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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


COMING TOMORROW

The D&D Daily's Exclusive 2025 ORC Report

Tomorrow, the D&D Daily will release its highly anticipated 2025 ORC Report, providing a comprehensive look at the organized retail crime landscape in 2025.

Based on hundreds of publicly reported ORC incidents tracked by the D&D Daily from news publications, law enforcement announcements and court records, the report examines the cases, trends and criminal activity that shaped the ORC landscape in 2025.

From the total number of reported ORC cases, store types, merchandise categories targeted most often, and regional hot spots, the D&D Daily's 2025 ORC Report provides a comprehensive look at the year's organized retail crime landscape.

Be sure to subscribe to the D&D Daily so the report is sent directly to your inbox!


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Following the Stolen Merchandise
The Resale Side of Organized Retail Crime

By the D&D Daily staff

When organized retail crime is discussed, attention often focuses on the theft itself. Surveillance footage, apprehensions and high-profile incidents tend to dominate the conversation. Yet for organized retail crime operations, the theft is only the beginning.

Stolen merchandise has little value unless it can be converted into cash. That is why resale channels remain a critical component of many organized retail crime schemes. Whether goods are sold through unauthorized online accounts, flea markets, social media platforms or other secondary markets, the ability to move merchandise creates the financial incentive that fuels continued theft activity.

This reality helps explain why law enforcement agencies and retail investigators often place significant emphasis on identifying resale operations. While individual theft incidents may involve relatively small amounts of merchandise, organized groups can generate substantial profits when stolen products are collected, consolidated and resold at scale.

The products most frequently targeted by organized retail crime groups often share common characteristics. They are typically easy to conceal, widely available, in consistent consumer demand and capable of being resold quickly. Health and beauty products, over-the-counter medications, cosmetics, fragrances and certain consumer goods have long been attractive targets for these reasons.

For retailers, understanding the role of resale channels can provide important context when evaluating organized theft activity. Multiple theft incidents involving the same products may indicate demand that extends well beyond a single offender. Investigators frequently look for patterns that connect stolen merchandise to broader distribution and resale networks operating across multiple locations or jurisdictions.

Efforts to combat organized retail crime increasingly focus on disrupting these downstream markets. Enhanced information sharing, partnerships with law enforcement and collaboration with online marketplaces have all become part of the broader strategy.

While theft remains the most visible aspect of organized retail crime, the larger challenge often lies beyond the store exit. Following the merchandise after it leaves the shelf can provide valuable insight into the networks that profit from retail theft and help inform more effective prevention efforts.


Shoplifting Drops 16% in Atlanta
Atlanta crime rates show a dramatic drop, police data reveals

City sees a significant drop in overall crime this year, with only aggravated assaults rising.

Despite several headline-grabbing violent attacks in recent weeks, overall crime is down so far this year in Atlanta, according to the latest police data.

Except for aggravated assaults, all major crime categories have seen double-digit declines compared with the same period a year ago.

Homicide: -12%
Rape: -14%
Aggravated Assault: +21%
Robbery: -22%
Burglary: -24%

Motor Vehicle Theft: -25%
Theft From Motor Vehicle: -33%
Shoplifting: -16%


Crime in north Atlanta, Midtown and Downtown had the biggest drops. Zone 2 (-22%) and Zone 5 (-24%) saw the biggest overall decreases due to declines in property crime, including burglary and motor vehicle theft.

Zone 3, covering southeast Atlanta, was the only area in which overall crime is up (+11%), mostly due to a 42% increase in aggravated assault. Zone 3 also had the fewest overall crimes. 11alive.com


Police Progress, Retail Skepticism
Retail crime remains out of control despite signs of progress, say retailers

A burglary, CCTV evidence and a case ultimately dropped due to’ evidential difficulties’. Asian Trader investigates the growing gap between police claims and retailer experiences

Police say shoplifting is slowly coming under control. Retailers say it is getting worse. At the heart of the debate lies a growing confidence gap that may be just as damaging as crime itself, finds Asian Trader.

