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After 25 years in Federal Law Enforcement, Here's What It Will Take to
Beat Organized Retail Crime
By Raul Aguilar - Head of Law Enforcement Partnerships, Americas at
Auror
As
we observe National Police Week, honoring the courage and sacrifice of
our law enforcement officers, it’s a good time to confront the pervasive
challenge they face in dealing with organized retail crime (ORC), and
what can be done to help.
After almost three decades in federal law enforcement, and now leading
the largest technology network in the US focused on combating retail
crime, I’m often asked how we can better equip the men and women who
protect our communities to keep up with the evolving tactics of
organized retail crime groups. After all, these are enormous crime
networks that operate not just interstate, but transnationally.
The reality is the top 10 percent of offenders are responsible for more
than 65 percent of retail crime across the country, and through retailer
reporting in Auror, we know those repeat offenders are up to three times
more likely to be violent or use weapons in stores. Not to mention this
is commonly the highest volume crime type.
There are three key opportunities in front of us to help make law
enforcement more efficient in the great work they do to keep our
communities safe.
First, break down the barriers that keep law enforcement working in
isolation.
Early in my career in California, crimes were treated as isolated
events. That model no longer works. ORC is driven by repeat offenders
across multiple retail stores and jurisdictions, making up
multi-billion-dollar enterprises that fuel other crimes like gun
trafficking, counterfeiting, wildlife smuggling, and human trafficking.
They are not brand loyal or city specific, they ‘steal-to-order.’ What
once looked like petty theft is now a sophisticated financial engine for
global crime.
While leading teams at Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), we
treated these groups like sophisticated criminal enterprises. By
leveraging financial data with multi-agency cooperation, we changed the
game on how to attack organized retail crime on a national scale. This
led to us starting
Operation Boiling Point, which combined law enforcement engagement
with retailers at every level. In FY 2021, ORC investigations increased
by more than
200 percent, and more than $9 million in assets were seized.
That’s the power of a true “coalition of the willing”. When federal
agents learn from our cross-sector partners, we can outmaneuver even the
most sophisticated criminal networks.
Second, embracing secure technology is the key to surfacing these
networks.
The only way to see the true scale of this widespread and volumetric
offending is through digital collaboration. By giving police the tools
to connect with retailers on this information, they can identify the
patterns, the highest harm offenders and bridge the information gap to
get on top of fast-moving organized crime.
When we enable this collaboration, the outcomes are huge. Just last
year, a $1 billion multi-state ORC operation based out of Texas was
dismantled thanks to intelligence sharing across retailers and law
enforcement
Yet in many cases, information about incidents is trapped in
spreadsheets, paper files, USB sticks or WhatsApp groups. That
fragmentation has allowed criminals to stay anonymous - and anonymity is
how criminals thrive. Collaboration needs to be operational, daily and
powered by secure technology - it is the critical enabler that can
assist police deal with such a high volume problem.
Finally, our political leaders have a big role to play. The
passing of the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA) by the U.S.
House is welcome news this week. It demonstrates that retail crime is
not simply about shoplifting or theft - it's violent, it's organized, it
robs communities of their vibrancy, and is a city killer. This is the
exact type of federal leadership needed to formalize cooperation and
equip law enforcement with the tools they need to keep pace. We must
maintain momentum.
By aligning federal resources under a unified strategy and strengthening
prosecutorial tools—such as making ORC a predicate offense for money
laundering—it enables agencies to dismantle criminal networks from the
top down. It encourages the partnerships necessary to protect our
economy and secure public safety.
As we reflect on the great work law enforcement officers do to keep us
safe this week, let’s continue working towards equipping them with the
tools and technology they need to efficiently and effectively focus
their resources on the highest harm, serious offenders in our
neighborhoods.
###
Raul
Aguilar is Head of Law Enforcement Partnerships, Americas at
Auror, and formerly
HSI responsible for transnational organized crime and founder of
Operation Boiling Point. Auror is a global retail crime intelligence
company that provides a crime reporting platform to the world’s largest
retailers to securely and consistently record crime, connect the dots on
organized offenders, and collaborate with law enforcement. Auror is used
in more than 85,000 stores and in 3,500 law enforcement agencies
globally. |
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Strengthen Retail Security & Enhance Workplace Safety with
Off-Duty Law Enforcement
Discover how off-duty law
enforcement enhances safety and deters crime while protecting employees
and assets.
