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Cosentino's Food Stores' 346% ROI and loss prevention transformation
with Retail Crime Intelligence

Until 2024, family-owned Kansas City grocer Cosentino’s Food Stores had
explored several solutions and vendors to address its loss prevention
needs, but those efforts became increasingly unsustainable amid rising
retail crime and violence.

Their previous case management system offered broken promises of crime
linking and poor customer service causing Cosentino’s to reach a
breaking point. Top of the list of challenges to address was decreasing
the amount of time spent on event reporting and improving collaboration
with law enforcement.
Now, in 2026, they have a “seamless” partnership with
Auror that has
helped them:
-
Achieve an
incredible 346% return on investment (ROI)
-
Cut their reporting
time by 90%
-
Significantly
improved their ability to deliver event reports and evidence to
police
Read
more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
'Cargo Theft Prevention Starts Before
a Carrier is Ever Dispatched'
How thieves move $1m in freight before anyone realizes it
When high-value freight moves
without added controls, exposure starts before the shipment does
A
recent Los Angeles bust uncovered more than $1 million in stolen
merchandise, including high-demand brands like Alo and Skims.
According to a report from ABC7 Los Angeles, the products were already
moving through resale channels before authorities intervened. That
detail matters because it shows how quickly stolen goods can be absorbed
into secondary markets once they leave the shipper’s control.
This type of event is often labeled as organized retail theft, but
that framing misses where the exposure actually begins. The products
targeted were recognizable, easy to resell, and widely accepted across
online marketplaces. This creates a predictable risk profile, and when
freight like this moves through standard processes without additional
controls, it becomes easier for bad actors to step in, redirect, or
extract value without immediate detection. The issue shifts from the act
of theft to how early control is lost in the process.
Prevention starts before a carrier is ever dispatched. High-value
and high-liquidity freight should not move through the same workflow as
standard shipments because the risk profile is fundamentally different.
Shippers need to apply risk-based handling that tightens carrier
selection, limits exposure to unknown parties, and requires stronger
validation before a load is ever tendered, especially when the product
itself can be monetized quickly.
In this case, apparel, small electronics, and household brands were
targeted because they move fast, require no additional processing, and
blend into legitimate resale channels without raising concern. That
combination makes them ideal for rapid liquidation and increases the
importance of controlling access before the shipment ever begins.
Information flow is where many of these events start to take shape.
Rate confirmations, pickup numbers, and facility details are often
shared through unsecured or easily intercepted channels. Once that
information is exposed, it allows someone else to step into the shipment
without needing physical access to a facility. Controlling how load
details are delivered and who can access them reduces the opportunity
for that handoff to happen unnoticed, and the growth of live-stream
marketplaces has shortened the time between theft and resale, allowing
stolen goods to be liquidated in hours rather than days, often before a
claim is even filed.
freightwaves.com
Worldwide Robberies Fueled by Pokémon
Cards
Pokémon cards are igniting an international crime spree
Since the pandemic, the market for Pokémon cards has exploded and
with it, a surge of worldwide robberies. This year alone,
collectible shops from Las Vegas and New York City to those in
Vancouver, Canada, and Nottingham, England, have all been hit, totaling
over $500,000 in stolen cards.
“Targeting card stores for these (Pokémon) cards is kind of popping
up. It’s a concern when we start to see a trend in something like
this,” said Paul Walker, a police sergeant in Abbotsford, British
Columbia.
The value of Pokémon cards, which has more than doubled over the past
year, makes them an attractive target. But it’s their compact
nature that makes them a lucrative heist with relatively low effort.
“The robbers can take a handful of cards, which can represent thousands
or tens of thousands of dollars, and literally fit it right in their
pocket,” said Nick Jarman, CEO of the Certified Trading Card
Association. “The resale is extremely fast. It’s high liquidity.”
The recent rise in theft could be related to the leadup to Pokémon’s
30th anniversary in February.
Since then, the franchise’s flagship trading cards have only risen in
value. The value of Pokémon cards has risen by more than 145% over
the past year, with buyers spending $450 million this January alone,
according to data from trading card analytics website Card Ladder. In
February, influencer and wrestler Logan Paul sold one card for a record
$16.5 million.
