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J. Rakes
named Manager, Enterprise Investigations for Gabes
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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 named finalist for top NZ tech honor
From
billion dollar organized crime busts to making frontline retail workers
feel safer at work -
Auror has been named a finalist for Company of the Year in the 2026
New Zealand Hi-Tech Awards, in recognition of its growing impact on
retail safety globally.
The Company of the Year category is one of the top technology accolades
in New Zealand, and is voted on by expert local and international
judges. Auror was named alongside five other New Zealand tech success
stories for the category.
Auror co-founder and CEO Phil Thomson said the nomination means a lot,
but we recognize that the impact we have simply isn’t possible without
our incredible retail and law enforcement partners.
“To work with some of the most recognized brands in the world and
partner with leading law enforcement agencies is an absolute privilege -
helping them better understand the scale of crime and violence impacting
frontline workers and provide them the tools to keep their people safe,”
he said.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Growing Momentum for Federal ORC Bill
Cargo Theft Bill Takes Important Step Forward
Bipartisan Momentum Boosts
Legislation’s Chances of Passage
A
bipartisan bill aimed at cracking down on cargo theft is gaining
traction on Capitol Hill as backers push for approval before
lawmakers’ pre-election window narrows.
Supporters of the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act say the
legislation is poised to clear Congress,
following backing from about half of House members, 43 senators and the
Trump administration.
According to Henry Hanscom, chief advocacy and public affairs officer at
American Trucking Associations, growing concern over cargo theft
across trucking, rail and retail has helped drive momentum. A key
hurdle was cleared earlier this year after the legislation advanced out
of the House Judiciary Committee with strong support. The panel is
typically divided along partisan lines.
“That [vote] gives incredible prospects for this moving forward
through the House and the Senate,” Hanscom told Transport Topics
this month. He cautioned, however, that the legislative calendar remains
tight ahead of the November midterm elections.
Specifically, the bill would facilitate the creation of a
multi-agency division that would include a road map for eliminating
retail theft operations.
Backers would prefer to move the bill as a stand-alone measure,
citing time constraints and a crowded congressional agenda. Still,
advocates are open to attaching it to a larger legislative vehicle if
necessary, such as a multiyear surface transportation reauthorization.
ttnews.com
When Retail Risk Strikes
Interface '2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report' Makes More
Headlines
Retail risk incidents follow predictable operating rhythms, spiking
363 percent at store openings and peaking between 6:00 and 8:00 p.m.,
according to a new report from remote monitoring and intervention
company Interface Systems.
The
2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report includes data
from 1.6 million remote monitoring requests and 53,369 high-priority
security events across more than 18,000 U.S. retail locations in 2025.
Among those incidents, location theft or loss was the top security
incident type by volume (68.7 percent), followed by disturbances
(11.2 percent) and loitering or panhandling (8.2 percent).
Incidents tended to spike when stores open and started to taper off
after a mid-evening peak at around 7:00 p.m., the report found. Of the
1.1 million total employee assistance requests Interface reviewed,
nearly 100,000 occurred during opening and early shifts, around
10:00 a.m., and nearly 150,000 occurred during the evening around
7:00 p.m. especially as employees requested virtual security escorts or
voice-down interventions.
On average, Sundays and Mondays had the most incidents, although
Thursdays had the highest dispatch rate (38.8 percent of monitored
incidents or alarms required a dispatched law enforcement response).
For specific incidents, disturbance incidents peaked in August, while
dispatches peaked in September (76.5 percent of incidents required
dispatch). Police dispatches in response to loitering were most common
in July.
“Loitering and disturbances often precede higher-risk escalation,”
the report said. “They require fast intervention, not passive
observation.”
Retailers should match the response model to store format, the
report said. “Do not assume the same intervention mix works across all
retail environments. Build service coverage around actual
employee-support patterns.”
asisonline.org
In Case You
Missed It
The D&D Daily's Retail Crime Brief
Listen to Episode 1: Self-Checkout & ORC
Welcome to the Retail Crime Brief, a
new short-form audio series from the D&D Daily.
 Rather
than a full-length podcast, these brief episodes offer quick, focused
breakdowns of important retail crime and loss prevention topics shaping
the industry. Each installment takes a few minutes to explore a
specific trend, tactic or development that retail professionals
should have on their radar.
Episode 1: Self-Checkout & ORC
In this pilot episode, we examine how organized retail crime crews
are increasingly exploiting self-checkout systems — and why these
lanes have become one of the most attractive entry points for organized
theft operations across the United States.
