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James
Willoby named Manager, Executive Protection for Ulta Beauty
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Retailer Wins Legal Fight Over
Anti-Crime Facial Recognition
The ruling could pave the way for other
major retailers to embrace this technology
Bunnings wins fight to use AI facial recognition tech to combat store
crime, opening door for other retailers
Bunnings was reasonably entitled to use AI
facial recognition technology to combat crime and staff abuse
in its stores, the Administrative Review Tribunal has found. The
hardware giant did not breach privacy laws in scanning customers'
faces, but could have done more to notify them of the data collection,
the tribunal said.
The ruling could pave the way for other major retailers to embrace
this technology, according to one expert.
Australia's Privacy Commissioner Carly Kind determined in 2024 that
Bunnings breached privacy laws by scanning hundreds of thousands of
customers' faces without their proper consent. A review of that decision
by the Administrative Review Tribunal of Australia has now found the
opposite.
"We welcome the decision from the Administrative Review Tribunal
regarding Bunnings' past trial of facial recognition technology,"
Bunnings managing director Mike Schneider said in a statement. "Our
intent in trialling this technology was to help protect people from
violence, abuse, serious criminal conduct and organised retail crime."
What if all retail stores used facial
recognition technology?
Professor Mortimer also said he expected other major Australian
retailers to follow Bunnings' lead in implementing facial
recognition technology in their stores to increase safety and quickly
identify potential criminal risks.
"This type of technology will become commonplace," he said. "It also has
broader impacts outside of just retail."
"The AI system will identify if someone is loitering near a toilet
area, the AI system will identify if somebody placed something inside
their pocket or concealed a product. It's reasonable that clearer
signage needs to be put in place — and that's maybe something that may
have been overlooked in [Bunnings'] initial implementation of this
technology."
abc.net.au
Canada Battles Theft Surge
Proposed bylaw provision targets shoplifting under $100
The lack of a proportionate
enforcement option for theft under $100 has emboldened shoplifters, the
notice of motion argues
Stealing
something worth less than $100 could soon net you a $250 fine, if two
Calgary city councillors get their way. A notice of motion coming to
Tuesday’s executive committee meeting asks the city to draft a community
standards bylaw amendment that would apply a fine or other penalty for
shoplifting offences under $100.
Ward 10 Coun. Andre Chabot and Ward 2 Coun. Jennifer Wyness are
co-sponsoring the notice of motion, which will have to pass a technical
review before council formally votes on it later this month.
Currently, minor shoplifting offences fall under the Criminal Code of
Canada as theft under $5,000. The councillors argue that criminal
charges for low-value, non-violent thefts are often withdrawn or
deprioritized by the Alberta Crown Prosecution Service due to a lack of
resources and prosecutorial triage protocols.
Despite this, responding to shoplifting calls eats up a lot of police
officer time and resources, the councillors argue. According to
their notice of motion, the Calgary Police Service has received more
than 23,000 calls for service related to shoplifting since 2023.
Each shoplifting incident that proceeds through the criminal process
requires about 2.5 hours of officer time, the councillors claim,
and adds up to more than 12,000 hours annually for cases that
rarely result in meaningful outcomes for victims.
The lack of a proportionate enforcement option for theft under $100
has emboldened shoplifters and contributed to “repeat offending,
business frustration, public erosion of confidence in enforcement
and front-line officer frustration,” the notice of motion states.
calgaryherald.com
When Simple Shoplifting Becomes
ORC
When Does Shoplifting Escalate to Organized Retail Theft in Arizona?
With law enforcement priorities shifting, the line between a
minor shoplifting offense and a serious felony like Organized Retail
Theft is becoming more critical for Arizona residents to understand. In
response to retailers losing billions nationwide to organized retail
crime (ORC), a crackdown is underway. The Tucson Police Department
recently launched an aggressive public campaign against retail theft,
signaling a zero-tolerance environment for offenders. This guide
clarifies the distinctions between these offenses, the statutory
thresholds, and the severe consequences of elevated charges in Arizona’s
current climate.
What Legally Defines Shoplifting in Arizona?
To understand how a charge can escalate, it is essential to first
establish the legal baseline for a standard shoplifting offense.
Arizona law defines the crime with specific elements and classifies its
severity primarily based on the monetary value of the goods involved.
This foundation helps illustrate how additional factors can dramatically
increase the legal jeopardy for an accused individual.
The Critical Role of Value: Misdemeanor vs.
