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 4/9/26

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Mike DiBella named Director of Global Physical Security for Oracle


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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


From Response to Prevention:
How Retailers Are Stopping Violent Incidents Before They Enter the Store


By the D&D Daily staff

Retail violence prevention strategies are increasingly moving upstream.

Rather than focusing solely on how store teams respond once a confrontation begins, many retailers are investing in technologies designed to identify high-risk threats before an incident ever reaches the sales floor.

Facial recognition and AI-powered subject recognition tools are becoming central to that shift. When integrated with existing CCTV infrastructure, these systems can alert store leaders and asset protection teams when an individual previously linked to violent or high-harm incidents enters the location. The goal is not simply apprehension, but prevention — giving teams critical moments to adjust staffing, increase visibility at entrances, or coordinate with law enforcement if necessary.

This represents a broader change in how retailers are approaching associate safety.

Historically, violence mitigation centered on de-escalation training, panic buttons, and post-incident reporting. Those tools remain important, but technology is now enabling retailers to take earlier action based on known risk patterns. Several providers report that a disproportionate share of violent incidents stems from a relatively small pool of repeat offenders, making early identification especially valuable.

What has accelerated adoption is ease of deployment.

Many solutions now layer onto existing camera networks without requiring a major hardware overhaul, making them more accessible for both national chains and regional operators. Just as importantly, leading systems are being deployed with human review controls, restricted watchlists tied to documented prior incidents, and immediate deletion of non-matches to support responsible use.

For retailers, the focus is increasingly clear: stop violence at the front door rather than manage it once it unfolds inside the store.


Retailers Prepare to Comply with New Workplace Safety Law
New York Sets Panic Button Safety Standard for Retail Workers, Companies Urged to Act Ahead of Deadline
Shoplifting incidents. Verbal threats from customers. Escalating confrontations. For retail employees across New York, these risks are often a daily part of the job.

But New York is raising the bar on workplace safety, requiring retailers with 500+ employees to equip workers with wearable panic buttons by January 1, 2027. The law, part of the Retail Worker Safety Act, signals a broader shift in how businesses are expected to protect frontline retail workers.

The legislation reflects a growing recognition that traditional safety protocols are no longer sufficient in fast-moving, high-risk retail environments. For many companies, the question is no longer whether to adopt new safety tools, but how quickly they can implement them.

This is a clear sign that workplace safety is evolving,” said Kenny Kelley, Founder and CEO of wearable safety company Silent Beacon. “Employers shouldn’t be waiting for a deadline to act. The expectation is now real-time protection, especially for employees working alone or in unpredictable retail environments.”

The law requires employers to equip workers with panic buttons that allow them to quickly call for help in an emergency and implement workplace violence prevention policies and training. It establishes a new baseline, one that many safety experts believe will extend beyond New York into other states and industries.

This legislation comes after a revealing national retail survey highlighted critical safety concerns among retail workers.

New York’s Retail Worker Safety Act originally required large retailers to provide panic buttons that directly contacted 911. An amendment has since replaced that requirement with devices that notify managers or security personnel instead. citybiz.co


UK's Retail Crime 'Epidemic'
Police plan crackdown on retail crime in Inverclyde amid 'national epidemic'
Police are planning a crackdown on retail crime in the coming months as the local force aims to get a grip on the ‘national epidemic’.

Figures included in a report provided to Inverclyde Council’s police and fire scrutiny panel show a significant spike in retail crime between April 1 and December 31 last year. Police have been working in partnership with retailers and specialist teams within the local division to try and get a handle on issue.

At the most recent meeting of the police and fire scrutiny panel last week, Chief Inspector David Doherty told councillors that police were now preparing to hold a ‘day of action’ in the next few months to target the perpetrators of these offences.

He said: “I’m quite happy to tell you that that national pot of money that Inverclyde have secured, there is also part of that money to fund various action plans against retail crime.

The senior police officer said that days of action had been a major part of the police’s approach to tackling retail crime locally but said the force have also been working with Inverclyde’s largest retailers to tackle the problem.

