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Jorge
Vega promoted to Asset Protection Manager for Nordstrom
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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Auror & Axon launch Retail Crime Hub to create safer stores &
communities
Auror,
the global leader in retail crime intelligence, has partnered with the
world’s leading public safety company, Axon Enterprise, to launch the
new Retail Crime Hub, unlocking a more efficient way for North American
law enforcement agencies to collaborate with retailers and stop crime in
our communities.
Auror CEO and co-founder Phil Thomson joined Axon CEO and founder Rick
Smith on stage at Axon Week in Phoenix, Arizona, in April to unveil the
new platform.
The Retail Crime Hub integrates seamlessly with the cloud-native
evidence management system, Axon Evidence, unlocking improved
interaction with retailers to uncover the top organized retail crime
syndicates and repeat offenders in an agency’s jurisdiction.
Mr
Thomson said the Retail Crime Hub is a significant step towards
streamlining digital crime reporting, investigation and evidence
gathering in North America, saving police between three and five hours
of time they would have otherwise spent driving to locations and
manually collecting witness statements, CCTV and other evidence.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Retail's Enemy Within?
Growing Insider Threat: Why Retailers
Can’t Afford to Ignore the Enemy Within
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retailers pour resources into battling external theft and ORC crews,
a quieter threat is gaining ground: insider-driven crime.
While smash-and-grab headlines dominate the news cycle, internal theft
remains a persistent — and evolving — risk. Today’s insider has
access not just to merchandise, but to systems, schedules, and security
protocols. That access can be exploited for personal gain or,
increasingly, to aid external boosters.
Collusion Is On the Rise
Recent investigations have revealed a troubling trend:
employees coordinating with ORC groups.
Whether it’s tipping off crews, staging product for easy grabs, or
disabling surveillance systems, these internal actors know exactly how
to bypass controls.
And they’re often hiding in plain sight.
Why It’s Getting Worse
High turnover, burnout, and limited vetting processes create fertile
ground for internal risk. Add in expanded access to e-commerce and
inventory platforms, and the modern insider threat becomes more
sophisticated — and harder to detect.
How to Respond
Retailers need to treat insider crime as a front-line threat, not a
background issue. That means:
-
Tight exception reporting to flag
suspicious patterns in refunds, discounts, and overrides
-
Behavioral monitoring to identify signs
of collusion
-
Regular audits of inventory and vendor
transactions
-
Anonymous reporting systems that empower
staff to speak up
-
LP–HR collaboration to track red flags in
employee behavior
Final Word
The most dangerous threat might not be coming through the front door
— it could be already clocked in. As external threats evolve, so too
must internal protections.
Nationwide Operation to Fight In-Store
Skimmers
Shoppers urged to check SNAP bank accounts as discreet info-swiping
device found at popular grocery store self-checkout
Plus, the key methods to prevent
information from being stolen
CONSUMERS
have been warned about a sneaky device stealing personal details at
select grocery stores. Placed by scammers and fraudsters, it quietly
collections bank account information as they check out and pay.
In a process known as skimming, shoppers swipe their credit or debit
cards as usual near the point-of-sale terminal, but hidden by the
criminals is a small item that quickly captures and later drains
funds.
The most targeted group is low-income families, particularly those who
have EBT cards from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program
(SNAP).
This month, the Secret Service worked with the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA), state, and local law enforcement in
Tennessee and Mississippi to create a coordinated operation that
located and removed the hidden devices draining funds from Americans in
need, per NewsNation.
Agents in 12 teams went to over 400 businesses
in each state, inspecting 2,200 point-of-sale terminals, 857 gas station
pumps, and 234 ATMs. A total of four skimming devices were
found.
Mark Switzer, a special agent out of the Memphis field office, explained
in a briefing that the devices are becoming exceedingly sophisticated
and difficult to spot.
the-sun.com
Another State Enacts New ORC Law
Tennessee Senate Update: Legislation Focuses on Crime, Public Safety
A new law is designed to strengthen law enforcement’s ability to
dismantle criminal networks and protect both retailers and consumers
by closing loopholes in the law and enhancing criminal penalties. It
ensures that criminals who exploit retailers, defraud businesses and
threaten public safety face appropriate consequences.