Lately, crime and shop theft have been major defining challenges facing Britain's retail sector. Shoplifting, abuse, violence, burglary and organised theft have become recurring themes in industry reports, retailer surveys and political debates.

Hardly a week passes without another retailer reports of offenders brazenly walking out with baskets of goods, threatening staff, or returning time and again despite previous warnings. On the other hand, tackling shoplifting and other forms of retail crime continue have been on the agenda of police forces across the country.

In April, the Metropolitan Police reported that shoplifting offences in London fell by 3.7 per cent in the year ending March 2026, equivalent to around 3,200 fewer incidents than the previous year.

The force says it has nearly doubled the number of shoplifting cases solved, increased arrests by almost 50 per cent and improved positive outcomes, including arrests, charges and convictions. The figures suggest progress. However, convenience retailers Asian Trader spoke to beg to disagree.

The Metropolitan Police stated that at present, just 20 per cent of shoplifting cases are submitted with CCTV evidence. Where clear CCTV is provided, officers are able to identify around 80 per cent of suspects by running images through facial recognition software and crime databases. asiantrader.biz


Canada's Crime Reform Package
Canada’s sweeping bail and sentencing reforms targeting extortion, auto theft and organized crime become law

Over 80 targeted changes to the Criminal Code on bail and sentencing are now law

The Government of Canada has heard from communities across the country that public safety is an issue of grave concern, and we have taken action to help keep everyone in Canada safe. Certain communities have been struck by a rise in extortions, car thefts and organized crime, which is why the government introduced legislation to crack down on such crimes and hold offenders to account.

The Bail and Sentencing Reform Act (Bill C-14), with some of the most significant reforms to make bail and sentencing laws stronger, has passed into law, delivering on our commitment to strengthen the Criminal Code.

Shaped by extensive consultations and close collaboration with partners across the country, these reforms were backed by premiers from every province and territory, as well as mayors, and law enforcement who called for the bill’s swift passage. The changes on bail and sentencing will come into force on July 15, 2026. canada.ca

   RELATED: Tougher laws for repeat offenders become reality in Canada


ICYMI: Chicago Sees Fewest May Homicides in Decades, But Shootings Remain Ahead of Last Year’s Pace

40 people died in Florida police pursuits in 4 years. A look at the data
 



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Store Safety Remains Priority
Retail has a safety crisis, and new research shows how leaders are responding
Shoplifting at U.S. retail stores rose 18% in 2024, according to the National Retail Federation, and threats of violence during these incidents climbed 17% in the same period. These are not just numbers to the employees showing up to work, not knowing what the shift will bring.

A new survey from Axon, a leader in safety and security technology, finds that retail leadership is paying attention to these problems. Nine in ten retail executives say workplace safety is a top priority for their organization. Eighty percent say it caused operational disruption in the past year.

That toll has a price. The costs show up quickly and in multiple directions, with the top effects reported including higher insurance or legal expenses, increased employee turnover and higher hiring and recruitment costs. These pressures compound over time, with each challenge feeding into the next and making it harder for stores to get ahead of the problem.

For the retail workers absorbing the daily tension of understaffed stores and difficult customer situations that can escalate quickly, the stakes are personal. These are the employees who are on the floor each day, responding to difficult moments in real time while absorbing the ongoing stress of simply not knowing what the next interaction might bring. The workforce consequences, including turnover, recruitment strain and burnout, are a direct reflection of what the job has become.

Retailers are responding. When asked whether they support greater investment in safety and efficiency measures, more than 4 in 5 retail leaders strongly favor or favor increased spending. Technology is where much of that appetite is focused, with majority support for solutions ranging from body-worn cameras, which can operate as a personal safety device, and de-escalation training to AI-powered tools and real-time monitoring operations centers.

