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 5/21/26

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LPRC Study Reveals Dramatic Efficiency Gains with FaceFirst® Technology


Investigators using FaceFirst® solved cases faster, uncovered more value, and built stronger cases against organized retail crime.

A Loss Prevention Research Council (LPRC) case study has demonstrated the substantial impact of FaceFirst®’s facial recognition technology on organized retail crime investigations, revealing dramatic improvements over traditional CCTV methods.

The study compared two investigators with similar backgrounds working the same case: one using FaceFirst® and the other relying on traditional CCTV reviews. The results were striking.
 

Learn more
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Violent Crime Down 9.3% in 2025 - Property Crime Down 12.4%
FBI announces US violent crime rate plummeted by fastest rate in nearly 90 years
U.S. violent crime rates in 2025 saw the largest decrease since 1937, according to FBI nationwide crime data.

Last year, murder and non-negligent manslaughter dropped by more than 18% across the U.S., and aggravated assault dropped by more than 7%, per the preliminary report from the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting Program on national 2025 crime rates, the New York Post reported. The data was collected from over 17,000 law enforcement agencies, which cover about 96% of policing in the U.S.

Overall, violent crime decreased by about 9.3% in 2025, according to the data. Rape dropped by nearly 8%, and robbery decreased by about 18.5%, the FBI reported.

Property crime also fell by about 12.4% between 2024 and 2025.

“The 2025 crime data in this report shows the single largest decrease in violent crime and murder since 1937 – as well as huge decreases across the board in terms of aggravated assault, rape, and robbery,” FBI Director Kash Patel said in a statement.

From 2025 to 2024, there were about 1.1 million fewer violent crimes committed, and a decrease of roughly 5.2 million property crimes, according to the data.

About 47% of violent crimes — more than 400,000 — were cleared with arrests, in addition to about 17% — 868,000 — of property crimes.

Last year, about 53 police officers were killed in the line of duty, and more than 90,000 were assaulted. Another 28 police officers died accidentally while on the job. komonews.com  nypost.com


Retailers Navigate Privacy and Crime Tech
Balancing privacy and AI legislation with retail safety technology

Retail and tech partners must commit to governance and communication on use and benefits

As retailers and communities across the nation confront high levels of retail theft, violence and organized retail crime, many are looking toward advanced technologies to protect workers, customers and assets. Tools such as AI-enabled cameras, intelligence video analytics, facial recognition and body-worn cameras have become essential in identifying threats, deterring repeat offenders, de-escalating violence and accelerating investigations.

But here in the United States, these powerful emerging technologies intersect directly with privacy legislation — a space where lawmakers must balance civil liberties and consumer privacy with urgent safety and security needs.

Several U.S. states have introduced and are advancing well-intentioned legislation that risks prohibiting some of these safety-critical technologies. While aimed at individual privacy protection, several introduced bills contain such broad restrictions into a retailer’s use of biometric data that it could affect routine safety capabilities — capabilities that could assist consumers against fraud, detect lost or abducted children, or prevent a known violent offender from causing harm during repeated theft of goods.

Additionally, some states may impose such strict notice or consent requirements for use of these technologies that it fragments the overall regulatory environment, causing compliance complexity for multi-state retailers.

Transparency around the purpose of its use in a location, communication around data capture and retention, and clear standards are all critical for the responsible deployment of these safety and security technologies.

For lawmakers, the path forward requires nuance and education. There’s no question that privacy protections must remain strong, especially for sensitive consumer and biometric data. However, legislators should recognize that retailers today operate in a uniquely different environment involving theft, crime and violence. The National Retail Federation provides an educational platform for legislators seeking a greater understanding how the use of these technologies in the retail environment will improve safety, security and crime prevention.