From non-scans and ticket switching to coordinated distraction tactics,
self-checkout is being targeted in ways that create new challenges for
retailers and LP teams.
In this Retail Crime Brief, we take a closer look at how these
schemes work and why the issue is drawing growing attention across the
industry.
Click here
to listen to the first episode
Stay tuned for a new episode
coming soon!
Backlash Continues After ORC Funding
Veto
Governor Bob Ferguson under fire after blocking funds to stop organized
retail crime
After Governor Bob Ferguson signed the state’s new spending plan,
people are still asking why he blocked a specific fund meant to stop
organized retail theft.
The veto cut $500,000 that was requested by State Rep. Mari Leavitt
(D-University Place) to address coordinated and often violent crimes
where groups steal items specifically to resell them. This
half-million dollars was supposed to build on previous investments that
helped police and businesses in King, Snohomish, and Spokane counties
tackle these high-cost crimes.
The program had been running successfully until the initial money ran
out in June 2025. According to a report from the state Department of
Commerce, the initiative was highly effective at improving how the state
responded to retail crime by prosecuting more cases and using diversion
programs. Leavitt said she was shocked by the decision, receiving a
phone call from the governor’s office just one night before the budget
was signed into law.
Despite pleas from the Washington Retail Association and the King County
Prosecutor, Governor Ferguson went through with the veto. When reporters
asked about the move, Ferguson pointed to his past work creating a
retail theft task force as Attorney General but claimed the state needed
to balance its budget, according to The Center Square. However,
Republicans argue that the $500,000 request was a tiny fraction of the
overall state budget and was vital for maintaining public safety in
shopping districts.
seattlered.com
Residents sue San Jose in federal court over automated license-plate
reader cameras
Lawsuit filed by the Virginia-based
Institute for Justice seeks class-action status, claims cameras and
police database searches are unconstitutional and unwarranted
surveillance
Memphis crime continues to drop, new data shows. Here's how much
Portsmouth crime data shows mixed trends in early 2026
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Training the Front Line:
Why Loss Prevention Starts With Store-Level Education
By
the D&D Daily staff
As shrink pressures persist across retail, many organizations are
reinforcing one of the most effective tools in the LP playbook:
employee training.
Retail loss prevention leaders continue to place renewed emphasis on
frontline training as a core strategy to reduce shrink, improve
compliance, and strengthen in-store safety.
While technology remains an increasingly important part of modern LP
programs, industry experts continue to point to associate education
as one of the most effective first lines of defense. Current best
practices focus on equipping store teams to identify suspicious
behavior, follow proper cash-handling and refund procedures, and respond
consistently to policy violations and operational errors.
Training programs are also evolving beyond traditional onboarding.
Many retailers are shifting toward ongoing microlearning modules,
scenario-based coaching, and regular refresher sessions designed to keep
procedures top of mind amid high turnover and changing threat patterns.
Topics often include theft deterrence, de-escalation techniques,
self-checkout oversight, inventory controls, and organized retail crime
awareness.
Operational shrink remains a major focus area within these efforts.
In addition to external theft, LP teams are using training to address
process breakdowns such as scanning errors, return fraud
vulnerabilities, and inventory miscounts — all of which can
significantly impact margins if left unchecked.
For many retailers, the objective is to create a culture of awareness
at the store level, where every associate understands their role in
protecting people, product, and profit. As the industry continues to
balance customer experience with security demands, training is expected
to remain a foundational pillar of loss prevention strategy in 2026.
$100M RFID Push
UPS builds on $100M RFID investment with network rollout
United Parcel Service (UPS) is making a major commitment to using
RFID for tracking small packages.
UPS is deploying RFID-enabled package sensing across its U.S. small
package network. The implementation comes following a more than $100
million investment in RFID to date to develop and roll out the
technology and includes all package delivery vehicles and delivery
facilities in the U.S., as well as every package shipped through the
company’s more than 5,500 The UPS Store locations, including customer
return shipments.
How it works
UPS is moving from tracking packages via scanning by drivers and
associates to automatic sensing performed by RFID technology:
-
RFID is embedded
into labels, on UPS vehicles and in the company’s loading bays.
-
RFID pickup
sensing confirms packages have been picked up and are in
UPS’s possession.
-
Packages are
automatically sensed as they move through the network and
customers gain transparency into where their shipments are and
how they are progressing.
