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 3/27/26

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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


Coming Next Week!

Previewing the D&D Daily's 'Retail Violent Fatalities Report'
Retail Violence Trends: Will 2025 Reverse 2024’s Progress?


By the D&D Daily staff

Retail violence remains one of the most serious safety challenges facing the industry, and the key question for us was whether 2025 would be a continuation of the progress seen in 2024 — or if the trend moves back in the wrong direction again.

After several years of rising violent incidents tied to retail locations, our 2024 Retail Violent Fatalities Report saw a decline in retail-related fatalities. For many loss prevention and asset protection professionals, the shift offered cautious optimism that expanded safety training, improved awareness and stronger coordination with law enforcement might be helping stabilize a troubling trend.

But as 2025 unfolded, questions began to emerge about whether that decline would hold. Our Mid-Year 2025 Retail Violent Fatalities Report, for example, saw a 25% uptick in retail fatalities.

The upcoming D&D Daily Retail Violent Fatalities Report takes a closer look at fatal incidents connected to retail locations across the United States over the past year. The report examines where these incidents occurred, the types of retail environments involved and the broader patterns shaping retail violence.

One important takeaway is that these incidents extend far beyond employee safety alone. Retail stores function as public spaces where large numbers of people interact every day, meaning violent incidents can involve customers, suspects, associates or bystanders caught in dangerous situations.

The report also highlights how certain retail formats continue to face elevated risks due to operating hours, staffing levels or the nature of the goods sold. For loss prevention teams, these realities make situational awareness and violence prevention training increasingly critical parts of store operations.

Geography is another factor. Some cities and states appear more frequently in fatal incident reporting, reflecting broader crime trends that can influence risk levels for retailers operating in those markets.

For the retail industry, the data reinforces an important point: violence prevention has become just as important as traditional theft deterrence strategies.

The full D&D Daily Retail Violent Fatalities Report is set to release this month and will provide a deeper analysis of the incidents that shaped the past year and the patterns emerging across the retail landscape.

For many in the industry, the central question remains: after the decline seen in 2024, will 2025 continue that progress — or signal a troubling reversal for retail safety?



Retailers Deploy Bodycams to Fight Rising Theft & Incivility
As Theft and Customer Incivility Rise, Bodycam Adoption in Retail will Climb
A YouGov poll of American adults from mid-2025 revealed a notable shift in sentiment around body-worn cameras. Once considered the domain of law enforcement, bodycams are now increasingly visible across everyday environments — from stores to medical offices, transit systems and venues. And it turns out that people are in favor: according to YouGov, 70% of respondents are either comfortable with, or indifferent to, seeing body-worn cameras worn by employees in more settings.

The National Retail Federation (NRF) and Loss Prevention Research Council’s October 2025 report, The Impact of Retail Theft & Violence 2025, highlighted how theft, organized retail crime and in-store violence remain persistent and costly challenges for retailers. For those navigating rising theft and customer incivility, the shift in perception of bodycams removes one of the biggest barriers to adoption — paving the way for more deployments in 2026 and beyond.

Early retail deployments of bodycams focused on stores that were considered high-risk – those with a track record of higher theft or incidents of violence. But the scope is widening today as retailers take a more proactive approach to deterring incivility before it happens. Major retailers including H&M, Target, Walmart and Aldi all have publicly acknowledged their use of bodycams as part of their loss prevention strategies.

The appeal is clear: Bodycams introduce a visible deterrent at the point of interaction. When potential offenders know an encounter is being recorded, behavior often changes. In fact, according to the aforementioned YouGov research, 44% of respondents admitted they would think twice about their behavior if they knew employees were wearing body-worn cameras.

Situations de-escalate faster. Associates feel more confident enforcing policies. And when there is an incident, having objective footage provides an unbiased, thorough record for internal review, law enforcement collaboration and legal proceedings — should it get to that point. Importantly, bodycams don’t replace existing security infrastructure — they complement it. Fixed cameras show what happened from afar; body-worn cameras capture an up-front live view of how it unfolded and what was said. retailtouchpoints.com


FBI Buying Our Location Data
Why is the FBI buying people’s location data and how is it using the information?

FBI director revealed agency had resumed buying private information en masse in possible constitutional violation

Kash Patel’s disclosure on Wednesday that the FBI has resumed buying location data on Americans has many people, including members of Congress, wondering: how does private information get into the hands of the US government in the first place – and how can federal law enforcement use that information to track peoples’ whereabouts?