Stealing high-value Pokémon cards can have a fast and big payoff,
but the crime can also carry a hefty sentence. In many states, stealing
items worth more than $1,000 in value is considered a felony. Many
Pokémon card heists exceed that.
But catching thieves is rare. Stolen cards are nearly impossible to
trace because they have no serial numbers, Jarman said.
cnn.com
'Militarized' Grocery Stores?
OPINION: Policing the grocery store checkout won’t fix Canada’s food
retail crisis
Militarized surveillance systems are becoming the new normal in many
Canadian grocery stores, marking a disturbing symptom of an already
fraught food retail system.
At a FreshCo in Toronto and a Superstore in Calgary, staff have begun
wearing body cameras in response to rising theft at self-checkouts,
organized retail crime where high-value items such as meat are stolen
and resold and increased food insecurity.
Surveillance systems in commercial retail are nothing new;
cameras, mirrors and store design have long been used to deter
shoplifting. But these newer, more militarized approaches seem both
heavy-handed and misguided.
Surveillance expands as theft rises
Despite the growing costs for employees and consumers, retailers say
they are facing significant losses from retail crime, which the
Retail Council of Canada has called a “national crisis.”
Retailers reported an average profit shrink of 1.5 per cent in 2024,
which is almost double what it was in 2019. Grocers and retailers have
both cited self-checkouts as a top contributor to this shrink.
Meanwhile, police-reported incidents of shoplifting are rising.
Toronto police reported that 105 incidents of shoplifting goods over
$5,000 occurred in 2024, up from just 32 in 2020. Winnipeg police
reported a 46 per cent increase in retail theft in 2024 compared to the
year prior.
In response, retailers are spending millions on police, security and
other forms of surveillance. Superstore, for example, has spent more
than $12 million in the last five years on special duty police officers
to patrol checkouts. Walmart started using special duty officers in
their Winnipeg stores in 2022, costing the U.S. conglomerate $1.4
million.
theconversation.com
Law Enforcement Agencies Continue
Retail Theft Crackdown
Kalamazoo County cracks down on 'candy boys' retail theft with ordinance
change
Officials say the
updated Hawking/Peddling Ordinance will help deputies identify and
address unauthorized sales of stolen goods.
The Kalamazoo County Sheriff's Office, in collaboration with Oshtemo
Township, has updated the local Hawking/Peddling Ordinance to address
a rise in retail theft and fraud targeting stores like Family Dollar,
Dollar Tree, Target, and Walgreens. The so-called 'candy boys' have
been stealing boxes of candy bars and then selling the products in front
of the stores.
The ordinance change now requires individuals to obtain authorization
before selling goods or services within the township, providing
deputies with a tool to identify and hold accountable those operating
outside the law.
Retail theft has been an ongoing issue in the Maple Hill Pavilion area,
with organized groups targeting stores for high-value items like candy
that can be easily resold. The updated ordinance gives law
enforcement more tools to crack down on this criminal activity and
hold both the thieves and their accomplices responsible.
nationaltoday.com
Chicago homicides in 2026: 99 people slain. How that compares with
previous years.
Mayor Mamdani steps back from pledge on total elimination of NYPD gang
database
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Congress Targets Retail Tariff
Loophole
Retailers rely on this tariff mitigation tactic. Congress has noticed.
The First Sale valuation method has
helped companies lower their tariff costs for decades, but renewed
scrutiny claims it harms U.S. production.
Retailers, along with other businesses, have adapted to trade volatility
over the past year by utilizing a decades-old customs rule that can
help minimize tariff costs — and it’s catching the attention of some
senators.
Companies have moved to mitigate the impact of heightened tariff rates
through a variety of tactics, such as moving production out of countries
targeted with higher levies or negotiating costs with vendors. Experts
say more businesses have increasingly leveraged what’s commonly known
as the “First Sale rule” as part of their mitigation toolkit.
In select cases, the First Sale rule allows importers operating in a
tiered supply chain — where middlemen are involved — to pay duties
based on the price paid in the first or earlier sale of the good.
Mass retailer Target mentioned its use of First Sale as a mitigation
tactic in its latest fiscal year 2025 filing with the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission.