Striking a balance is essential. Regulations that are too restrictive or ambiguous can unintentionally limit a retailer’s ability to provide a safe working and shopping environment. Privacy and security are not opposing forces — they must be complementary to provide safe, trustworthy and resilient retail environments. nrf.com


'Unchecked Retail Theft' Closes Another Store
Another Walgreens Is Closing in Chicago—Blame Criminals, Not the Company

As the store withdraws from the South Side, Alderman William Hall refuses to address the obvious problem: unchecked retail theft.

Walgreens is pulling out of Chicago’s South Side, home to some of the city’s most crime-ridden areas. The closure of a store in the city’s Chatham neighborhood, set for June 4, marks the seventh Walgreens location to shut down on the South Side in the past year.

Who’s to blame for this departure? Chicago Alderman William Hall, who represents Chatham as part of Ward 6, blames the company. Walgreens, he said, should be charged with “first-degree corporate abandonment” for creating a “medicine drought,” and he even accused it of committing a “pharmaceutical genocide.” (It’s particularly rich that Hall is now castigating Walgreens for closing, given that he hadn’t been happy about Walgreens opening, alleging it “ran out” small, local businesses.)

Hall is right to be concerned that residents and seniors with chronic health conditions may suffer. But criminals, not corporations, are to blame for the closures. Strengthening both policing and prosecution of property crimes is the key to bringing Walgreens and other businesses back to the South Side. Rhetoric like Hall’s, by contrast, continues to send the message that Chicago is closed for business.

Walgreens has been clear that crime is the problem. At a town hall on May 9, executives revealed that the Chatham store lost more than $1 million last year due to shoplifting and declining prescription sales. The location loses 16 percent of its inventory to theft—four times the company average, according to Walgreens’ regional vice president.

Like many stores reeling from the national surge of retail theft, the Chatham Walgreens was forced to install lock boxes to protect merchandise. And it spent more than $400,000 a year on security guards. Yet criminals were undeterred. Thieves broke the locks, leaped over counters to steal liquor and cigarettes, and assaulted workers. city-journal.org


Retail Theft is Turning More Violent
Shoplifting incidents escalate as violence, organized crime draw federal attention
What was once a simple act of shoplifting has, in some cases, escalated into more dangerous and violent encounters.

A recent incident at a Henderson Costco on St Rose Parkway on Saturday highlighted that shift. Henderson police said a suspect attempting to steal a laptop sprayed mace at an employee while trying to flee before 2 p.m., prompting customers to cover their faces as the situation unfolded.

Legal experts said such actions can elevate the severity of the crime.

Once you start using violence or force in order to retain the item, or the threat of force to retain the item, then it becomes a robbery,” Frank Coumou, a retired Clark County prosecutor and current defense attorney with De Castroverde Law Group said.

Coumou said the use of mace or any weapon can significantly increase potential penalties, turning a theft into a violent felony that may carry years in prison.

“If they use something to retain property in order to take it out of the store, whether they use a gun or they punch an employee or they use mace, in this particular instance, they're trying to retain this property from the rightful owner or an agent of the owner in order to steal it,” Coumou said. “So now it becomes a very serious crime, a crime of violence that carries anywhere between two and 15 years.”

Law enforcement officials said the issue extends beyond isolated incidents. Many thefts are tied to organized groups that resell stolen goods for profit.

The trend has drawn attention at the federal level, with Nevada Democratic Reps. Susie Lee and Dina Titus are helping spearhead legislation aimed at combating organized retail crime.

The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act( CORCA) recently passed the U.S. House with bipartisan support. The legislation would strengthen coordination among federal, state and local law enforcement agencies and create a federal coordination center within Homeland Security Investigations to target organized theft rings. news3lv.com


New Tough-on-Crime Approach
Prison sentences for retail theft doubled in 2025, according to report studying State’s Attorney Burke policies
A court-monitoring group that studied policy changes during the first 500 days of Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke’s leadership found in a new report that prison sentences for retail theft more than doubled last year, alleging that the top prosecutor returned “to the tough-on-crime prosecution that weakened Cook County communities for decades” when she took over from former State’s Attorney Kim Foxx.

