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Auror recognized by US retail crime research body as Most Engaged
Solution Partner

Global retail crime intelligence software company Auror - which allows retailers and police in their communities to identify high-harm repeat offenders - has been recognized by the Loss Prevention Research Council (LPRC) for its work alongside retailers and law enforcement to tackle organized retail crime across the United States through evidence-based strategies.

Auror was selected as the Most Engaged Solution Partner in recognition of its ongoing engagement in the ORC Working Group, which was presented last week at the LPRC’s annual IMPACT Conference in Florida.

The event brought together the retail and law enforcement community to discuss trends in retail crime and technology solutions, like Auror’s retail crime intelligence platform, to take on high levels of prolific and violent retail crime.

Auror is one of 165 solution partners that work closely with LPRC’s retail members such as CVS, Ulta Beauty, Target, Kroger, Lululemon, IKEA, as well as law enforcement agencies, to lead research and find innovative solutions to deal with the issue of organized crime impacting retail stores across the US.

Read the full press release here
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Flash Mob Retail Theft:
How Coordination Tactics Are Evolving In-Store Response


By the D&D Daily Staff

Retailers are continuing to adapt to a more coordinated form of theft often referred to as “flash mob” incidents—where groups of individuals enter a store simultaneously, overwhelm staff, and quickly exit with merchandise. While these events are not new, loss prevention teams report that the tactics behind them are becoming more structured and difficult to anticipate.

In many cases, groups are leveraging private messaging apps and social platforms to coordinate timing, store selection, and roles within the incident. Participants may be assigned specific tasks, such as distracting associates, monitoring entrances, or targeting high-value items. This level of coordination can compress incidents into a matter of minutes, limiting opportunities for intervention.

What makes these incidents particularly challenging is their variability. Some groups operate opportunistically, assembling quickly based on real-time communication, while others appear to follow more deliberate planning patterns across multiple locations. Retailers have noted instances where the same group—or overlapping participants—target stores within a defined geographic radius over a short period.

In response, loss prevention teams are adjusting both operational and technological strategies. Real-time communication between stores, including internal alert systems and regional coordination, has become increasingly important. Some retailers are also refining store layouts and product placement to reduce accessibility to frequently targeted items during high-risk periods.

Training is another area of focus. Store associates are being coached on situational awareness, de-escalation, and safety-first protocols when faced with large-group incidents. Given the speed and scale of these events, many retailers emphasize that employee safety remains the top priority over recovery of merchandise.

As these coordinated theft tactics continue to evolve, retailers are balancing prevention efforts with the realities of in-store operations. The challenge moving forward will be maintaining a safe shopping environment while adapting to increasingly organized and fast-moving threats.


Cell Phone Use Impacting Crime Rates?
Are video games and phones helping to reduce crime?

Criminal activity plunges as pandemic effects fade and youth retreat indoors to game

Crime plummeted in the U.S. in 2025 after a steady but less-precipitous decline in 2024. Not only is the scary rise in violence that began early in the COVID-19 pandemic now receding in the rearview mirror, but population-adjusted rates of some crimes — murder and burglary, notably — are approaching levels not seen in more than half a century, if ever.

Yes, the historical view on murder is less impressive when you consider the vast improvement in medical care over the decades. Burglars and perpetrators of other traditional property crimes are to some extent just being supplanted by online crooks. And it’s hard to get too excited about recent declines in shoplifting given that the deodorant is now behind lock and key at the local Walgreens. But overall, the crime drop is pretty great. If only we knew why it was happening.

I exaggerate a little. There seems to be a reasonably clear line from the social disruptions caused by the pandemic and the outrage and protests in response to George Floyd’s murder by a Minneapolis police officer in May 2020 to the subsequent rise in violent crime and the fading effects of those events probably explain much of the drop. They don’t really explain the size of last year’s decline, though.

What does? U.S. President Donald Trump’s deportation campaign was the biggest development in U.S. law enforcement in 2025 and it’s plausible that it is reducing reported crime although not necessarily for the reasons you might think. An even more important development, though, may be that the young men disproportionately responsible for crime are now too preoccupied with their phones and other electronic devices to bother.