U.S. Sens. Sheldon Whitehouse and Bill Cassidy introduced bipartisan
legislation in February, aiming to get rid of the First Sale “customs
loophole,” as the February press release describes it.
The Last Sale Valuation Act would require that transaction values be
determined based on “the last sale of the merchandise occurring before
exportation to the United States,” per the release. It’s endorsed by
several trade groups, including the National Council of Textile
Organizations.
retaildive.com
Will the War Put a Damper on Retail
Expansion Plans?
Retailers’ Bullish Expansion Plans Suddenly Look Risky
Having weathered a global tariff crisis, the consumer economy started
off the year poised for enough growth that a scrum of retail chains were
rolling out plans to add thousands of new stores to their fleets,
plus major revamps of existing locations.
An early forecast by Coresight Research, which tracks such trends,
predicted more than 5,000 new stores would open this year in the U.S.,
and that the number of store closures would fall to a three-year low.
Now, exactly six years since the chaotic onset of the Covid pandemic
changed retailing forever, such optimism is in short supply. Retail
industry execs once again find themselves trying to chart the future
without a compass or a road map. How much longer will the Iran War
and its disruptions continue, and how will it all affect consumer
behavior?
No one can predict the former, but the outlook for consumer spending
seems inevitable.
Already stressed by mega-trends (e.g., grocery inflation, unaffordable
housing, AI eliminating jobs), the sudden hike in fuel prices alone
is straining the nation’s wallet. Those big, bright gas station
signs are powerful cues for how people perceive their financial
situations from day to day.
High fuel prices will also add to the expenses of mass merchants who
rely on trucks to move large shipments of inventory and the last-mile
costs of e-commerce retailers. A sudden spike like the one we’re
experiencing is a source of anxiety that should make all retailers
nervous and prompt a pause in some of those expansion plans.
If there will be any winners in this scenario, it is likely to be
off-price and budget brands.
firstinsight.com
AI Customer Service Off to
Unsatisfying Start
Can AI Customer Service Actually Replace Humans?
In a report for CNBC, journalist Kevin Williams outlined the current
struggles that AI customer service bots and call centers are having in
satisfying shopper demands, despite several industries adopting
these solutions at scale.
Noting that while the promise of AI call centers and chatbots is
enticing for many operations looking to slash costs, deflection —
rather than resolution — is often a part of the game as it stands, with
customer satisfaction often being the metric left behind.
“I hate AI customer service chatbots,” said Californian shopper Carmen
Smith, as quoted by Williams.
“It seems that no matter what, they all will either point you to some
type of FAQs list or repeat information you’ve already tried and found
lacking,” Smith said. “I hate dealing with them, but a lot of
companies use them nowadays, alas. I’d rather speak to a human being.”
Qualtrics data cited by the report indicated that ~20% of consumers
who had engaged with AI customer service agents received zero benefit
from the interaction, a failure rate four times higher than AI usage
more broadly.
retailwire.com
How are Employees Successfully Coping with Stress?
University of Illinois survey says employers
should protect time for deep focus, normalize restorative breaks, and
build the norms that make reaching out acceptable and encouraged.
Placer.ai: Indoor, outlet malls see visits drop in March
CoStar: Retail space construction down year over year in Q1
Ace Hardware expands delivery options with Uber Eats
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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Closing the Execution Gap
Retail Inventory Management Edition

Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility is a powerful, cutting-edge solution
designed to revolutionize inventory management for modern retailers. It is a
purpose-built solution to enable retailers to close the gap in inventory
management.
In a market where 70% of retailers are stuck in weekly struggles with inventory
accuracy, Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility empowers businesses to move
beyond reactive approaches and achieve operational excellence.
What Sets Winners Apart?
Retail success isn’t just about managing challenges- it’s about strategically
connecting the dots between omnichannel optimization, sourcing strategies,
and advanced technology adoption. The latest study by IHL Research
reveals key insights into what top-performing retailers are doing differently:
-
95% more likely to deploy AI solutions: Winners use
AI to predict demand, optimize inventory placement, and automate processes
for greater accuracy and efficiency.
-
76% more likely to leverage RFID technology: RFID
enables precise inventory tracking, reducing errors and improving stock
replenishment.