Felony Shoplifting
The primary factor that elevates a simple shoplifting charge from a
misdemeanor to a felony in Arizona is the total value of the stolen
merchandise. The law establishes clear monetary thresholds that
dictate the classification of the offense and, consequently, the
severity of potential penalties. While a low-value theft might result in
probation and fines, stealing higher-value items can lead to significant
prison time. This is a crucial distinction that defendants must
understand from the outset of their case.
When Does Shoplifting Escalate to Organized
Retail Theft?
The transition from a standard shoplifting charge to the much more
serious offense of Organized Retail Theft (ORT) involves factors that
go far beyond the value of the items taken in a single incident.
Prosecutors build these cases by looking for patterns of behavior,
evidence of coordination, and a specific criminal intent that
indicates a commercial enterprise rather than a simple, impulsive act.
This escalation is central to the current law enforcement crackdown in
Arizona.
lawfuel.com
Shoplifting Data vs.
Perception
Chart of the Week: Brits lead world in perceptions of how common
shoplifting is
A survey of 17 countries shared exclusively
with Retail Week by research firm YouGov showed that Brits were most
likely to think shoplifting was common in their country
Palm Springs Crime Rates Drop Significantly, New Police Data Shows
Spokane crime drops to lowest levels in six years, police data shows
SC’s top 5 counties with the highest, lowest violent crime rates
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Retail-Focused OSHA Guidance
OSHA Retail Safety Guidance Signals Steps Home Depot Should Adopt
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration has published
retail-focused guidance covering crowd management, workplace violence
prevention, material handling, and seasonal worker protections. The
recommendations matter to Home Depot associates and managers because
they offer specific, actionable measures to reduce injuries, prevent
incidents during peak shopping events, and ensure training and reporting
rights for all workers.
OSHA’s
guidance for retail employers lays out a range of safety and security
practices that retail chains and distribution operations can use to
assess and strengthen protections for employees and customers. For
Home Depot stores and fulfillment centers, the guidance addresses
high-risk areas including crowd-control during sales events, workplace
violence and robbery response, powered industrial vehicle operation,
material handling, and protections for seasonal and temporary workers.
On crowd management and major sales events, OSHA recommends planning
that includes trained security personnel, barricades or rope lines,
clear emergency exits, occupancy control and pre-planned procedures
to prevent injuries and chaos during peak shopping periods. Implementing
those measures affects scheduling, security staffing and store layout
decisions, and requires coordination between store managers and
loss-prevention teams to minimize risk while maintaining throughput.
Workplace violence and robbery-prevention guidance emphasizes
prevention planning and employee training in de-escalation, along with
clear steps for safe response to aggressive customers or robberies.
For associates who encounter verbal or physical threats, having
formalized procedures and practiced drills can reduce on-the-job trauma
and uncertainty while clarifying what managers must do to protect staff.
In warehouses and fulfillment centers, OSHA calls for safe stacking
and ergonomic measures to limit repetitive lifting strains, thorough
training on powered industrial vehicles such as forklifts and hi-los,
and lockout/tagout procedures where relevant. The guidance also
highlights hazards posed by compactors and balers, areas that require
specific controls and supervision in distribution operations. Adopting
these practices may mean additional training time, certification for
powered-equipment operators, and investments in ergonomic aids.
Crucially, OSHA reiterates worker rights: employees can file safety
complaints, are protected as whistleblowers, and employers have a legal
responsibility to provide a safe workplace. Seasonal and temporary
workers are entitled to the same training and safe conditions as
permanent staff, and employers must deliver training in a language and
manner the worker understands. That requirement affects hiring and
onboarding practices during peak seasons when Home Depot relies heavily
on temporary labor.
prismnews.com
AI Pricing Controversy
Algorithmic And Surveillance Pricing Pushes Retail Into Legal Minefield
AI offers immense retail value, but
its "surveillance pricing" practice, which uses personal data to set
individualized prices, faces growing regulatory backlash.
More than its potential to boost revenue, AI is a power multiplier,
giving retailers unprecedented ability to personalize consumer
interactions to potentially deepen engagement, loyalty and customer
delight. But as with any powerful tool, it can be used for good or
ill.
Recent actions at the state and federal levels suggest regulators
suspect malicious intent, especially regarding surveillance pricing
and the privacy concerns it raises. Surveillance pricing, sometimes
called personalized pricing, is a practice in which a retailer uses
personal data and algorithms to set individualized prices for the same
product. In effect, merchandise that the retailer buys at a fixed
wholesale cost is sold to customers at different prices based on their
data profile.