 Retailers
are under more pressure than ever to prevent theft, ensure employee
safety and maintain business continuity across stores. Criminal
activities are on the rise, and they can severely disrupt operations,
leading to financial losses and a tarnished reputation. Workplace
security not only safeguards assets and sensitive information but also
protects employees and visitors, fostering a safe and productive
environment.
Hiring
off-duty law enforcement is a proven way to level up your retail
security strategy. Off-duty personnel are uniquely positioned to deter
criminal activities, respond swiftly in emergencies and provide an added
layer of protection. By integrating off-duty law enforcement into your
security strategy, you can create a safer, more secure workplace
environment.
Protos Security's workplace security blog explores ways that
off-duty law enforcement can benefit retailers and increase workplace
safety.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Retail Violence Hurting Employee
Retention
Retail Violence Is Adding New Pressure to Hiring and Retention
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retailers across the country continue facing rising concerns over
theft, aggressive behavior and workplace violence — and industry
experts say the impact is extending beyond safety itself.
The issue is increasingly affecting employee stress, burnout and the
ability to recruit and retain front-line workers.
A 2025 retail safety survey conducted by the Loss Prevention Research
Council, Verkada and The Harris Poll found that 35% of retail workers
said they felt unsafe at work, up from 27% the previous year.
Workers cited theft, aggressive customer behavior, verbal harassment and
robbery among their top concerns.
The report also found growing concern among employees about the
long-term impact of repeated confrontations and hostile incidents inside
stores. Researchers noted that violence in retail settings is no
longer limited to isolated robbery events, but increasingly includes
verbal abuse, threats and confrontational behavior tied to theft
activity and customer disputes.
At the same time, retailers are already dealing with staffing
shortages and high turnover across many front-line positions.
Workforce analysts say safety concerns are becoming another obstacle for
hiring managers trying to attract workers into customer-facing retail
roles.
A separate 2025 workforce report from Mercer described the retail
industry as facing a broader "workforce crisis," with many hourly
workers reporting stress, low morale and limited long-term interest in
staying in the field.
Some retailers have responded by increasing de-escalation training,
expanding security presence and investing in panic buttons, surveillance
technology and workplace violence prevention programs. New laws in
states including New York are also requiring certain retailers to
implement workplace violence prevention plans and employee training.
Industry experts say the challenge for retailers moving forward will not
only involve reducing theft and violence itself, but also ensuring
employees feel physically safe and supported enough to remain in
customer-facing roles.
As retail crime and aggressive incidents continue drawing national
attention, worker safety may increasingly become part of the
industry's larger labor and retention conversation.
ORC Climbs Up the Political Agenda in
D.C.
Push to curb retail crime gains momentum in Washington
US efforts to tackle organized
retail crime are advancing as a federal bill aims to improve law
enforcement coordination and strengthen investigations into large theft
networks.
Organized
retail crime (ORC) is moving up the political agenda in the United
States, as lawmakers in the House of Representatives advance
legislation aimed at strengthening coordination between federal, state
and local authorities.
The National Retail Federation (NRF), the country’s largest retail trade
association, has welcomed the development, saying it marks an
important step toward a more unified national response to retail
theft.
The proposed legislation, known as the Combating Organized Retail
Crime Act, is designed to improve information-sharing and create a
more coordinated enforcement structure to tackle theft networks that
operate across multiple jurisdictions. Retail groups argue that
fragmented policing has made it harder to pursue organized theft groups
that target stores, warehouses and supply chains.
At the centre of the proposed legislation is the creation of a
federal coordination structure within the Department of Homeland
Security’s investigative arm. The aim is to improve collaboration
between agencies and strengthen the ability to investigate organized
theft groups.
The legislation would formalize cooperation between federal, state
and local law enforcement agencies, alongside private-sector
retailers, in an effort to improve case-building and prosecution rates.