-
54% higher profits by 2025 through supply chain
diversification: Winners adopt agile strategies to navigate disruptions
and seize new opportunities.
Their Secret? Focusing on integrated systems that react to
problems by preventing them from happening. This proactive approach creates a
compounding effect: operational efficiency fuels innovation, which drives
sustained growth and profitability.
By combining advanced technology with strategic foresight, these retailers are
pulling ahead and creating a competitive edge that’s hard to match.
Download the full IHL Research report here to uncover the game-changing
insights. Learn how
Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility can help solve your real-time
inventory challenges. |
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The Cybersecurity Hit List:
From Enterprise AI to Compromised Coffee Machines
Bad actors love a good opportunity. And the enterprise cybersecurity
landscape has given them several in just the past few days.
A cluster of seemingly unrelated incidents ranging from exposed
enterprise AI tools to a breached coffee machine has revealed the
daunting reality that modern cyber risk is no longer confined to
servers, endpoints or even employees. It now increasingly spans
ecosystems, vendors and even the delivery mechanisms for the very tools
designed to drive organizational productivity.
Anthropic’s Claude Code was exposed and businesses chasing the AI
leader’s secrets found that some of their downloads came with a side of
credential-stealing malware, while Microsoft has shifted its messaging
on Copilot after years of heavy promotion, explicitly warning users that
Copilot should not be relied upon and framing use as “at your own
risk.”
To top it off, but not with any hazelnut creamer, an ongoing cyber
disruption at an unnamed firm has a new alleged culprit: the
company’s internet-connected coffee machine that was sending data
packets to cybercriminals from its secure enterprise network.
For CFOs and CISOs, the collection implications of the cyber
landscape’s latest headlines may require not just heightened vigilance,
but a potential rethinking of how cyber risk is modeled, budgeted and
governed.
The modern enterprise attack surface is no longer expanding gradually
but is mutating in real time.
The exposure of Anthropic’s Claude Code environment underscores a
growing tension in enterprise artificial intelligence adoption.
Organizations racing to operationalize generative AI are doing so in a
threat environment that is evolving just as quickly as the technology
itself. In this case, actors seeking access to proprietary
capabilities reportedly encountered poisoned downloads bundled with
credential-stealing malware.
pymnts.com
'Widespread Credential-Harvesting
Campaign'
React2Shell vulnerability helps hackers steal credentials, AI platform
keys and other sensitive data
The stolen information could help
intruders plan follow-up attacks and breach more organizations, Cisco
researchers said.
A cyber threat actor is using the React2Shell vulnerability as the basis
for a widespread credential-harvesting campaign that has compromised
everything from AI tool API keys to cloud platform passwords.
After identifying internet-facing React Server Components instances that
are vulnerable to React2Shell, the hackers upload a malicious payload
to the server — without the need for authentication — that lets them
execute arbitrary code on the target server, researchers at Cisco’s
Talos threat intelligence group said in a recent report.
The payload contains a “multi-phase credential harvesting tool that
harvests credentials, SSH keys, cloud tokens, and environment secrets at
scale,” Cisco researchers wrote.
The entire process after target identification is automated. “No
further manual interaction is required to extract and exfiltrate
credentials harvested from the system,” Cisco said.
The campaign has compromised at least 766 servers in multiple regions,
according to the report. The activity is indiscriminate, Cisco said,
with the hackers not focusing on specific countries or industries.
cybersecuritydive.com
Customer Service Platform Attacked
Hims & Hers says limited data stolen in social engineering attack
The telehealth provider said hackers
gained access to a third-party customer service platform, but medical
records remained secure.
Hims & Hers, a San Francisco-based telehealth company, was impacted
by a “sophisticated social engineering attack” in February in which
a hacker gained access to its third-party customer service platform,
according to regulatory filings.
The firm said an unknown party gained unauthorized access to service
tickets between Feb. 4 and Feb. 7, according to a filing Thursday
with the California Attorney General’s office.
