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 6/30/26

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Kirk Carter named Regional Asset Protection Manager for URBN (Urban Outfitters, Anthropologie Group, Free People & Nuuly)


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Strengthen Retail Security & Enhance Workplace Safety with
Off-Duty Law Enforcement

Discover how off-duty law enforcement enhances safety and deters crime while protecting employees and assets.

Retailers are under more pressure than ever to prevent theft, ensure employee safety and maintain business continuity across stores. Criminal activities are on the rise, and they can severely disrupt operations, leading to financial losses and a tarnished reputation. Workplace security not only safeguards assets and sensitive information but also protects employees and visitors, fostering a safe and productive environment.

Hiring off-duty law enforcement is a proven way to level up your retail security strategy. Off-duty personnel are uniquely positioned to deter criminal activities, respond swiftly in emergencies and provide an added layer of protection. By integrating off-duty law enforcement into your security strategy, you can create a safer, more secure workplace environment.

Protos Security's workplace security blog explores ways that off-duty law enforcement can benefit retailers and increase workplace safety.

Read more here
 




 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Property Crime Continues to Trend Lower in Early 2026
New national data shows broad declines across major property crime categories


By the D&D Daily staff

New year-to-date data from the Crime Index points to continued declines in reported property crime across the United States, with every major category showing lower totals compared with the same period last year. The figures, covering January through April 2026, suggest the downward trend seen in recent years has continued into the first four months of the year.

Overall property crime fell 11.4% year over year, with 696,687 reported incidents compared with 786,350 during the same period in 2025. The Crime Index defines property crime using the FBI’s Summary Reporting System categories of burglary, theft and motor vehicle theft.

Among the individual offense categories, burglaries recorded one of the largest declines, dropping 16.5% to 82,840 reported incidents. Theft, which remains the largest property crime category by volume, decreased 8.4% to 511,252 incidents. Motor vehicle theft posted the steepest percentage decline, falling 20.3% to 102,595 reported offenses.

The Crime Index compiles data from participating law enforcement agencies nationwide and publishes current crime trends before annual FBI estimates become available. Its historical data also shows property crime has generally followed a long-term downward trajectory over the past several decades, despite periodic fluctuations in individual offense categories.

For retailers, the broader decline in reported property crime provides additional context as companies continue investing in loss prevention technologies, organized retail crime investigations and partnerships with law enforcement. While national crime statistics encompass a much wider range of offenses than retail theft alone, trends in burglary and theft remain closely watched by the retail industry.

As always, national figures may differ from local conditions. Individual communities can experience crime patterns that vary significantly from nationwide averages, making local intelligence, data sharing and targeted prevention strategies important components of effective retail security programs.  crimeindex.org


Addressing Root Causes of Shoplifting
Why you cannot fix the shoplifting crisis without addressing homelessness and addiction

Is it ever possible to tackle crimes like shoplifting without tackling social issues such as poverty and homelessness?

The fact that in London 104 repeat offenders were responsible for more than 5,300 retail crimes over the past two years is not a surprise to our organisation.

We have been raising the alarm about repeat low-level offending for over a decade. The retail crime crisis is in part, the visible result of the UK’s inertia ‘supporting’ people with multiple disadvantage. When people experiencing crisis don’t fit neatly into a pathway or sector, we struggle to provide the intensive support they so urgently need. Years of neglectful policy-coasting has funded failure and resulted in an unavoidable consequence of rising reoffending.

We agree with Met Police Assistant Commissioner Matt Twist that “the system needs to change’” Revolving Doors suggest we start by tackling the root cause of these crimes.

Prolific low-level offenders, like shoplifters, are far from a homogenous group. There are serious concerns about organised crime – yes, however the well-known truth is that a significant amount of repeat shop theft is linked to people in deep crisis, addiction, homelessness, poor mental health, trauma and poverty – the revolving door group.

