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New Auror Data: Violent Retail Crime on the
Rise in Illinois
Illinois retail workers are facing rising levels of in-store violence
tied to repeat and organized offenders, according to new data from
global retail crime intelligence company Auror.
The
data shows that one in seven retail crime incidents involve violence,
weapons or threatening behavior, while the top 10 percent of retail
crime offenders were responsible for more than 63 percent of reported
incidents in Illinois stores last year.
Overall, the rate of violent events increased by 7% last year.
These insights are drawn from some of North America’s largest retailers,
which use Auror’s crime reporting and intelligence platform to document
crimes after they occur in their stores. The platform helps retailers
and law enforcement identify repeat offenders and organized crime
patterns across networks and jurisdictions, connecting cases that might
otherwise appear isolated, while also safeguarding each retailers’ data
and privacy.
The Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association (ILORCA),
Illinois’ only statewide intelligence-sharing network dedicated to
combating organized retail crime, said the findings underscore the
growing risks despite significant investments retailers have made in
security and loss prevention.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Contact Your
Member of Congress Today!
Important Update on the Combating
Organized Retail Crime Act
Organized Retail Crime Bill Heads Toward Possible House Vote Next Week
Retailers and loss prevention
leaders intensify pressure on Congress as the organized retail crime
bill approaches a critical House vote next week.
Retail
industry groups and loss prevention professionals are ramping up
advocacy efforts as the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA)
moves closer to a possible vote in the U.S. House of Representatives.
The legislation, officially listed as H.R. 2853, has reportedly been
placed on the House calendar and could come up for a vote during the
week of May 11 through May 15. The measure represents one of the
most significant federal efforts to address organized retail crime in
recent years.
CORCA currently has 206 co-sponsors in the House. Because the bill is
expected to move under suspension procedures, it would require a
two-thirds majority vote to pass — meaning roughly 290 votes would be
needed for approval.
Industry organizations, including the National Retail Federation, are
encouraging retailers, loss prevention professionals and other
stakeholders to contact members of Congress in support of the
legislation. Advocacy efforts are being amplified through NRF’s
“Voter Voice” platform, which allows users to send messages directly to
their congressional representatives.
Organized retail crime continues to evolve into a more coordinated,
interstate issue that increasingly impacts retailers, supply chains,
employees and consumers. Many in the retail loss prevention industry
have pushed for stronger federal coordination, expanded information
sharing and increased resources aimed at disrupting large-scale theft
networks.
The pending vote comes as retailers across multiple sectors continue
to report concerns surrounding repeat offenders, cargo theft, online
resale marketplaces and increasingly aggressive theft incidents tied
to organized crime groups.
Loss prevention leaders have described the coming vote as a pivotal
moment for the industry’s broader push for federal action on organized
retail crime. Industry advocates are expected to continue outreach
efforts throughout the coming week in an attempt to build additional
bipartisan support before the measure reaches the House floor.
Click here to tell your member of Congress to
support the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act
Grocery Store Theft Losses Near $10
Billion in Canada
Organized crime groups are behind grocery store theft across Canada
The Retail Council of Canada is calling grocery store theft a
national crisis, with losses now approaching $10 billion annually
across the grocery sector and it’s only growing.
The rise is due to more than people stealing an apple. According to
multiple sources who spoke to CTV National News, organized crime is
now also involved.
In an email to CTV News, the Retail Council of Canada says that
“grocery theft is rising in Canada, driven by a mix of economic pressure
and increasingly organized retail crime. While affordability
challenges are real for many Canadians, what retailers are seeing more
of is coordinated, repeat theft tied to organized networks,” the
statement read.
“Eastern European organized crime has certainly been involved,
and this isn’t just a big city problem, it’s happening straight across
the country,” says CTV News crime specialist, Mark Mendelson.
RCMP in Richmond, B.C., say supermarket theft has doubled in the city
so far in 2026 compared to the same period last year.
“We have analysts and when they see a spike like this, we have meetings
every week, so this is something we’re looking at and it’s definitely on
our radar,” shares RCMP Cpl. Frank Bryson.
Authorities have also flagged some self-checkout counters, inside
grocery stores as areas where criminals are taking advantage of security
gaps.
“I’ve seen thefts at the self-checkout happen right in front of me.