Retailers are also tracking whether the investments pay off. Store performance and customer experience rank among the top ways retail organizations measure whether safety spending is working. Behind those metrics are real people, workers who want to feel supported on the job and customers who want to shop without worry.

The tension shoppers may sense when they walk through the door is the same tension retail workers feel every shift. But the gap between that reality and the promise of a safer experience is closing. Technology has given retailers more ways to protect the people in their stores - training platforms that prepare workers for real situations before they happen, AI tools that help teams respond faster, and solutions that make it easier to de-escalate a situation before it gets worse. tri-cityherald.com


Passing Tariff Refunds to Customers?
BJ’s Wholesale Club uses tariff refunds to cut prices

The rebates helped reduce overall retail prices by about half a percentage point.

BJ’s Wholesale Club used tariff refunds to help reduce overall retail prices by about half a percentage point, President and CEO Bob Eddy told investors.

Applying the refund to lower prices widened the membership warehouse club’s price advantage over competitors, Eddy said on a May 22 Q1 earnings call.

“We will continue to use any source of gain that we can to really bring that value back to our members so that we can build the franchise for the long term,” Eddy said.

BJ’s is one of several retailers to direct tariff refunds toward lower prices, following the February Supreme Court ruling that found President Donald Trump had imposed country-specific tariffs illegally. Walmart plans to prioritize its anticipated $2.4 billion in tariff rebates for price cuts, while beauty brand E.l.f. Beauty expects to use its $58.5 million in refunds to reduce prices and boost sales volumes.

BJ’s executives did not specify the exact amount of tariff refunds received. CFO Laura Felice said tariff refund benefits provided about a 50-basis-point lift to merchandise margin last quarter, equating to roughly $20 million. retaildive.com


Benefits & Remote Work Key to Attracting Employees
Health Benefits Key to Talent Strategy

Employee survey from the Society of Human Resource Management also found flexible work evolving.

Health-related benefits continue to serve as the foundation of a competitive total rewards strategy, according to a new survey, 2026 Employee Benefits Survey from The Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM).

The majority of employers (88%) rate them as “very important” or “extremely important.”

“This year’s survey highlights that health coverage remains the foundation of competitive benefits, while retirement and leave offerings are central to workforce stability,” said Alex Alonso, chief knowledge officer, SHRM, in a statement.

“We’re seeing a strong shift toward technology access, with more employers investing in AI tools. Flexible work arrangements are evolving, and targeted family-support benefits are on the rise. ehstoday.com


Values-Driven Consumer Spending
What Should Brand Positioning Look Like as Consumers’ Preferred Sociopolitical Values Show Deep Rifts?
A pair of recent reports issued by Sogolytics and the Human Rights Campaign Foundation (HRC) show a potential divergence in consumer demands from various U.S. consumer demographics while also signaling agreement on one major front: Shoppers are increasingly aligning their intentional spend with retailers and brands that best represent their own sociopolitical values — even if some shoppers would prefer if neutrality (or even silence) were more commonplace in this context.

The HRC report, titled “Pride in the Marketplace ’26: The Power of LGBTQ+ Consumer Trust and Corporate Inclusion,” highlighted survey data showing that LGBTQ+ consumers were pulling back from companies that had either pulled back from, or hadn’t at all, backed diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies and supports. That report indicated that LGBTQ+ consumers represented $1.4 trillion in U.S. annual consumer spend, and that 71.5% of shoppers whom self-identified within that category had purchased fewer products from companies “perceived as reducing DEI commitments.” retailwire.com


Kroger flags rising inflation as consumers curb spending

Winn-Dixie plots new stores; continues to convert Harveys Supermarket locations
 



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How to Streamline Management With
Advanced Convenience Store Security



The United States convenience store industry has seen rapid expansion and transformation in recent years. Market data shows that convenience stores were the fastest-growing retail channel in the US from 2023 to 2024, with 1.5% year-over-year growth. Across the nation, over 150,000 convenience stores are in operation. However, as growth accelerates, businesses find themselves struggling to effectively scale their operations with the addition of new locations, employees, and systems.