Federal law enforcement agencies generally must obtain a warrant, which requires establishing probable cause in the eyes of a judge, to gather historical or real-time cellphone location data. The US supreme court has ruled that the fourth amendment to the US constitution, which protects against “unreasonable search and seizure”, prohibits the warrantless collection of individuals’ location histories. Buying such information, usually en masse, can circumvent this requirement, leading many privacy advocates to label the practice unconstitutional.

The FBI director’s admission came in response to a question from Ron Wyden, a Democratic senator of Oregon and a longtime opponent of the warrantless surveillance of Americans. Wyden told Patel that his predecessor, Christopher Wray, testified in 2023 that the FBI did not at that time purchase location data derived from internet advertising, although he acknowledged that it had done so in the past. theguardian.com


Trump Urges Congress to Pass New Crime Bill
Trump Calls for Law Cracking Down on Crime and ‘Rogue Judges’

Ahead of the midterms, President Trump told a Republican gathering that he wants to go after repeat offenders and “rogue judges that are criminals.”

President Trump escalated his attacks on judges on Wednesday, calling on Republican lawmakers to pass a crime bill that “cracks down on rogue judges.”

“The time has also come for Republicans to pass a tough new crime bill that imposes harsh penalties for dangerous repeat offenders, cracks down on rogue judges. We got rogue judges that are criminals. They are criminals, what they do to our country. The decisions that they hand down and hurt our country,” Mr. Trump said at a National Republican Congressional Committee event in Washington.

Mr. Trump has previously said that he would not sign any legislation until a strict voter identification bill was passed, saying that it would “guarantee the midterms” for his party. He appeared to suggest that a crime bill could be handled after the midterms. Mr. Trump said on Wednesday that “if we get a few more votes,” then “we could do things that would be a miracle. We got to get out and win.” nytimes.com


Crime in Memphis slightly increasing each month this year, data shows

The data surrounding immigration and crime
 



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Smarter Access and Asset Control in Retail
Rethinking access and asset management in retail security
Retail operations are being reshaped by a fundamental shift in consumer behavior.

Today’s shoppers move fluidly between channels, browsing online, purchasing in store, picking up curbside, returning items through different locations and expecting every interaction to feel fast, consistent and effortless.

From the customer’s perspective, retail is no longer a collection of channels. It is a single, continuous experience.

As retailers respond to this shift, access and asset management are increasingly viewed not as isolated controls, but as part of a cohesive operational framework.

Efficiency is no longer achieved by forcing a single access model across every environment. Instead, it comes from aligning different systems, so they work together, each supporting the specific demands of its context. This distinction is especially important when considering access models.

On the sales floor, retailers are increasingly adopting streamlined access approaches to reduce friction and support faster customer interactions.

At the same time, retail leaders recognize that certain environments require more structured control. Storage cages, fleet vehicles and shared operational assets often involve higher replacement costs, regulatory considerations or the need for explicit chain of custody tracking.

In these contexts, controlled access and audited handoff processes remain essential. Rather than slowing operations, these controls provide clarity and reliability where risk and complexity increase. Operational maturity comes from acknowledging this reality.

Efficiency is not achieved by eliminating controls everywhere, but by applying the right controls in the right places and ensuring they operate within a unified framework. securityjournalamericas.com


Retail Boycott Looming
REI faces possible anniversary sale boycott after abandoning labor talks

The REI Union, expressing confidence that the retailer’s customers would join workers in sending a message, will finalize a decision by May 1.

The REI Union has authorized a boycott of the outdoor retailer’s upcoming anniversary sale and a decision about whether to go through with the action is expected by May 1.

In an emailed statement, REI expressed disappointment, calling its sale “a moment centered on our members and one that the vast majority of our employees take pride in supporting.

“Actions like this aimed at weakening the business can have real, lasting consequences, and put the jobs, wages, benefits, and future opportunities employees depend on at risk,” the retailer said. “This certainly seems to undermine the very outcomes the union says it is focused on.”