You’re used to hearing a beeping noise then all of a sudden, the beeping
stops but items continue to go into the bag. Walmart in the United
States is pulling self-checkouts from their stores. The losses are
becoming too much to handle,” says Mendelson.
ctvnews.ca
Chicago Lawmaker Demands Criminal
Charges Against Walgreens
Chicago pol says Walgreens should be charged with 'first-degree
corporate abandonment' over closure over theft
The Chatham neighborhood store in
Ward 6 is slated to close June 4 after the chain cited theft and
violence
A Chicago alderman, incensed by the upcoming closure of a Walgreens
store amid safety concerns, stated that the corporate retailer
should be charged with "first-degree corporate abandonment."
Ald. William Hall, along with several community members, held a news
conference Monday to voice their anger over the company's decision to
close the location in Chicago’s 6th Ward in the Chatham neighborhood.
"Walgreens should be charged with first-degree corporate abandonment,"
Hall said. "It should be a crime, the way they're treating our elders.
It should be a crime, the way they're treating our families."
In a statement to the Chicago Sun-Times, the Chicago-area-based pharmacy
store chain cited theft and violent incidents as the primary factors
behind its decision to close the store on S. Cottage Grove Ave.
"Despite a range of efforts, including previous operating adjustments,
these ongoing safety challenges have made it increasingly difficult
to maintain a secure environment for our team members and customers,"
the company said. "While this was not an easy decision, safety must
remain our top priority."
Ald. Raymond Lopez, a Democrat, said he understands the community's
frustration but questioned the timing of the outrage.
"Where was that anger when the stores in our communities were under
years and years of assault by criminals allowed to shoplift, vandalize,
and destroy neighborhood institutions?" Lopez asked in a statement
to Fox News Digital. "Many leaders say it is simply an insurance matter.
They are wrong. There are real-world consequences for crime running
rampant. This closure is the perfect example of that effect."
foxnews.com
Magnet-Based Retail Theft Trends
How criminals use magnets to steal fuel and bypass security systems
From diesel pump theft schemes in
Florida to casino scams and utility meter tampering, magnets have become
an unexpected tool in a range of real-world crimes
Retail theft investigators and security companies have long warned
about the use of magnets to remove anti-theft security tags from
clothing, electronics and other merchandise. Certain magnets can
disengage locking mechanisms inside some security tags, allowing thieves
to remove them without damaging products or triggering alarms.
For organized retail theft crews, the tactic offers a major
advantage: stolen merchandise can still be resold in near-perfect
condition. Instead of cutting security devices off products and
damaging them, suspects can remove them cleanly before reselling the
items online or through third-party marketplaces.
The issue has become common enough that retail security companies
like Checkpoint Systems now market magnet-detection systems designed
to identify people carrying illegal security tag detachers into stores
or fitting rooms.
Retailers and researchers are also testing additional anti-theft
technology aimed at detecting so-called “magic bags” lined with foil
to defeat electronic tag systems. In a recent video feature from the
Loss Prevention Research Council at the University of Florida,
researchers demonstrated both low-tech and high-tech approaches
retailers are using to combat organized retail theft.
police1.com
The Trick Fueling Retail Theft Across
the Country
The store return trick no one expected involved LEGO and pasta - simple
swap turned into a fraud scheme across multiple states
Irvine Police say Augustine repeatedly bought premium sets, including
Star Wars and Marvel kits that can cost hundreds of dollars, then
removed minifigures and other key pieces at home. Investigators say he
resealed the boxes and returned them for refunds, and Target
later reported at least 70 thefts nationwide tied to the same suspect.
The filler is what made the scheme work, at least for a while.
Police described the substitute as dried “durum wheat semolina pasta,”
which can mimic the weight and rattle of loose bricks during a quick
returns inspection.
The case gained traction after Target loss prevention flagged
suspicious returns in late 2025, and investigators say surveillance
ultimately led to an arrest and the recovery of LEGO pieces and pasta
packages.
Returns fraud is the quiet version of the problem, but the loud
version shows up on highways. On April 8, Kern County sheriff’s deputies
in Mojave stopped two box trucks after a report of suspicious vehicles
and later found what officials described as about $1 million worth of
LEGO products, along with two freight trailers.