People in this revolving door typically commit acquisitive crime, often to fund addictions and because of other unmet needs. As they are not the most dangerous offenders, they tend not to qualify for intense interventions and services are generally too segregated to work together to help them, so they simply slip through the net.

Opportunistic thieving and organised attacks on supermarkets are a shock to witness and experience as a staff member but these two retail crime groups (organised or opportunistic) need different responses. The most important factor being that local services know who the individuals at the sharp end of crisis are and understand that they need holistic support.

Neighbourhoods, authorities and services hold crucial knowledge on individuals experiencing homelessness and addiction that can be focussed into urgent impact. ‘Bobbies on the beat’ know who need intensive support on their patch and are increasingly desperate and advocating for more impactful solutions to stop reoffending because repeated prosecution and sentencing is offering no respite, taking precious time away from more serious offences and community justice. bigissue.com


Shoplifting Epidemic Across the Pond
UK: Retail Crime Running Riot Warns Labour As Shoplifting And Assaults Rise
Retail crime is “running riot” as shoplifting and assaults on staff have risen in the past year, Scottish Labour has said.

Scottish Government figures published on Tuesday showed the number of shoplifting crimes recorded by police rose 19% in 2025-26. There has also been an increase in the number of assaults on retail workers, rising by 10% in a year.

The number of assaults on retail workers which caused an injury has increased by 18%. Scottish Labour justice spokeswoman Pauline McNeill said the SNP must “wake up to this growing crisis”.

She said: “Retail crime is running riot in Scotland, putting workers at risk and leaving businesses out of pocket. “The Retail Crime Taskforce has a role to play, but these damning figures show it is no silver bullet."

“The SNP must wake up to this growing crisis and deliver real action to protect shopworkers and tackle shoplifting. Too often police are stuck waiting around in court and A&E waiting rooms instead of being out in our communities."

We need a real plan to strengthen policing, support businesses and improve community safety.” moorlandsradio.co.uk


Canada's Battle Against Retail Theft
Businesses applaud Ottawa’s tougher bail, sentencing laws aimed at retail theft
The federal government says it’s heard loud and clear that public safety is an “issue of grave concern” and has brought in legislation to combat retail theft and violence against transit workers.

Business associations in the Halifax region are applauding the Bail and Sentencing Reform Act (Bill C-14), after having spoken out repeatedly, calling for more to be done to stop such crimes in the city’s downtown.

Federal Justice Minister and Attorney General Sean Fraser told reporters in Halifax Thursday that stricter bail and sentencing legislation across Canada aims to alleviate pressures on businesses.

“These changes are going to have a positive impact by reducing the prevalence of repeat offenders and by communicating very clearly before a crime is committed that the consequences will be serious,” said Fraser.

The bail and sentencing reforms will impact charges connected to organized crime, home invasion, car theft, and human trafficking. Retail theft connected to organized crime will be considered an aggravating factor and could lead to tougher sentencing.

Violence against front-line transit workers will also be considered an aggravating factor. globalnews.ca


Houston tops Texas cities in crime rates, reports FBI data

Kentucky crime rates decline for second straight year
 



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Security Culture Strengthens Retail Operations
Building a Stronger Security Culture Starts With Every Employee


By the D&D Daily staff

Retail security has traditionally been viewed as the responsibility of loss prevention professionals, security teams and store leadership. Increasingly, however, retailers are recognizing that creating a safer, more secure environment depends on building a security-minded culture that includes every employee.

From the sales floor to the stockroom, associates are often the first to notice unusual activity, safety hazards or operational concerns. Providing employees with the knowledge and confidence to recognize and report these issues can strengthen both security efforts and day-to-day operations.

Many retailers are expanding training beyond traditional topics such as emergency procedures and workplace safety. Newer programs often include situational awareness, de-escalation techniques, cybersecurity awareness, inventory protection, fraud recognition and clear reporting protocols. The goal is not to turn associates into investigators, but to help them understand their role in protecting people, products and company assets.