The boycott vote was a response to REI’s decision earlier this month to declare an impasse in negotiations with the union — a labor collective of 11 REI stores backed by various United Food and Commercial Workers and Retail, Wholesale and Department Store Union locals. This is a legal maneuver that allows the retailer to take unilateral steps, including ones that had been rejected by the union. In February, REI went ahead with changes to retirement plans, vacation time and sick time that the union is against. retaildive.com


700+ Closures
GameStop closed over 700 stores last year

That amounts to more than 1,300 over the past two fiscal years, though the gaming retailer said it doesn’t expect any major footprint reductions in 2026.

After shuttering 727 stores in the U.S. last year, GameStop’s store closures are winding down, according to a Tuesday filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The retailer’s U.S. store footprint is down from 2,915 stores as of February 2024 to 1,598 as of Jan. 31 and the company doesn’t expect to close a significant number of locations in 2026.

The news comes as GameStop’s fourth quarter net sales dropped nearly 14% year over year to $1.1 billion and net income declined about 3% to $127.9 million, according to a Tuesday press release. For the full fiscal year, net sales dropped about 5% to $3.63 billion while net income improved over 200% reaching $418.4 million.

The gaming retailer also closed store operations in New Zealand during the fourth quarter and continues to evaluate its businesses outside the U.S. GameStop’s international footprint now consists of 308 stores in France and 300 in Australia. GameStop did not hold a conference call.   retaildive.com


Business-Crippling Regulation?
California’s new recycling laws could cripple unprepared businesses
California’s SB 54 (Plastic Pollution Prevention and Packaging Producer Responsibility Act) is among the most stringent Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) policies globally.

While CalRecycle is still refining the final regulations, the statutory performance targets remain.

By Jan. 1, 2028, plastic covered material must meet a 30% recycling rate, rising to 40% by 2030 and 65% by 2032. While by Jan. 1, 2032, 100% of single-use packaging and single-use plastic food service ware sold into California must be recyclable or compostable, as determined by CalRecycle.

Noncompliance can trigger enforcement action and significant penalties (including daily penalties of up to $50,000), and for certain materials, such as expanded polystyrene (EPS) food service ware, can result in sales and distribution prohibitions. chainstoreage.com


Dollarama to only pass on price increases from war where ‘absolutely necessary’: CEO
As conflict in the Middle East drives up the cost of many daily essentials, the head of Dollarama Inc. says the company will try to resist hiking its own prices as much as possible.

Nordstrom to close 2 full-line stores despite top-line strength last year

5 Essential Lone Worker Training Programs That Prevent Injuries and Save Lives

Most frequent c-store visitors motivated by identity and familiarity, not price

The 10 ‘most innovative’ companies in retail are...
 



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Connect with a retail security expert today to learn how Everon can help identify and deter threats, enhance employee safety, and provide peace of mind across all your locations.


 

 

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AI is Fueling Cyberattacks
AI poised to help low-skilled hackers in the near term

The expected rise in automated cyberattacks means more work for defenders — but they can use AI to fight back.

AI will be much more helpful to amateur cybercriminals than to sophisticated threat actors in the near future, a former senior FBI cybersecurity official warned at the RSAC 2026 Conference here on Monday.

Despite all the hype about sophisticated AI-powered hacking capabilities, “I still think the threat is really [centered] on that wannabe, novice group trying to use some of these orchestration attacks to make themselves more effective,” Cynthia Kaiser, the senior vice president of the security firm Halcyon’s Ransomware Research Center, said during a panel about the legal and security challenges associated with businesses’ increased AI use.

Her mention of orchestration was a reference to hackers’ use of the Model Context Protocol and other orchestration platforms to connect AI tools to third-party services, thus expanding the potential reach of their abusive tactics.

Low-level AI-fueled attacks won’t be complicated to block, but a tidal wave of them will still be able to overwhelm defenders, said Kaiser, a former deputy assistant director of the FBI’s Cyber Division. “The volume is about to increase substantially,” she warned.

That will increase defenders’ fatigue, she said, as security operations center (SOC) personnel have to deal with far more potential incidents than in years past.

And even half-baked attacks can still cause problems.

“The actors had actually created this whole ransomware [attack chain], and they used AI across the [various] tasks and then ugly-chained it together,” she said. But in the end, “they forgot to actually make something that allowed [encrypted files] to be decrypted. … You need a place to put the key, like a keyhole, and they forgot to make the keyhole.”