That kind of theft can dump a massive amount of product into the
resale market in a single run. Cargo theft reported to CargoNet
jumped to about $725 million in 2025, and experts routinely warn that
the true totals are higher because reporting is uneven. The result, for
everyday shoppers, is familiar and frustrating, with more locked cases
and more “out of stock” signs.
vozpopuli.com
VIDEO: Self-checkout theft surges, with
organized crime targeting retailers
Muriel Bowser promises changes to MPD's crime data release process
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The Solution to Self-Checkout Woes?
Will Increased AI Security Halt the Selective Rollback of
Self-Checkouts?
Bill Miller, president of retail tech provider GK Software USA,
highlighted both the common elements of the tug-of-war represented by
the fluctuating self-checkout situation, as well as some proposed
security solutions.
Writing for Retail TouchPoints, Miller first pointed to the current
reality: Despite massive shrink, self-checkout remains “too
operationally and economically valuable to abandon.” But despite
rollbacks taking place in certain localities, could these be mitigated
by an improved security system — one reliant on AI-driven computer
vision?
“Computer vision is real-time visual recognition. Cameras positioned
at self-checkout lanes capture a continuous feed of every movement and
item in the checkout area,” Miller wrote.
“Machine learning models trained on large volumes of transaction video
streams analyze that feed to understand human behavior at
self-checkout and recognize items. This technology distinguishes a
completed scan from a missed one, a legitimate bag placement from an
item that bypasses the scanner, or a premium product being rung up as a
cheaper alternative,” he added, noting that these models are not reliant
on barcodes or weight but rather hand position, item trajectory, and
item movement. Deviations are flagged and customers are asked for a
re-scan, while associates are immediately notified with a short video
clip of the error to provide context.
Miller went further to say that, ideally, these systems would be
installed on a per-lane or at least per-store basis, cutting down on
latency and reliance on cloud compute to solve problems that could be
contained within each retail location.
Additionally, by analyzing patterns at the SKU and lane level
(routing findings upstream to merchandising or category management to
isolate root causes); auditing escalation logic on a routine basis
(to prevent over-alerting and false positives, with the goal of reducing
friction or customer annoyance more broadly); and tightening
intervention outcomes (assessing signals such as routine dismissal
of alerts by associates to see what, exactly, is going wrong); the
overall workflow can be tightened to a desired level, per Miller.
retailwire.com
Big Retailers Capture Growing Share of
Store Visits
Placer.ai: Retail giants continue gaining share of store visits
Physical retail is increasingly
being defined by a small group of dominant players.
The
share of physical retail traffic captured by Walmart, Target, Costco
Wholesale and Dollar General rose from 16.8% in 2019 to 17.5% in the
first quarter of 2026, signaling continued sector consolidation,
according to Placer.ai’s new white paper, “Physical Retail in 2026.”
Placer.ai says that these larger players benefit from “superior data,
stronger vendor leverage and operational efficiencies” that are
setting them apart from competitors.
Costco and Dollar General are seeing the strongest visit growth among
retail giants, supported by both store growth and rising visits per
location. In 2025, Placer.ai found that visits per store exceeded
pre-pandemic levels by 18.1% for Costco and 10.2% for Dollar General,
with both brands also seeing steady increases in their share of total
brick-and-mortar retail chain visits.
America’s biggest retailer, Walmart, accounted for 9.7% of traffic to
major brick-and-mortar chains last year. While the chain’s share of
visits declined slightly in the immediate aftermath of the pandemic, it
has held steady over the past three years. After remaining essentially
flat in 2025, average visits per location to Walmart grew 3.5% year over
year to start the year, with visits rising in almost all U.S. markets.
chainstoreage.com
$250 Million Apple Settlement
Apple to pay iPhone buyers $250 million after lawsuit claims it hyped
non-existent AI in ‘bait and switch’
Apple has agreed to pay $250 million to people who bought certain
newer-model iPhones, to settle a class-action lawsuit claiming it
hyped artificial intelligence features that didn’t exist.
At issue in the case were Apple’s statements and ads heavily promoting
“Apple Intelligence,” a set of purportedly advanced generative AI
features centered around its chatbot Siri. Starting in mid-2024,
Apple claimed the enhanced Siri “would intelligently interact with
users’ personal data across device applications and apply that data to
solve everyday problems,” and act as a “fully fledged AI assistant,” the
lawsuit in San Jose U.S. District Court said.