For these multi-location convenience store businesses, bottlenecks arise as their existing security infrastructure creates disconnected stores and isolated management, which inhibit productivity and impact business performance. To solve this, organizations can turn to centralized cloud video security to unify locations, users, and devices, improving operations and security in a single pane of glass.

In this article, we explore the challenges facing convenience stores and highlight how an open platform cloud video surveillance solution can help organizations overcome these obstacles, unify operations, and prepare for scalable, flexible growth.

How a Disconnected Organization Hurts Convenience Store Operations

Convenience stores often operate across a wide range of areas, serving diverse customer bases with unique needs and expectations, creating a phenomenon known as “market-type dispersion.” Research shows when store units are isolated in their different market types, the organization tends to see overall diminished performance at both chain and single store levels. To address profitability and reduce operational costs, many companies have pursued standardization of processes across locations. However, these initiatives frequently encounter obstacles such as inadequate tools and outdated infrastructure, making it difficult to efficiently meet each location’s unique needs and increasing the risk of costly errors in daily operations.

Below, we’ll examine the three sides of this issue and how they create more work for location-specific operators as well as the entire organization, negatively impacting the bottom line and creating less support for team members.

Fragmented, Isolated Convenience Store Locations

One of the most pressing challenges for multi-location convenience store organizations is the fragmentation of systems and operations across their stores, created by outdated security systems without remote access. District managers often need to visit each site in person to ensure operations are running smoothly or to review security footage, creating extra time and effort to managing these locations.

Fragmented operations is a problem that only gets compounded when you factor in the high rates of staff turnover within the industry. According to the NACS SOI Compensation Report of 2022, average turnover rates for store associates have reached 141%, up substantially from previous years, and have consistently exceeded 100% since 2016. For those managing security systems, constant staff changes require frequent updates as to who can access cameras and security systems across locations, increasing the number of overall site visits. If store managers fail to remove access promptly, it can create security gaps and increase risk.  


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Retail's Complexity Creates Cyber Exposure
Retail’s Biggest Security Risk Might Be Its Own Operations

With breaches nearly doubling, retail's structural complexity is increasingly becoming its most dangerous cybersecurity liability

Retailers are facing an increasingly hostile cyber threat environment, as attackers grow more sophisticated in exploiting the structural complexities that define how the sector operates.

According to the 2026 Verizon Data Breach Investigation Report, retail breaches have doubled year-over-year as the threat landscape evolves with strategy intent.

For CX leaders, teams that sit at the intersection of this threat must understand that what is driving this exposure has never been more urgent.

Speaking with CX Today, Tim Waterton, CRO at HappyOrNot, draws a parallel between operational pressure and how attackers are targeting security infrastructure, suggesting the industry’s own complexity is being used against it.

“The data suggests attackers have worked out exactly the same thing about retail’s security infrastructure,” he pointed out.

Why Retail’s Defenses Are Being Outpaced

The DBIR shows a significant shift in how retail organizations are being compromised, attacker behavior is shifting, and systems are being targeted faster than ever before, with overtaken stolen credentials now being the leading initial access method for breaches.

Across industries, 31% of breaches now start with vulnerability exploitation, with more attackers enabling AI to compress the time between vulnerability discovery and exploitation from months to just hours, placing increasing pressure on window defenders.

In retail specifically, there is additional pressure from multiple overlapping attack paths all at once, such as ransomware, credential theft, and vulnerability exploitation, seeing a 2x increase in targeting and success rates for attackers.

This layered breakdown of defensive controls creates a compounding risk environment where one control failure increases the likelihood of others being exploited cxtoday.com
 



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What's Fueling Cyber Insurance Losses?
Ransomware and Third-Party Vendors Drive Highest Cyber Insurance Losses, Willis Report Finds

Ransomware remains the costliest category of cyber event while third-party vendor incidents are responsible for a growing share of losses, according to Willis.