Retailers have intensified lobbying efforts in recent years as
concerns over theft, fraud and supply chain crime have grown.
retail-insight-network.com
Retail Theft Crackdown Recovers $75M
in Stolen Goods
New FBI data: crime drops across California as retail theft enforcement
recovers $75 million in stolen goods
Continuing to show statewide progress to combat organized retail crime,
Governor Gavin Newsom today highlighted the nearly $75 million worth
of stolen goods that were recovered by the California Highway Patrol’s (CHP)
Organized Retail Crime Task Force (ORTC) — a collaborative effort
with local law enforcement agencies and retailers that is delivering
major public safety results across California.
The state’s aggressive enforcement strategy against organized retail
crime is helping drive broader public safety gains across the state.
Through coordinated CHP operations with local law enforcement and
retailers, the Task Force has now conducted more than 4,500
investigations, arrested more than 5,100 suspects, and recovered more
than 1.6 million stolen items valued at over $74.6 million since 2019.
Public safety gains come as newly aggregated FBI and local agency data
show California’s crime rates continue to decline — with property
crime and burglary rates now at their lowest levels in decades,
underscoring the impact of sustained investments in enforcement,
accountability, and local public safety partnerships.
The enforcement results come as California continues to see encouraging
statewide crime trends. Preliminary 2025 FBI data from California law
enforcement agencies covering 83% of the population show additional
declines from 2024:
-
Violent crime
down 9.94% from 2024
-
Property crime down 14.35% from 2024
-
Murder down an
16.51% from 2024
-
Continued
declines in burglary and larceny-theft from 2024
gov.ca.gov
Another Facial Recognition Success
Story
UK: Met facial recognition pilot cuts violence against women
Static cameras in Croydon led to 173
arrests and a 21 per cent drop in targeted offences
Offences involving violence against women and girls fell by a fifth
during a Metropolitan Police live facial recognition (LFR) pilot that
led to more than 170 arrests.
Static LFR cameras were deployed for the first time during a
six-month pilot in Croydon, south London, between October 2025 and
March 2026.
Scotland Yard said crime in the area fell by 10.5 per cent
compared with the same period last year. The biggest reduction was seen
in violence against women and girls (Vawg) offences, which were down 21
per cent.
The cameras, which are mounted to existing infrastructure such as
lampposts instead of mobile vans, were used as part of 24 separate
operations and officers made 173 arrests — the equivalent of one arrest
every 35 minutes.
thetimes.com
FMI applauds House Passage of Organize Retail Crime Bill
U.S. Dairy Backs Crackdown on Retail Crime Networks
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Physical Security Investments Rising -
But Who Oversees It?
More money is going to physical security, but it’s often CISOs that
oversee it: EY
Organizations should centralize
physical security and cybersecurity so both are adequately prepared for,
the consulting firm says in a survey report.
Organizations are allocating more money for security against physical
threats but the money is coming with more board oversight, and
confusion remains over who has the lead role in physical security and
how to blend physical security with cybersecurity, an EY survey finds.
Almost 80% of organizations say they increased the allocation for
physical security over their last budget cycle, in some cases by as much
as 50%, according to the EY Forensic & Integrity Pulse, based on
responses from 250 executives and board members to a March survey.
“Leaders are beginning to recognize gaps in crisis management and
physical security preparedness as threats and risk evolve,” EY says
in the report, released May 5.
Many organizations have a security chief that oversees both physical
security and cybersecurity, but as many as 27% put the responsibility
in the hands of the chief information security officer, or CISO, EY
says.
That might make sense for the third of organizations that put most of
their security funding in cybersecurity, the report says. But for
others, that “potentially [leaves] the physical space under-resourced,”
it says. “CISOs are being asked to lead broader security operations,
covering not just IT and operational technology security but, in some
cases, people and plant management, product safety and crisis planning
for weather emergencies.”
Organizations need a way to integrate security across all functions and
to create paths for holding those responsible for security accountable.
“Fragmented ownership delays escalation, blurs accountability and
weakens crisis response when minutes matter,” the report says.
cybersecuritydive.com
The Power of Supervisor Communication:
Transforming Safety Culture on Work Sites
Safety leaders are the key
interpreters and communicators who influence safety behavior on work
sites, often more than formal policies or procedures.