"More kids seem to be spending more time at home in their basements scrolling on their phones rather than out carousing with friends,” Gelb said. "We know that can have some terrible negative effects on mental health ... but the flip side may be that, particularly because youthful offending is often done in groups, if you’re home alone on your phone you’re less likely to go out and get into bad trouble with your friends.” japantimes.co.jp


New ORC Bill in Colorado
Colorado Small Businesses Applaud Effort to Curb Organized Retail Theft

HB 1138 addresses organized retail theft in Colorado

DENVER – The National Federation of Independent Business (NFIB), the state’s leading small business advocacy organization, announced its strong support for HB 1138, a bill that would address organized retail theft in Colorado. The bill establishes a task force, advisory board, and grant program to help law enforcement investigate and prosecute organized retail theft.

In a statement, NFIB State Director Michael Smith applauded the effort.

Nearly every small business owner has experienced retail theft. Not only does theft jeopardize the safety of small business owners, their employees, and their customers, but it also threatens our state’s economy. This bill takes several important steps to improve coordination among law enforcement, so they are better equipped to investigate and prosecute these crimes.”  nfib.com
 

Madison police investigate thefts targeting Asian-owned businesses

U.S. Senate Confirms Markwayne Mullin as DHS Secretary
 



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What's Fueling the Retail Shrink Decline?
Retailers report shrink levels down from pandemic highs

Is the improvement from addressing theft, operational weaknesses or accounting gaps? It’s probably a combination, but most aren’t saying.

Shrink — a mismatch between inventory a retailer has on hand and what records say it should have — continues to confound the industry. But several companies in recent weeks reported that shrink is less of a problem, dropping, in at least two cases, to a low not seen since the pandemic.

“It’s becoming a nonevent,” loss prevention consultant Brand Elverston, who works with major retailers and brands, said by phone. “I don’t feel comfortable saying it’s prepandemic levels. What I’m saying is it’s down significantly from its apex during COVID and is more manageable.”

In recent weeks, executives at Kroger, Target, Dollar General and TJX told investors that lower shrink was boosting margins and profits. At Target and TJX the decline has been especially dramatic, down to pre-pandemic levels, according to the chief financial officers at both companies.

This is a sharp turnabout from a couple of years ago, when retail executives at these retailers and others lamented high levels of inventory loss, often to theft, contradicting surveys from loss prevention executives that found shrink levels had been more or less flat for years.

Using various benchmarks and its own data, loss prevention platform Appriss Retail calculates that the industry lost $90 billion to shrink last year; the firm is working on a comprehensive survey of the problem. These days many analysts, including some loss prevention experts, believe the causes of shrink are multilayered rather than strictly crime-related.

The lack of clarity around shrink now extends to why or how things have improved because retailers aren’t providing any details. Most of the retailers contacted for this story didn’t immediately respond to requests for more information about how they mitigated their risk; TJX declined to comment. On earnings calls, most alluded to operational improvements. Target CFO Jim Lee is the only executive so far to call out “industry and community efforts to combat retail theft across the country.”

David Johnston, NRF vice president of asset protection and retail operations, credited a “balanced approach” of operational adjustments plus antitheft measures retaildive.com


Another Retail Crisis
The Iran Conflict Is A Compounding Cost Crisis For Retail
Operation Epic Fury, the coordinated strikes carried out on Iran by the U.S. and Israel on Feb. 28, fractured an already fragile and volatile global supply chain. One that has been confronted with re-routing to avoid multiple regional conflicts, tariff-driven cost headwinds already working through retail P&Ls, and ongoing reshoring efforts that haven’t yet matured into reliable alternatives.

Since the start of the conflict, at least 21 commercial vessels have been hit with projectiles, drones, or sea mines with several more stranded. In response, carriers have implemented Emergency Conflict Surcharges and Emergency Freight Increases. Some have even gone as far as releasing end of voyage declarations, leaving goods completely stranded. Additionally, 18% of air cargo through gulf airspace has either been redirected or grounded.

Garment shipments for Zara owner Inditex and other major clothing retailers have been stranded at airports in Bangladesh and India as the conflict forced Gulf airlines to cancel flights, with freight charges for some manufacturers doubling due to reduced air capacity. This disruption illustrates how fast a supply chain built on high-frequency replenishment can unravel when a single regional corridor closes.

Major Middle Eastern transit hubs such as Dubai, Doha, and Abu Dhabi have faced suspensions or had operations restricted. Demand for alternative warehouse hubs has since surged.