Cyber insurance is covering more than 95% of the average data breach loss and 90% of the average first-party loss for policyholders, according to a new report from Willis.

The report identifies ransomware, third-party vendor failures, and the amplifying effects of artificial intelligence as forces shaping cyber insurance losses, and notes that organizations whose policy limits and response plans do not reflect their actual risk profile face heightened exposure.

Cyber insurance cover varies widely, which is why organizations must understand what they have in place and ensure it aligns with their risk exposures,” said Peter Foster, chairman, global FINEX cyber and cyber risk solutions at Willis. “When cover doesn’t reflect reality, organizations risk critical gaps where protection is needed most, while paying for cover that offers little real value.”

The report draws on approximately 5,500 claims from more than 95 countries and roughly $1 billion in insurer payments spanning 2013 to January 2026. riskandinsurance.com


Risks of AI-Powered Apps
Hundreds of AI-powered iOS apps found exposing credentials
Mobile app developers are packing AI features into everything from writing assistants to productivity tools and lifestyle apps. New research shows that securing access to those services remains a challenge.

Researchers from Wake Forest University analyzed 444 iOS applications with LLM features and found 282 that exposed exploitable credentials or backend access mechanisms. The affected apps covered 13 categories, including productivity, entertainment, lifestyle, education, utilities, and health and fitness.

LLM-powered applications reached 17 billion downloads in 2025 and accounted for 13% of all mobile app downloads.

LLM API key leakage is a widespread and systemic issue in the iOS ecosystem, affecting 26% of analyzed Apps across diverse categories and developer types. The vulnerability’s impact extends from niche Apps to popular apps with hundreds of thousands of users,” the researchers noted.  helpnetsecurity.com


Cybercriminals abused GitHub, YouTube & VirusTotal to push crypto-stealing malware

23 ClawHub plugins squatting official scopes expose AI registry security gaps


 




Consumers Lean Into AI
EXCLUSIVE: Despite trust issues, consumer use of AI search grows

Consumers are leveraging AI for product search, whether they like it or not.

Seven-in-10 consumers say their use of AI for product and brand search has increased during the past year. Only 4% have never used AI tools for search at all. However, results of a survey of 1,008 U.S. consumers exclusively released to Chain Store Age by digital marketing agency Fractl reveals that only 54% of respondents found AI more helpful than traditional search, down 34% from 82% in 2025.

During that same time period, the percentage of respondents actively rating AI less helpful than traditional search grew almost sixfold to 17% from 3%. Surprisingly, boomers (63%) were more likely than Gen Z respondents (47%) to say AI search is more helpful.

Respondents were asked how brand usage of AI affects their trust. The percentage saying heavy AI use would decrease their trust in a favorite brand doubled to 40% from 20% in 2025. Fourteen percent said their brand trust would decrease significantly, while another 14% would trust a brand more for using AI heavily.

More than half (54%) of Gen Z respondents say their trust would decrease if a favorite brand used AI for most marketing, compared to 33% of Gen X and 32% of boomers. Women penalize more than men (44% vs. 34%).

In addition, 84% of respondents want written AI content labeled while 91% want video AI content labeled, 90% want AI images labeled and 87% want AI audio labeled. chainstoreage.com
 

9% Increase in Prime Day Spending?
Amazon Prime Day expected to drive $26.3 billion in online sales
Amazon.com Inc. will begin its 12th annual Prime Day sale Tuesday, with the four-day event projected to generate $26.3 billion in online spending across Amazon and competing retailers, according to Adobe Inc.

The forecast marks a 9% increase from last year’s July event. Adobe tracks visits to retail sites to compile its data.