Effective communication from supervisors fosters psychological
safety, encouraging workers to speak up and report hazards.
Simplified, clear messaging tailored to field conditions enhances safety
understanding and compliance.
Training supervisors in leadership communication transforms reactive
safety practices into proactive safety culture. Building communication
rhythms—regular pre-job talks, checks, and reflections—creates
stability and trust among workers.
Walk onto any busy job site (a construction project, a factory floor, a
warehouse, a utilities crew staging area) and you can feel the
difference within minutes. Some sites are calm, organized and focused.
People move with confidence. Information flows smoothly. Hazards are
discussed openly. You can sense psychological safety almost the way you
can feel good lighting or clean air.
Other sites feel tense. Workers avoid eye contact. Shortcuts
happen quietly. You hear confusion in the way people talk about tasks.
Conversations feel rushed or incomplete. There’s a heaviness in the
air—a sense that production is the real priority, and safety is a box to
check when time allows.
That difference rarely comes from the written safety program. It
comes from leadership on the ground. And the leader who shapes this
environment day after day isn’t the CEO or the EHS director—it’s the
supervisor.
ehstoday.com
Third Straight Monthly Retail Sales
Gain
US retail sales post third straight monthly gain; import prices surge
U.S. retail sales increased solidly for a third straight month in
April, though part of the rise in receipts was due to soaring inflation
amid the war with Iran. Rising price pressures were underscored by
other data on Thursday showing imported inflation last month rose at its
fastest pace in four years.
Larger tax refunds this year as well as a strong stock market
performance are providing a cushion for households against rampant
inflation. But surging prices are outpacing wage gains and households
are rapidly drawing down their tax refunds, leaving economists to
anticipate a slowdown in spending.
Retail sales rose 0.5% last month after a downwardly revised 1.6%
jump in March, the Commerce Department's Census Bureau said.
Economists polled by Reuters had forecast retail sales, which are mostly
goods and are not adjusted for inflation, gaining 0.5% after a
previously reported 1.7% increase in March.
Retail sales increased 4.9% year-on-year in April. Economists
estimated that sales adjusted for inflation dipped 0.1% last month and
were up 1.1% from a year ago.
reuters.com
Related NRF Data: Retail sales grow in
April
LVMH to sell Marc Jacobs to Toys R Us, Express owner
Best Buy debuts consultation spaces within Ikea stores
Why human intelligence is the key that unlocks AI’s potential
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AI Regulation Bills Rolled Out in
Illinois
Illinois Democrats push AI regulation bills on consumer protection, data
privacy and mental health
With less than three weeks left in its spring legislative session,
members of the Illinois General Assembly are pushing to pass
legislation responding to the rise of artificial intelligence and
what they view as the Trump administration’s failure to shield the
public from its potential harms.
Senate Democrats on Wednesday outlined a range of proposals, including
for education, consumer protection and data privacy, that could
serve as guardrails to the technology. Republican lawmakers, as they
have during previous AI debates in the Democratic-controlled
legislature, cautioned that such measures could hinder innovation.
There’s a “sense of urgency” to act, Democratic state Sen. Bill
Cunningham of Chicago said at a statehouse news conference, because “the
federal government has taken no substantive action on this subject
matter, despite the expansive and continually growing role AI plays in
our lives.”
“We hope that by joining together with a few other states who have
implemented AI regulation, like California and New York, we can help
create a national standard,” he said.
One bill from state Sen. Mary Edly-Allen, a Democrat from Grayslake,
would require AI developers such as ChatGPT to file “an independent
third-party” annual report with the state detailing how they would
mitigate “catastrophic risks, provide transparency reports and
report critical safety incidents,” she said. Companies would have 72
hours to report such incidents after learning of them or 24 hours if the
incident poses “an imminent risk of death or serious physical harm,” she
said.
Democratic state Sen. Rachel Ventura of Joliet detailed legislation
requiring businesses to notify customers at the start of a phone call
that they are interacting with an automated system.
