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Join Gatekeeper Systems & FaceFirst at RILA 2025 | Booths 503 & 709
Protecting Retail Environments with
Purchek® and FaceFirst Technologies

Join
Gatekeeper Systems at booth 503 and
FaceFirst at
booth 709 to experience the latest advancements in retail theft
prevention and shopper experience optimization. Discover how our
cutting-edge technologies—from pushout prevention with Purchek® to
real-time known offender alerts with FaceFirst—are setting new standards
for protecting people, products, and profits.
What Awaits You
at RILA 2025 – booths 503 & 709
Seamless Theft Prevention
Uncover the power of
Purchek® technology, a cart-based behavior system that prevents
pushout theft without confrontation, keeping merchandise secure while
enhancing employee and shopper safety.
Data-Driven Intelligence
Gain deep insights into theft patterns, repeat offender behavior, and
ROI performance. Our
Theft Intelligence Services deliver advanced analytics and automated
reporting—empowering you to combat organized retail crime with
precision.
Real-Time Offender Recognition
Now part of Gatekeeper Systems’ suite of solutions,
FaceFirst
provides real-time alerts when known offenders enter your store. This
AI-powered face matching technology enhances your loss prevention
strategy by accelerating investigations and improving response times.
Enhanced Operations and Shopper Experience
Explore solutions designed to improve operational efficiency while
remaining invisible to customers. From video alerts to detailed reports,
our technology makes it easier to protect your store and provide a
seamless shopping journey.
Meet Gatekeeper & FaceFirst at the show
.png)
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
The Link Between ORC & Drug Addiction
Organized Retail Crime and Drug
Addiction: Understanding the Connection
By the D&D Daily staff
Organized retail crime (ORC) has emerged as a growing concern for law
enforcement and retailers across the United States, with annual losses
estimated in the tens of billions of dollars. While the phenomenon is
multifaceted, one contributing factor gaining increased attention is
its link to drug addiction.
Unlike
opportunistic shoplifting, ORC typically involves coordinated groups who
steal large volumes of merchandise, often with the intent to resell it
through online marketplaces, street vendors, or informal networks. The
profits are then used to fund various activities—including, in many
cases, substance abuse.
Law enforcement officials and addiction specialists note that many
low-level participants in ORC operations are individuals struggling with
addiction. These individuals are often
recruited by more organized criminal enterprises to carry out thefts in
exchange for cash or drugs. Because those with substance use
disorders may face limited employment opportunities and financial
instability, engaging in theft can be seen as a quick way to secure
money to feed an addiction.
A 2022 report by the National Retail Federation cited that 70% of
retailers believe ORC-related theft has increased in severity and
frequency, with many noting that stolen goods are being exchanged for
narcotics in cities heavily impacted by the opioid crisis.
Additionally, states dealing with high rates of fentanyl and
methamphetamine use—such as California, Ohio, and Oregon—have reported
corresponding increases in retail crime.
Experts caution that while drug addiction is not the sole cause of ORC,
it is a significant driver behind the involvement of repeat offenders.
Retail security professionals also report that some individuals cycle
through the criminal justice system due to untreated addiction,
reoffending shortly after release.
In response, some jurisdictions are experimenting with diversion
programs that offer treatment instead of incarceration for
nonviolent retail offenders. Proponents argue that addressing the root
cause—addiction—can help reduce recidivism and the strain on both
retailers and the legal system.
At the same time, retailers are investing in new technology, such as
surveillance systems, facial recognition, and electronic product
tracking, to combat the rise in theft. But many acknowledge that
prevention efforts must also include social services and partnerships
with public health agencies to address the underlying addiction issues
contributing to the crime.
As the national conversation around ORC continues, the connection to
drug addiction remains a critical piece of the puzzle, requiring
both enforcement and rehabilitation approaches to make meaningful
progress.
New York's Gang Database Being Used By
the Feds
The New York State Police Are Feeding ICE a Gang Database
For 20 years, the state police have
been quietly building a database of suspected gang members—and they’re
feeding it to Donald Trump’s administration.
As
President Donald Trump’s administration rounds up hundreds of immigrants
it claims are gang members and expels them to a notorious Salvadoran
prison, New York State is quietly feeding federal authorities gang
intelligence that could fuel the deportation machine.