Walmart Inc. and Target Corp. will run concurrent sales events. Consumer research from digital marketing agency Tinuiti shows nearly 60% of Amazon Prime Day shoppers plan to browse Walmart, while 35% will visit Target. The survey was conducted in April.

Amazon first introduced Prime Day in 2015 to grow its subscription base. Prime membership costs $139 annually and includes shipping discounts, video streaming and additional services.

Consumer Intelligence Research Partners reported that approximately 201 million U.S. Amazon shoppers held Prime subscriptions as of March, representing a 3% year-over-year increase. investing.com


Amazon making adjustments to Prime Day due to inflation

Numerator: Amazon-Whole Foods cross-shopping rises dramatically


 


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Bridgeport, CT: Update, DOJ: NY jeweler gets 2 years for role in $4.4M jewelry theft ring that targeted CT malls
A Queens jewelry store owner was sentenced to two years in prison on Monday after pleading guilty to buying and selling jewelry stolen from across the country, the United States Attorney's Office for the District of Connecticut announced. The 55-year-old Brooklyn native, Salim Sakal, conspired with an organized jewelry theft ring of Colombian nationals, according to court documents and statements made in court. Sakal was the co-owner of Ramoun Jewelry, located in Corona, New York, which sold fine jewelry to retail customers. The store purchased jewelry from a third-party theft ring that burglarized malls and kiosks in Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, New Jersey, Ohio, and Virginia. Sakal worked with the organized theft ring to receive, store and sell jewelry stolen in seven burglaries between August 2023 and April 2024. The total value of the burglarized jewelry exceeded $4.4 million, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office. Bridgeport Judge Kari A. Dooley also sentenced Sakal to three years of supervised release, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office. Sakal was ordered in January to pay $2,471,457 in restitution along with others convicted in the case. Sakal is expected to report to prison on October 5 and is currently free on a $1 million None of the stolen jewelry has been recovered by law enforcement justice.gov


New York, NY: Mobster Accused in $1.7 Million Chanel Burglary
A reputed Gambino crime family member with a long criminal history has been accused of masterminding a $1.7 million burglary at Chanel's flagship Manhattan boutique, according to prosecutors. Thomas "Tommy" Dono, 52, allegedly oversaw the theft of nearly 300 luxury items worth $1,776,700 during an overnight burglary at Chanel's store on East 57th Street in July 2024, the New York Post reported, citing court records and law enforcement sources. Prosecutors say Dono directed the operation from a white minivan parked outside the store while a crew of about 10 accomplices spent hours carrying out the burglary. The thieves allegedly gained access through a stockroom ceiling hatch and removed merchandise using large laundry and trash bags before transporting the stolen goods through a nearby construction site and into a waiting van. None of the stolen merchandise has been recovered, authorities said. Dono pleaded not guilty to grand larceny charges after his arrest last month and was released on $300,000 bond newsmax.com


Blaine, MN: Blaine Police Recover Nearly $3,800 in Stolen Tools Following Fleet Farm Shoplifting Cases
The Blaine Police Department says officers recently recovered approximately $3,800 worth of stolen power tools connected to three separate shoplifting incidents at Fleet Farm. According to police, the stolen merchandise included Milwaukee and DeWalt tools. Investigators determined that after the thefts, the suspects pawned the stolen items. The Blaine Police Retail Unit was able to identify the suspects, locate the pawned tools, and recover the merchandise. The recovered tools have since been returned to Fleet Farm.  limitless-news.com