The measure builds upon the Organized Retail Crime (ORC) Prevention
Act of 2017.
It adds new offenses to the definition of organized retail crime
— including the use of anti-theft device removers, fraudulent returns of
counterfeit merchandise, sale of stolen goods through online
marketplaces and possession of devices used to steal electronic payment
information.
Under the bill, offenders who engage in property destruction, use
weapons or commit organized retail crime while out on bond or pretrial
release will face increased penalties.
It extends the time period stolen goods can be counted toward felony
charges from 90 to 180 days, making it harder for criminals to avoid
prosecution by spreading out their thefts.
Tennessee retailers lose an estimated $500 million annually to theft,
and the state loses $117 million in tax revenue each year.
mainstreetmediatn.com
New app lets North Charleston residents submit tips, view crime data
trends
Crime data shows thieves target parked cars to steal guns
Store Closures Up 67% in 2025
Retail Closures Outpace Openings As High-Profile Bankruptcies Bloat
Inventory
Retailers have announced 67% more store closures so far this year
compared to 2024, with 119 shops across the U.S. closing in the first
week of July alone, according to data from CoreSight Research. Large
brand bankruptcies, including Forever 21's exit from U.S. malls, are
driving store closures.
There have been 5,941 announced store closures and 4,176 new
locations this year through July 4. The imbalance of openings and
closings amounts to roughly 50M SF of space that has been vacated this
year without a new tenant in place, CoStar estimates.
Brick-and-mortar shops remain consumers' preferred method of shopping,
but the data could reflect unease among retailers as consumer
sentiment sours and President Donald Trump’s trade war drags on.
The nearly 6,000 store closings recorded this
year through early July is compared to 3,496 closures during the same
period a year earlier. Store openings have kept pace with
2024 levels, but the acceleration of closures is resulting in more
vacancies.
While higher than last year, the pace of closures lags CoreSight’s
forecast for the year, which predicted that 15,000 locations would
shutter. Retailers are also announcing new locations at a faster
rate than the 5,800 new locations CoreSight forecast for the year in
January.
Craft retailer Joann has closed the most stores this year —815
locations — after declaring bankruptcy for the second time in less
than a year. Party City, which went out of business last year, is
exiting 738 stores. Big Lots, which has been mulling a
comeback after its 2024 bankruptcy, has announced 682 locations
will close.
Eleven retailers plan to close more than 100 locations this year,
including the leading pharmacy chains, 7-Eleven and bankrupt
fast-fashion retailer Forever 21.
The top four brands opening stores are all discount retailers,
led by Dollar General at 611 planned openings, Dollar Tree at 378
stores, Aldi and Five Below.
bisnow.com
Retail Impact of Foreign Worker Purge
Trump’s Purge of Foreign Workers Arrives at Amazon’s Warehouses
The tech giant has quietly shed
warehouse employees whose work authorizations were revoked after the
Trump administration ended a Biden-era immigration program.
They are among thousands of foreign workers across the country who
have been swept up in a quiet purge, pushed out of jobs in places
where their labor was in high demand and at times won high praise. While
raids to nab undocumented workers in fields and Home Depot parking lots
have grabbed attention, the job dismissals at the Amazon warehouse are
part of the Trump administration’s effort to thin the ranks of
immigrants who had legal authorization to work.
Such dismissals are happening at many of Amazon’s more than 1,000
facilities around the country, including in Massachusetts and the
warehouse in Staten Island that fills orders for millions of New
Yorkers. At one fulfillment center in Florida, hundreds were let go, a
person familiar with the site said.
The timing of the dismissals is tricky for Amazon, just before
its Prime Day deals, an event that now stretches over four days in July.
The deals typically drive a spike in customer orders — and overtime
demands — rivaled only by the holiday shopping season.