However, the lawsuit alleged, it wasn’t until March 2025 after
millions of customers bought iPhones, “expecting the heralded features,”
that Apple admitted enhanced Siri didn’t exist at the time the Cupertino
tech giant began widely hyping it, and would not be available until
sometime in 2026.
Apple “misled” customers into paying a premium price of $599 to
more than $1,200 for the iPhone 16, iPhone 15 Pro, and 15 Pro Max, the
settlement agreement filed Tuesday alleged.
mercurynews.com
Lone Worker Accidents
36% of Lone Workers Had Accident Last Year
In the U.S., 38% of workers identify as lone workers, and 36% said
they experienced an accident while working alone in the previous
year.
This is according to the 2026 Workplace Safety report from Ecoline,
which surveyed 1,267 workers.
Lone working is most prevalent among younger workers, with 42% of
the 18–34 age group identifying as lone workers, compared to 36% of the
35–49 group and 27% of the 50–65 group.
By industry, utilities, oil and gas have the highest rate of
accidents at 48%, followed by construction at 41% and manufacturing
at 35%.
ehstoday.com
UK: Up to 150 former WH Smith stores face closure amid restructuring
Survey: Consumers looking to save at pump, limit gas spending
Dick's continues House of Sport expansion — here's where
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Strengthen Retail Security and 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 by:
-
Creating Safer Store
Environments: Law enforcement provides a strong visual deterrent and
offers peace of mind to both employees and shoppers.
-
Deterring Theft and
Workplace Threats: Regular patrols, surveillance and expert situational
awareness reduce the risk of crime before it starts.
-
Responding Swiftly to
Emergencies: Off-duty law enforcement react quickly to high-stress
situations, minimizing harm and restoring order with calm precision.
When you need trained law enforcement,
Protos Security offers second- to-none coverage through the nation’s
largest off-duty law enforcement network. With 60,000 off-duty personnel
and more than 1,400 agencies, we provide expertise when and where you
need it.
Want to reduce shrink, strengthen operations and keep your workplace
secure?
Learn More Here
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Gap Between AI Eagerness & AI
Readiness
Businesses eager but unprepared for AI to transform their security
strategies
Meanwhile, a new report found,
companies are neglecting other basic security tools.
Businesses are confident that AI will improve their cybersecurity
posture, even as they neglect more fundamental security tools like
identity management and zero-trust networking, according to a “State of
Workforce Password Security” report that the business software provider
Zoho published on Tuesday.
AI confidence also doesn’t match implementation readiness, the
report found, with a massive gap between the share of companies
expecting AI to help them with security and the share of companies ready
to act on that potential.
The report also contains data on the share of companies that experienced
recent cyberattacks and the business world’s security spending plans.
The gap between AI eagerness and AI readiness was one of the top
findings Zoho highlighted in its report. While 90% of survey respondents
said AI could strengthen their cyber defenses, only 8% said they were
currently ready to deploy AI-powered security tools.
“An 82-point gap between belief and deployment readiness defines
the most critical inflection point in workforce security,” Zoho said.
At the same time, many businesses don’t have a handle on core
cybersecurity practices. Roughly three-quarters of respondents said
they lacked complete visibility into their identity ecosystem, meaning
they don’t know who has access to which systems. While 36% reported
partial visibility, 38% reported limited visibility and 14% said they
had no visibility at all.
“This ‘identity visibility gap’ is not a peripheral concern,” Zoho
warned. “It is the central vulnerability enabling unauthorised
access, insider threats, and compliance failures.”
cybersecuritydive.com
Fake Emergency Alerts
Phishing can masquerade as emergency alerts for disasters, researchers
warn
Emergency alerts for disasters like earthquakes and tsunamis are
messages we hope we never see, and we trust them when they arrive.
Researchers have shown that this trust can be exploited, enabling
attackers to send fake emergency alerts that phones display as normal
system alerts.
Alerts reach phones without verification
Public warning systems broadcast alerts to all phones in a geographic
area. In 5G networks, these messages are sent as signals from nearby
infrastructure and are received even when a device is not actively
connected to a network, including when it is in idle or inactive states.
Emergency warnings can be delivered without relying on prior
authentication or valid subscription. This broadcast model does not
include a mechanism for verifying the origin of the message. A signal
that mimics a legitimate network can deliver a warning that the device
accepts and displays.