The company discovered the suspicious activity on Feb. 5, took steps
to secure its customer service environment and launched an
investigation.
cybersecuritydive.com
Russian hackers hijack internet traffic using vulnerable routers
Google study finds LLMs are embedded at every stage of abuse detection |
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Millions of Amazon Products Facing
Price Hikes
(Update) If you shop on Amazon, this new 3.5% surcharge could affect
what you pay for millions of products
Amazon will begin collecting a 3.5% surcharge from third-party
sellers on its platform later this month, a move that could impact
shoppers.
The surcharge applies to third-party sellers in the U.S. and Canada,
starting April 17, according to an Amazon note sent to sellers on
Thursday, April 2.
The e-commerce company said it has absorbed these increased costs so
far. Similar to other major carriers, Amazon implements temporary
surcharges when costs are elevated to recover these expenses.
Amazon said the surcharge is “meaningfully lower” compared to what
other major carriers charge. For an average item in the U.S., it
equates to 17 cents per unit, though the cost may vary depending on the
item’s size.
Amazon’s announcement comes as gas prices continue to skyrocket
due to the war in Iran.
Amazon’s new surcharge follows as the United States Postal Service
announced a similar surcharge amid soaring fuel prices. The postal
service said it will impose an 8% fuel surcharge on packages taking
effect on April 16, 2026 through Jan. 17, 2027.
al.com
New Amazon-USPS Agreement
Exclusive: Amazon strikes deal with USPS that maintains 80% of package
volume
Amazon.com on Monday announced it reached a new agreement with the U.S.
Postal Service on package deliveries, and sources said the
cash-strapped mail system would retain about 80% of its existing
deliveries from its biggest customer.
That 20% cut is a dramatically better outcome for the postal agency than
the two-thirds or larger reduction that Reuters reported last month
Amazon had threatened.
reuters.com
Full-year e-commerce sales rise 5.4% from 2024 |
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Tigard, OR: Tigard Police investigate armed robbery at Washington Square Mall’s
Kay Jewelers
The Tigard Police Department said they’re investigating an armed robbery at
Washington Square Mall in which “glass cases were smashed.” KOIN 6 News crews
confirmed that the mall’s Kay Jewelers was the damaged store in question.
Officers responded just after 6 p.m. and the investigation is ongoing. There
were no shots fired, despite rumors to the contrary, Tigard police said. No one
was hurt. Police believe there are two suspects who drove away from the scene.
Detectives are still working to identify them.
koin.com
West Hollywood, CA: Suspects Mace Best Buy Employees, Flee With iPad; Still at
Large
At least two suspects attempted to steal two iPads from the Best Buy on La Brea
at the Gateway Mall in West Hollywood Monday afternoon, maced multiple employees
and fled. One iPad was recovered. As of Monday evening, the suspects hadn’t been
caught. It happened around 4:15 p.m. A West Hollywood sheriff’s deputy described
it to WEHOonline at the scene. “It was a robbery,” the deputy said. “This person
walked in, grabbed two iPads. Loss prevention tried to stop them. They dropped
one, picked it back up, ran out.” The suspects first tried to exit through a
back door. The alarm triggered. They couldn’t get through. When store employees
moved in to apprehend them and recover the iPads, the suspects deployed mace,
hitting multiple employees. The suspects then headed toward the front of the
store.
wehoonline.com
Sacramento, CA: Lincoln Cops Nab Alleged Retail Theft Trio After Lowe's Lot
Stakeout
Three Sacramento residents were hauled into custody Monday after Lincoln police,
staking out a busy shopping center, said they uncovered a stash of stolen goods,
drugs and counterfeit U.S. Postal Service keys. According to Lincoln police,
officers were watching the parking lot that serves Lowe's and Dollar Tree when
they moved in on a motorcycle and a pickup truck they had been tracking. That
stop, investigators said, quickly linked the vehicles to a string of recent
retail thefts in the area. Officers pulled over a motorcycle ridden by
38-year-old Brian Smith and a truck occupied by 58-year-old Valerie Murphy and
27-year-old Xavier Estrada, according to FOX40. Police said the motorcycle
turned out to be stolen, and the truck was loaded with merchandise allegedly
taken from Home Depot, Target, Lowe's and Dollar Tree. Officers also reported
finding a credit card belonging to someone else, along with counterfeit Postal
Service "arrow" keys.