About 30% of global container trade moves through the Suez Canal, of which 90% has been rerouted through the Cape of Good Hope. This move adds 10-14 days to transit time, which means less turnover of ships effectively reducing capacity by 10-15%. forbes.com


The Shift from Enforcement to Resource
OSHA's Strategic Shift Emphasizes Resources, Technology and Better Communication
OSHA's new programs focus on helping companies improve safety through continuous learning and resource sharing. The agency aims to balance enforcement with proactive safety support, especially for small and medium-sized businesses.

David Keeling highlighted plans to incorporate AI and predictive analytics to better prevent workplace injuries and fatalities. OSHA intends to train inspectors to provide practical guidance and share best practices during visits.

The leadership emphasizes a comprehensive approach, using all available tools and strategies to lead workplace safety improvements.

Last week, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) launched two new workplace safety programs: the Safety Champions Program, aimed at helping companies establish and continuously improve their safety and health programs; and OSHA CARES, a customer service-focused initiative aimed at making it easier for companies to gain access to OSHA’s resources.

OSHA is an enforcement agency and we’re going to remain an enforcement agency,” Keeling said. “But what the OSHA CARES program can do for us is reinforce our position as a resource, especially for small and medium-sized businesses. The intent is to improve our communication and coordination with all agencies and employees and workers.”   ehstoday.com

   RELATED: Should Companies Participate in New OSHA Safety Champions Program?

 
24-Hour Autonomous Store
‘First-of-its-kind’ autonomous store to open in Las Vegas
VenHub Global and Circa Resort & Casino Inc. are teaming up to open an autonomous, 24-hour store in Las Vegas .

Measuring 66 feet x 10 feet by 10 feet, the installation will debut at Circa Resort later this spring, next to the hotel's sportsbook. Powered by VenHub’s autonomous Smart Store technology, the "first-of-its-kind" retail attraction is made up of three autonomous stores operating as one seamlessly integrated and continuously operating retail experience.

The installation will give customers the ability to autonomously browse and purchase food, snacks, alcohol and smokeless tobacco products at any hour, without wait times, checkout lines or staffing friction. It is engineered to be open 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. chainstoreage.com
 

Saks Global reverses course on three stores marked for closure

Epic Games cuts 1,000 jobs as Fortnite 'magic' fades in 'extreme' market conditions

UK food prices could soar by summer due to Iran war, warns IGD

On CEO’s ‘planned hiatus’ comes as a surprise

Mass deportations could jolt Bay Area economy and trigger job losses: report
 



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Reduce Human Involvement With
Intelligent Video Monitoring



Every second counts when a security threat emerges—yet traditional surveillance still relies heavily on on-site guards and constant human oversight. This dependence not only drives up operational costs but also puts staff in harm’s way during high-risk incidents, especially when confronting potentially violent offenders. As threats evolve, organizations are urgently seeking ways to strengthen security without requiring in-person guarded protection.

This article examines modern strategies for remote monitoring that reduce the need for continuous human involvement. It explores how overreliance on manual processes can slow efficiency, and how intelligent, cloud-powered video solutions can relieve security teams of routine tasks—freeing them to focus on higher-value responsibilities that improve overall safety and operations.
 
Limitations of Manual Surveillance in Modern Security

Organizations have traditionally relied on security guards and monitoring teams to surveil facilities, respond to incidents, and keep people and assets safe. While human oversight remains an important component of surveillance, it brings notable complexities that can affect both productivity and safety.

Cost and Resource Inefficiency

Employing a security staff complete with on-site guards requires significant resources. Overnight or weekend shifts often result in substantial salary expenses and overtime payments. In many cases, multiple staff are needed to ensure complete coverage and reduce the possibility of blind spots, further driving up operational costs. As many businesses struggle to incorporate these costs into their budgets, finding solutions that are more cost-effective while still providing complete security coverage becomes vital.

Difficult Coverage and Remote Sites

No matter how skilled or dedicated security staff may be, on-site personnel can only monitor a limited area at a time, inevitably leaving blind spots and vulnerabilities. This situation becomes further complicated for remote, low traffic sites that need continuous coverage but cannot justify round-the-clock physical guarding. These realities highlight the need for alternative security approaches that can ensure round-the-clock vigilance.