Rogue signals deliver alerts
The experiments were conducted in a controlled environment using
commercial smartphones, including several Android devices and an
iPhone. A laptop and radio hardware generated the signal. Researchers
noted that the attack could be carried out using relatively inexpensive
equipment, including a standard laptop and a software-defined radio.
Devices latched onto the rogue signal and began reading its broadcast
messages, which included the warning. If a device was already connected
to a legitimate network, the attacker first had to disrupt that
connection so the phone would search for a new cell.
The alert appeared as soon as the device started listening to the rogue
signal, before any authentication or secure network connection took
place.
Message content and phishing risk
Web links were recognized as clickable across all tested devices when
they included a protocol such as http or https, or when they ended with
a valid domain like .com. Shortened URLs were also detected as clickable
on all devices, while hiding their final destination and removing
visual cues that could help users assess legitimacy.
helpnetsecurity.com
Measuring the Cybersecurity Risk of AI
Models
NIST will test three major tech firms’ frontier AI models for
cybersecurity risks
After Anthropic’s announcement of
Claude Mythos, agencies across the government are racing to get ahead of
new AI models’ potential dangers.
The U.S. government’s AI security center will evaluate frontier
models from Google, Microsoft and xAI before their release to
determine whether the models’ advanced capabilities pose cybersecurity
risks.
The newly announced plan for the National Institute of Standards and
Technology’s (NIST) Center for AI Standards and Innovation (CAISI) to
conduct “pre-deployment evaluations” represents the U.S. government’s
most significant attempt yet to get ahead of security threats from
powerful AI systems.
“Independent, rigorous measurement science is essential to
understanding frontier AI and its national security implications,” CAISI
Director Chris Fall said in a statement. “These expanded industry
collaborations help us scale our work in the public interest at a
critical moment.”
cybersecuritydive.com
$250M cryptocurrency heist funded luxury fashion, nightclub parties, and
private jets
Iran-sponsored threat group behind false flag social engineering
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Online Counterfeits
I Hired a Lab to Counterfeit-Test a Dozen Suspicious Beauty Products I
Bought Online. Every Single One Had a Problem.
U.S. Customs and Border Protection seized 500,716 counterfeit
personal-care items — a category that includes cosmetics, skin care,
soap, and toothpaste — during the 2024 fiscal year. That’s peanuts
considering how many fake handbags and wallets (5,132,402), fake
pharmaceuticals (3,743,413), fake clothing items (1,043,853), fake pairs
of sunglasses (771,533), and fake pieces of jewelry (713,036) the agency
intercepted over that same time frame.
That figure is even more minuscule compared to the number of bootleg
beauty products that aren’t confiscated. Authorities capture less
than 2.3% of all counterfeit goods sent to the United States,
according to a July 2020 report from the National Association of
Manufacturers.
If those 500,716 counterfeit personal-care items represented 2.3% of the
fakes arriving stateside, that means another 21,269,544 snuck across
the border that same year.
Then there are domestically manufactured fakes, like the $700,000 worth
of illegitimate Kylie Cosmetics, MAC, NARS, and Urban Decay products
seized by Los Angeles police in a 2018 raid. Authorities were reportedly
tipped off by buyers who, not realizing they’d purchased counterfeits,
complained to the actual brands about developing bumps and rashes after
using “their” products. The fakes were ultimately “found to contain
bacteria and human waste,” as LAPD deputy chief Marc Reina later
tweeted.
And that’s why counterfeit beauty, even though it represents a small
fraction of the fakery out there, is one of the most critical categories
to avoid. These are products that go on or in your body, and that
can be risky. Over the past two decades, fake personal-care products
have been found to contain ingredients like antifreeze (in counterfeit
toothpaste as a sweetener, I’m sorry to tell you) and urine (to give a
fake fragrance a golden hue, I’m even more sorry to say).
“People go to the hospital because of these products,” Bob Barchiesi,
president of the International AntiCounterfeiting Coalition, said in a
video interview. “They end up in the emergency room because of them.”
nytimes.com
Agentic Commerce Surge
US agentic commerce revenue forecast to reach $1 trillion by 2030
But even as the technology grows in
popularity, the physical shopping experience will remain important, per
a new report.