The findings are not surprising, given that Burke reversed a number of Foxx’s policies after running on a platform that was more tough on crime than the former progressive prosecutor, even as the report shows a continued divide between Burke and progressive groups advocating for criminal justice reform.

In a statement, Burke’s office said it is “committed to strengthening public safety by taking dangerous weapons off our streets, supporting and seeking justice on behalf of victims, protecting survivors of domestic violence, combating crime on public transit and deterring violent offenders from inflicting harm on our neighborhoods.” chicagotribune.com


ICYMI: UK expands crackdown on organized retail crime networks

Analysis of FBI data shows most common crimes in Ohio

 



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LP Balances Safety and Convenience
Retailers Reevaluate Visible Security Measures to Reduce Customer Friction

By the D&D Daily staff

Retailers are increasingly reassessing how visible security practices impact the customer experience, as loss prevention teams work to balance shrink reduction with convenience and shopper satisfaction.

Industry analysts say many retailers are looking for ways to maintain security standards without creating unnecessary friction for customers through excessive locked merchandise, long wait times for product access, or cumbersome checkout verification processes.

The conversation has grown alongside the expansion of self-checkout, mobile shopping expectations, and rising competition from e-commerce platforms, where convenience often plays a major role in purchasing decisions.

According to retail consultants and technology providers, many retailers are now investing more heavily in operational tools that work in the background rather than relying solely on highly visible deterrence measures. These tools can include RFID inventory tracking, intelligent video analytics, exception-based reporting systems, inventory visibility platforms, and data-driven monitoring designed to help identify operational irregularities more efficiently.

Retail analysts note that store design itself has also become part of modern LP strategy. Some retailers are reevaluating lighting, aisle layouts, staffing visibility, product placement, and checkout positioning to improve natural oversight within stores while maintaining a more welcoming environment for shoppers.

At the same time, employee engagement remains a major focus. Industry experts frequently point to customer service presence as an important operational deterrent. Greeting customers, improving associate visibility on the sales floor, and reducing response times for assistance requests are commonly cited practices that can support both customer experience and store awareness efforts.

Retailers are also continuing to evaluate the operational impact of locked merchandise displays. While such measures may help reduce losses in certain categories, analysts say they can also create fulfillment delays, frustrate shoppers, and increase pressure on already limited store staffing levels.

Industry observers say the broader trend reflects how LP departments are becoming more closely tied to overall store operations, customer experience strategy, and operational efficiency rather than functioning solely as traditional security departments.

As retailers continue modernizing store environments, many expect LP leaders to play a larger role in balancing operational protection with customer convenience and long-term brand loyalty.


Recognizing Security Leaders
2026 Security Officer Award Nominations Are Open

Recognize your employee, co-worker, colleague, supervisor, and even your boss. You can even nominate yourself!

All recipients will receive an award certificate and an accommodation bar and everyone will be included in a national press release. Recipients' names will also be added to the POI website awards page.

Nominations may be made for exceptional achievement in any security or private or public police endeavor, either on duty or off-duty, including self-initiated cases, community policing, criminal investigation, extraordinary valor, excellent arrest or detention, progressive security techniques, meritorious service, enhancing or advancing private security through education, training or community services, and overall client safety awareness or other programs.

Nominees may come from virtually any area of private security including proprietary departments, contract agencies, special or private police forces or other private protective services, loss prevention, and retail security.

A national press release in June will list all officers who receive awards!

Learn more here

 
Do Stores Need More Personality?
Grocers need to make sure stores have personality

New report shows majority of shoppers prefer to shop in store rather than online

The food industry’s leading trade group says consumers still prefer shopping for groceries in physical stores despite the continued growth of online and omnichannel options.