Susceptibility to Threats

On-site security roles inherently involve personal risk, especially when dealing with potentially aggressive or violent individuals. In high-tension situations, security personnel can quickly become the focus of confrontation. Incidents can escalate suddenly, leaving little time to react and increasing the potential for injury. Beyond the immediate danger, these encounters can have lasting effects on a guard’s mental well-being. The reality is that even the most experienced and well-trained security professionals operate in unpredictable environments where safety cannot be guaranteed. These risks highlight the importance of modern monitoring solutions that can manage threats effectively.


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Balancing Risk & Opportunity with Advanced Tech
ISACs confront AI’s promise and peril for threat intelligence-sharing

Any use of AI for ISAC work must preserve members’ trust, representatives of three critical infrastructure sectors said.

The AI era is forcing critical infrastructure sectors to rethink how they share information — balancing risk and opportunity with advanced technology — in situations where critical services are on the line.

“When we talk about [how] people’s money or lives are at stake, that’s where things get very, very real very quickly,” Pam Lindemoen, the chief security officer and vice president of strategy at the Retail & Hospitality Information Sharing and Analysis Center (RH-ISAC), said during a panel at the RSAC 2026 Conference here on Monday.

Speaking alongside representatives from two other ISACs, Lindemoen said the information-sharing groups were scrambling to understand how AI could help them better analyze and distribute threat intelligence, a vital service at a time when nation-state and cybercriminal hackers are becoming more sophisticated and aggressive.

How do we balance new technology, getting things faster, without diluting the message and without it becoming noise?” Lindemoen asked.

If automated threat information-sharing led to lower-quality output, she warned, critical infrastructure organizations would lose trust in their ISACs.

“If we lose that center of trust,” she said, “that’s where I think things are going to go really poorly for us and for our peers in the industry as well. cybersecuritydive.com


Cybercriminals Becoming Faster
Cybercrime groups speed up initial access handoff through planning, coordination

A report by Google Threat Intelligence Group also shows voice-based phishing has surged amid a rise in social engineering tactics.

Cybercriminals are becoming much faster at handing off initial access in targeted environments, with the window shrinking to just 22 seconds in 2025, according to a report Monday by Google Threat Intelligence Group and its incident response unit, Mandiant. That compares to about eight hours in 2022.

Exploits remained the leading initial access vector, with 32% of all methods, according to the report. However, voice-based phishing has surged as an initial access vector, rising to the second-leading means of entry, at 11%. Voice-based phishing was the top method for all cloud intrusions, at 23%.

Meanwhile, the global median dwell time rose to 14 days, driven largely by cyber espionage campaigns as well as North Korean IT worker scams, which saw median dwell times of 122 days.

The report found that threat groups are becoming much more deliberate and integrated in how they work with each other. Analysis showed significant coordination and planning for actions during the window between initial access and a secondary actor taking advantage of that access.

During ransomware and extortion incidents, threat groups are increasingly specializing in specific tasks during the attack life cycle, according to Mandiant researchers.   cybersecuritydive.com


Attacks Against Consumer-Grade Routers
FCC bans import of consumer-grade routers amid national security concerns

The decision follows years of escalating attacks against the U.S. from state-linked threat groups targeting routers and edge devices.

The Federal Communications Commission on Monday said it will no longer approve imported routers for consumer use without government review.

An interagency body convened by the White House determined that consumer-grade routers made outside the U.S. present an unacceptable risk to national security, according to FCC officials.

The Trump administration’s 2025 National Security Strategy says the U.S. should not be dependent on an outside power for core components considered vital to the nation’s economy or defense. cybersecuritydive.com


Why your phishing simulations aren’t building a security culture

 


 

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New Front Door to E-Commerce?
How Shopify's ChatGPT Integration Is Changing E-Commerce Strategy
In September 2025, Shopify and OpenAI formally unveiled a partnership allowing shoppers to buy products directly within ChatGPT without redirects, extra browsing or friction.

Panic and backlash promptly ensued, but the concerns missed the mark. What we're seeing is retail entering its next chapter with a powerful new channel.

This integration marks a big shift in e-commerce. GenAI platforms are becoming a new front door to commerce, joining search, social and storefronts as primary paths to purchase. The question isn't whether this channel will matter. It's how fast brands and consumers will adapt.