-
With more and
better data, UPS says it can respond faster when conditions
change such as weather and other unexpected events.
RFID is in use every day at UPS, supporting millions of packages.
The company says it is the first major logistics provider to broadly
roll out RFID technology across its integrated network.
chainstoreage.com
Learning From Safety Moments
Use Real Incidents as Teaching Tools Without Creating Fear or Blame
Learn how to turn safety moments
into opportunities for growth and trust-building.
Real incidents, when shared thoughtfully, create emotional resonance
that deepens safety understanding and memory. Using calm, respectful
storytelling helps avoid fear and blame, encouraging open reflection and
honest participation.
Selecting incidents that clearly illustrate risks, respect privacy,
and offer immediate lessons ensures effective and ethical training.
Separating behavior from character and avoiding dramatization preserves
dignity and maintains trainer credibility.
Engaging workers with open questions and encouraging them to share
personal stories fosters a culture of trust and continuous learning.
This tension is common. Real incidents carry power, but they must be
used carefully. When handled poorly, incident-based training can
create shame, defensiveness and fear. Workers disengage because they
feel targeted. Morale drops. Trust erodes. And the message, ironically,
gets lost.
ehstoday.com
For luxury retailers, value is a vibe
Chief executives at Ralph Lauren and
Tapestry are utilizing experiences and storytelling to provide value
beyond pricing to shoppers.
Macy’s closing 14 stores — here are the locations
Walmart to remodel 650-plus stores in 2026; details new store growth
Bergdorf merchant heads to Nordstrom after Saks Global drops lawsuit
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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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siffron Appoints Matt Johnson as Vice President and General Manager of
Loss Prevention Business Unit
Twinsburg,
OH — siffron, a
leading provider of retail merchandising and loss prevention solutions,
announced the appointment of Matt Johnson as Vice President and
General Manager of its Loss Prevention business unit.
In this role, Johnson will lead the strategic direction, product
innovation, and commercial growth of siffron’s loss prevention
portfolio. He will focus on accelerating siffron’s position as a trusted
partner for retailers and brands seeking to reduce shrink while
maintaining a positive shopper experience.
Johnson
brings extensive experience in strategy, operations, and team
leadership, with a strong background in retail and loss prevention. His
expertise spans developing scalable business strategies, leading
cross-functional teams, and delivering measurable results in highly
competitive environments.
“Matt is a proven leader with a deep understanding of the challenges
retailers face today,” said Fabrizio Valentini, CEO of siffron. “His
ability to connect strategy with execution, combined with his passion
for innovation in loss prevention, makes him the ideal leader to drive
this critical part of our business forward. We are excited to have him
on board as we continue to invest in solutions that protect products,
support store operations, and enhance the shopper experience.”
Johnson’s
appointment comes at a time when retailers are navigating increasing
shrink, organized retail crime, and the need to balance security with
accessibility. siffron is well-positioned to address these challenges
with flexible, scalable solutions that help protect merchandise, improve
operational efficiency, and maintain an open, shoppable environment that
supports sales and brand engagement.
Read the full press release here |
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Employee AI Misuse Spooks CIOs
CIOs fret over rising security concerns amid AI adoption
AI is emerging as a critical tool
and a growing threat as CIOs struggle to balance innovation with risk,
according to a new report.
Securing AI has become a top priority for CIOs, according to a Logicalis
report published Monday. The report, which surveyed more than 1,000 CIOs
globally, found more than a quarter see AI as a significant source of
risk, placing it nearly on par with traditional threats such as
malware, ransomware and phishing.
Employee misuse of AI is compounding concerns, with 57% of CIOs
saying staff are putting data security at risk. Despite the mounting
risk, AI governance measures remain limited, with just 37% of
organizations saying they have visibility into the AI tools in use.
The challenges posed by the advent of AI are significant enough that
nearly half of respondents in the Logicalis report said they wish AI had
“not been invented.”
While traditional threats remain the dominant concern for CIOs, AI is
being increasingly cited as a risk as business leaders grapple with
critical issues such as shadow AI, app sprawl and lack of oversight.
Security teams, already strained, are losing ground in the face of
increased blind spots, with more than one-third reporting a reduced
ability to detect breaches and worsening incident response times.
At the same time, internal misuse of AI is introducing new workforce
challenges. Two-thirds of respondents say employee training on AI
risk management is insufficient, while 94% of CIOs report a
cybersecurity skills shortage.