FMI—The Food Industry Association on Tuesday released its U.S. Grocery Shopper Trends 2026 Report, developed in partnership with The Hartman Group. The report found shoppers continue to value the in-store grocery experience and often visit multiple grocery banners each month.

Consumers visit more than five grocery store banners on average per month as they seek stores that align with their household needs and shopping preferences, according to the report.

“It’s important for food retailers to ask themselves, ‘What personality does my store have?’ and ensure that personality grows customer loyalty,” said Leslie Sarasin, president and CEO of FMI.

Sarasin said shoppers are drawn to stores with distinct personalities, ranging from entertainment-focused shopping experiences to bargain-oriented retailers offering bulk or stock-up options. supermarketnews.com


Avoiding Burnout & Boosting Workplace Safety
How Unused Vacation Days Increase Workplace Safety Hazards

New research shows deferred recovery and worker burnout act as operational exposure risks that trigger preventable errors and near-misses.

Employee burnout and unused paid time off are traditionally categorized as human resources concerns, but new data suggests safety professionals should monitor them as leading indicators for workplace incidents.

A study of more than 1,000 U.S. workers conducted by Clarify Capital found that employees leave an average of six days of paid vacation unused annually. In safety-critical fields like healthcare, 26% of respondents reported skipping time off entirely due to staffing shortages.

When workers defer necessary recovery time, the resulting fatigue directly compromises human performance in high-risk environments.

“There’s a misconception that burnout is only an HR concern. In occupational safety, it is also an exposure risk,” said Michael Baynes, CEO of Clarify Capital. “Nearly half of employees are worried about falling behind or returning to disorder. To get ahead of this, organizations can operationalize coverage by cross-training teams, normalize workload redistribution, and design systems where stepping away doesn’t cause risk downstream. That’s how to protect workplace safety.”  ohsonline.com


SDM 100: Top 100 Security Dealers of 2026
The top 100 security dealers navigated a complex landscape in 2025, overcoming tariffs, economic uncertainty and customer hesitation by leaning on disciplined strategy and in-demand technologies like AI and video to drive impressive growth.

The Link between Chemical Exposure and Hearing Loss
Combined exposure to noise and chemicals affects about 12 million workers annually, highlighting the need for comprehensive protective measures.

High energy prices drive spike in consumer prices: Statistics Canada

Target hits bullseye with ‘impressive’ earnings

Donatos positions Florida as key growth market with up to 25 new stores
 





In Honor of Memorial Day Weekend,
the D&D Daily will not publish on May 22 and May 25.

We will resume publication on Tuesday, May 26.


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Siffron's Sliding Clear Security Gate

Product security & visibility in one solution


Retail theft continues to rise. For some categories and locations, the only solution to prevent theft and protect merchandise is to restrict access. siffron's Sliding Security Gate with clear front allow retailers to convert their existing shelving systems into a locked case. This managed access solution requires store personnel to open and access products for customers while keeping it safe from potential shoplifters.

Mounting hardware is provided to secure the gates to standard Lozier or Madix shelving. Side panels are available to close off the ends and prevent side access, creating a secure system. This solution is available in wire grid or in clear glass gates.


Learn more here


 

 

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Retail Cyber Attacks:
Why E-commerce Is a Prime Target
If you run a retail business, any retail business, and you’re not actively thinking about cybersecurity, you’re already behind. That’s not a scare tactic. It’s just where things stand right now. Retail cyber attacks have been rising for years, and 2024 didn’t offer much relief. What makes this worse is who’s getting hit. It used to be that only household names, your Targets and Home Depots, made headlines after a breach. That’s changed. Small and mid-size retailers now account for a growing share of reported retail cyberattacks, partly because they’re easier to crack and partly because attackers have gotten better at automating the process of quickly finding weak targets.

Why the Retail Industry Is a Major Target for Cyber Attacks

Start with the obvious: retailers are sitting on a lot of valuable data. Every transaction produces cardholder information, billing addresses, email addresses, and purchase histories. This generates millions of usable records a year, the kind of data that sells quickly on dark web markets.