The New York State Police maintain a database of more than 5,100
people they’ve designated as members of criminal gangs—and funnel
the information into a federal database used by US Immigration and
Customs Enforcement, a New York Focus investigation has found.
The statewide gang database has been in operation for 20 years,
though it has garnered almost no outside attention or scrutiny. State
Police staff designate people as gang members—including people who may
never have been charged with a crime—using highly speculative criteria
like where they spend their time, whom they talk to, what clothing they
wear, and what tattoos they have.
Any law enforcement agency in the state can submit entries to the
database, a State Police spokesperson said. As officers and analysts
add names, State Police staff also submit them to a federal gang file
that feeds directly into ICE’s main case management tool.
The statewide gang database currently contains 225 alleged criminal
gangs, the spokesperson said. It has not been audited by an outside
entity.
thenation.com
From Shoplifting Incident to Mass
Casualty Event
Shoplifter's arrest foils potential "mass casualty event" in Minnesota,
charges say
Authorities say they believe a southern Minnesota man accused of
theft and online threats may have been
planning a "mass casualty event." Mohamed Adan Mohamed, 24,
of St. Peter, faces felony charges of theft and threats of violence
following his arrest after a shoplifting incident last week at the
Scheels store in Mankato.
Mohamed allegedly told people on the sales floor that he had an "AR
style rifle that was calibrated to 9mm" before fleeing the store
with over $2,150 worth of items.
Security at the store attempted a "citizen's arrest" on Mohamed,
but he got into a Toyota Sienna and fled, nearly running over a person
in the process, according to the complaint.
Mohamed left a list at the store, which he was looking at while taking
items, that said "Survival Gear List with Alternative" at the top, the
complaint said. The list included knives, bows and arrows, a sleeping
bag, lighters, pepper spray, a "6-mag chest right" and eight magazines.
Authorities say Mohamed stole eight magazines.
cbsnews.com
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act
Makes More Headlines
U.S. Senators Reintroduce Legislation to Combat Organized Retail Theft
U.S. Senators Bill Cassidy, M.D. (R-LA), Chuck Grassley (R-IA), and
colleagues reintroduced the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act to
crack down on flash mob robberies and intricate retail theft schemes,
establish a coordinated multi-agency response, and create new tools to
tackle evolving trends in organized retail theft.
The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act would:
- Establish an Organized Retail and Supply Chain Crime Coordination
Center within the U.S. Department of Homeland Security that combines
expertise from state and local law enforcement agencies and retail
industry representatives.
- Create new tools to assist in federal investigation and prosecution
of organized retail crime and help recapture lost goods and proceeds.
news-journal.com
The Landscape Is Centuries Old. The Crime Is More Modern.
In rural England, increasingly sophisticated
farming equipment has become a target for thieves, adding to pressure on
farming communities.
Established Organized Crime Syndicates Continue to Age and Decline in
Japan
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Did Retailers Talk Trump Off the Ledge
on Tariffs?
Walmart, Target, Home Depot tout productive meeting with Trump as
tariffs threaten the holidays
New import duties are poised to
raise prices in time for peak shopping periods, starting with back to
school and Halloween.
Executives
from Walmart, Target and Home Depot this week ventured to the White
House to discuss tariffs, which all three described in general terms
as constructive.
“We had a productive meeting with President Trump and our retail
peers to discuss the path forward on trade, and we remain committed to
delivering value for American consumers,” Target spokesperson Jim Joice
said by email.
The parley took place as retailers steadily work through their
pretariff inventories. Some are beginning to view tariffs as an
incoming “holiday tax,” given that many of the levies will first be
applied to goods put on shelves for the back-to-school, Halloween and Q4
holidays.
Monday’s gathering at the White House was the most high-profile
action to-date from the industry over the ever-changing levies,
involving just three companies. The National Retail Federation didn’t
immediately return messages asking whether the group has met or plans to
meet with members of the administration.
It’s encouraging to see businesses communicate directly with the
president, and not just through trade groups, according to Charlie
Skuba, faculty emeritus at Georgetown University’s McDonough School of
Business.
“He needs to hear from the companies who sell everyday household
products to American consumers and learn from them about the effects
of both announced and potential tariffs,” Skuba said by email.
retaildive.com
Walmart 'Throwing the Doors Wide Open'
on AI
Walmart is all-in on generative AI, agentic tools
The company is “throwing the doors
wide open” and wants associates to use the technology every day,
executives said.