While a renewed focus on upskilling and expenditure on post-breach
remediation is rising in tandem with the threat, there is a growing
need for more to be done to shift response from reactive to preventative.
cybersecuritydive.com
Threat Actor Targets Logistics
Companies
Cargo theft malware actor spent a month inside a decoy network before
researchers pulled the plug
Proofpoint researchers executed a malicious payload from a threat actor
known to
target trucking and logistics companies in late February 2026,
doing so inside a decoy environment. The environment stayed compromised
for more than 30 days, long enough for researchers to watch the actor
work through their tools, scripts, and decisions beyond the initial
break-in.
The attacker had previously been documented targeting transportation
carriers through compromised load board platforms, which are online
marketplaces connecting shippers and freight brokers with motor
carriers. This engagement revealed what happens after that initial
foothold is established.
How the infection started
On February 27, 2026, after compromising a load board platform, the
actor delivered a malicious payload via email to transportation carriers
inquiring about fraudulent advertised loads. The payload was a
Visual Basic Script file. When executed, it downloaded and ran a
PowerShell script, installed the ScreenConnect remote access tool, and
displayed a decoy broker-carrier agreement to mask the activity.
Stacking remote access tools for redundancy
Once inside, the actor installed four separate ScreenConnect instances,
Pulseway RMM, and SimpleHelp RMM over the course of the intrusion.
Running multiple remote management platforms simultaneously points to
deliberate redundancy, preserving access in case one tool gets flagged
or disabled.
helpnetsecurity.com
NIST limits vulnerability analysis as CVE backlog swells
The agency will stop adding detailed
information to vulnerabilities that don’t meet certain criteria.
The National Institute of Standards and Technology is changing how it
analyzes newly disclosed vulnerabilities as it faces a massive backlog
of digital flaws.
Due to “a surge in [cybersecurity vulnerabilities and exposures]
submissions,” NIST said on Wednesday, the agency will only perform
detailed analyses of CVEs that meet certain criteria, including
publication in the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency’s
Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) catalog, presence in software used
in the federal government or presence in “critical software” (as defined
in a Biden administration executive order).
cybersecuritydive.com
Two US nationals jailed over scheme that generated $5M for North Korean
regime
Google Play is changing how Android apps access your contacts and
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Amazon Tightens Anti-Counterfeit
Controls
Amazon Intensifies Counterfeit Crackdown Across Marketplace
By
the D&D Daily staff
Amazon is continuing to expand its efforts to combat counterfeit
merchandise across its third-party marketplace, as the company
increases investments in technology, seller verification, and
enforcement actions aimed at protecting both consumers and brands.
The company’s Counterfeit Crimes Unit (CCU), launched in 2020, has
become a central part of that strategy. The unit combines former
federal prosecutors, investigators, data analysts and machine learning
specialists to identify and pursue bad actors selling fake goods through
the platform. Recent updates indicate Amazon has increased the use of
AI-driven detection tools capable of flagging suspicious listings,
seller behaviors and manipulated product images before items go live.
A major operational shift is also underway in 2026 with Amazon’s move
away from inventory commingling, a process in which identical products
from multiple sellers were previously pooled together in fulfillment
centers. By requiring greater inventory separation and labeling
controls, the change is expected to reduce the risk of counterfeit
items entering legitimate product streams and improve product
traceability.
Amazon has stated that these measures are intended to strengthen
trust in the marketplace as third-party sellers continue to account for
a significant share of overall platform sales. For retailers, brands
and loss prevention leaders, the broader takeaway is the increasing role
of technology-driven authentication and supply chain transparency in
online commerce.
The crackdown also reflects wider industry pressure on marketplaces
to improve seller vetting and respond more quickly to fraudulent
listings. As counterfeit activity continues to evolve, platforms are
relying more heavily on AI monitoring, brand partnerships and legal
enforcement to reduce exposure and maintain consumer confidence.
Move Over, Google!
Survey: Many AI tool users view Google as second option
Users of artificial intelligence assistants such as ChatGPT and Gemini
are becoming increasingly less likely to use the world’s most popular
search engine.
Roughly seven-in-10 (79%) AI chatbot users now use Google less than
before, with 32% turning to AI first for information, according to a
new report from B2B service provider platform Clutch. More than a
quarter (28%) of AI assistant users still go to Google first.