Communication also plays an important role. Organizations are increasingly using mobile communication platforms, digital reporting tools and regular team discussions to share timely information about emerging risks, operational changes and best practices. When employees understand why security procedures exist—and see leadership consistently reinforcing them—they are more likely to follow established processes.

Recognition can be just as important as training. Retailers that acknowledge employees for identifying safety concerns, reporting operational issues or following security procedures help reinforce positive behaviors. Over time, these actions contribute to a workplace where security becomes part of everyday decision-making rather than a separate function.

Technology continues to support these efforts through tools such as mobile reporting applications, video analytics, electronic access controls and workforce communication platforms. While these solutions can improve visibility and response times, they are most effective when paired with engaged employees who understand how and when to use them.

As retail environments continue to evolve, organizations are finding that effective loss prevention is not built solely on technology or dedicated security teams. A strong security culture—supported by consistent training, open communication and employee engagement—can help retailers reduce risk while creating a safer experience for both associates and customers.


Closures To Outpace Openings in 2026?
(Updated) More than 1,000 stores are set to open across the US in 2026

While some retailers are scaling back in 2026, others are expanding their footprints across the US.

The success of discount retailers like Dollar General and Nordstrom Rack suggests that American consumers are rewarding retailers that can offer them deals over those that charge full price for groceries and apparel. Big box stores like Target and Walmart, and warehouse clubs like Costco, are also upping their investments in store remodels and openings for 2026 and beyond.

For now, 2026 store closures appear on track to outpace openings, with over 2,000 planned closures announced so far, by Business Insider's count. In 2025, store closures reached over 4,100.

While retailers like Macy's cut back on stores to focus on their digital footprint, these chains are spending money to expand their physical retail presence. businessinsider.com


Mall Closes Over Safety Violations
Troubled Central Texas mall suddenly shut down over serious safety violations
A Central Texas mall with an uncertain future has been ordered to temporarily close after facing a series of violations. "The City of Temple has ordered the temporary closure of the Temple Mall due to unresolved fire and building code violations affecting critical life safety systems," the city posted to Facebook on Monday.

The Temple Fire Mashal's Office issued a 30-day notice to Temple Mall on May 22, advising that the property would be ordered to vacate if identified deficiencies were not corrected.

"Following continued inspections, those deficiencies remain unresolved," the city wrote.

The temporary closure, which took effect Tuesday, will remain until the owners correct the violations and the property meets the applicable fire and building code requirements. Dillard's is open and remains unaffected by the closure. chron.com


Heat Wave Triggered Store Closures
UK: Greggs confirms wave of store closures due to red heat warning in UK
GREGGS has been forced to shut multiple stores due. The popular bakery chain confirmed that various branches have closed their doors amid the UK’s red heat warning from the Met Office.

Greggs confirmed to The Sun that 11 of its stores will be closed from today (June 24) and tomorrow (June 25). Greggs’ flagship store in London’s Leicester Square is among the sites shutting up shop.

The decision has been made in order to “protect” staff, with customers being notified of the closures in an email sent by Greggs.

In the announcement, Greggs explained: “Just to let you know – the following shops will be temporarily closed on Wednesday 24th and Thursday 25th June to protect our customers and colleagues during the severe hot weather.” thescottishsun.co.uk


Saks Global exits bankruptcy; changes name, slashes debt
Saks Global has emerged from Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection with a new corporate name, new owners, less debt and a greatly reduced store footprint.

The top supply chain stress sources include...

Family Dollar completes $75 million sale-leaseback across 19 states

Numerator: July 4 spending could total nearly $22 billion

UK retail downturn deepened in June, CBI survey shows
 



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AI Poses Growing Risk to Companies
Companies keep bolting AI onto their products, and the security bill is coming due
Companies keep bolting AI and LLM features onto their products, and the security results are starting to show a pattern. The vulnerabilities those features create get rated high risk far more often than anything else, and they get fixed slower than anything else. The figures come from Cobalt’s AI and Pentesting Pulse Report 2026, built on five years of penetration testing data and a survey of 455 security leaders and practitioners.