After
two years exploring generative AI use, Walmart has embedded the
technology across workflows, honing its deployment strategy and
expanding the toolkit for associates and developers in the process.
“In 2023, we were like ‘we want to go all in with AI,’ but we didn’t
really know what that meant,” David Glick, senior vice president of
enterprise business services at Walmart, told Retail Dive’s sister
publication CIO Dive. “There was no enterprise ChatGPT or enterprise
Gemini and the data privacy element was not where it needed to be.”
Finding the balance between innovation and risk is a tension
enterprise leaders know all too well. But friction isn’t viewed as a
bad thing, Walmart executives said. Instead, the back-and-forth between
technologists, information security pros, legal and compliance
counterparts keeps the company on the right track.
“We’re pushing and pulling every day,” Glick said. “I’m
negotiating [and] I’m working very hard to make AI approachable while
our legal team and compliance team or InfoSec team are working very hard
to make it safe. We spend a lot of time together, having direct and
candid conversations.”
After all, no business wants to be in the news for a data privacy
leak or AI-related fumble. But at the same time, executives see the
value in pushing boundaries and being innovative.
retaildive.com
Thrift Stores Could See Tariff Boom
Tariffs Could Spark Thrift Store Boom in Chico, Calif.
There’s a saying: one man’s cloud is another man’s sunshine. And
when it comes to President Donald Trump’s tariffs, that may be ringing
true for second-hand stores.
As the U.S. economy adjusts to potential price hikes driven by tariffs,
local thrift stores—like Show Love Thrift Store in Chico—could be on
the verge of a business boost.
There’s a common misconception that thrift stores cater exclusively to
low-income shoppers. But if tariffs cause retail prices to rise,
experts say second-hand shopping may appeal to a broader crowd. One
store owner believes rising costs for new goods—especially
clothing—could push even more shoppers toward her store.
If the tariffs are implemented, value could become the new trend.
And thrift stores may benefit from that cultural shift.
actionnewsnow.com
The Big Lots
Comeback
Big Lots Is Reopening Over 100 Stores in May. Is There a Location Near
You?
Big Lots is staging quite the comeback, with
over 100 locations reopening in May. News of these reopenings comes hot
on the heels of the nine locations that are reopening this month under
the new ownership.
Hudson’s Bay Closes Final Chapter as Flagship Stores Fall
Hasbro Playing ‘Defense & Offense’ on China Tariffs as Stock Skyrockets
by 16%
Walmart Offers Customers Giant Fuel Savings of 50 Cents Per Gallon

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'Retail
Crime Uncovered': Special Episode #3
In this
jam-packed round up of the latest developments in retail crime, Emmeline
outlines the key recommendations from the UK House of Lords Inquiry into
shoplifting with special guest, Chris Noice from the Association of Convenience
Stores (ACS). In Newscast, we learn about the growing trend for targeting luxury
food items such as artisan cheese and champagne and exporting it into
international markets, as well as the million dollar gift card scams hitting the
USA and attracting the attention of Homeland Security. The Country Focus takes
in South Africa and RCU guest Andre Jordaan describes the 'war on the highway'.
Stream It Here
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$16.6B in Cyber Fraud Losses in 2024
BEC scams, investment fraud accounted for biggest cybercrime losses in
2024
Americans lost $16.6 billion to
cyber fraud last year, according to an FBI report.
The FBI Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) released
the 2024 annual internet crime report. The report found that
Americans lost $16.6 billion to cyber fraud and internet crimes last
year, up 33% from the previous year.
Phishing, spoofing and extortion topped the list of complaints,
but investment and business email compromise
(BEC) scams cost victims the most money.
The latest IC3 report helps quantify the scale of cyber threats in the
United States and serves as a reminder that common internet scams, not
exotic zero-day vulnerabilities, cause the most serious harm to
Americans on a daily basis.
Investment scams were, by far, the most costly type of internet crime
in 2024, easily leading the pack with estimated losses of around
$6.6 billion. Interestingly, investment scams were only the fifth most
commonly reported type of internet crime, highlighting the
disproportionate impact of individual scams. These schemes cost
Americans $2 billion more last year than they did the year before,
suggesting that they are becoming more profitable for criminals. The
relative ease of perpetrating massive cryptocurrency scams could partly
explain this increase.