During that rush before Christmas, Haitians would emerge in threes and
fours from cars that filed into the huge lot outside the West Jefferson
fulfillment center to start their shifts. But “if you go to the parking
lot now,” said Sadrac Delva, a Haitian asylum seeker who continues to
work at the center, “you will notice a huge difference.”
Amazon said it had prepared for the policy change, adjusting staffing
plans and awaiting formal guidance from the government, which
finally came last month.
nytimes.com
'Massive Blow' to Canadian Retailers
Trump’s latest tariff threat creating uncertainty for Canadian
businesses
President Trump’s latest threat to increase tariffs on select Canadian
imports by 35% represents unprecedented uncertainty to Canadian
business, according to various retail experts.
“The worst thing for business is uncertainty. Businesses cannot plan
under these circumstances due to the variability in economic forces
at play. The knock on effects include lower capital spending, lower
hiring, a cautious consumer who spends less at retail and potential GDP
erosion and layoffs for our country,” retail analyst Bruce Winder.
“The longer this type of political and economic climate persists, the
greater harm to the Canadian economy and thus our quality of life as a
country."
“One can argue that President Trump will face significant pressure
from US business owners and consumers if and when these significant
planned tariffs import inflation into America. In essence we are
playing a game of chicken with our biggest trading partner and must
watch from the sidelines as to who blinks first.”
Sylvain Charlebois, Senior Director, Agri-Food Analytics Lab, Dalhousie
University, said Trump’s threat of 35% tariffs on Canadian goods, if
implemented, would be a massive blow—not just to Canadian exporters,
but also to retailers and ultimately consumers on both sides of the
border.
retail-insider.com
"Significant Shift in Federal
Workplace Safety Policy"
What's Behind OSHA's Flurry of Rulemakings
July 1 actions seen as undoing
Biden-era regulatory agenda.
On July 1—just three days before Independence Day—the Occupational
Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) took the unprecedented step of
initiating 26 rulemaking proceedings on the same day, ranging from
technical adjustments for chemical exposure equipment rules to one major
policy shift, all intended to advance the Trump Administration’s
deregulation agenda.
“One of President Trump’s very first actions was directing his cabinet
to dismantle the mountain of outdated rules that have held back
American workers and businesses for far too long,” commented Labor
Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer, adding that DOL “is proud to lead the way
by eliminating unnecessary regulations that stifle growth and limit
opportunity.”
OSHA’s proposed deregulatory actions represent “a significant shift
in federal workplace safety policy, with implications for employers
across a range of industries,” according to attorneys from the law firm
of Reed Smith. “While the agency asserts that these changes will
streamline compliance and better reflect current technology and
practices, companies should closely monitor OSHA’s ongoing rulemaking
process and be prepared to adapt their workplace safety programs
accordingly.”
ehstoday.com
Study: Three holiday shopping predictions
- Holiday consumers will be discretionary spenders
- This will be a healthier holiday season
- Holiday is the biggest moment for multichannel
chainstoreage.com
Target to open 8 new stores this summer
Retail vacancy rates edge up as rents edge down in Q2
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If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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For more than a century,
Detex
has earned the trust of millions of property owners to secure and protect their
people and property. From our newest innovations in life safety and security
door hardware, integrated door security systems, and guard tour verification
technologies to our original Watchman's clocks, Detex, a USA company, designs,
manufactures, markets and ships our products from New Braunfels, TX and is
recognized as a best-in-class life safety, security and security assurance
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Retail Customer Data Stolen
Luxury retailer LVMH says UK customer data was stolen in cyber attack
French luxury goods retailer LVMH
has disclosed multiple cyber attacks in 2025 so far, their impact is now
spreading to the UK as a new incident affecting Louis Vuitton comes to
light.
UK customers of luxury goods brand Louis Vuitton have been warned to be
on their guard against opportunist fraud attempts after their data
was compromised in a cyber attack on the retailer.
In an email sent to customers, Louis Vuitton revealed that its IT
systems were accessed on 2 July 2025 by an unauthorised third party,
who was able to obtain data including names, contact details and
purchasing histories – all data of use to cyber criminals. Louis Vuitton
said that bank and credit card details were not affected.