A risk rate that holds at 2.7 times the average

AI applications stack new weaknesses on top of old ones. They keep every flaw of conventional software and add a fresh set. A web app with an LLM wired into it can still be hit by SQL injection, cross-site scripting, and broken authentication. It can now also be hit by prompt injection, insecure output handling, and model-level denial of service.

Across Cobalt’s dataset, the high-risk rate for AI and LLM pentests runs at 2.7 times the rate for every other kind of system. That gap has held for two straight years. About one in three AI findings earns a high-risk label. For other systems, the share sits near one in eight.

Two of every three serious findings stay open

Finding the problems turns out to be the easy part. Fixing them is where AI trails everything else. AI and LLM pentests carry the lowest resolution rate Cobalt tracks, landing at 38.4% in 2026. Two of every three serious findings stay open and exploitable.

The rate nearly doubled over the year, the biggest jump of any asset class. That counts as progress from last place. It still trails the next category by double digits and sits far below API and web testing, where most serious findings get resolved.

Three things hold the rate down. Too few staff understand both security and AI systems. The fix often runs through a model vendor when the flaw lives in the model. Most AI projects are new, with security processes that have yet to mature. The median time to close one of these findings nearly doubled as well, a sign that teams are taking on harder cases that need more digging.

Shadow AI leads the incident list: helpnetsecurity.com
 



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Giving AI Too Much Power?
Most teams accept higher risk for faster AI database work
Database professionals are using AI for everyday work like writing queries, building schemas, and reviewing code, and a growing share rely on autonomous tools that act on the database itself. The use of AI in database management has almost tripled in a year, climbing from 15% to 44% of organizations, according to Redgate’s 2026 State of the Database Landscape report. That puts AI inside the systems holding an organization’s most sensitive data, often with permission to change that data directly.

The security problem here is one the people running these systems already see coming. Data security ranks as their top worry about AI, named by close to two-thirds of respondents and by even more of those whose organizations have yet to adopt it. The same group is going ahead anyway. A majority accept higher data security risk in exchange for the speed AI gives them, a choice many made before the controls were in place to support it.

Most of the attention on AI in this space goes to generative tools that draft code and queries. The sharper issue is the next category. A majority of organizations use autonomous AI and agents, software that can operate on database systems with limited human review of each action. These tools handle data quality work, schema design, and automation, and almost every organization reports getting something useful out of them.

“AI can be the good and the bad here. It can analyze threats and find issues automatically, so it can strengthen my own system’s security. The concern is mainly how people deal with it (like uploading confidential information to ChatGPT), or when you give it too much power. Granting AI the permissions to automatically fix everything means it can potentially also cause huge damage,” said Ben Weissman, CEO, Solisyon. helpnetsecurity.com

 
The Danger of Chatbots
Sycophantic chatbots and the harms that build over many chats
People use AI chatbots for company, advice, and emotional support, and these systems answer in ways meant to hold their attention. Researchers describe the resulting risks as affective safety, a class of harm that exists because humans are emotional beings and because the systems engage directly with that emotional life. The damage happens during ordinary use, with no breach and no intruder. These systems work as designed, optimizing for the goals their builders set, and the harm comes out of that optimization.

Harm that builds over time

The strongest evidence concerns harm that accumulates across many interactions. Molly Russell, a 14-year-old from London, died in 2017 from an act of self-harm after viewing large amounts of depression, self-harm, and suicide content on Instagram and Pinterest. A UK coroner ruled in 2022 that this content contributed to her death and found that platform algorithms pushed harmful material she had not requested. In 2024 New York City filed legal action against TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Snapchat, and YouTube, claiming their recommendation systems contribute to higher rates of depression, anxiety, and suicidal ideation among young users.