CI Doherty said that the work that had taken place to build up lines of communication between retailers had been ‘really valuable’ in driving down the ‘national epidemic’ of retail crime. uk.news.yahoo.com
 

Retailers Demand 'Stronger Action' to Fight Theft
Retail crime becoming ‘more aggressive and organised’ amid viral ‘link-up’ trend

Bosses are calling for a more coordinated response to rising retail crime

Retail leaders have warned that shop theft is becoming increasingly organised and aggressive following a series of social media-driven “link-up” gatherings that have disrupted high streets across the UK.

Incidents in London, Birmingham and Milton Keynes have seen large groups of young people gather in retail areas, with some events escalating into disorder, store closures and theft.

Senior figures across the industry say the scenes reflect a wider trend of escalating retail crime, particularly affecting convenience and high-footfall stores.

At Marks & Spencer, director Thinus Keeve said offending is becoming “more brazen, more organised and more aggressive”, with some incidents involving “gangs forcing open locked cabinets, stripping shelves and, in some cases, ransacking stores and assaulting staff”.

Keeve added that violence against retail workers is increasing, saying: “Our colleagues have been headbutted, attacked with ammonia and hospitalised.”

Mark & Spencer’s chief executive, Stuart Machin, has called for stronger action to tackle what he described as organised retail crime, urging a more coordinated response. betterretailing.com


New data shows drop in crime rates across CT

El Paso police, sheriff report decline in serious crime in 2025

Glendale Police credits quicker crime solving to centralized data software
 



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AI Adoption in Retail Is Slow But Steady
Study: Retail, consumer goods' AI adoption slow — but progressing
Retail and consumer goods (CG) companies are accelerating their adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) and analytics, however they still face challenges impacting their strategic use of the technology.

AI remains at the center of exploration, planned usage and investments across retail and CG companies, with more than half of respondents reporting that they have 10 or more employees dedicated to analytics. Both CGs and retailers reported a gradually larger representation of their IT budget dedicated to AI versus previous years.

Yet, many organizations are still operating with relatively small analytics budgets. More than one-third of retailers said 5% or less of their IT budget is currently dedicated to analytics. However, expansion is on the horizon: one-third of CGs expect to spend 25% or more of their IT budget on analytics in 2029, while about 40% of retailers expect to spend somewhere between 15% and 25%, according to the report.

Analytic and predictive AI remain top priorities for both industry segments, with 61% of companies currently using these solutions or planning to within 12 months. Generative AI is a close second with 59% of companies currently using the solution or planning to within 12 months. While interest in agentic AI is growing, it still lags behind as less than half (49%) of companies currently use agentic AI or plan to within 12 months, the study said.  chainstoreage.com


EHS 'Gaps'
Issues Facing EHS Professionals

Engagement between leadership and EHS professionals could use some improvement.

Looking across the EHS landscape, a recent survey from Intelex found that going into 2026, 82% of those surveyed felt that the profession will become both more influential and strategic. Furthermore, the EHS function of companies will be increasingly involved in driving sustainability and environmental goals.

One of the most interesting findings of the survey is that there is a gap when it comes to how leaders view EHS compared to EHS professionals.

The survey looked at how engaged the leadership was with the EHS departments at their companies. In North America, 55% are engaged. And for comparison, in Europe, the percentage engaged is 67%, with the UK at 74%.

The survey discusses gaps in focus between those in leadership positions and EHS professionals. While senior leaders prioritize outcomes, EHS professionals are more concerned with programs and activities. ehstoday.com


When Will Relief Hit Following Iran Ceasefire?
When will prices come down for gas, air travel and strawberries?

Once the Strait of Hormuz opens, it could take months to see significant relief at the pump.

American consumers have started to feel their budgets squeezed beyond gas prices from the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran, as energy costs have begun to pressure shipping, transportation, agriculture and airline prices.

With President Donald Trump on Tuesday announcing a suspension of U.S. attacks on Iran for two weeks, the big question is: When will prices come down?   washingtonpost.com


Consumer goods prices slightly decline in March after brief uptick
Prices for everyday household purchases decreased 0.02% in March 2026 following a 0.19% increase in February and a 0.33% decrease in January. The monthly Numerator Consumer Goods Price Index (CGPI) also indicates that prices for everyday goods are up 2% compared to March 2025.

Import cargo volume continues falling in February amid tariffs

(Updated) The running list of major retail deals

Oil prices drop after US-Iran ceasefire deal. Will gas prices fall next?
 