These attacks are “not great,” Kaiser said, “but they’re dangerous, they’re destructive, and they’re just fatiguing.”  cybersecuritydive.com


AI Smuggling Operation Goes Wrong
Mission to smuggle $170 million worth of AI tech to China collapsed for three men
Three individuals, Stanley Yi Zheng, Matthew Kelly, and Tommy Shad English, have been charged with conspiracy to commit smuggling and export control violations after allegedly attempting to procure millions of dollars’ worth of restricted computer chips from a California-based hardware company.

In October 2023, Tommy Shad English, claiming to represent a Thailand-based company, ordered 750 computer servers worth about $170 million from a U.S. hardware firm, including 600 with export-controlled chips that require a license for shipment to China. He signed certifications stating the equipment was not intended for China or any other country subject to heightened export requirements.

By January 2024, he had paid more than $20 million toward the order and added Stanley Yi Zheng and Matthew Kelly to email discussions during a compliance review, raising concerns about Zheng’s ties to China. The chip manufacturer could not verify a legitimate end user in Thailand, and the order was not completed.

In April 2024, English sought to place a second order for 500 servers through another Thailand-based company and again certified the stated end user, but that transaction was also not completed. helpnetsecurity.com


Iran-Linked Cyberattacks
Congress wants details from White House on cyber strategy, Iran resilience measures

Lawmakers’ aides from both parties say they want to be kept in the loop on implementation.

Members of Congress and their staffs are eagerly awaiting the Trump administration’s plan for implementing its new cybersecurity strategy and want more regular updates on how the government is helping critical infrastructure organizations guard against new Iran-linked hacking threats.

Staffers from the House Homeland Security Committee and the House Oversight Committee discussed those and other cybersecurity issues during a panel at the RSAC 2026 Conference here on Tuesday.

While the Democratic and Republican staffers sometimes took different approaches to the issues, they agreed on the need for more details about the strategy and about efforts to counter Iran-linked cyberattacks. cybersecuritydive.com
 

The CVE Program, a bedrock of global cyber defense, is teetering on the brink

Google races to secure encryption before quantum threats arrive

 


 

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Counterfeit Goods in E-Commerce:
A Persistent Challenge for Retailers


By the D&D Daily Staff

The continued growth of e-commerce has created new opportunities for retailers, but it has also expanded the reach of counterfeit goods in the global marketplace. Online platforms—ranging from large third-party marketplaces to smaller independent sites—have made it easier for counterfeit products to reach consumers at scale, often bypassing traditional safeguards present in brick-and-mortar retail.

Counterfeit items commonly appear in high-demand categories such as apparel, footwear, electronics, beauty products and luxury goods. In many cases, these products are designed to closely mimic legitimate brands, making detection more difficult for both consumers and retailers. Some counterfeit listings use stolen product images or slightly altered brand names to avoid automated detection systems.

For retailers and brands, the impact extends beyond lost sales. Counterfeit goods can erode brand trust, introduce safety risks and create operational challenges tied to customer complaints and returns. In categories like cosmetics or electronics, counterfeit products may also pose health or safety concerns due to the use of substandard materials.

E-commerce platforms and retailers are increasingly deploying a mix of strategies to address the issue. These include machine learning tools to identify suspicious listings, brand registry programs that allow rights holders to report infringements and supply chain tracking technologies designed to verify product authenticity. Some companies are also investing in serialization and digital product passports to improve traceability.

Collaboration has become a key component of mitigation efforts. Retailers, marketplaces, law enforcement and brand owners are sharing data and coordinating enforcement actions to disrupt counterfeit networks. However, enforcement remains complex due to the cross-border nature of many operations and the speed at which new listings can appear.

As e-commerce continues to evolve, counterfeit prevention is expected to remain a priority area for loss prevention teams, requiring ongoing adaptation of both technology and policy.


Enhancing the Online Shopping Experience
The Home Depot beefs up digital shopping experience for pros

As it pursues home improvement professionals, the retailer is enhancing the online experience with tools for better project management.

The Home Depot is expanding its digital hub with new capabilities for professional renovators, remodelers and builders, the home improvement retailer said in a Wednesday release.

The platform, available online or in the mobile app, is intended to function as a central hub for pros to project manage their various jobs. It allows Home Depot’s Pro Xtra loyalty program members to organize their projects, manage deliveries, access their purchase histories and share information with their teams.