A single recommendation in these sequences looks harmless on its own. The harm lives in the accumulation, the loop, and the gradual displacement of a person’s own responses by the system’s pattern. Content moderation and single-turn safety checks examine one output at a time, so a sequence that stays under any single threshold passes through. The pattern resembles slow intrusions that avoid detection by keeping each action small. helpnetsecurity.com


What your next cyber insurance renewal will demand

GPT-5.6 gets better at cybersecurity


 




Fake Retailers Boosted by AI
As AI-Backed Fake Retailers Pollute the Internet, What Are the Solutions?
Fraudulent business practices and the scam artists behind them may be nothing new in the world of commerce, but a new trend brought about by the advance of technology is: AI-created fake retailers and brands are proliferating across the web and social media, often leveraging consumers’ empathy and emotion to rope unsuspecting victims into a purchase.

Facebook and other similar social media platforms are rife with these sorts of fake retail operations, with Meta’s own late 2024 data suggesting that 10% of its total revenue was derived from scam ads (and Wall Street Journal data suggesting, as of mid-2025, that 70% of new ads on Meta platforms either promoted “scams, poor quality products or illicit goods,” per FOX 59).

In a more recent report issued by Forbes contributor Catherine Erdly, the latest iteration of dishonest retail practices spreading across the internet are so-called “ghost stores,” or e-comm businesses which use AI-created imagery, reviews, testimonials, and websites to misrepresent themselves as small businesses, often local. Erdly set the scene:

“Ready to focus on their new roles as grandparents, a couple shared a heartfelt message with customers as they close their boutique doors with one final sale: ‘It’s with a heavy heart that we share this message with you. After years of love and care poured into this little shop, it’s time for us to close,’” she began.

At first glance, everything looks genuine. The emotional farewell. The photo of the owners. But on second glance, things don’t add up. Despite the title referencing a local town, the shipping details note that orders are dispatched from their warehouse in Central Asia. A closer look at the photo suggests the smoothness and uniformity of an AI-generated image,” she added. retailwire.com


Amazon Robotics Push
EXCLUSIVE: Q&A with VP of Amazon Robotics on company’s robotics strategy

Amazon supports fast delivery and heavy order volumes with a growing fleet of advanced fulfillment robots.

Chain Store Age recently visited Amazon’s Boston-area robotics R&D and manufacturing hub in Westborough, Mass. to take a first-hand look at the latest advances in the robots the retailer uses in its fulfillment centers. During the visit, which took place on the first day of Amazon Prime Day 2026, we spoke with Scott Dresser, VP of Amazon Robotics, to get deeper insight into the online giant’s robotics strategy.

What are the key guiding principles of Amazon's robotics program?

Safety is always first. We need to make sure that the systems and the robotics that we develop are safe around our associates, because they are inherently in the same spaces as our associates. There was a lot of design iteration about how to make a system that had safe sensors and software so that we could reliably test it and verify it to make sure that was safe around people.

Amazon also thinks about speed. Customers love speed, they love ordering products and getting them in as little as 30 minutes, which they can in some cases. Robots enable us to build fulfillment operations that are denser and closer to our customers, and that combined with artificial intelligence and work we're doing in inventory placement means that we can provide transportation times that are much less than they would be otherwise. chainstoreage.com


New Amazon Handling-Time Rule Take Effect This Week


 


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Wilmington, DE: Man accused of running a $70K organized retail theft operation
A man has been arrested and charged following a months-long organized retail theft investigation involving multiple businesses throughout New Castle County, Delaware, police said. According to Delaware State Police, in March 2026, their criminal investigations unit received information that Eric Tillman, 65, of Wilmington, was recruiting individuals struggling with drug addiction to steal merchandise from retail stores in exchange for a fraction of the items’ retail value. During the investigation, police said detectives determined that Tillman targeted numerous retailers throughout New Castle County, including, Giant, Walgreens, CVS, Target, and the Kenny Family ShopRite stores. The investigation also revealed that Tillman transported the stolen merchandise to a storage unit in New Jersey before reselling the items at multiple flea markets throughout the state, according to police. On June 8, 2026, detectives located Tillman in Wilmington and took him into custody, police said. Following his arrest, police said detectives executed search warrants at his Wilmington residence, a New Jersey storage unit, and two vehicles. Detectives found around 4,317 items of suspected stolen merchandise with an estimated retail value of $70,292.36. After Tillman was taken into custody, he was charged with organized retail crime, receiving stolen property, and second-degree conspiracy. Police said he was released on a $8,000 unsecured bond.  nbcphiladelphia.com