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Visible security and proactive prevention hit the shopper experience differently. Retailers have spent years leaning on entrance gates and security guards to fight pushout theft. It works for a while, that visible presence makes offenders think twice. Then the offenders adapt. They find workarounds, and losses keep climbing, and the honest shoppers are the ones most impacted.

In 2025, a national grocer in a global market put it to the test. They invested in gates, guards, and Gatekeeper's Purchek® technology, then measured what actually worked. The results were telling.

Gatekeeper Systems' research from that study shows 49% of pushout attempts bypassed entrance gates entirely. Another 27% went through self-checkout, with nearly a third of those involving offenders tailgating behind paying customers after AI-enabled gates opened. The remaining 24% went through manned or unmanned registers. Gates give you visibility, but they still need good timing, an attentive employee, and an offender who doesn't know how to undermine it. That's a lot of things to go right.

Guards faced their own challenges. Coverage depended on schedules, attention shifted with service demands, and policies limited what they could do in the moment. Pushouts happen in seconds. By the time a guard assesses intent and weighs safety, the cart is already moving toward the door.

Meanwhile, paying customers feel the weight of all that security. Gate-and-guard setups slow the exit for everyone, and that friction wears on the shopping experience over time.

Gatekeeper's Purchek® technology takes a different angle. Instead of relying on compliance at a gate or a guard's judgment call, the system acts on the cart itself. When a cart with unpaid merchandise hits a defined boundary, the wheels lock. The event ends quietly, no chase, no confrontation. Nearby shoppers often don't notice anything has happened. It runs the same way every time, applying little to no friction to paying customers and direct control where it counts.

The financial case backs it up. One $500 pushout requires over $16,000 in sales to break even at a 3% operating margin. Multiply that across hundreds of incidents a year and the margin damage stacks fast. Every stopped cart reduces the volume of sales needed to stay whole.

The takeaway from this retailer's 2025 data was straightforward. Gates didn't prevent pushout theft. Guards didn't stop it. Purchek® did. Getting ahead of the problem protects shrink, preserves margins, and keeps store teams out of harm's way.


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AI Scams Fueling Massive Losses
FBI Flags $893 Million in AI-Driven Scams
The FBI’s Internet Crime Complaint Center (IC3) received 22,364 internet crime complaints that contained references to artificial intelligence (AI) in 2025.

These AI-related complaints reported losses of $893 million, the agency said.

The FBI included this data in its 2025 Internet Crime Report, marking the first time in the 25-year history of the report that it broke out AI-related complaints as a separate category, the agency said in a Monday (April 6) press release.

AI is used in cybercrime to create social media profiles, personalized conversations and other synthetic content. The technology helps make this content convincing and generates it at scale. It is used in several forms of fraud, including business email compromise (BEC), confidence/romance scams, employment scams and investment scams, per the report.

“People have manipulated video and audio similarly for decades, but the widespread availability of this developing technology makes it possible to create high-quality content,” the report said. “AI-enabled synthetic content is becoming increasingly difficult to detect and easier to make, which allows criminal actors to potentially conduct successful fraud schemes against individuals, businesses and financial institutions.”

Overall, across all categories of internet crime, IC3 received 1,008,597 complaints that reported $20.9 billion in losses in 2025, according to the report released Monday. Those figures were up from 859,532 and $16.6 billion, respectively, in 2024.

The most frequently reported complaints involved phishing/spoofing, extortion and investment scams, per the release.

Cyber-enabled fraud accounted for 452,868 complaints and $17.7 billion in losses. The FBI defines this form of fraud as that in which criminals use the internet or other technology, according to the report.

Complaints involving cryptocurrency accounted for 181,565 complaints and $11.4 billion in losses in 2025, per the report. pymnts.com


Attackers Better at Evading Detection
Cybercriminals move deeper into networks, hiding in edge infrastructure
Attack activity is moving toward infrastructure outside endpoint visibility. Proxy networks support a wide range of operations, edge devices serve as initial access points, and GenAI speeds up how attackers assemble and rebuild their tooling. Lumen’s 2026 Threatscape Report describes this pattern in criminal and nation-state activity.

Threat intelligence is needed to find the adversary as early as possible and as close to the point of origination as possible,” said Chris Kissel, IDC VP, Security & Trust.