The FBI’s report points to other possible trends in the popularity of
certain digital attack and fraud tools — for example, the
comparatively low annual losses attributed to botnets ($8.9 million)
compared to those attributed to SIM-swapping attacks ($26 million)
could indicate a need to refocus law enforcement and private-sector
investigative resources accordingly.
cybersecuritydive.com
CISOs Call Out World Governments
CISOs band together to urge world governments to harmonize cyber rules
Policymakers have moved slowly to
reduce regulatory overlap, but the new industry plea could help change
that.
A letter from the CISOs of 45 powerful global companies could
provide crucial backing for world governments looking to reduce
cybersecurity regulations and their accompanying hassles for businesses.
The CISO letter, sent to members of the Group of Seven nations and the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, urges
governments to use those high-level forums to “focus on greater
alignment of cybersecurity regulations.”
The signatories — including tech giants, large banks, major hospital
chains and influential health-care firms — want to see consistent
implementation of existing rules, more collaboration on future rules,
faster threat intelligence-sharing and more corporate engagement.
The broad list of the letter’s signatories reflects widespread
frustration across industries about the international morass of
conflicting and redundant cyber rules, as well as the private
sector’s belief that the moment for harmonization has finally arrived.
cybersecuritydive.com
Estée Lauder revamps IT leadership with transformation in mind
The global cosmetics company
recruited Brian Franz from investment firm State Street to be its first
chief technology, data and analytics officer.
The Estée Lauder Companies appointed Brian Franz to its leadership
team as chief technology, data and analytics officer Monday. Franz
will lead the cosmetic giant’s global IT organization, taking the reins
from CIO Michael Smith, who departed earlier this month, the company
said in an email Tuesday.
Franz’s purview extends across enterprise data and IT transformation,
platform integration, digital experiences and AI adoption, the company
said. “By bringing these critical areas together under one leader, we
are simplifying our structure, removing operational silos and
creating stronger alignment across our data and technology strategies”
de La Faverie added in his first external executive leadership
appointment announcement since rising to CEO in October.
retaildive.com
Understanding 2024 cyber attack trends
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What Drives E-Commerce Purchases?
Survey: Delivery speed, product availability drive repeat online purchases
Differing factors persuade consumers to make initial and repeat purchases from
direct-to-consumer retailers and online brands.
Thirty-two percent of consumers say product quality is the top reason they
initially purchase from a brand, while 29% cite product exclusivity, according
to a survey from e-commerce solutions provider Radial. However, delivery
speed (72%), product availability (66%), and
easy or free returns (63%) are now the most influential factors in
consumers’ decision-making process when it comes to conversion and long-term
loyalty.
Only 25% of respondents told Radial they believed personalization was “very
important,” and 38% referenced brand values, suggesting that execution, not just
intention, keeps customers returning.
When it comes to what factors prevent customer loyalty, Radial found that nearly
40% of consumers have stopped purchasing from DTC brands they liked due to
fulfillment issues such as stockouts, shipping delays (29%), unexpected fees
(30%) and return friction (24%).
Gen Z (35%) and millennials (33%) are most frustrated with delivery delays
and lack of communication. Meanwhile, nearly two-thirds (62%) of all consumers
surveyed said they would lose trust in a brand if product quality declined or
post-purchase execution fell short.
chainstoreage.com
Amazon's Return to Work Impact
I'm a 64-year-old Amazon employee. Retirement wasn't even on my radar, but now I
have to leave due to RTO mandates.
I'm not leaving voluntarily; as far as I'm concerned, they're firing me. I'm a
good employee. My performance review this year said I significantly exceeded
expectations. I've given the company 100% of myself for 14 years; to have to
leave is demoralizing and perplexing.
I love how you can reinvent yourself at Amazon. I've had the chance to have a
bunch of different careers and get exposure to many different teams. When I
started, I worked out of Seattle HQ for five years on the Kindle Fire launch
team. In my first three months, it felt like all I did was run around — it was a
great, electric time to be at Amazon.
In 2016, my oldest daughter became ill, and I needed to move to Indiana to be
closer to family. Soon after that, I was able to start working virtually and was
successful at doing so. In November 2023, my change of address request was
approved by the VP of my organization — with the caveat that I retire in August
2024.