It’s easy to see the murky legal waters retailers enter with
surveillance pricing. A once-level playing field in the prices
people pay can be too easily titled in the retailer’s favor, raising
concerns about fairness, discrimination, and potential consumer
exploitation. It further casts doubt on how retailers collect, use and
potentially misuse personal consumer information.
“Surveillance pricing is a minefield and the mines are exploding,”
warned Crowell and Moring litigation attorney Joanna Forster, as she
sees more state attorneys general and consumer protection chiefs leaning
into this issue, both around the fairness and privacy issues. And as
states move forward, she expects the federal government, which has
already moved in this direction, to pick up its pace.
forbes.com
Thrift Retail is Having a Moment
You’ll Never Guess The Fastest-Growing Retail Sector — And Gen Z Loves
It
Most retail industry captains are reporting sleepless nights lately,
tormented by nightmares like tariff chaos, the AI stampede, and cranky
investors — all while trying to just keep up with inflation. But
there is one industry segment that has been on a roll for the past four
years, clocking a blistering compound annual revenue growth rate of 15%,
in spite of not making a profit … yet.
Meet the thrift and resale juggernaut that has been slowly eating
into the consumer wallet share, especially in shoes and apparel.
Meet the new face of sustainability and a puzzle for traditional
retailers to solve.
At one end, there are timeless nonprofits like Goodwill Industries or
Salvation Army, stores that have been around since the early 1900s.
They help support foundations that provide social services, places with
harsh fluorescent lighting that older generations remember visiting only
in desperate times.
Today, thrifting is a widespread hobby among the Gen Z crowd, and
often a first stop for a majority of Gen Z shoppers hoping for a
surprise find, or a killer bargain.
forbes.com
Bad Sign for Department Stores?
Is Saks’ Collapse Another Omen For Traditional Department Stores?
Saks’ trip to bankruptcy court has led to diatribes on the sad state of
department stores, but a few other articles point to brighter days
ahead for the channel.
In a New York Times
article entitled “Can Department Stores Ever Be Fun Again?”
Ginia Bellafante, the newspaper’s fashion critic, traces a first signal
of department stores’ descent to the closing of B. Altman on Fifth
Avenue in 1989, followed in New York City by the closure of Henri Bendel,
Lord & Taylor and Barneys.
Beyond pressures from mass retailers and online selling, she argues that
department stores’ problems over the last five decades come about as
the shopping experience no longer inspires. Product offerings have
become “lackluster” due in part to lost buying talent, as “ambitious
young women with great taste” in the latter part of the 20th century
began pursuing MBA programs over retail careers. Banners also lost their
“identity” over the years, and now collectively embrace a “sterilized
atmosphere” in carrying the same products as rivals, she added.
retailwire.com
In-Store AI Robots
Ulta tests AI manicure robots in select stores
As AI moves into the physical world,
Ulta’s robot manicurist offers a glimpse of what’s next.
Here at Ulta, the robot holding my hand was built by Boston-based
startup 10Beauty. After six years of R&D and $50 million in
venture funding, the company has created a machine meant to
replicate the entire manicure process: polish removal, shaping,
buffing, and painting. The company plans to roll the robots out to Ulta,
Nordstrom, and high-end salons later this year. The manicures will be
priced at $30—no tipping required.
But first comes the beta test. Ulta has agreed to pilot the machines
in select stores, where customers can get free manicures while
10Beauty gathers real-world data. Human nail techs stand by to fix
mistakes, ensuring customers still leave with salon-worthy nails.
fastcompany.com
Top retail conferences in 2026
Survey: Shoppers expect fall, winter holiday spending to rise in 2026
Newmark: Retail space absorption, rents rise in Q4 2025
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Super Bowl Preps for Cyber Threats
NFL-Super Bowl prepares for potential AI cybersecurity threat
Before the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks face off at Super
Bowl LX, Levi’s Stadium needed a tech upgrade package.
To equip the venue for Sunday's Super Bowl, the National Football League
and the San Francisco 49ers laid down miles of fiber optic cable,
set up hundreds of wireless access points and
raised cyber defenses to fend off possible incursions.
The effort to prepare the stadium began in earnest more than a year ago.
Ahead of the game, the NFL has deployed its own cybersecurity safety
squad to ensure that it goes off without a hitch. As part of the
preparations, the NFL set up a makeshift cyber command center in the
bowels of the stadium to monitor and intercept threats.