Early pressure built at the edge

The movement had been building for several years. In 2022, over 80% of breaches against web applications and internet-exposed services involved brute force or stolen credentials. Microsoft then reported a global peak of 11,000 password-based attacks per second in April 2023.

By 2025, endpoint tools were widely deployed, with 91% of organizations running EDR and those tools covering 72% of in-scope devices on average. That left routers, VPN gateways, firewalls, and other exposed systems as attractive entry points.

“By lurking in devices outside of the reach of standard security controls and reaching back out days, weeks, or even months after the initial access, attackers can better evade detection and prevent defenders from connecting the dots,” researchers said. helpnetsecurity.com


Outlook Credentials At Risk
Russian state hackers are hijacking TP-Link and MicroTik routers to steal Outlook credentials, cybersecurity center warns

Traffic is being redirected through attacker-controlled servers.

The UK National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) on Tuesday published an advisory warning that Russian state hacking group APT28 has been exploiting vulnerable small office and home office (SOHO) routers since 2024 to overwrite their DHCP and DNS settings, redirecting downstream traffic through attacker-controlled DNS servers to harvest passwords and authentication tokens for web and email services. The NCSC assesses that APT28 is "almost certainly" the Russian Main Intelligence Directorate (GRU)'s 85th Main Special Service Centre, Military Intelligence Unit 26165.

According to the advisory, the actor has been configuring virtual private servers to act as malicious DNS resolvers, then pointing compromised SOHO routers at them by rewriting the routers' DHCP DNS settings. Laptops, phones, and other downstream devices on the network inherit those settings automatically and begin sending lookups to the attacker-controlled infrastructure.

Lookups for domains tied to targeted services, such as login pages, get pointed to further attacker-owned IPs that host adversary-in-the-middle infrastructure. Meanwhile, requests outside the targeting criteria are resolved to the legitimate addresses to avoid breaking the connection. tomshardware.com


Your customer passed authentication. So why are they sending money to a scammer?

Social engineering attacks on open source developers are escalating

 


 

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E-Commerce Safety Concerns
Report: Safety Protections Have Not Kept Up With E-Commerce Boom, And Last Mile Is Making It Worse

A new report from the Teamsters concludes that the city has not kept up with the "last-mile delivery" boom from companies like Amazon.

Amazon is not held accountable for the vast majority of its parking violations — and a new analysis by a Teamsters local argues that the lack of enforcement reveals the need for greater regulation of the last-mile delivery industry because the city can’t ticket its way to safety and equity.

The report by Teamsters Local 804 argues that the proliferation of “last-mile” warehouses has made city streets less safe partly because of rampant illegal parking with little consequences, but also because the algorithm-driven companies pressure workers with quotas leading to high driver turnover. The report mirrors one by the city comptroller’s office last year that showed higher injury rates around last-mile warehouses in the city’s industrial zones.

We fully expect Amazon to deflect and deny responsibility for the damage its inflicting upon millions of New Yorkers, but facts don’t lie,” Teamsters Local 804 President Vincent Perrone said in a statement. “This company is driving down safety and workplace standards for the entire last-mile industry, and the best way to address this problem is by passing the Delivery Protection Act.

To prepare its analysis, the Teamsters combined publicly available data with research into enforcement. The city’s open data provided 1,553 license plates associated with Amazon. Between 2021 and 2025, those vehicles received 2,696 “No Standing” tickets, 906 tickets for blocking a bike lane and 2,183 tickets for blocking a hydrant.

Those are just some of the violations that we know of. But according to a study published last year in the Journal of Cities, the enforcement rate for parking violations is between 2.87 and 11.2 percent.

Assuming the higher enforcement rate, those 1,553 trucks had about 90,313 violations. At the 2.87-percent ticketing rate, the number of violations on those trucks is above 330,000 in the four-year period.

Those numbers suggest that the city can’t solve the problem through enforcement alone — the city’s 2,155 Traffic Enforcement Agents give out an average of 4,100 citations per year. It’s a lot, but not nearly enough if nearly 97 percent of violations aren’t ever punished. nyc.streetsblog.org


Shifting E-Commerce Landscape
Which Online Retailers Lead US Ecommerce in 2026?
North America’s ecommerce landscape is shifting fast—and the retailers who understand where the market is heading will be the ones who win in 2026 and beyond. Join our experts as they unpack the newest findings from the 2026 Top 1000 Report, the industry’s most comprehensive analysis of online retail performance.