Computer Weekly understands Louis Vuitton is engaged with the UK
authorities and has informed the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO)
of the incident.
This is the third incident disclosed by Louis Vuitton’s parent,
French luxury goods house LVMH, in recent months.
Earlier in July, Louis Vuitton Korea also revealed it had fallen victim
to a cyber intrusion, while two of the organisation’s other high-profile
labels, Christian Dior Couture and Tiffany, reported an attack in May.
The organisation also operates other iconic beauty, fashion and luxury
goods brands including Bulgari, Givenchy, Fendi, Loewe, Marc Jacobs,
Moët & Chandon, Sephora, and TAG Heuer.
computerweekly.com
Freight Trains at Risk
Major railroad-signaling vulnerability could lead to train disruptions
The high-severity flaw could let a
hacker abruptly halt — and potentially derail — a train.
A newly disclosed vulnerability in train
braking systems could let hackers remotely stop trains with
relatively simple and inexpensive hardware, potentially causing
derailments.
The high-severity vulnerability involves weak authentication in
the protocol used to send what are known as end-of-train and
head-of-train packets, radio signals that command a rail vehicle’s
end-of-train device to stop the vehicle.
“Successful exploitation of this vulnerability could allow an
attacker to send their own brake control commands to the end-of-train
device, causing a sudden stoppage of the train which may lead to a
disruption of operations, or induce brake failure,” CISA said in a July
10 advisory about the vulnerability, which it described as being
relatively simple to exploit.
The Association of American Railroads, an industry trade group that
manages a committee responsible for maintaining the flawed protocol, is
developing new systems to replace the vulnerable ones, according to the
CISA advisory.
But those new systems won’t be ready until 2027 at the earliest,
according to Neil Smith, one of two researchers who independently
discovered the vulnerability and reported it to CISA. Eric Reuter, the
other researcher credited with its discovery, first presented a talk
about it at the DEF CON hacker conference in 2018.
The newly revealed vulnerability potentially represents one of the most
serious cyber threats to rail infrastructure ever discovered. By sending
fraudulent brake signals to a train, hackers
could derail or damage it, imperiling its passengers and cargo, and
wreak havoc on the U.S.’s precisely timed freight and passenger rail
system.
cybersecuritydive.com
171% Jump in Malware Detections
Ransomware drops, but don’t relax yet
WatchGuard has released its latest Internet Security Report, covering
malware, network, and endpoint threats spotted by its Threat Lab in the
first quarter of 2025. The report shows a 171% jump in unique malware
detections compared to the previous quarter, the highest number the
Threat Lab has seen so far. Along with that, there was a large rise in
zero-day malware, pointing to a growing trend in threats designed to
slip past traditional security tools that depend on known patterns.
One key takeaway is a 323% increase in malware caught by WatchGuard’s
machine learning-based detection system. Gateway AntiVirus detections
rose 30%, and malware using encrypted TLS channels went up by 11
percentage points. These trends suggest attackers are increasingly
hiding their activity through encryption and evasion techniques, making
it harder for conventional tools to catch them.
On endpoints, the Threat Lab found a 712% spike in new malware
threats. That’s a major shift after three quarters of steady
decline. The most common malware at the endpoint was an LSASS dumper, a
tool used to steal credentials by targeting a key Windows process
involved in login authentication and password management. Attackers
often use this method to gain deeper access to systems by working around
standard user controls.
helpnetsecurity.com
Hackers exploiting flaw in widely used Wing FTP Server |
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Fake Products, Real Problem:
Counterfeits Gaining Ground with Consumers —
and Retailers Are Paying the Price
By
the D&D Daily Staff
For years, retailers have fought to stay one step ahead of counterfeiters — but
the battle has now entered a troubling new phase: consumers are no longer just
being duped by fake products. Increasingly, they’re embracing them.