It felt completely out of the blue. I was like, "Who said anything about
retiring?" Retire is a very ageist word. After several more conversations with
HR in July 2024 — a month before I was supposed to leave — they ended up
extending my remote work exception until April 30 of this year.
businessinsider.com
Amazon and Nvidia say AI data center demand is not slowing down |
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San Francisco, CA: SFPD Arrests Suspect Involved in the Buying and
Selling of Stolen Merchandise from San Francisco
In
January 2025, San Francisco Police Department investigators assigned to
the Burglary Detail discovered evidence of a known fencer, identified as
45-year-old male Ronald Lopez-Rivera from Richmond, CA, providing
information on suspected stolen bicycles to another known fencer. A
fence is defined as a person who receives stolen goods and resells these
items for personal profit. Investigators began surveillance of
Lopez-Rivera, continuing to gather evidence of criminal acts. In March
2025, investigators observed Lopez-Rivera selling stolen items such as
medication, health products, construction tools, and bicycles from known
retail establishments. On April 18th, 2025, officers continued
surveillance of Lopez-Rivera in the area of 8th and Folsom Streets,
where Lopez-Rivera was seen placing a suspected stolen bicycle in a
vehicle and then transporting the merchandise to the area of Leavenworth
and McAllister Streets. On this date, officers developed probable cause
to arrest Lopez-Rivera. Officers conducted a search of Lopez-Rivera’s
vehicle which revealed two confirmed stolen bicycles that were reported
stolen from residential burglaries earlier that day in San Francisco.
Investigators obtained a search warrant for Lopez-Rivera’s residence and
storage units located in Richmond, CA. Members of the SFPD Burglary
Detail, Defend Against Retail Theft (DART), and San Francisco District
Attorney Investigators (SFDAI) conducted the search, which revealed
additional stolen property from San Francisco that was seized as
evidence. Lopez-Rivera was booked into San Francisco County Jail for the
possession of stolen property (496(a) PC).
sanfranciscopolice.org
Raleigh, NC: NC woman faces 20 charges from Bath & Body Works thefts
A woman was arrested Tuesday for multiple felonies stemming from an
investigation of multiple retail thefts throughout the month of November
last year, according to court records. Jynecia Serinaty Arrington, 25,
of Greenville was arrested in Pitt County Tuesday, according to multiple
arrest warrants. They stated she committed larceny three times at two
Bath & Body Works locations in Raleigh — one at Brier Creek Commons and
one at the Pleasant Valley Promenade on Glenwood Avenue. The
estimated total of items stolen in the three reported thefts was just
over $13,470.
cbs17.com
Thousand Oaks, CA: Pro shop burglarized at North Ranch County Club
Authorities are investigating a burglary at the pro shop of the North
Ranch Country Club in Thousand Oaks on April 24. The incident was
reported around 6:35 a.m. at the country club at 4761 Valley Spring
Drive in the Westlake Village area, said Ventura County Sheriff's Capt.
John Hajducko. The sheriff's office is contracted for police services in
Thousand Oaks. The call indicated the burglary had just occurred.
Responding deputies determined two male suspects had smashed the doors
of the pro shop, the captain said. The suspects took mostly golf clubs,
Hajducko said.
vcstar.com
Hollister, CA: Police investigating $5000 NAPA auto parts burglary
Horry County, SC: Police searching for teens accused of stealing $2500
of items from South Strand flea market
Columbus, GA: Opelika Police searching for suspects who stole $600 worth
of merchandise
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Shootings & Deaths
Waterbury, CT: 4 killed, including three brothers, after BMW slams into corner
store
Four people have died after a car crashed into a corner store in the Waterbury
area in Connecticut on Thursday. Waterbury police responded to Cherry Street at
12:45 a.m. to a report of a car that had crashed into a store. Authorities said
a BMW sedan slammed into the Hernandez Market, partially collapsing the
building. Cherry Street was closed from East Main to Walnut streets until around
4 p.m. Emergency responders remained on scene well into the daylight hours.