In a year defined by uncertainty, tight margins, and cautious consumer spending, the retailers in Digital Commerce 360’s Top 1000 still delivered meaningful growth:

  • Online sales rose 8.7% year over year, surpassing $1.2 trillion in 2025 despite economic pressure

  • Growth is expected to remain under pressure in 2026, even as the largest retailers continue to expand their market share

  • Retail chains with physical stores are leveraging omnichannel strength to maintain key advantages

  • Web-only merchants have accelerated their growth rates over the past five years

Understand the trends shaping North American ecommerce in 2026, see what sets top performing retailers apart, and learn how to apply their winning approaches to your organization. digitalcommerce360.com


Anthropic Lets Apple, Amazon Test More Powerful Mythos AI Model
 
Hair growth products sold on Amazon are recalled over poisoning risk


 


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Greece, NY: Man Charged in $70K Jewelry Heist at Greece Ridge Mall
A 26-year-old Rochester man named Victor Maisonet has been charged with burglary, grand larceny, and criminal mischief after allegedly stealing around $70,000 worth of jewelry from a kiosk at Greece Ridge Mall in Greece, New York. Police say Maisonet entered the mall through an employee corridor, tried unsuccessfully to get jewelry from behind the counter, then used a tool to smash a display case and steal multiple gold necklaces. Surveillance footage helped police identify Maisonet, who was later detained by Irondequoit police after trying to sell the stolen jewelry at a pawn shop.  nationaltoday.com


Clark County, IN: 2 women accused of robbing store, leading police on chase from Clarksville to Louisville
Two women are behind bars for robbery and other charges after they led police on a chase from Clarksville into Louisville. The Clarksville Police Department said officers were dispatched to JCPenney about reports of shoplifting. While on the way to the store, police were told the suspects assaulted security as they left the store. "That then turned this from a conventional shoplifting into a robbery," said Cpl. Justice Kraft, of Clarksville PD. Police said the driver took off from the store and headed through downtown New Albany, crossing the Sherman Minton Bridge into Louisville. Officers followed the suspected vehicle and made a stop around 33rd and Bank streets in Louisville. "These individuals think that they're tagging home base and once they cross the bridge, they don't have to worry about us anymore, but in this case, as you can see, that's not what happened," said Cpl. Kraft. Jalisa Box and Shannon Pruitt were arrested. They are charged with robbery, felony theft, resisting law enforcement with a vehicle, criminal recklessness, battery, reckless driving, and possession of drug paraphernalia. Police said the two women stole more than $1,000 worth of merchandise. Records show Pruitt is a repeat offender with theft charges in Kentucky and Indiana.  wlky.com


Maple Ridge, BC, Canada: Masked men attempt robbery at jewelry store in Maple Ridge mall
First responders rushed to the store located in ValleyFair Mall at around 5 p.m. on Tuesday, April 7, when Ridge Meadows RCMP received a call about a robbery in progress. RCMP said their officers immediately attended the area and learned that two masked male suspects had entered the shopping centre and attempted to rob the business. However, mall security interrupted the men, who then deployed bear spray and fled the area.  mapleridgenews.com


Springfield, IL: 14 Weapons recovered by Springfield, IL Police; weapons and $12,000 in cash related to Sporting Goods store burglary

West Palm Beach, FL: $1,200 in Alo Yoga merchandise stolen from CityPlace location

Kokomo, IN : Indiana police looking for suspect after multiple chainsaws stolen from shop

 



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Shootings & Deaths


San Diego, CA: Man found stabbed to death behind Fashion Valley Mall
The San Diego Police Department is conducting a homicide investigation after a man was found stabbed to death behind Fashion Valley Mall early Wednesday morning. Shortly before 12:30 a.m., police received an anonymous call reporting a man down at Town and Country Park, located at 1100 Fashion Valley Road. Responding officers found a man inside the park with multiple stab wounds to his upper body. The individual was pronounced dead at the scene. Their identity has not yet been released. SDPD’s Homicide Unit is handling the investigation. Detectives will be in the area throughout the day Wednesday to canvass for security footage and talk to possible witnesses.  fox5sandiego.com