Across major online marketplaces and social media platforms, counterfeit goods
have become not only more accessible but more normalized. From high-end luxury
knockoffs to fake electronics, skincare, and even over-the-counter medications,
fake versions of legitimate brands are flooding the digital landscape — and
consumers aren’t necessarily running the other way. Many are knowingly
purchasing counterfeit products because they’re cheaper, easier to find, and in
some cases, practically indistinguishable from the real thing.
This shift in consumer behavior is a major red flag for the retail industry.
A Booming Underground Market
According to the OECD, global trade in counterfeit goods exceeds $500 billion
annually. Much of that activity is now driven by e-commerce, where platforms
like TikTok Shop, Instagram storefronts, and third-party marketplaces offer
fertile ground for counterfeiters to reach buyers directly — often without the
safeguards or enforcement mechanisms traditional retailers have in place.
The situation is especially dire for apparel, footwear, and electronics
retailers, whose products are among the most frequently counterfeited online.
But even grocers and pharmacy chains are seeing knockoff products mimicking
household brands sold through less-regulated digital channels.
Consumer Attitudes Are Changing
What’s especially alarming is the apparent erosion of stigma. A growing number
of shoppers view counterfeits not as fraud but as “dupes” — a savvy way to
access expensive looks or products at a fraction of the cost. Influencers
frequently promote lookalike products as cost-effective alternatives, blurring
the lines between counterfeit and legitimate value-brand offerings.
For brand-protective retailers, this normalization undermines not only revenue
but trust. When consumers stop caring about authenticity, the incentive to buy
from authorized sellers shrinks — and so does the retailer's market share.
Retailers Fight Back — But Struggle to Keep Up
Many retailers have invested heavily in brand protection technology, from
digital watermarks and blockchain tracking to AI-driven marketplace monitoring.
But enforcement remains whack-a-mole. As soon as one seller is taken down,
another pops up — often selling the same counterfeit inventory under a different
name.
Moreover, legal pathways are time-consuming and expensive, especially when
counterfeiters operate overseas or through shell storefronts.
What’s Next?
Retailers face a critical challenge: defending their brands in an environment
where fakes aren’t just fooling consumers — they’re appealing to them. Combating
this trend will require a multi-pronged strategy, including better consumer
education, stronger partnerships with online platforms, and continued investment
in authentication technology.
But perhaps the most urgent task is shifting consumer culture itself —
reestablishing the value of buying real.
Because if fake is good enough for the average shopper, it’s bad news for
everyone else in the retail ecosystem.
The Rise of 'Instant Commerce'
Coffee at 30 cents is the latest gimmick in China’s billion-dollar ‘instant
commerce’ price war
China’s e-commerce players have consistently
competed on delivery times, supported by the country’s large labor force and gig
economy.
In China’s fiercely competitive market, the latest price war is playing out in
the growing “instant commerce” sector, where companies are launching massive
subsidies and other incentives to get consumers to spend. The ‘instant
commerce’ sector is backed by massive networks of
scooter drivers that quickly transport everything from food and drink
to fast fashion and gadgets.
The space is mostly occupied by three main players, including the established
e-commerce heavyweights JD.com and Alibaba, as well as delivery platform
Meituan, which has historically focused heavily on food delivery.
Competition between these companies has intensified this year, with all three
expanding their delivery networks and pledging billions in subsidies to
merchants and consumers.
The result — insanely fast and cheap offers. Perusing through JD.com’s
delivery platform on Friday, CNBC found coffee as cheap as 10.9 yuan, or $1.50,
including delivery fees. Meituan was offering a 13 yuan set of steamed buns and
a 26.8 yuan McDonald’s breakfast set.
cnbc.com
Online grocery sales hit $9.8 billion in June
Walmart's Omnichannel Strategy: Core Catalyst Behind E-Commerce Surge |
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Long
Beach, CA: Looters Hit Long Beach Stores During Weekly Street Takeover
A large crowd looted a convenience store in Long Beach after a street
takeover early Monday. In the latest example of what’s become an almost
weekly ritual in the Los Angeles area, a group of motorists drove
recklessly and blocked the intersection of Orange Avenue and Harding
Street around 12:40 a.m. Monday, according to the Long Beach Police
Department. “While officers were en route, they received additional
information indicating that a group had forced entry into a nearby
business located at 6190 Orange Avenue,” according to a police
statement.