According to data from Similarweb, Google.com was the world’s most
visited website as of February 2026.
chainstoreage.com
Starbucks launches beta app in ChatGPT to fuel new drink discovery
Commentary: FedEx and UPS need to move up the e-commerce food chain |
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Alexandria, IN: Alexandria man caught with $150K worth of stolen tools told
police he stole faster than he could sell
An Alexandria man allegedly admitted to making nearly $40,000 over the last year
selling stolen tools. But the man told police he stole merchandise faster than
he could sell it— his garage and shed piled with $150,000 worth of stolen tools.
David Eldridge, 53, is charged with organized retail theft, theft of property
greater than $50,000 and corrupt business influence. These are all Level 5
felonies that carry a maximum prison sentence of six years. But police said
Eldridge didn’t operate the theft scheme alone. Also charged is Amy Verbryck,
51, of Alexandria. She faces the same charges as Eldridge despite not reportedly
stealing any of the tools herself. Police say Verbryck helped facilitate the
sale of the stolen merchandise and lied to customers when Eldridge was jailed
for shoplifting. According to court documents, Eldridge was a truck driver who
frequently stole tools and other merchandise from Home Depot, Lowes and Meijer.
He sold the stolen items to others, claiming to have a “hook up.” Eldridge
frequently targeted Hamilton County stores, admitting to police that he had a
six-store circuit that he stole from weekly. Eldridge would fill his cart full
of tools and other items and walk straight out the door.
fox59.com
Holyoke, MA: Holyoke jewelry theft leads to Florida arrest and armed robbery
charge
What began as a jewelry theft at the Holyoke Mall ended more than 1,000 miles
away when police arrested a suspect in Florida on an armed robbery charge,
authorities said. Ricardo Cotto, 48, is charged with committing armed robbery,
giving a false name to police, being a fugitive from justice in Holyoke and
stealing property worth more than $1,200. Cotto was arrested March 20 in Volusia
County, Florida, and charged with armed robbery, according to Holyoke Police
Chief Brian Keenan. On Jan. 18, Holyoke police were called to the mall for a
report of a theft. Keenan said the suspect, later identified as Cotto, asked to
see several pieces of jewelry inside a store, then stole them and ran out of the
mall. About $30,000 worth of jewelry was taken, Keenan said. Detectives later
identified Cotto as a suspect and obtained a warrant for his arrest. The arrest
warrant was active when Cotto was taken into custody in Florida, Keenan said.
After his Florida case is handled, he can be brought back to Massachusetts to
face charges, Keenan said.
masslive.com
Hialeah, FL: Video Captures Dramatic Pharmacy Theft at Hialeah Publix
This week, Hialeah authorities released surveillance and body cam footage
depicting the moment an off-duty state officer confronted an armed thief at a
Publix store after the man attempted to steal nine bottles of over-the-counter
medications valued at just under $190. The incident occurred on September 29,
2025, around 4:30 p.m. at the supermarket located at 1585 W. 49th St., adjacent
to Westland Mall in Hialeah, Florida. The suspect, identified as 43-year-old
Edwin Soto, whose nationality has not been disclosed, was spotted by an officer
from the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) as he stashed
six bottles of Advil and three of Tylenol into a backpack. The officer, who was
not on duty at the time, displayed his badge in an attempt to detain Soto. Soto
exited the store while glancing over his shoulder but returned shortly,
brandished a knife, and threatened to kill the officer before fleeing on a
bicycle.
cubaheadlines.com
Milwaukee woman accused of stealing perfume from Crystal Lake, McHenry Ultas in
‘ongoing criminal enterprise’
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Shootings & Deaths
Memphis, TN: Three shot, one killed, outside Memphis strip mall Thursday
One person is dead, and two others are in critical condition in what police are
calling a targeted shooting at a strip mall in the Fox Meadows area. MPD, the
Memphis Safe Task Force, including members of the National Guard, is on the
scene at Knight Arnold Road and Mendenhall Road. According to police, three
people were shot outside the shopping center, and one of them was pronounced
dead at the hospital.
wreg.com
Miami, FL: Box truck driver runs over, kills woman crossing street in Miami
Beach
The driver of a box truck struck and killed a woman crossing the street in Miami
Beach on Thursday afternoon. According to Miami Beach police, the crash happened
at around 1:27 p.m. at West 41st Street and Royal Palm Avenue. Police said the
woman was in the crosswalk as the box truck driver hit her while turning left
onto 41st Street. Surveillance video shows bystanders rushing to her aid. Police
said medics responded and “immediately initiated life-saving measures,” but the
woman died after being taken to Jackson Memorial Hospital’s Ryder Trauma Center.