Garland, TX: Garland PD and FBI announce $50,000 reward in fatal 2021 Garland convenience store shooting
The FBI, along with the Garland Police Department, announced Wednesday an increased reward of $50,000 for information leading to the arrest of the Garland teen wanted for a 2021 triple murder. Abel Elias Acosta, has been on the run since he was 14 years old, following the shooting and killing of three teenagers, ages 14, 16 and 17, at a convenience store. Abel Acosta, who was identified as the alleged shooter, was believed to have fled to Mexico with the help of his father, Richard Acosta Jr., who was indicted and charged with capital murder for his role in helping his son.  nbcdfw.com


Oakland, CA: Oakland man charged with killing inside convenience store
A man has been arrested and charged with murder for allegedly shooting a man then chasing him into a convenience store and continuing to fire after the victim had fallen to the ground, court records show. Antone Bullard, 37, of Oakland, was charged with murder and use of a firearm in the March 1 killing of 35-year-old Matthew Pierce, who was shot and killed inside The Island store on San Pablo Avenue in Oakland. The entire killing was captured on video, from when Bullard and Pierce were seen arguing outside the store, to the point where Bullard allegedly chased a wounded Pierce inside the and finished him off, according to police.  eastbaytimes.com


Toronto, Canada: Man, 35, accused of shooting up Jewish-owned restaurant in North York
A 35-year-old man faces gun charges for allegedly opening fire on a Jewish-owned restaurant in North York – an incident that seems to have the full attention of cops. Toronto Police say the shooting – the latest act of violence targeting the city’s Jewish community – saw the Old Avenue Restaurant on Avenue Rd. near Brooke Ave., south of Wilson Ave., riddled with bullets just before 1:30 a.m. on Friday.  torontosun.com


Monticello, MS: 4 injured, 2 arrested during shooting at fast food restaurant
Four people were injured during a shooting at a Sonic in Monticello. According to the Monticello Police Department, officers received a call regarding an active shooter around 10:58 a.m. on Monday. Officers from the Monticello Police Department and deputies from the Lawrence County Sheriff’s Office responded to the scene, where four people were found injured with gunshot wounds. Multiple other businesses in the area were also struck by gunfire.  msn.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Reno, NV: One person arrested after alleged armed robbery at Meadowood Mall
One person has been arrested after an armed robbery at the Meadowood Mall on Tuesday afternoon. Reno Police received a call reporting a robbery at JC Penny in the mall around 3:30 p.m., according to an RPD spokesperson. The suspect allegedly took two pairs of shoes from the store and pulled a machete on security personnel, then fled on foot, passing near the Nevada Highway Patrol main Reno office on Hammill Lane. The suspect allegedly tried to ditch their backpack and machete by throwing them into the motor pool at the NHP office. Both items were recovered, and the suspect was arrested.  2news.com


Fresno, CA: Fresno Fire Seeks Suspect in Strip Mall Arson
The Fresno Fire Department is asking the public for help identifying a person believed responsible for an arson fire that broke out around 2 p.m. Thursday in a strip mall on East Ashlan Avenue. The blaze caused extensive damage to the structure and the businesses inside, including a burger restaurant, vacant barbershop, taqueria, 7-Eleven, and clothing store. No injuries were reported, but the incident escalated to a third alarm with 65 firefighters working to extinguish hotspots.  nationaltoday.com


Sherman, TX: Man sentenced to over 7 years for firearms store robbery


 


 

C-Store – Pine Bluff, AR – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Saginaw, MI – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Richmond, VA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Hattiesburg, MS – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Lansing, MI – Armed Robbery
Clothing- Jonesboro, AR – Robbery
Clothing - West Palm Beach, FL – Robbery
Guns – Sherman, TX – Robbery
Guns- Springfield, IL – Burglary
Hardware - Kokomo, IN – Burglary
JC Penney – Clarksville, IN – Robbery
Jewelry - Victorville, CA – Robbery
Jewelry - Anchorage, AK – Robbery
Jewelry - Grand Prairie, TX – Robbery
Laundry – New Bern, CT – Armed Robbery
Liquor – Lebanon, TN – Armed Robbery
Pawn – San Antonio, TX – Robbery
Restaurant – Austintown, OH – Armed Robbery        
 

Daily Totals:
• 16 robberies
• 2 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



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