the 2300 block of
Decosta Circle, near West Smoke Ranch Road and North Torrey Pines Drive.
Police said they found more than 900 items, including stolen jewelry,
watches, tools, handbags, purses, clothing and accessories, high-end
sunglasses, fragrance, cosmetics, alcohol and toys. The recovered
merchandise was estimated to be worth more than $418,000.
reviewjournal.com
San Francisco, CA: SF man arrested for allegedly stealing from Walgreens
27 times for $40K of merchandise
A San Francisco man repeatedly released from custody without serious
consequences is accused of stealing from multiple Walgreens stores
dozens of times over several months. Tyrese Boswell is accused of
stealing almost $40,000 in Walgreens merchandise across 27 separate
theft incidents, according to the San Francisco Police Department. The
24-year-old allegedly targeted Walgreens locations in North Beach and
Noe Valley between late 2025 and April 2026, primarily swiping cosmetics
and batteries, police said. Boswell was among five prolific retail theft
suspects recently arrested by the San Francisco Police Department’s
Organized Retail Crime Task Force, which linked the group to more than
$43,000 in stolen goods. “The San Francisco Police Department Organized
Retail Crime (ORC) Task Force is continuing its rigorous efforts to
apprehend prolific retail theft suspects,” a statement said.
nypost.com
San Jose Suspect Arrested with Nearly $8,000 in Suspected Stolen Golf
Balls from Target Stores
Santa Clara County Sheriff's Office officials report that golf balls
always caught the eye of a theft suspect who hit Target stores in the
City of Cupertino and the City of San José more than 21 times since
February, stealing $4,500 worth of balls. San Jose Police Department
launched an investigation. The stolen golf balls were being resold
online. Our Retail Theft Task Force joined the investigation and
identified the suspect as William Pu, 41, of San Jose. A search of his
house on Pas Los Cerritos uncovered nearly $8,000 in suspected stolen
golf balls, still in their packaging. Pu was arrested and booked into
the Santa Clara County Main Jail.
goldrushcam.com
Philadelphia County, PA: Update: DOJ: Pennsylvania Pawn Shop owner
pleads guilty to fencing $19M in stolen goods
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Shootings & Deaths
Tulsa, OK: Man dead after midtown Tulsa shooting, police searching for suspect
The Tulsa Police Department said a 28-year-old man is dead after a midtown Tulsa
shooting Sunday morning. Around 1:54 a.m., officers responded to reports of a
shooting in the north-side parking lot of the Trade Winds Central Inn near East
51st Street and South Harvard Avenue. Police said the victim was shot in the
parking lot and transported to the hospital, where he later died.
fox23.com
San Augustine, TX: Police investigate shooting involving juvenile outside San
Augustine convenience store
Two people were involved in a shooting Sunday afternoon outside a convenience
store in San Augustine, according to the San Augustine Police Department. Police
said officers were called to the Texaco convenience store near MLK Drive after
reports of gunfire. Investigators say witnesses told officers two people started
shooting at one another before leaving the scene. One of the suspects was a
juvenile who was later taken into custody on an unrelated warrant, according to
police. Investigators said they do not believe there is any ongoing threat to
the public.
cbs19.tv
Atlanta, GA: 2 shot at Grove Park convenience store
Two men were shot at a convenience store in the Grove Park neighborhood on
Saturday morning, Atlanta police said. Officers were called to 1960 Donald Lee
Hollowell Parkway at around 12:35 a.m., where they found the two victims. The
men were taken to the hospital in stable condition. The circumstances of the
shooting are unknown, but police said it was an isolated incident. Officers
continue to investigate.
atlantanewsfirst.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Orlando, FL: Pop Royal frenzy forces shutdown of Swatch store at The Mall of
Millenia
A huge crowd gathered outside The Mall at Millenia in Orlando on Saturday for
the release of the Pop Royal brand of Swatch watches. The store closed early on
Saturday because of concerns about crowd control. Seven other Swatch stores in
the U.S. closed early Saturday because of the crowds. “Today’s Bioceramic Royal
Pop Collection launch saw extraordinarily high demand. Some of our stores had to
be closed in accordance with our security staff and local authorities to ensure
a safe environment for everyone. We remind you that the Royal Pop Collection is
not a limited edition" -Swatch There were also long lines at Swatch stores in
Europe.
clickorlando.com
Austin, TX: 3 arrested after Austin Police disperse crowd at The Domain Swatch
store
Okaloosa County, FL: Robbery suspect arrested after returning to store,
apologizing
Attleboro, MA: Suspicious fire at Attleboro J.D. Byrider car dealership under
investigation
Sunnyvale, CA: Car crashes into, drives inside grocery store; here's what
happened
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Beauty – Clermont, FL
- Burglary
•
Beauty – Philadelphia,
PA – Armed Robbery
•
Bicycle – Summit, NJ –
Burglary
•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Newark, DE –
Armed Robbery
•
Costco – Las Vegas, NV
– Robbery
•
Jewelry – Woodstock,
GA – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Marfa, TX –
Robbery
•
Jewelry – Seekonk, MA – Robbery
•
Jewelry - East Point, GA – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Joliet, IL – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Winston- Salem, NC – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Concord, CA – Armed Robbery
•
Marijuana – San
Antonio, TX- Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Chicago,
IL – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Greenville, SC – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Vicksburg, MS – Robbery
•
Target – San Jose, CA
– Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 15 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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