Agentic commerce in the U.S. business-to-consumer retail market may
reach $1 trillion in revenue by 2030, according to a report by ICSC
and McKinsey & Company.
Sixty-eight percent of consumers used at least one AI tool in the
past three months as part of their shopping experience. And 62% of
those surveyed said they have used AI to compare brands, models, prices,
or reviews.
Stores are still a relevant platform as the use of AI grows, with
younger consumers choosing to shop online and visit stores to complete a
purchase. Nearly 40% of Gen Z and millennials surveyed “expressed a
preference for experiential retail, creating structural upside for
physical retail environments that offer discovery and social
connection,” according to the report.
retaildive.com
Survey: E-commerce loyalty programs spur repeat purchases
Amazon Weighs Merging AI Chat Into Its Main Search Bar |
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New York, NY: Update: Feds Bust Perps Behind The $1.2M Dollar Apple Truck
Robbery
A trio of armed robbers attempted to pull off a brazen, movie-style daytime
hijacking outside one of Long Island, New York’s most upscale shopping centers
at the beginning of the year. The feds say the suspects stole more than $1.2
million worth of Apple products while terrifying delivery workers at gunpoint.
Per a freshly unsealed federal indictment out of the Eastern District of New
York, the suspects allegedly targeted an Apple delivery truck parked outside the
Apple Store at the Americana Manhasset mall. This was on the chilly morning of
January 3, 2026. Employees prepared to unload high-end merchandise including
MacBooks, iPhones, iPads, Apple Watches, and accessories. The feds allege three
armed men stormed the truck around 8 a.m., forcing one worker into the cargo
area before zip-tying his hands. The second victim was allegedly ordered into
the driver’s seat at gunpoint and was forced to drive to a secluded parking area
nearby. Once there, feds claim the robbers forced the second worker into the
back of the truck as well, tying him up beside his coworker before carrying out
the massive electronics heist. The indictment alleges the suspects used a rented
Home Depot box truck (obtained with a fake Pennsylvania driver’s license) to
transfer the stolen Apple products from the hijacked delivery truck into another
vehicle.
lamag.com
Cheltenham, PA: Woman accused of stealing nearly $1M from Victoria’s Secret,
selling the items through eBay
Tiffany R. Halley, 41, of Cheltenham Township, is charged with 293 felony counts
of retail theft, according to court records. According to a criminal complaint
obtained by NorthPennNow, Halley is accused of stealing nearly $1 million in
lingerie from Victoria’s Secret stores in six states, then selling the items at
a fraction of retail prices through an online eBay store called
“halley_boutique” between December 2022 and February 2026. The store made a
total of 3,323 sales which generated more than $152,000 through discounts of
more than 83%. Victoria’s Secret was defrauded of $923,000 in retail value, the
largest losses coming from stores located in Willow Grove, King of Prussia, and
Philadelphia, the complaint said.
glensidelocal.com
Miami, FL: Teen workers at Miami UPS Store face charges in $40K package theft,
deputies say
Two teen workers at a Miami UPS store and their alleged accomplice are facing
charges in the theft of packages worth around $40,000, authorities said. Angel
Caleb Pagan, 18, was arrested Wednesday on second-degree grand theft and
attempted tampering with physical evidence charges, an arrest report said. Two
17-year-olds are also facing charges in the theft, which happened at the UPS
Store at 8555 Northwest 186th Street, the report said. According to the report,
Pagan and one of the 17-year-olds work at the store and are students at Barbara
Goleman High School in Miami Lakes. The alleged victims are a husband and wife
who own a business that sells Bath and Body Works and Victoria's Secret products
through Amazon and to individual customers. The husband and wife told Miami-Dade
Sheriff's Office investigators that between March 21 and April 13, 80 boxes of
merchandise worth $40,000 that was dropped off at the UPS store went missing,
the report said.
nbcmiami.com
Zanesville, OH: Man sentenced to 6 years in multi-county $25,000 Legos theft
scheme
Lakeland, FL: Man Arrested After Stealing $1,400 in Fishing Rods, Leading
Deputies on Foot Chase
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Shootings & Deaths
DeKalb County, GA: Man shot woman at DeKalb shopping center
DeKalb County police are investigating after two people were found shot in the
parking lot of a grocery store Wednesday evening. Officers responded to the
Publix on Panola Road in Lithonia around 7:20 p.m. Wednesday, according to the
DeKalb County Police Department. Officers found a man and woman with gunshot
wounds. The woman died from her injuries and the man was rushed to an area
hospital for treatment. On Thursday morning, DeKalb PD identified the pair as
23-year-old Isiah Tarver and 25-year-old Chayla Cummings. Police say Tarver and
Cummings knew each other and Tarver shot Cummings before shooting himself.