The digital experience now also offers real-time delivery tracking of bulky materials and integrates Home Depot’s Material List Builder AI tool. In the future, the retailer plans to add more features to assist its professional customers, including expanded search capabilities for prior orders. retaildive.com


Survey: Consumers over 45 make up growing share of U.S. e-commerce market

Amazon and Walmart fined for selling banned refrigerant in WA


 


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Texarkana, TX: Pair arrested for reportedly stealing $400k+ from marine supply store in Texarkana
Two people in Texarkana were arrested after allegedly stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from a business over the course of five years. The Texarkana Texas Police Department says after a six-month long investigation, Jay Freeman, 43, and Loren Jones, 34, were arrested March 25 for allegedly stealing more than $400,000 from Gregg Orr Marine over the course of five years. Police say Freeman, the manager, and Jones, the office manager, worked together to manipulate the company’s finances in order to steal the money. Police say their detectives worked with other employees of the store to discover the scheme, get warrants, and make the arrests. Freeman and Jones were booked into the Bi-State Jail and both released the same day on $75,000 bonds. Both are charged with theft of property more than $300,000.  ksla.com


Cobb County, GA: Man accused in $28K Home Depot theft ring across metro Atlanta
A California man is behind bars, accused of taking part in a large-scale organized retail theft ring that targeted dozens of Home Depot stores across metro Atlanta, according to a Cobb County arrest warrant. Police say Luis Alfredo Monjarret Orozco was arrested after investigators found him in possession of more than $28,000 worth of stolen Home Depot merchandise.  wsbtv.com


Los Angeles, CA: Armed Thieves Flee After Robbery at Mall in Sherman Oaks
A group of alleged armed robbers are on the loose Thursday after a smash-and-grab robbery at a Macy's store at the Westfield Fashion Square shopping mall in Sherman Oaks, the Los Angeles Police Department said. LAPD officers were called at 7:08 p.m. Wednesday to the 14000 block of Riverside Drive regarding a robbery. When the officers arrived at the mall, they learned at least three masked suspects armed with sledgehammers began smashing display cases at the department store and stole watches and jewelry before running out of the store, an LAPD spokesman told City News Service. The robbers stole around $5,000 worth of merchandise, the LAPD spokesman said. A shelter-in-place order was issued for all other shoppers at the mall subsequent to the robbery and it was lifted by 8 p.m. Wednesday. No injuries were reported.  kiisfm.iheart.com


Nashville, TN: Suspects ram car into Southeast Nashville vape shop
Police are asking for the public’s help in identifying several people suspected of a burglary early Thursday at a vape shop in Southeast Nashville. According to the Metro Nashville Police Department, the break-in happened around 2:40 a.m. on March 26 when a group used a car to break into a store. Investigators said the suspects drove a stolen Kia Rio with a Kentucky license plate into the building. Authorities reported that four people were involved, though only three entered the business. Police said the group took cash from the register and merchandise valued at several thousand dollars before leaving the scene.  fox17.com


West Palm Beach, FL: Jupiter man accused of stealing more than $5K in electronics from WPB Best Buy

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Arlington, TX: Man killed in 7-Eleven parking lot after altercation; suspect at large
Arlington police are investigating a fatal shooting that occurred early Thursday morning following an altercation in a 7-Eleven parking lot near Sherry and East Abram streets. Officers discovered a man with a gunshot wound just before 1:30 a.m., and he was later pronounced dead after being transported to a nearby hospital. The suspect fled the scene before police arrived and remains at large as investigators work to determine the motive behind the shooting.  fox4news.com


Toms River Township, NJ: Teen shot in face at Ocean County Mall, investigation underway, police say
Law enforcement officials are on the hunt for a shooter who, police say, shot a teen in the face in an altercation at the Ocean County Mall on Wednesday night before fleeing the scene. According to police, the incident happened at about 8:10 p.m. on Wednesday when police officers were called to the Ocean County Mall, on Hooper Avenue in Toms River Township, to find a 17-year-old boy who had been shot in the face. The boy, officials said, was immediately taken to a nearby hospital where he was listed in stable condition. Follow up investigation found that the boy was struck after he was seated in a common area of the mall and was confronted by an individual. After that confrontation, police said the individual -- who police did not immediately identify -- walked away from the victim before stopping and turning back. The individual then produced a firearm and fired several shots at the victim, striking the boy once in the face, officials said.  nbcphiladelphia.com