Polk County, FL: Tesla, BMW, And 16 Arrests: How A $40 Wawa Snack Theft Unraveled For Florida Airbnb Guests
A trip to a Polk County convenience store ended in a mass arrest on Friday, June 26, 2026, when Polk County Sheriff’s Office deputies detained 12 adults and three juveniles at the Davenport Wawa on Old Lake Wilson Road. According to investigators, the group had been staying together at a local Airbnb while visiting the area from various other counties across Florida. Store employees alerted authorities after witnessing the individuals walking through the business and concealing bottled drinks and food inside their clothing. Police reports indicate the group arrived at the location in three separate vehicles—a BMW, a Tesla, and a Honda Accord—and all appeared to know one another. When deputies arrived, the suspects were still in the parking lot preparing to leave in their vehicles. Law enforcement secured the area, interviewed the individuals, and recovered both unconsumed items and empty containers. All 15 suspects subsequently admitted to taking the items, and deputies retrieved the store’s video surveillance footage, which documented the coordinated effort.  tampafp.com


DeLand, FL: ‘Mini hardware store’: Two arrested after stolen tools found in DeLand home, deputies say
Two men are facing felony charges after they allegedly stockpiled thousands of dollars’ worth of stolen merchandise from Lowe’s inside a DeLand home. According to the Volusia County Sheriff’s Office, an investigation into the retail theft incident allegedly revealed that a suspect, identified as 29-year-old Tyler Cherry, had fraudulently obtained Lowe’s credit cards. The agency added that Cherry and a 25-year-old accomplice, identified as Jared Bennett, reportedly used those fraudulent Lowe’s cards to steal numerous tools and other items from the home improvement retailers. The scope of the operation was uncovered in March 2026 when detectives executed a search warrant at a residence located at 342 S Sans Souci Avenue in DeLand, according to VCSO. During the search, investigators allegedly discovered what they described as a “mini hardware store.” In photos shared by the agency on social media, stacks of brand-new DeWalt power tools, circular saws, rolled wire, and other hardware supplies are observed inside the searched residence.  orlando-news.com

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Fairbank, AK: Armed man fatally shot by law enforcement in Fairbanks mall parking lot, police say
A 31-year-old man was fatally shot by law enforcement officers near a Fairbanks shopping center Sunday evening, Fairbanks police say. The shooting took place just after 6 p.m. in the parking lot of the Bentley Mall, according to a statement from the Fairbanks Police Department. Two officers from the department, as well as one Alaska State Trooper, fired their weapons, both agencies said. Police identified the man as Brandon Michael Roberts in an update Monday afternoon. The encounter began after a probation officer called 911 to say he had spotted Roberts, who was wanted on a probation warrant related to a prior burglary, the update said. The officer also told dispatchers that it appeared Roberts, a convicted felon, was carrying a gun, the department said. The probation officer provided updates as police and troopers responded to the area of the mall, located on College Road, according to the update. “Moments after arriving, officers spotted Roberts, who immediately fled on foot,” the update said. “Officers pursued him and, just moments later, Roberts pointed a handgun towards a police officer.” Two police officers and one trooper fired at Roberts, striking him several times, according to the department.  adn.com