Authorities said the investigation into the crash “remains ongoing.”
local10.com
Coral Springs, FL: Coral Springs police investigating shooting behind strip mall
A woman was hospitalized and a person was in custody after a shooting in Coral
Springs on Thursday that was caught on camera. The shooting happened around 3
p.m. near a shopping plaza along the 7600 block of West Sample Road. Cell phone
video obtained by NBC6 showed a man in an orange shirt get out of a landscaping
company van and approach an SUV armed with a gun. He's seen pointing the gun at
the SUV and firing a single gunshot before the video ends.
local10.com
Buffalo, NY: Man shot store clerk, then was shot by police during armed robbery
on Buffalo's West Side
Buffalo police are investigating after they say a man shot a store clerk and was
then shot by an officer during an armed robbery on Buffalo's West Side. The
incident occurred just before 8:45 p.m. on Wednesday. According to police,
officers arrived at the 7-Eleven at Prospect Avenue and Connecticut Street as
customers, and as they approached the door, they observed an armed robbery in
progress.
wkbw.com
Jacksonville, FL: Man shot in the head, another in the neck at gas stations
Two shootings at separate Jacksonville gas stations resulted in one man shot in
the head and killed and another in the neck in life-threatening condition. The
Sheriff’s Office couldn't say if they are thought to be related, but the
circumstances don’t appear to indicate a link. The first happened about 8:30
p.m. Wednesday, April 15, at the 9001 Southside Blvd. Circle K not far from The
Avenues mall. Sgt. Steve Rudlaff said the victim, later identified as
36-year-old Omar Padilla, got into an argument inside the store with another man
about 20 to 25 years old. They continued to argue outside into the next-door
parking lot of a Home Depot where the assailant pulled out a gun and shot the
victim in the head. The gunman left in a red Dodge Charger.
jacksonville.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Weston, FL: Update: Drone video shows moments Weston jewelry heist suspect is
captured in Indiana
Newly released drone video shows the moments Indiana police officers say they
captured a man who was wanted in a massive jewelry heist in Weston. The video
shows the man running along a road, seemingly evading police before officers in
Zionsville take him down and cuff him. Jose Elias Barrozo-Espinosa, 38, also
known as Fabian Eliseo Llancavil Nahuel, was arrested late last month. According
to Broward Sheriff’s Office deputies, the Chilean national left blood behind at
the Weston scene on Nov. 8, proving crucial to identifying him. According to an
arrest warrant, at the Weston home, “unknown suspects” shattered a master
bedroom window and got in, stealing a safe containing roughly $500,000 in gold
and jewelry. DNA evidence taken from blood left on a shade near the shattered
window and on the floor came back to Barrozo-Espinosa. An Indianapolis news
outlet reports that Barrozo-Espinosa also has a warrant out of Texas and that
the case is linked to “similar cases of South American gangs targeting suburban
homes.”
local10.com
Cracker Barrel closed after armed robbery at restaurant in Nashville
Police said officers responded to reports of an
armed robbery at the Charlotte Pike restaurant on Thursday afternoon.
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•
C-Store – England, AR
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Buffalo, NY
– Armed Robbery / Emp-Susp wounded
•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Morgantown,
WV – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store –
Jacksonville, FL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Providence,
RI – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Bay City, MI
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Everett, MA
– Robbery
•
C-Store - Lyford, TX –
Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Ozone
Park, NY – Robbery
•
Dollar - San Antonio,
TX – Robbery
•
Grocery - Raleigh, NC
– Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry - Aurora, IL – Robbery
•
Jewelry – San
Francisco, CA – Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Nashville, TN – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Topeka,
KS – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Bowie, MD
– Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 16 robberies
• 1 burglary
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
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Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
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Regional AP & Safety Business Partner - South Region
Texas
This position is considered Field based and is considered to be a blend
of onsite and remote work activity. Field associates will spend their time both
traveling to and spending time in various PetSmart locations and can expect to
be asked to travel to Phoenix Home Office periodically throughout the year.
Field associates typically work out of their home office when not traveling as
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Insight,
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If Your Demo Requires You To Talk Over It,
It’s Probably Not Ready
The strongest demos are the ones where the
screen does most of the talking. When vendors have to constantly explain
what they're supposed to be seeing, confidence drops quietly - even if
they're smiling and nodding.
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