hoodline.com
Wrentham, MA: Update: Ronald Patterson Jr Sentenced In Gucci Store Heist
A Washington, D.C., man will serve prison time for his role in a sweeping
smash-and-grab series of retail burglaries that stretched across the East Coast,
federal officials said. Ronald Patterson Jr., 35, was sentenced last week in
federal court in Boston to three years and a month in prison, according to the
U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts. He will also serve
three years of supervised release and must pay $33,000 in restitution.
dailyvoice.com
Franklin County, PA: Burglar's break-in of Chambersburg sports shop totals
roughly $15K in damages
A local sports business will have to pay roughly $15,000 in repairs after an
unidentified burglar smashed through the establishment's doors Monday night. The
break-in happened around 11:17 p.m. at the Nellie Fox Bowl & Sport Shop,
according to store owner, Brett Hockensmith. Hockensmith shared security footage
of the whole ordeal with CBS 21, which shows the burglar breaking the business'
front glass door before rummaging around the shop.
local21news.com
Fairfax City, VA: $2K In Beauty Products Stolen From Fairfax City Store
Menomonee Falls, WI: CVS retail theft; $1,200 in items stolen
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Shootings & Deaths
Memphis, TN Shooting victim found dead outside Southwest Memphis c-store
Memphis police are investigating a shooting that left one person dead Tuesday
morning. Just after 11 a.m., several law enforcement agencies — including the
Memphis Police Department and the Memphis Safe Task Force — responded to the
Mitchell Tiger Mart convenience store on West Mitchell Road near Rochester Road
for a shots fired call. Police say a male shooting victim was located and
pronounced dead on the scene. MPD did not specify the age of the victim.
actionnews5.com
Philadelphia, PA: Police search for gunman after deadly shooting inside
University City store
Police in Philadelphia are searching for a gunman after a deadly shooting inside
a grocery store in University City on Monday afternoon. Investigators said a
26-year-old man was shot multiple times inside a store at the corner of 40th and
Market streets, marking the second deadly shooting at that same location in
recent years. According to police, the suspect entered the store around 4 p.m.,
a typically busy time, and approached the victim inside the vestibule with a gun
already drawn. Authorities said the two exchanged words before the gunman opened
fire. Police said the suspect fired at least two shots, striking the victim in
the leg and chest. He was rushed to the hospital, where he was later pronounced
dead.
phl17.com
Los Angeles, CA: LAPD releases bodycam video weeks after police shot, killed
armed robbery suspect at 7-Eleven
A month after Los Angeles police shot and killed an armed robbery suspect at a
7-Eleven in Harbor Gateway, the LAPD on Monday released body camera video of the
confrontation. Officers responded at 11:15 p.m. on March 7 to a radio call of a
robbery in progress at the convenience store, located at 15300 South Figueroa
Street, just west of the 110 Freeway, authorities said in a news release.
abc7.com
Bridgeport, CT: Update: Surveillance Video Shows Deadly Shooting, Robbery at
Bridgeport Dollar Store
Jurors were shown surveillance video of a fatal shooting at a Bridgeport
convenience store, where 23-year-old Clinton Taylor was killed in a violent
attack. The video depicts a masked gunman opening fire on Taylor, then robbing
his lifeless body before fleeing the scene. The suspect, 38-year-old Luis
Morales, is now on trial for murder, felony murder, robbery, and weapons
charges. The trial is expected to last between 5 to 10 days as the jury hears
additional testimony and evidence.
nationaltoday.com
Horn Lake, MS: 18-year-old shot inside Horn Lake market, in critical condition
Horn Lake police said officers were dispatched to Discount Market at 3340
Goodman Road at about 12:45 p.m. on April 7 after a disturbance in which at
least one shot was fired inside the store. Police said officers found
18-year-old Christopher Campbell Jr. on the floor with a single gunshot wound to
the chest. Responding officers sealed the wound while awaiting emergency medical
services, and EMS transported Campbell to Regional One Medical Center. The Horn
Lake Police Department said he was last known to be in critical condition.