State Sen. Laura Murphy, a Democrat from Des Plaines, discussed a
bill to prohibit companies from selling consumers’ most sensitive data
without first giving them a chance to opt out. She used targeted
advertising as a prime example of how companies collect and monetize
user data.
chicagotribune.com
Compliance Issues Correlate with
Higher Risk of Breaches
Over 70% of organizations hit by identity breaches
Attackers rely on stolen credentials, compromised service accounts,
and social engineering attacks targeting employees, according to
Sophos’ The State of Identity Security 2026 survey.
A survey of 5,000 IT and cybersecurity leaders across 17 countries found
that more than 70% of organizations were affected by at least one
identity-related breach in the past 12 months. Switzerland had the
highest breach rate, followed by Mexico and Italy. Germany, Colombia,
and Japan had the lowest rates, though each still exceeded 60%.
The energy, oil and gas, utilities, and federal government sectors
recorded the highest breach rates. IT, telecoms, and healthcare had
the lowest, which may reflect stronger security investment in those
sectors.
Compliance difficulties can indicate broader security weaknesses,
with companies that struggle with compliance
recorded higher breach rates.
Most respondents that experienced an identity-related breach in 2025
detected and stopped the attack before it caused damage. Smaller
companies were less likely to detect attacks, increasing the risk of
severe consequences.
Across industries, media, leisure, and entertainment had the highest
detection failure rate, followed by manufacturing and financial
services. Healthcare performed best, possibly because of regulatory
pressure to invest in threat monitoring.
helpnetsecurity.com
AI Cyber Capability Is Moving Fast
AI cyber capability is speeding past earlier projections
AI cyber capability is improving
faster than expected, with newer models surpassing earlier projections,
according to the UK government’s AI Security Institute (AISI).
AISI measures AI cyber capability using “time horizon benchmarks”, which
estimate how long AI systems can complete cybersecurity tasks
autonomously compared to human experts.
“In February 2026, we estimated that frontier models’ 80%-reliability
cyber time horizon had doubled every 4.7 months since reasoning models
emerged in late 2024, given a 2.5M token limit. This was around half
our November 2025 doubling time estimate, which was 8 months for both
50% and 80% reliability,” AISI wrote in a blog post.
“Claude Mythos Preview and GPT-5.5 have since significantly
outperformed this trend,” researchers added.
According to the institute, it remains unclear whether this represents
“an isolated break from existing rates of progress or part of a new,
faster trend.”
Researchers also said the latest frontier models are beginning to
exceed the limits of the current cyber evaluation framework.
helpnetsecurity.com
Tapping the powers of Mythos-like models still requires human
intervention
Microsoft turns Copilot Studio into an AI agent control center |
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More Amazon Job Cuts: AI to Blame?
Amazon cuts more jobs months after mass layoffs
Amazon cut more jobs this week, with reductions hitting its Selling
Partner Services organization this time, a company spokesperson
confirmed to Business Insider.
The layoffs follow roughly 30,000 job cuts announced across waves in
October and January. In March, the company also eliminated a small
number of roles in its robotics division.
The size of the layoffs this week could not be determined, though
the spokesperson described the cuts as affecting a "small number" of
employees.
"We regularly review our organizations to ensure we're best set up to
deliver on our goals. Following a recent review, we've made the
difficult decision to eliminate a relatively small number of roles in
our Selling Partner Services team. We don't take decisions like this
lightly, and we're committed to supporting affected employees with
transitional health care, a separation payment, and outsourced job
placement services," the spokesperson said in a statement.
The Selling Partner Services group works closely with millions of
third-party merchants that sell products on Amazon's marketplace,
helping with onboarding, logistics, and account support.
The latest cuts underscore how Amazon continues to reshape its
sprawling retail organization after CEO Andy Jassy spent the last two
years emphasizing efficiency and cost discipline. While the company
previously framed large-scale layoffs as a response to pandemic-era
over-expansion, the continued reductions suggest Amazon is still
fine-tuning headcount across multiple businesses.
The cuts also come as Amazon aggressively expands its investments in
AI across nearly every part of the company, from retail operations
and customer service to advertising and logistics.