Houston, TX: Man shoots two suspects in SW Houston, claims they broke into his business Wednesday morning
Two suspects were shot after allegedly burglarizing a business in southwest Houston Wednesday morning, according to the Houston Police Department. The scene unfolded in the city's Sunnyside area off Reed Road near Duane Street. Officials with the HPD's Major Assaults Division said officers arrived at the business and spoke with the owner. According to investigators, the owner was on his way to work when he received a notification on his phone that the building's metal gate was open. HPD said the suspects did make it inside the building, but it is unclear if they were successful in taking anything. The business was said to be either electric or HVAC-related. The owner said he arrived and saw the two suspects inside, who then approached him, before shots were fired, HPD said. Police said the suspects were taken to the hospital, but their condition is not known.  abc13.com


Shootout at Pittsburgh-area shopping center leaves 1 injured
A man was injured in a shootout at the Edgewood Towne Center on Thursday afternoon, police said. Allegheny County police said 911 was notified of a shooting at the shopping center around 3 p.m. When first responders got there, they learned that two people were shooting at each other. County police said a man was taken to the hospital with a gunshot wound to the butt. Edgewood police said he had non-life-threatening injuries. County police said the second shooter ran away. A white sedan with a shattered window was parked at the scene. Yellow police tape blocked off an area by the Wendy's restaurant. Police didn't immediately release any more information but said county detectives are initiating the investigation.  cbsnews.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Smash-and-grab robbery at Westfield Fashion Square in Sherman Oaks forces temporary shelter-in-place for shoppers
Shoppers at the Westfield Fashion Square shopping mall in Sherman Oaks on Wednesday night were forced to shelter in place due to a smash-and-grab robbery at the Macy's store, police said. It happened at around 7:10 p.m. at the mall located in the 15000 block of Riverside Drive, according to Los Angeles Police Department officers. They said that they were called to the scene for reports of a shooting, but upon arrival, found that it was actually a robbery. Officers said that three suspects armed with sledgehammers smashed several display cases inside of the Macy's store and stole watches and jewelry before running from the area. They were seen fleeing from the mall in a white Lexus that was heading eastbound on Riverside Drive. All three of the suspects were wearing masks and had black or grey clothing and blue jeans on when the robbery occurred, police said. A shelter-in-place order was issued for all other shoppers at the mall as the scene unfolded. It was lifted by 8 p.m. and LAPD officers said that there were no injuries reported in the incident.  cbsnews.com


Dallas, TX: Operation Clean Sweep: Dallas Police announce over 60 arrests in operation targeting violent robbery fugitives

Buffalo, NY: Buffalo man sentenced to 13 years for Armed Robbery of Liquor store

Boonville, MO: ATF joins highway patrol, local law enforcement in Boonville casino armed robbery investigation

Jacksonville, FL: Burglary at Jacksonville store sparks early morning vehicle pursuit; couldn’t get stolen safe into get-a-way car


 


 

Adult – Arvada, CO - Robbery
Auto – Rome, GA – Robbery
C-Store – Houston, TX – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Pasadena. CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Lithuania, GA – Burglary
C-Store - Luverne, AL - Burglary
C-Store – Boston, MA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Myrtle Bach, SC – Armed Robbery
Dollar – West Hartford, CT – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Odessa, TX – Robbery
Grocery – Jacksonville, FL – Burglary
Macy’s – Sherman Oaks, CA – Armed Robbery
Pawn – San Antonio, TX – Armed Robbery
Pawn - Hou8ston, TX – Armed Robbery
Pharmacy – Franklin County, PA – Burglary
Vape – Nashville, TN – Burglary   
 

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



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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Group Director, Asset Protection - Fulfillment Centers
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The Group Director, Asset Protection – Fulfillment Centers is responsible for leading the operations and strategy of the Asset Protection department across Walmart’s Fulfillment Centers. This role ensures the safety, security, and profitability of fulfillment operations by overseeing risk management, crisis response, financial performance, and team leadership...

 



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The Vendors Who Win Long-Term Usually
Talk Less During Crisis Calls


During incidents, nobody wants a lecture or a sales pitch. The best vendors listen first, stabilize the situation, fix what needs fixing, and explain later. That calm competence gets remembered long after the incident is resolved.


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