Witnesses told investigators that a man confronted Campbell inside the store,
produced a handgun and fired a single shot that struck him in the chest.
desotocountynews.com
Eau Claire, WI: Update: Suspect and victim identified in Eau Claire shooting
incident
The Eau Claire County Sheriff's Office has named the suspect in Friday's
shooting incident. As 18 News reported, authorities were called to a shooting
incident on Mall Drive just after 3 a.m. Friday. At the time, they said an adult
had a single, non-life-threatening gunshot wound. Cameron Blackcoon, 19, was
arrested after the incident and is awaiting charges of endangering safety while
armed and intoxicated, and recklessly endangering safety. The victim, Dakotah
Blackcoon, 39, was taken to a local hospital but is expected to be okay.
Authorities say Dakotah is Cameron's father.
wqow.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Ontario, CA: Employee accused of Arson after paper goods warehouse destroyed in
massive fire in Ontario
A warehouse employee was arrested on suspicion of arson after a massive fire
destroyed the building in Ontario, prompting a large response from first
responders overnight. The fire started around 12:30 a.m. Tuesday near Hellman
and Merrill avenues, according to the Ontario Fire Department. More than 100
firefighters were on scene battling the flames, which cast an orange glow in the
area. The firefight continued for several hours as the blaze continued to burn
through the Kimberly-Clark Distribution Center, which is estimated to be 1.2
million square feet -- about the size of 11 city blocks. The flames and smoke
were visible for miles. Nearly twelve hours later, crews were still on scene
shooting water at the building from ladder trucks. They were able to contain the
flames to the warehouse, protecting nearby businesses. The warehouse was filled
with paper products from familiar brands like Kleenex to Huggies diapers, which
further fueled the six-alarm fire. Officials said the building has a fire
suppression system, which was operating but was compromised when a portion of
the roof collapsed. Several big rigs docked at the facility were also destroyed.
About 20 employees were inside the warehouse when the fire broke out. One person
was initially missing, but was later accounted for. That missing person was the
suspect, police said.
abc7.com
Oshawa, ON, Canada: Security guard threatened at knifepoint during drug store
robbery at Oshawa mall
A security guard was threatened with a knife during a robbery at the Shoppers
Drug Mart in the Oshawa Centre on Monday, with the suspect arrested by police
after a brief search outside the mall. Durham Regional Police responded to an
armed person call just after 11 a.m. at the drug store after a security guard
confronted a man who he believed was concealing stolen items in personal bag. At
the time of his arrest, the accused, Alexander Joseph Callaghan, 35, was on a
weapon prohibition condition. Callaghan, an Oshawa resident, is charged with
assault with a weapon, possession of a dangerous weapon, uttering threats,
theft, possession of stolen property and breach of probation.
insauga.com
Ottawa, ON, Canada: Ottawa Police seek suspect in Bayshore mall jewelry store
robbery
The Ottawa Police Service is asking for the public’s help identifying a suspect
and tracking down jewelry after a smash-and-grab robbery at the Bayshore
Shopping Centre last month. The robbery happened at around 9:40 a.m. on March
23. Police say a man entered the store, smashed a cabinet and stole jewelry.
Some of the items are traceable and might show up for sale online, police said.
ctvnews.ca
Culver City, CA: Suspected Swatting Hoax Triggers Police Search at Westfield
Culver City
Little Rock, AR: Man sentenced to 10 years in prison for armed robbery of postal
worker; restitution $44,000
Camden, NJ: Former New Jersey hospital employee accused of stealing $2.5 million
worth of medical supplies
Kinston, NC: Chick-fil-A employee reluctantly accepts reward after finding
nearly $10,000 in cash
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Beauty – Fairfax City,
VA – Robbery
•
C-Store – Memphis, TN
– Armed Robbery / 1 killed
•
C-Store – Horn Lake,
MS - Armed Robbery / shots fired
•
C-Store – Fort Pierce,
FL – Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Duck, NC –
Burglary
•
Electronics – West
Hollywood, CA – Robbery
•
Gas Station- Roanoke,
VA - Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry – Tigard, OR –
Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry – Phoenix, AZ – Robbery
•
Liquor – Claremont, CA
- Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Menomonee
Falls, WI – Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Sheepshead Bay, NY – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Bakersfield, CA – Burglary
•
Sports – Burlington,
NC - Armed Robbery
•
Sports – Chambersburg,
PA – Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 2 shootings
• 1 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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