Executives have increasingly pushed teams to use AI tools to automate
routine tasks and streamline operations, raising concern among some
employees that roles might be replaced or reduced through
automation. Jassy has said AI will allow Amazon to operate more
efficiently over time, and warned last year that it could help "reduce"
the company's workforce.
businessinsider.com
E-Commerce Brands Lean Into AI
OpenAI makes ChatGPT ads easier for ecommerce brands
OpenAI is adding product feed-based ads tools for ecommerce companies
running campaigns in ChatGPT.
The update allows retailers to generate ads from existing product
catalogues instead of creating campaigns for each item manually. The
ads will continue to appear below ChatGPT responses and will be labelled
as sponsored.
According to Digiday, the change applies to the campaign setup process
rather than the ad placement itself. Retailers can connect a product
catalogue and choose which products are eligible for advertising. The
platform then creates ads using product names, images, and other
catalogue attributes.
marketingtechnews.net
Amazon Kills Rufus Chatbot, Rolls Out AI-Powered Alexa Shopping
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Virginia Beach, VA: Police say multi-state retail theft ring dismantled;
trio indicted in $1.66M scheme
A multi-state organized retail theft ring has been dismantled thanks to
the work of several local police departments cooperating with agencies
in multiple states. The theft ring was responsible for over $1.66
million in losses across the Southeast dating back to at least December
of 2023, according to Virginia Beach Police Department. In all, the
investigation revealed a systematic pattern of thefts spanning multiple
jurisdictions including Yorktown, Chesapeake, Norfolk and Henrico
County, as well as in Roxboro, N.C. Police said McClease has been
identified as the “operational leader,” who was directing thefts and
managing distribution, even while incarcerated. Police also accused
Newman of serving as the “booster,” executing the theft of goods.
Chane’l Stith, 45, of Hampton, has been identified as the primary
“fence,” responsible for marketing and sale of stolen goods. All three
have been indicted on charges of organized retail theft, grand larceny,
and conspiracy.
13newsnow.com
Las Vegas, NV: Las Vegas police recover $418K in goods, arrest suspect
in months-long retail theft probe
Las Vegas police say a months-long organized retail theft investigation
led to the recovery of more than 900 items and the arrest of a
49-year-old man accused of buying stolen merchandise and reselling it
online. The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department said detectives
from its Organized Retail Crimes Section began an operation on March 28
at various retail stores to identify, detain, and arrest people
attempting to steal high-value merchandise. During the investigation,
detectives identified a person purchasing stolen items, later identified
as Roberto Fuentes. Police said the investigation revealed Fuentes would
purchase stolen merchandise and resell the items through various online
platforms. On May 7, detectives served a search warrant at Fuentes’
residence in the 2300 block of Decosta Circle. Police said detectives
found more than 900 items, including stolen jewelry, watches, tools,
handbags, purses, clothing and accessories, high-end sunglasses,
fragrance, cosmetics, alcohol, and toys. Loss prevention partners from
the Nevada Organized Retail Crimes Association assisted with an itemized
inventory of the recovered merchandise, which police said totaled over
$418,000.
news3lv.com
San Francisco police arrest 5 suspected in dozens of retail thefts
Police in San Francisco announced the recent arrests of five people
suspected in dozens of retail thefts around the city. In a statement
Thursday, police said the suspects stole more than $43,000 in items from
stores and coffee shops. The thefts date back to late last year. "The
San Francisco Police Department Organized Retail Crime (ORC) Task Force
is continuing its rigorous efforts to apprehend prolific retail theft
suspects. ORC Task Force Investigators are maintaining robust
partnerships with local retailers to effectively investigate these
cases," police said. Among the suspects arrested include 24-year-old
Tyrese Boswell, who is suspected in at least 27 separate thefts at
Walgreens stores between late 2025 and April. Police said he stole
nearly $40,000 in items, primarily targeting cosmetics and batteries.