2urbangirls.com
Jonesboro, AR: Wynne Woman Accused of Stealing Purses, Selling Them at
Nearby Store in Jonesboro
A woman with a previous shoplifting conviction was arrested after she
allegedly stole purses from one store and went to sell them at another
in Jonesboro. On July 11, officers were dispatched to the 2600 block of
Fair Park in Jonesboro over a shoplifting call, according to the
probable cause affidavit. Police made contact with the alleged victim at
the store where the items were taken. They were told the suspect, Angel
L. Light, had come into the store. Light was already known to employees.
She selected various items of clothing and went into the change room.
When she exited the room, Light had put the clothes down. The victim
said her purse looked like it was very full. Light then exited the store
and traveled to Plato’s Closet. She entered the store, and the affidavit
says she agreed to sell the purses for $86.10. The employee at Plato’s
had Light sign a sale agreement before leaving the store. Due to
thefts in the area, the affidavit states that employees created a
message group. After Light left Plato’s, an employee received a message
that Light had stolen several purses from a different store.
Officers located Light nearby in a parking lot and took her into custody
without incident. After her name was run through dispatch, police
learned she was arrested and convicted of shoplifting in 2019, the
affidavit says.
neareport.com
Lompoc, CA: Police Arrest Woman for Stealing $1600 of merchandise from
Multiple Ulta Stores in the Area
Victoria, BC, Canada: Suspect sought in daylight theft of $2,000
cashmere and fur shawl from Victoria store
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Shootings & Deaths
San Antonio, TX: Two dead in Southeast Side shooting, search for gunman underway
Two people are dead after they were shot on the Southeast Side Sunday night. San
Antonio police say they were called to the H-E-B on South New Braunfels Street
at around 11 p.m. They arrived to find a man and a woman dead from gunshot
wounds. What officers know so far is that the victims had gone to meet someone
at the store, but an argument broke out and someone started shooting. The
victim’s names haven’t been released. Police haven’t released a description of
the shooter but say they drove off in a white SUV. The investigation continues.
ktsa.com
Nashville, TN: One Suspected Robber Dead in Murfreesboro Pike Liquor Store
Parking Lot Shooting
A suspected robbery in the parking lot of a Murfreesboro Pike liquor store ended
in gunfire early Saturday, resulting in the death of one alleged robber and
injuries to another. According to Hermitage Precinct officers, the incident
occurred shortly after 4 a.m. when two men allegedly attempted to rob the
occupant of a parked car outside a liquor store in the 2600 block of
Murfreesboro Pike. Officers found Brandon Watson, 42, dead in the store’s
parking lot. His alleged accomplice, Antione Ellis, 44, was reportedly shot in
the neck and later drove himself to Southern Hills Medical Center.
countryherald.com
Charlotte, NC: Two shot at northeast Charlotte strip mall
Two people were shot at a northeast Charlotte strip mall Monday afternoon. Medic
officials reported the double-shooting just after 5 p.m. in the 6700 block of
North Tryon Street. One person was treated with life-threatening injuries, but
paramedics could not locate the other victim. The shooting took place nears
businesses on the southbound side of Tryon. No suspects have been named from the
incident.
qcnews.com
Daphne, AL: Police investigating after shot fired in Daphne Walmart parking lot
A shot was fired Sunday night at a Walmart on the Eastern Shore. The Daphne
Police Department responded to a call at around 9:15 p.m. when a man allegedly
shot at the store after an argument with a store employee in the parking lot.