This integration marks a big shift in e-commerce. GenAI platforms are becoming a new front door to commerce, joining search, social and storefronts as primary paths to purchase. The question isn't whether this channel will matter. It's how fast brands and consumers will adapt.

The Shopify-ChatGPT integration makes one thing clear: Commerce is escaping the boundaries of traditional channels and showing up wherever conversations and decisions happen. Allowing shoppers to move from inquiry to purchase within a single conversational thread has signaled a shift toward more fluid, ambient buying experiences. This is a recognition that shoppers increasingly expect commerce to meet them wherever they already are.

For brands, this isn't about guessing whether chat-based shopping will win. It's about building the infrastructure now so their products and stories show up powerfully, accurately and on-brand everywhere—websites, marketplaces and AI platforms alike.

As a new era of distributed, conversational commerce is unlocked, the brands that thrive will design for flexibility from day one and treat every new interface not as a threat but as a powerful new way to engage, inspire and convert customers wherever they are. forbes.com


FedEx vs. Amazon
FedEx to offer same-day delivery as it battles with Amazon and other retailers
FedEx said Tuesday that it will offer same-day delivery in partnership with logistics company OneRail, with the announcement following a recent move by Amazon to offer expedited deliveries across the U.S.

The new shipping option allows FedEx customers to choose two-hour or end-of-day delivery when they are completing the checkout process for a package. The company said it will then match the order with other delivery providers in its national network, while also allowing customers to track packages.

Customers can opt in for same-day delivery for different packages, including large, oversized or specialized deliveries, FedEx said in a news release.

FedEx is moving to speed its deliveries as retail giants Amazon and Walmart also roll out same-day delivery. Amazon last week introduced one-hour and three-hour delivery options, with the latter available in thousands of cities across the U.S.

Walmart has also expanded its delivery services over the years to include faster shipping services throughout the day, including early morning hours and late evening. cbsnews.com


OpenAI reveals updates to its agentic commerce experience for ChatGPT


 


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Wayne County, MI: Ulta Beauty suspect pleads guilty in $30K theft ring in Metro Detroit
A Detroit woman is facing up to 20 years behind bars after authorities said she organized more than a dozen thefts at Ulta Beauty stores in Metro Detroit, netting more than $30,000 worth of stolen merchandise. Cheaira Broughton, 38, pleaded guilty March 12 to conducting a criminal enterprise, said Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel on Wednesday in a press release.  detroitnews.com


Philadelphia, PA : Undercover sting nets dozens of shoplifting arrests at Philadelphia CVS stores
Undercover Philadelphia police officers arrested more than a dozen people Thursday at a Center City CVS as part of a broader effort to crack down on retail theft, police said. Officers conducted the sting at the CVS at 11th and Market streets, where Action News observed arrest after arrest outside the store. Those taken into custody were accused of shoplifting, according to police. The operation is part of a larger retail theft initiative that the Philadelphia Police Department launched more than three years ago. Police say the effort has intensified in recent days, with nearly 40 arrests made this week alone at CVS locations across the city. Philadelphia Police Inspector Ray Evers said undercover officers arrested 26 people this week at nine CVS locations citywide, not including the arrests made Wednesday at the Center City store. Police said 13 people were arrested at that single location. According to Evers, those arrested reflect a wide range of backgrounds, from organized retail theft gangs to everyday residents.  6abc.com


Chicago, IL: 2 charged with felonies for stealing over $9,000 in merchandise from Lakeview Lululemon
The Cook County Sheriff's Office said two men have been charged with felonies for stealing more than $9,000 from a Lululemon store in Lakeview.. Police said Sunday at about 5:15 p.m., officers got a call from a Lululemon employee saying two men got out of a Honda minivan, entered their store in the 3500 block of North Southport Ave., filled up bags with merchandise and then left without paying. The arriving officers found 25-year-old Christopher Slawek of Chicago and 51-year-old Michael Brown of Matteson holding Lululemon bags, and they ran when approached. Officers arrested Slawek a short distance away in the 3500 block of North Greenview Ave., and Brown in the 1400 block of West Addison St., with their bags. Inside police said they found 118 Lululemon items worth more than $9,000. Police also tracked down the minivan a short distance away and found an additional $9,000 worth of merchandise from other stores inside. Brown and Slawek are each charged with felony retail theft. Slawek face additional charges from outstanding warrants for retail theft in Cook, DuPage and Will counties, police said.  cbsnews.com