Transaction volume creates noise

Retailers handle thousands to millions of transactions daily. That volume makes it genuinely difficult to spot the anomalies that signal an attack in progress. By the time something unusual surfaces, the damage is often already done.

Vendor access is everywhere

Think about how many third parties have some kind of access to a typical retailer’s systems: payment processors, logistics partners, inventory software providers, marketing platforms, HVAC contractors. Retail cybersecurity teams have to secure not just their own infrastructure but an entire web of external connections they don’t fully control.

Seasonal hiring is a real liability

Retail brings on thousands of temporary workers during peak periods. These employees often get a quick onboarding, minimal security training, and access to systems they’ll use for a few weeks. That’s an easy target for anyone running phishing attacks in retail environments.

A lot of systems are old

Legacy POS hardware and aging back-office software are everywhere in retail. These platforms weren’t built with current threats in mind; they’re hard to update without disrupting operations, and they often can’t support modern security tools. That’s a problem that doesn’t get fixed overnight. Understanding these gaps is where the integrated retail security strategy has to begin, not with technology purchases, but with an honest audit of where your actual exposure is. securityjournalamericas.com


7-Eleven's Breach in the News
(Update) 7-Eleven hit by data breach

The retailer confirmed that an unauthorized third party gained access to certain systems used to store franchisee documents earlier this spring.

Hackers breached 7-Eleven earlier this spring in an attack that exposed some franchisee information, a company spokesperson confirmed to C-Store Dive on Tuesday.

The retailer learned on April 8 that an unauthorized third party gained access to certain 7-Eleven systems used to store franchisee documents, Jim Kastle, 7-Eleven’s chief information security officer, said in a letter sent to impacted individuals on May 1. Those documents included personal information provided to 7-Eleven during the franchise application process.

About 50 people in Massachusetts, Maine and Vermont were impacted by the incident, according to data breach filings presented to those states last week. It’s not clear if other individuals across the country were also affected.

7-Eleven’s spokesperson said that the convenience retailer “immediately launched an investigation and began taking steps to contain the incident” upon discovering it. The company has notified law enforcement and retained third-party cybersecurity experts, and hasn’t experienced any disruption to operations, the spokesperson emphasized. cybersecuritydive.com

 
Cyberattack Cuts Into Retailer's Profit
M&S expects profit recovery after cyber attack drives 24% slump in FY26
Marks & Spencer said it expects profit growth to resume in its 2027 financial year (FY27), after a cyber attack forced a seven-week suspension of online clothing orders in 2025/26, weighing heavily on sales and margins.

"Profit growth is expected to resume ‌versus ⁠2024/25," the company said on Wednesday.

The British retailer reported full-year adjusted pre-tax profit of £671 million, down 23.8% year-on-year, as the cyber attack took a heavy toll on earnings. The second half showed signs of recovery, with adjusted PBT of £487 million coming in around 3% ahead of consensus and up 4.1% on the same period a year earlier.

“As expected, the headline profit damage is ugly but the important thing is the underlying business still appears full of life underneath the cyber rubble," Robinhood U.K. lead analyst Dan Lane said. investing.com


Verizon DBIR: Vulnerability exploitation is the dominant initial access vector

FBI: $388 million lost in crypto ATM scams in 2026


 




Target's Next-Day Delivery Push
Target expanding next-day delivery

Target Corp. continues spreading the availability of next-day delivery for online orders.

The discount giant said that by the end of spring 2026, 60% of the U.S. population will have access to next-day delivery of online Target orders. Customers in more than 50 top U.S. metro areas will be able to get their purchases delivered next day.

Most items eligible for shipping at Target are eligible for next-day delivery, including hundreds of thousands of items and 85% of products sold in Target stores. Customers can heck an item’s product detail page, or the cart and checkout page for next-day delivery eligibility and order-by time.