According to the police, a man and a woman walked into the Walmart located in
Daphne on Highway 98 with a baby and a nine-millimeter pistol. Police said a
Walmart employee noticed the gun sticking out of the waistband of his pants and
asked the man to put the weapon back in his car or cover it up. They said that
the conversation escalated into an argument.
wkrg.com
Warren, OH: C-Store employee says he was shot at as he swept parking lot
Savannah, GA: Update: Mugshot released for Oglethorpe Mall Shooting suspect
Cleveland, OH: Update: 2 arrested after 15-year-old shot near Cleveland Heights
grocery store
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Houston, TX: SWAT team standoff at Houston Burger King ends with burglary
suspect still at large
A SWAT team responded to a Burger King in Houston on Monday after a man
allegedly barricaded himself inside. In a July 14 press conference, police said
that deputies responded to calls of a burglary inside the Burger King at around
3 a.m. local time. Police said the robbery was discovered by a restaurant
employee who had just shown up for work. When officials arrived at the
restaurant, they said they found two men inside and believed that they had
broken in through the restaurant's drive-through window. One man was taken into
custody. Police believed that the second man had barricaded himself inside the
restaurant’s attic, prompting a standoff with SWAT.
usatoday.com
San Francisco, CA: Walgreens Store Manager convicted of assaulting shoplifter
A Walgreens store manager was convicted of assaulting a shoplifter who stole
shampoo in San Francisco, the district attorney’s office said. Following a
trial, jurors found the Walgreens manager, 46-year-old Guang Hong, guilty for a
violent March 19 incident at the store. San Francisco shop owners have struggled
to deter and thwart shoplifters in recent years. District Attorney Brooke
Jenkins said Monday, “Although I understand the frustration and anger in the
community, violence is unacceptable and only makes matters worse.” The
shoplifter, 30-year-old Larry Whitlock, walked into the store before 5 a.m. and
stole one bottle of shampoo. “As he was leaving, the security guard alerted Mr.
Hong, the Walgreens manager, of the theft,” the DA’s Office wrote. Hong
recovered the stolen shampoo bottle and Whitlock left the Walgreens, located at
498 Castro Street, according to prosecutors. About a minute later, Hong noticed
that the shoplifter was still outside of the store. Hong placed his keys between
his knuckles and punched the shoplifter in the face while shouting at him,
prosecutors said. “Mr. Hong then punched the victim two more times with his keys
in his hand and kicked the victim as he fell to the ground,” the DA’s Office
wrote.
kron4.com
Montgomery County, PA: Update: $380,000 ‘Smash-and-grab’ Collegeville jewelry
store heist lands getaway driver in prison
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Beauty – Lompoc, CA –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Seattle, WA
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Flagstaff,
AZ – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Rutland, VT
– Burglary
•
C-Store – Long Beach,
CA – Burglary
•
C-Store – Tyler, TX –
Armed Robbery
•
Handbag – Jonesboro,,
AR – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Phoenix, AZ
– Burglary
•
Jewelry – Manchester,
NH – Robbery
• Jewelry - San Jose, CA - Robbery
• Jewelry - Las Vegas, NV – Robbery
• Jewelry - Denver, CO – Robbery
• Jewelry - Aurora, CO – Burglary
•
Liquor – Nashville, TN
– Armed Robbery / Susp killed
•
Pharmacy – Chicago, IL
– Burglary
•
Pharmacy – Chicago, IL
– Burglary
•
Pharmacy – Chicago, IL
– Burglary
•
Restaurant – Houston,
TX – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Wimberley, TX – Burglary
•
Sport – Aurelius, NY -
Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 9 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 1 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
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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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The drive home can be the longest drive of the day when looking into the
rear-view mirror and seeing nothing but the day's events. It is a great time for
reflection and evaluation of all that transpired over the last 12 hours, often
times allowing you to realize that the briefest interaction with someone may
have been the most important event of the day. Those one line snip-its often
times are where the true feelings and intentions are expressed. Piecing them
together can mean the difference between success and failure of a project, a
program, and even an executive. It is only in reflection that we see the truth
and give ourselves the ability to react to it the right way the next day. Take
the time and look in the rear-view mirror. You may see something you had not
seen.
Just a Thought, Gus

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