Tarver is now facing a murder charge.
fox5atlanta.com
Toronto, ON, Canada: Update: Two additional men arrested in fatal Woodbine mall
shooting in February
Two more men have been charged in connection with the daytime shooting death of
a man at Woodbine Mall in Rexdale three months ago. Toronto Police say Chanda
Kumar Raja Nandakumar, 37, of Brampton, died in hospital of his injuries shortly
after being shot in what they called a targeted shooting inside a vehicle at the
mall’s parking lot around 3:30 p.m. on Feb. 7. Following the shooting, police
said a suspect or suspects fled the area in a vehicle, but no further
information was provided. “I can understand how a shooting like this, especially
at a mall, can cause concern for the safety of the public,” Insp. Errol Watson
told media outside the mall after the shooting. On April 30, officers arrested
Dyson Taylor, 18, of Brantford, and charged him with accessory after the fact to
murder. And on Wednesday, officers arrested Xzavier Blake, 18, of Toronto,
charging him with first-degree murder. Previously, cops announced on March 3
that Isaiah Thomas Badger, 19, of Edmonton, was wanted on a Canada-wide warrant
for first-degree murder.
torontosun.com
West Springfield, MA: Man wounded in West Springfield parking lot shooting
An investigation is underway after a man was shot in West Springfield store
parking lot. Western Mass News has been seeking information from authorities
and, after several days of reaching out, West Springfield Police confirmed
Thursday that they responded to the parking lot of The Home Depot on Daggett
Drive around 12:45 a.m. Sunday on May 3rd for a report of shots fired. When
officers arrived, they saw several vehicles leaving what they said appeared to
be “an impromptu car meet in the parking lot.
westernmassnews.com
Los Angeles, CA: Update: LAPD found not liable for officer's fatal shooting of
14-year-old girl in Burlington store
Port Royal, SC: Beaufort man convicted, sentenced for shooting Parker’s clerk in
2022 armed robbery
Clackamas County, OR: Man sentenced to prison for stealing $25K worth of liquor
from Wilsonville store
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Washington, DC: DOJ: Former Walgreen’s Store Manager Sentenced for Her Role in
Seven Inside-Job Drug Store Robberies
London Teeter, 22, of the District of Columbia, was sentenced today in U.S.
District Court to 32 months in prison for her role in a series of seven
inside-job robberies of the Chinatown drug store where she was employed as a
store manager, announced U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro. Teeter pleaded
guilty Feb. 13, 2025, to one count of conspiracy to interfere with interstate
commerce by robbery (Hobbs Act robbery). In addition to the 32-month prison
term, Judge Jia M. Cobb ordered Teeter to serve three years of supervised
release. Federal prosecutors had requested a 100-month prison sentence. “London
Teeter was a key architect of a seven-month scheme that repeatedly turned her
own workplace into a crime scene,” said U.S. Attorney Pirro. “The sentencing
guidelines called for 87-to-108 months. This sentence, which is significantly
lighter, does little to protect the citizens of the District.”
justice.gov
Tempe, AZ: Couple allegedly caught on video swiping $4K bottle from table in
brazen restaurant theft
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•
Auto – Candler, NC –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Grass
Valley, CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – North
Charleston, SC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Holtsville,
NY – Robbery
•
Clothing – Newark, NJ
– Burglary
•
Dollar – Columbus
County, NC – Robbery
•
Dollar – Charleston,
SC – Armed Robbery
•
Gaming – Greenville,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
Gas Station – Halfmoon,
NY – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Newark, NJ –
Burglary
•
Jewelry – Laurel, MD – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Erie, PA – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Albuquerque, NM – Robbery
•
Pawn – Sheffield, AL –
Robbery
•
Restaurant – Des
Moines, IA – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Chicago,
IL – Burglary
•
Tobacco – Miami, Fl –
Armed Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 14 robberies
• 3 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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