Next-day delivery is free for orders over $35 or with no minimum order amount for members of the Target 360 paid membership program or for purchases made with the Target Circle credit card. According to Target, it already reaches 80% of the U.S. population with same-day delivery, often within as little as two or three hours, and 99% of the population with two-day shipping.

Target is following up on a previous expansion of next-day delivery to consumers across 35 top U.S. metro areas — over half of the U.S. population — in October 2025. At the time, Target said more than 20 additional cities would be coming in 2026, including Orlando; San Diego; St. Louis; and Charlotte, N.C.

The retailer has also been making adjustments in its supply chain to better support next-day delivery. In November 2025, Target opened a sortation center that enables next-day delivery of online orders in the Cleveland metro area. The facility is a three-year trial of a sortation center model in which last-mile delivery is only activated by the Shipt delivery platform, a wholly-owned Target subsidiary.

Target piloted the concept of sortation centers — which streamline the process of fulfilling and delivering online orders, removing the sorting process from the backroom of stores — in April 2021 with a pilot in its Minneapolis hometown. chainstoreage.com


AI's Seamless Acceleration in China
How China’s Super-App Ecosystem Is Accelerating AI Adoption
A shopper in Shanghai opens one app to message a friend, find a product and pay for it. The same app books a restaurant and hails a ride. When Alibaba inserted an artificial intelligence (AI) agent into that flow in early 2026, it did not need to convince anyone to adopt a new tool. It upgraded one they already used every day.

China entered the AI era with super apps already embedded into daily life. Those platforms did not need to find users for AI. That entry point is defining how quickly AI moves from feature to infrastructure.

WeChat combines messaging, payments and commerce for 1.3 billion monthly active users. Taobao, Meituan and Douyin each run their own integrated discovery and payment layers. Inserting AI into those environments means plugging into habits that already exist, CNBC reported.

The scale of what has already deployed is significant. Alibaba’s Qwen AI assistant reached 300 million monthly active users across Taobao, Tmall and Alipay by early 2026. Roughly 140 million first-time AI shopping experiences were logged during a single Chinese New Year campaign, Let’s Data Science reported. Transactions were completed through Alipay. The AI steps back only for final user confirmation. The loop never leaves the app.

ByteDance upgraded its Doubao AI chatbot to autonomously handle tasks such as ticket bookings through Douyin’s commerce layer. Tencent is building equivalent capabilities directly into WeChat. Each platform is racing to make AI the operating layer of an app consumers already depend on, Sinolytics noted. The goal is not to launch a new AI product. It is to make AI invisible inside one that already has a billion users. pymnts.com


Adobe: Memorial Day online spending to approach $11B

Man says Amazon data center construction upended his life, hurt his home's value

60 days or leave: Indians with H-1B visa struggling to survive after Meta and Amazon layoffs


 


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Los Angeles, CA: Pokémon and One Piece cards stolen in $300,000 West LA card store burglary
Pokémon and One Piece cards were stolen over the weekend in a burglary at a Los Angeles card store. RWT Collective manager Ebrahim Alas told NBC4 Investigates that a security alarm was activated at about 3 a.m. Sunday at the store in the 11300 block of West Olympic Boulevard. When he arrived, he found the front window of his business shattered. After checking security camera video, Alas said the thieves appeared to have left just before he arrived. They smashed display cases and stole about $300,000 worth of cards, including unopened Pokémon card boxes and Japanese manga series One Piece cards.  nbclosangeles.com


Julington Creek, FL: 4 arrested after vape shop break-in connected to multiple burglaries in Florida counties
Four people were arrested on April 29 after they broke into a vape shop in Julington Creek, leading deputies to believe the group is tied to multiple burglaries across Duval and St. Johns Counties, according to authorities. Surveillance video from inside Golden Innovape on Durbin Pavilion Drive shows a group of people wearing masks throwing a large piece of concrete through the front window of the shop and entering the store around 3 a.m. Two teenagers and Jordan Raysor, 18, took merchandise and money from the register, the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office said in a Facebook post. wfla.com