According to police, the car was heading down Baldwin Street onto Cherry Street
before losing control and smashing into the building.
ksnblocal4.com
Cleveland, OH: Update: Video released from law enforcement fatal shooting of man
at Staples in Cleveland
Video
from the fatal shooting of a man by Homeland Security Investigations / Ohio
Organized Crime Investigations Commission task force was released Thursday. The
shooting happened on April 16 in the parking lot of the Staples store at West
117th and Berea Road in Cleveland. Cleveland Police said officers assigned to
the task force were conducting a drug investigation when they encountered
47-year-old Andre Dewayne Lamont Martin, who pulled a knife, prompting two
officers from the Medina County Sheriff’s Department to shoot him. The video
sent to 19 News by Cleveland Police shows Martin leaving Staples carrying a
large box and walking into the parking lot. Police have not said why Martin was
at the store or if he was under investigation by this task force.
cleveland19.com
Syracuse, NY: Man accused of shooting outside convenience store in 2023 admits
to killing Syracuse man
A man admitted Wednesday to causing the death of a man he shot in the head
outside a convenience store in Syracuse. Marley Oselmo, 23, pleaded guilty to
second-degree murder and second-degree criminal possession of a weapon.
Oselmo was promised a sentence of 20 years to life in prison in exchange for his
plea.
syracuse.com
St Paul, MN: Man sentenced to nearly 20 years for fatal shooting outside tobacco
store
Portland, OR: 1 hospitalized in convenience store parking lot shooting
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
New Haven, CT: CT felon accused of Armed Robbery at Sunglass Hut in Westfarms
Mall while on probation
Indianapolis, IN: Accused thief faces 26 charges following a series of business
smash and grab break-ins
St Louis County, MO: Missouri Pair Sentenced To Federal Prison For Armed Dollar
Store Robberies
Burlington, ON, Canada: Police arrest six people in connection to failed Rogers
store robbery in Burlington
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•
Adult – San Diego, CA
– Armed Robbery
•
Auto – Hollister, Ca –
Burglary
•
C-Store – Bulloch
County, GA – Robbery
•
Golf – Thousand Oaks,
CA – Burglary
• Jewelry - Tallahassee, FL – Robbery
•
Liquor – Carrollton,
MO - Robbery
•
Liquor – Bethesda, MD
– Burglary
•
Pharmacy – Danville,
KY – Armed Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Foley, AL –
Burglary
•
Restaurant – Wayne, NJ
– Burglary
•
Restaurant – Wayne, NJ
– Burglary
•
Tobacco – Los Angeles,
Ca – Burglary
•
Tobacco – Wilton
Manors, FL – Armed Robbery
•
Thrift – Horry County,
SC – Burglary
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Daily Totals:
• 6 robberies
• 8 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
Staffing 'Best in Class' Teams
Every one has a role to play in building an
industry.
Filled your job? Any good candidates left over?
Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build
a 'Best in Class' Community
|
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Region Asset Protection Manager
Jackson, MI
-
Posted April 17
The Region Asset Protection Manager will be the primary
subject matter expert in regard to the training, auditing, and investigatory
needs of Dollar General. Their key efforts are to reduce shrinkage and increase
profitability through proactive training mediums, standardized audits and the
resolution of internal and external investigations...
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Manager, Regional Loss Prevention
Birmingham, AL / Nashville, TN
-
Posted March 7
This position is responsible for managing all aspects of
loss prevention for a geographic area to reduce and control shortage and other
financial losses in 124+ company stores. The coverage areas average $850+
million in sales revenue...
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Manager, Regional Loss Prevention
Washington, D.C. / Richmond, VA
-
Posted March 7
This position is responsible for managing all aspects of loss prevention
for a geographic area to reduce and control shortage and other financial losses
in 124+ company stores. The coverage areas average $850+ million in sales
revenue...
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Senior Manager Global Risk & AP International
Kissimmee, FL / Glendale, CA
-
Posted February 27
You and the team will develop and implement Retail profit protection and
risk mitigation plans and practices to achieve efficient and effective daily
operational controls and business interruption restoration to help protect and
maintain a safe environment as well as continuity of the revenue stream. Foster
cross-functional collaboration with business units and regional security
partners to help ensure programs are maintained in accordance with both
enterprise and regional compliance requirements...
|
Featured Jobs
To apply to any of today's Featured Jobs,
Click Here
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View Featured
Jobs |
Post Your Job
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The difference between success and failure is in the planning and the execution.
Taking something from a thought or idea to a reality can be a long and painful
process lined with failures and detractors. But a great idea is only as good as
the plan you have to bring it to life and the execution everyone delivers to
give it a life. Because without the two the great idea never existed. As one "C"
level executive once told me- He never saw a bad great idea as it was always the
failed plan to roll it out and the poor execution that killed it.
Just a Thought, Gus

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