Las Vegas, NV: Update: Suspect in fatal shooting outside laundromat fired at car 17 times while toddler was inside
A man accused in the deadly shooting outside a northeast valley laundromat earlier this month fired 17 times at a vehicle while a toddler was inside, according to an arrest report obtained by Channel 13. Abdul Muhammad, 39, is charged with one count of open murder, two counts of attempted murder, one count of carrying a concealed weapon without a permit and one count of prohibited person in possession of a firearm in a June 18 shooting that killed 24-year-old Marquis Perkins and injured his girlfriend. The shooting happened on June 18 around 9 p.m. at a strip mall near East Craig Road and North Nellis Boulevard. Marquis Perkins, 24, died and his girlfriend was injured. Police said the female victim's 2-year-old child was not injured in the incident. Muhammad made his initial appearance in Las Vegas Justice Court on June 25, where a judge ordered him to be held without bail. He is due back in court for a preliminary hearing on July 9.  ktnv.com


Hopkinsville, KY: 1 flown for treatment after shooting in Hopkinsville
A man was injured in a shooting on Fort Campbell Boulevard in Hopkinsville on Monday afternoon Hopkinsville Police say just after 3 pm, an argument between two men over a woman led to shots being fired and one man being hit in the thigh. The shooting happened in the front parking lot of Bradford Square Mall but the men started arguing inside a store. The man who was reportedly shot ran behind the mall after being shot. Hopkinsville Fire Department Spokesman Captain Payton Rogers says the man was taken to a waiting helicopter that flew him to Skyline Medical Center in Nashville due to his injuries. Police had blocked off the area as they investigate the shooting but Police say both men are in custody but no one has been charged at this time.  wkdzradio.com


San Bernardino County, CA: Teen shot at Redlands shopping center, 1 in custody
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Lehigh County, PA: Man going to prison after 2024 pharmacy heist led to standoff
A Pennsylvania man will spend years in state prison after pleading guilty to his role in a 2024 shooting and standoff with police at a pharmacy, according to the Lehigh County District Attorney's Office. The incident unfolded on Dec. 24, 2024, around 9 p.m. at the Fountain Hill Pharmacy in Fountain Hill, Pennsylvania, officials said. When officers arrived to the store, they said they saw two men inside the pharmacy who were later identified as Miguel Angel Martinez, 57, and David Montes Vazquez, 34. Officers reported that Vazquez pointed his gun at an officer who then opened fire at the suspects. The gunfire did not hit the two men inside the store. It was discovered that the two men broke into the store, used spray paint to cover the surveillance cameras and stole medication, police said. Martinez pleaded guilty to felony charges of conspiracy to commit burglary, burglary and a misdemeanor charge of possessing instruments of crime back in May of 2026, officials said. A judge sentenced Martinez to eight to 20 years in state prison nbcphiladelphia.com


Jacksonville, FL: 4 from Jacksonville get federal prison sentences after pleading guilty in string of Dollar General robberies in 2024

Loudoun County: Two More Juveniles Arrested in June 15 Dulles Town Center Armed Robbery Case

San Antonio, TX: Suspect accused of threatening off-duty officer with knife while stealing sunglasses

San Antonio, TX: Female clerk injured during Valero robbery; reward offered for suspect identification

Wilmington, NC: Man sentenced to 10-13 years in violent Wilmington game store robbery

Atlanta, GA: DOJ: Convicted Felon Faces Federal Charges for Allegedly Robbing Atlanta Pawn Shop


 


 

C-Store – San Antonio, TX – Robbery
C-Store – Austin, TX – Robbery
C-Store – Lynchburg, VA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Seattle, WA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Cape Girardeau, MO – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Seattle, WA – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Minneapolis, MN – Armed Robbery
Eyewear – San Antonio, TX – Armed Robbery
Jewelry - Santa Rosa, CA - Robbery
Jewelry – Concord, CA – Armed Robbery
Jewelry - Vacaville, CA - Robbery
Jewelry - Tampa, FL – Armed Robbery
Liquor – Shreveport, LA – Armed Robbery
Tobacco – Overland Park, KS – Robbery
Vape – Grand Island, NE – Robbery                             
 

Daily Totals:
• 15 robberies
• 0 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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