Wilkes-Barre Township, PA: Man wore 19 shirts in theft attempt
A man from New Jersey entered a fitting room where he put on 19 shirts while his co-conspirator stashed multiple belts in a tote bag in an attempt to cheat a department store on Tuesday, according to court records. Police in Wilkes-Barre Township charged Luis Daniel Escalante, 48, and Natali Herrera-Cardona, 41, both from Trenton, with looting Kohl’s on Wilkes-Barre Township Boulevard, court records say. Court records allege Escalante entered a fitting room, placed 19 Tommy Hilfiger shirts on himself, removed the security tags from each item, and walked out of the store without paying. While Escalante was in the fitting room, court records say, Herrera-Cardona was on her way out of the store, passing multiple cash registers with a tote bag that concealed 21 belts.  timesleader.com


Lake Forest, CA: Deputies recovered expensive stolen guitars and arrested the suspect in south Orange County

Cleveland, OH: Man arrested for Walgreens theft; wanted on warrants from seven cities, one county

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Baton Rouge, LA: Man dies after shooting outside Baton Rouge shoe store
A man who was listed in critical condition following a shooting outside of a Baton Rouge shoe store almost a week ago has died. The coroner’s office identified the deceased as 28-year-old Na’Quail Weaver. The shooting happened on Thursday, May 14, at the Athlete’s Foot store on Florida Boulevard near North Foster. A witness said several men were fighting in the store parking lot when gunfire rang out. The suspected gunman was no longer in the area when police arrived.  wafb.com


Chula Vista, CA: Walmart worker, 18, shot dead in store parking lot in east Chula Vista; suspect arrested
A suspect was arrested in connection with the shooting death of an 18-year-old Walmart worker in the parking lot of the retail store in Chula Vista’s Eastlake neighborhood, police said. According to the Chula Vista Police Department, officers were dispatched to the Walmart in the 1300 block of Eastlake Parkway just after 10:30 p.m. Tuesday due to multiple 911 calls reporting a shooting. Officers arrived to find a victim with a single gunshot wound and performed life-saving measures. Thomas Perez was taken to Scripps Mercy Hospital in San Diego for further treatment, but police said he died after arrival. The victim was identified by police as a male resident of Chula Vista. The initial investigation revealed Perez and the victim were involved in a mutual fight when Perez produced a holstered firearm from his waistband and shot the victim.” A Walmart spokesperson confirmed to ABC 10News that the victim worked at the Eastlake Parkway store.  10news.com


Fort Wayne, IN: 75-year-old woman dead after fight with Tim Hortons worker inside coffee shop
The Fort Wayne Police Department is investigating after an elderly woman died following a fight over an order issue at a Tim Hortons last week. On May 13, the department conducted a death investigation after responding to a reported battery involving a 75-year-old woman and a 20-year-old worker at the Tim Hortons. From the investigation, detectives learned that Anita Grayson, 75, had entered the restaurant to address an issue with her order she got in the drive-thru. When she went inside, police say she began "berating a 17-year-old female employee." That's when a 20-year-old shift lead stepped in and told the woman to leave. According to a release from FWPD, the shift lead put her hands on Grayson to stop her from reaching the other employee. Shortly after, the 75-year-old shoved the shift lead backward and struck her face. Just moments later, security footage shows the altercation continue with the two on the floor. FWPD says the shift lead was left with "scratches" and "a chunk of hair" pulled from her head. In the video, you can see the shift lead's hair fall out of Grayson's hand. Shortly after being taken to a local hospital, Grayson was officially pronounced dead by medics. No arrests have been made in the incident, and FWPD says Grayson’s cause of death has not yet been determined.  khou.com