Boardman, OH: Woman arrested on 7 warrants for thefts across Boardman

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Montreal, Canada: Police Officer, suspect, and civilian dead in Montreal shooting
Montreal police confirmed three people are dead, including a police officer and a civilian, after a suspect started shooting at a hotel in the Côte-des-Neiges district Monday morning. Police Chief Fady Dagher said a second officer was also seriously injured in the shooting but is in stable condition. Dagher said he did not know who shot the civilian. He said the suspect, who was armed with a long gun, was killed, adding that police do not think there is a second shooter. Police confirmed the suspect was dead before authorities issued the alert. Authorities say someone called 911 around 11:35 a.m. about a person who was sticking a gun out from a window at the Hilton hotel. Officers said they arrived at the scene and were targeted with gunfire. “It’s a very, very sad day,” Dagher told reporters. “It’s a nightmare.” He said it’s been 24 years since a Montreal police officer has been killed in the line of duty. A public safety alert issued across radio, TV and mobile phones Monday afternoon advised residents to shelter in place, lock the doors and stay away from windows while police responded. The alert was lifted just after 3 p.m.  globalnews.ca


Medford, OR: Police say fatal shooting at Sportsman’s Warehouse in Medford was self-inflicted, at gun counter
Medford police confirmed Sunday that a shooting death at the gun counter at the Medford Sportsman’s Warehouse on Saturday was the result of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Police responded to reports of shots fired at just before 10 a.m. after reports of a man firing a gun at the gun counter inside the store. Witnesses at the scene later told the Rogue Valley Times that some three-dozen customers and store employees fled the store at 1710 Delta Waters Road after hearing a single gunshot fired. A dozen or more customers and employees hid in the back of the store to wait for police to clear the scene. The first officer arrived on scene at 9:55 a.m., within three minutes of the initial call. Officers secured the area and conducted an investigation,” a statement from Medford police on Saturday afternoon stated. “At no time was there a physical threat to patrons or employees inside the store, and there is no ongoing threat to the public.”  rv-times.com


Kalamazoo, MI: Update: Man convicted of murder in fatal shooting outside Kalamazoo liquor store
A jury has convicted Vernon Powell of second-degree murder in the 2022 shooting death of Aaron Lee Starling. Powell, 47, was found guilty on Monday, June 18, in connection with the fatal shooting of Starling, 28. The jury also convicted Powell of two counts of felony firearm, felon in possession of a weapon and carrying a concealed weapon. Starling was shot around 1:54 a.m. on Sept. 3, 2022, at On the Rocks Liquor Store in the 600 block of Portage St. Starling was shot in the chest and was taken to the hospital, where he was later pronounced dead.  mlive.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Boston, MA: DOJ: North Andover Man Charged with Armed Robbery of Danvers CVS Pharmacy

Atlanta, GA: Man assaults Boost Mobile clerk, steals cash and more than $6K worth of devices

Dauphin County, PA: Police seek 3 suspects who robbed jewelry store employees at gunpoint

Aventura, FL: Longtime felon pepper-sprays employee in Aventura Nordstrom Rack robbery

Lexington, KY: Man arrested after Armed Robbery, attempted burglary at Lexington gas station


 


 

C-Store - Indianapolis, IN – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Lexington, KY – Robbery
C-Store – Lexington, KY – Burglary
C-Store – McAllen, TX – Robbery
C-Store – Atlanta, GA – Robbery
C-Store – Ellicott City, MD – Armed Robbery
Cellphone - Atlanta, GA – Armed Robbery
Clothing - Aventura, FL - Robbery
Grocery – Coral Springs, FL – Robbery
Grocery – Bloomfield Township, MI – Robbery
Hardware – Blaine, MN - Robbery
Jewelry – Harrisburg, PA – Armed Robbery
Jewelry - Woodbridge, VA – Robbery
Jewelry - Rancho Cucamonga, CA - Robbery
Jewelry - Fresno, CA – Robbery
Jewelry - Brooklyn, NY – Robbery
Jewelry - Newburgh, NY – Robbery
Jewelry - Frisco, TX – Robbery
Jewelry - Tucson, AZ – Robbery
Jewelry - Spokane, WA – Robbery
Pet – Colorado Springs, CO – Robbery
Tobacco – Smyrna, DE – Armed Robbery
Vape – Kernersville, NC – Robbery                             
 

Daily Totals:
• 22 robberies
• 1 burglary
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



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