cbsnews.com
Dayton, OH: Austin Landing retail theft blitz yields multiple arrests
There was a coordinated retail theft enforcement blitz around the Austin
Landing outdoor shopping center in Miamisburg on Wednesday. The Miami
Twp. Police Department coordinated the blitz with the Organized Retail
Crime Task Force. There were multiple people arrested for their alleged
actions, including: Theft (first-degree misdemeanor): Three people were
arrested and taken to the Montgomery County Jail; one was summoned to
court. Theft (first-degree misdemeanor) / Obstructing Official Business
(misdemeanor): One person was arrested and taken to the Montgomery
County Jail. Theft (first-degree misdemeanor): Two juveniles; the store
declined prosecution. Theft (misdemeanor) / Failure to Comply (felony):
Under active investigation.
wdtn.com
Hendersonville, TN: Trio arrested in alleged Hendersonville retail theft
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Shootings & Deaths
Cahokia Heights, IL: Coroner IDs man killed in Cahokia Heights c-store shooting
Cahokia Heights police are investigating a shooting that killed a 35-year-old
man on Wednesday night. St. Clair County Coroner Calvin Dye Sr. identified the
victim as Deshawn Bell of East St. Louis. Bell was transported to Touchette
Regional Hospital, where he was declared dead at 10:14 p.m. The shooting
happened at Crown Food Mart, 5839 Bond Ave., which is across the street from the
police station.
bnd.com
Albuquerque, NM: Police investigate deadly shooting near Frontier Restaurant
Police are investigating a deadly shooting that happened overnight near Frontier
Restaurant, close to the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. One person was
shot Wednesday at 10:47 p.m., in the alleyway between Cornell Drive and Stanford
Drive, just south of Central Avenue, according to the Albuquerque Police
Department. They died at the scene.
kob.com
Wichita, KS: Kansas murder suspect captured at convenience store
Wichita police have arrested a suspect in connection with the fatal shooting of
38-year-old Montel Parks of Wichita. The suspect, identified in county booking
records as 32-year-old Tayante O. Dagans was taken into custody Wednesday
morning at the QuikTrip located at 6011 W. Central after patrol officers
recognized the suspect’s vehicle from an internal informational bulletin
distributed by investigators identifying both the suspect and vehicle. The
investigation began just after 6:30 p.m. Tuesday when officers responded to a
reported shooting at Emery Gardens apartments, 4244 S. Hydraulic in Wichita,
according to a media release.
jcpost.com
Baldwin County, AL Shooting at Daphne shopping center leads to arrest
Daphne Police have made an arrest after a Wednesday night shooting at Jubilee
Square. According to a Daphne Police Department Facebook post, 27-year-old JR
Weilbacher of Irvington turned himself in and now faces third-degree domestic
violence and reckless endangerment charges. Police were called to the Rock N
Roll Sushi around 9:18 p.m. Wednesday after gunshots were reported.
wkrg.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Cook County, IL: 7 stores in Maine Township strip mall hit by smash-and-grab
burglars
Seven stores in a strip mall in Maine Township, Illinois, had their windows
smashed in apparent overnight burglaries. Video of the strip mall in the 9300
block of Ballard showed the front glass doors and windows of restaurants,
convenience stores and other retail outlets smashed and workers boarding them up
Thursday morning. Surveillance video from one convenience store that was
burglarized shows a man in a hoodie crawling in through a hole in the bottom of
the front door, climbing over the front counter and opening the cash register.
He takes cash and other items from inside the drawer, then grabs some other
items from behind the counter before hopping back over the counter and leaving
through the same hole.
cbsnews.com
Concord, CA: Concord Police investigating smash-and-grab robbery at jewelry
kiosk inside Sunvalley Mall
Monroe, MI: Video shows 2 people pour gasoline in cannabis shop before lighting
themselves on fire, running away
Castle Rock, CO: Person of interest in custody after second fire hits Castle
Rock restaurant in 2 days
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•
C-Store – Colbert
County, AL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Cook County,
IL – Burglary
•
Clothing – Cook
County, IL – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Concord, CA
– Armed Robbery
•
Pawn – Orange City, FL
– Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Odessa, TX
– Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Dayton,
OH – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Cook
County, IL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Chicago,
IL – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Albuquerque, NM – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – New Hope,
PA – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Colorado
Springs, CO – Burglary
•
Restaurant – East
Bridgewater, MA – Armed Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 8 robberies
• 6 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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