Glendale, AZ: Domestic violence suspect shot by officers in Glendale strip mall
Police shot and wounded a domestic violence suspect in Glendale on Wednesday morning. The shooting happened on May 20 near 63rd Avenue and Bell Road. Glendale police say officers encountered a suspect inside a business in the area, and at some point, a shooting occurred. The suspect was taken to a hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. No officers were hurt.  fox10phoenix.com


Oakland County, MI: Mother shot during carjacking outside Oakland County strip mall, man arrested after police chase
A woman is seriously hurt after being shot during a random carjacking outside a shopping plaza in Orion Township. The shooting happened at around 5:45 p.m. on Tuesday, May 19, outside Baldwin Commons Plaza near Baldwin and Brown roads. According to Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard, investigators believe a 25-year-old Ann Arbor man had been sitting outside watching for a victim before targeting the woman, who was walking through the parking lot with her young son.  clickondetroit.com


Gastonia, NC: Update: Corner store security video contradicts police narrative in Gastonia shooting
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Clarksville police seek suspects in Big Lots armed robbery
The Clarksville Police Department is asking for the public’s help identifying two suspects connected to an aggravated robbery at a Big Lots store last week. Police said the robbery happened around 8:39 p.m. Friday, May 15, at the Big Lots located at 1041 S. Riverside Drive. According to investigators, two masked men entered the store and appeared to be purchasing a Slim Jim. When the cashier opened the register, one of the suspects allegedly attempted to grab the cash drawer, but the cashier quickly shut it.  newschannel5.com


Essex County, NJ: N.J. man charged with robbery after using Google Translate to demand cash
Police have arrested a man they say used the Google Translate app to threaten a store employee in Newark before fleeing with cash and two stolen cellphones, authorities said. Najee Bishop, 25, of Newark, was arrested May 13 and charged with first-degree robbery, first- and second-degree weapons offenses and third-degree terroristic threats, court records show. Newark Public Safety Director Emanuel Miranda Sr. said the robbery occurred around 6:40 p.m. on March 6 at a store in the 100 block of Pacific Street. Bishop allegedly entered the business and showed the employee a Google Translate message on his cellphone that announced he had a gun and wanted all the store’s money. “The suspect’s message also advised the worker not to get killed for someone else’s money,” Miranda said in a statement. Miranda said that Bishop walked around the counter, removed $550 in cash from the register and placed it in his backpack. “He also removed one cell phone from the employee and another from the store before fleeing westbound on Chestnut Street,” Miranda said. Newark police detectives identified Bishop as the suspect and obtained a warrant for his arrest, Miranda said. Bishop was in custody pending a court hearing. Attorney information was not available in court records.  nj.com


Edmonton, AB, Canada: Police use forensics to arrest suspect in West Edmonton Mall jewelry store robbery


 


 

Beauty - Opelika, AL – Robbery
C-Store – Florence, SC – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Visalia, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Bristol, VA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Newark, NJ – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Raynham, MA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Philadelphia, PA – Burglary
Cellphone – Spartanburg, SC – Robbery
Clothing - Wilkes-Barre Township, PA - Robbery
Collectable – Los Angeles, CA - Burglary
Gaming – Chicago, IL – Burglary
Grocery – Huntington Beach, CA – Robbery
Jewelry – Chandler, AZ – Robbery
Jewelry – McLean, VA – Robbery
Music – Lake Forest, CA - Burglary
Liquor – Atlantic City, NJ – Armed Robbery
Tobacco – Houston, TX – Armed Robbery
Vape - Julington Creek, FL - Burglary                         
 

Daily Totals:
• 13 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



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Regional AP & Safety Business Partner - South Region
Texas
This position is considered Field based and is considered to be a blend of onsite and remote work activity. Field associates will spend their time both traveling to and spending time in various PetSmart locations and can expect to be asked to travel to Phoenix Home Office periodically throughout the year. Field associates typically work out of their home office when not traveling as outlined above...
 



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