Portland, OR: Portland Police arrest 5 in Retail Theft Operation
Five people have been arrested, and stolen items were recovered after a retail theft mission at Jantzen Beach Shopping Center earlier in March, the Portland Police Bureau announced Wednesday. Officers conducted the daytime operation March 18, where authorities contacted individuals suspected of theft or other criminal activity. PPB said five people were arrested in the mission and police recovered $400 of stolen property. Those arrested face several charges including theft, criminal mischief and arrest warrants. According to PPB, retail theft often includes more than shoplifting items for personal use, noting many suspects are involved in organized theft rings.  koin.com


Texarkana, TX: Two Women Accused Of Organized Retail Theft In Texarkana

 



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Shootings & Deaths


New York, NY: Masked Gunmen Wanted After Fatal Shooting At NYC Restaurant
Police have released photos of two suspects wanted in the fatal shooting of a 29-year-old man inside a Queens restaurant on Tuesday. The incident happened inside Hangar 11 Burgers & Brews, located at 119-11 Metropolitan Ave. in Kew Gardens around 1:35 a.m. According to police, 29-year-old Demitri McKay was found with a gunshot wound to the left arm. He was taken to Jamaica Hospital Medical Center, where he was later pronounced dead.  patch.com
 

Trumbull County, OH: Update: Judge denies Warren C-Store murder suspect’s request to represent himself
A Trumbull County judge has denied the request of a man accused of a murder at a Warren convenience store to fire his attorney and represent himself in his case. During a pretrial hearing on Wednesday, March 25, Judge Sean O’Brien denied 24-year-old Savion Woodall’s request to represent himself. Court records do not show the official judgment entry detailing why the motion was denied yet, but an employee in Judge O’Brien’s court tells 21 News that the judge gave Woodall two options: either maintain his current attorney or hire a new one. Woodall chose to maintain his current attorney. Woodall is charged with murder and attempted murder, both with firearm specifications, as well as having weapons under disability, illegal possession of a firearm in liquor permit premises, tampering with evidence, carrying concealed weapons and improper handling of firearms in a motor vehicle. The charges stem from the shooting death of David Owens III. Owens was shot to death in the parking lot of Convenient Food Mart on Elm Road in August of 2025. A second man was also wounded in the shooting.  wfmj.com


Bastrop, TX: Man arrested after allegedly shooting at vehicles at Home Depot store
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Dallas, TX: NorthPark Center evacuated after serious security incident
NorthPark Center, one of Dallas’s most visited and well-known shopping destinations, was evacuated Wednesday afternoon following what the Dallas Police Department described as a security incident that triggered a fire alarm and drew a significant law enforcement response to the area. Officers confirmed they were dispatched to the mall, located in the 8600 block of North Central Expressway, at approximately 12:30 p.m. local time. The Dallas Police Department encouraged the public to avoid the area as officers worked to redirect traffic near the busy North Dallas corridor and assess the situation on the ground.  rollingout.com


San Francisco, CA: Stonestown Galleria mall evacuated due to police activity

Mississauga, ON, Canada: Latest smash-and-grab robbery puts Mississauga jewelry store out of business

Los Angeles, CA: Trio Gets 13 Years Each for Stealing Lottery Tickets in 33 Robberies Targeting 7-Eleven Stores

Norfolk, VA: From downtown to Military Circle, break-ins leave Norfolk businesses on edge

Tucson, AZ: Two Ball Pythons stolen from Desert Pet Shop, caught on video


 


 

C-Store – Somerville, MA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Enosburg, VT – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Seymour, IN – Robbery
Clothing – Chicago, IL - Robbery
Dollar – Beaver, PA – Robbery
Gaming – Howard County, MO – Armed Robbery
Grocery – Lincoln, NE – Burglary
Grocery – Myrtle Beach, SC – Armed Robbery
Hardware – Houston, TX – Burglary
Jewelry - West Covina, CA – Robbery
Jewelry – Westminster, CA – Robbery
Jewelry – Rockford, IL – Robbery
Pet – Tucson, AZ – Robbery
Pharmacy – Fort Smith, AR – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Norfolk, VA – Burglary
Tobacco – Abington Township, PA – Robbery
Vape – Lee County, FL – Burglary   
 

Daily Totals:
• 13 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



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