“So the threat actors will take an environment like this, just like a
pickpocket,” NFL Senior Director of Cybersecurity George Griesler said.
This year, more than others, the cyber defense efforts are watching
more closely for attacks that are powered by artificial intelligence,
said Costa Kladianos, 49ers Executive Vice President, Head of
Technology.
“Even up until last year, (AI) wasn't as big of a threat as it is
this year,” Kladianos said.
One of the most significant updates for Super Bowl LX is the Wi-Fi in
the stadium to cope with the voluminous amount of data that the
roughly 65,000 spectators will generate during the game. All the
social media posts, livestreamed video and other content will take an
enormous amount of upload bandwidth to cope with.
channelnewsasia.com
Business & Government Must Work
Together on Cybersecurity
National cybersecurity strategies depend on public-private trust, report
warns
An influential think tank urged
governments to consult extensively with a wide variety of business
stakeholders before making ambitious plans.
Governments should work closely with the private sector when
designing and detailing their national cybersecurity strategies, a
prominent think tank said in a report published on Monday.
“Active participation from the private sector, particularly large
technology, telecommunications, and cybersecurity firms, is critical
throughout the strategy’s development,” the Center for Cybersecurity
Policy and Law (CCPL) said in its white paper. “The private sector can
help not only support but also deliver on the government’s cybersecurity
objectives and is key to a secure and resilient nation.”
CCPL’s report comes as President Donald Trump’s administration
finalizes its own national cybersecurity strategy, which it is expected
to roll out this month. The five-page document is expected to
address digital deterrence, regulatory harmonization, workforce growth,
procurement reforms, emerging technologies and critical infrastructure
protection. The White House will follow up the strategy with an
implementation plan.
It is unclear how extensively the Trump administration collaborated with
the business community in drafting the strategy. But CCPL’s white paper
identifies several reasons why close coordination could make the
difference between success and failure in implementing the
administration’s plan.
cybersecuritydive.com
Trump Administration to Private
Sector: 'We Need Input From You'
National cyber director solicits industry help in fixing regulations,
threat information-sharing
President Donald Trump’s chief
cybersecurity adviser said a forthcoming national strategy will kick off
ambitious projects.
The U.S. government needs the business community’s help crafting
the right cybersecurity strategy, President Donald Trump’s top
cybersecurity official said on Tuesday.
“We need input from you,” National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross
said at an event hosted by the Information Technology Industry Council.
“You know your regulatory scheme better than I do — where there’s
friction, where there’s frustration with information-sharing, what sort
of information is shared, the process through which it’s shared.”
The White House wants to revise the current patchwork of cybersecurity
regulations “so that form follows function rather than [the rules
being] a compliance checklist,” said Cairncross, who has led the
relatively new Office of the National Cyber Director since August.
The administration intends to work with companies “to figure out a
way that industry can best align its resources with the assets that
it needs to protect,” he said.
cybersecuritydive.com
Why incident response breaks down when it matters most |
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Online Returns Surge
Global online return volumes increased 18% in 2025
Online refund volumes and values
surged last year as e-commerce continues to grow.
Annual refund volumes in the global retail sector increased 18.1 % in
2025 compared to the year prior, while refund value rose 12.7%
year over year, according to global payment technology provider
ACI’s annual "Global Ecommerce Report." Across all retail sectors,
e-commerce transaction volumes grew 28.3% in 2025, while total
transaction value increased 34.3% year over year.
The holiday season (November and December together) accounted for
approximately 20% of all e-commerce refunds in 2025. December alone
recorded a 2.89% refund rate, meaning nearly three out of every 100
purchases resulted in a return, compared with an average refund rate
of 2.25% between January and October.
E-commerce payment volumes increased 28.3% in 2025, with
transaction values up 34.3%, reflecting sustained consumer spending
growth. While refund rates are rising more slowly than e-commerce
transactions, ACI says the financial impact for retailers remains very
high. Every $1 million in refunds typically translates into around $1.3
million in total costs once reverse logistics, inventory depreciation,
payment processing fees and fraud-related overheads are accounted for.
“The sharp rise in refund volumes is exposing a growing pressure
point for retailers – one that directly threatens margins,
especially during peak periods and extended return windows,” said
Adriana Iordan, head of merchant product management and payments
intelligence at ACI Worldwide. “Retailers need smarter, AI‑driven
controls that spot abuse in real time and adapt policies dynamically,
without adding friction for genuine customers. By bringing fraud and
refund management together, merchants can curb losses, protect
profitability, and still deliver a customer seamless experience – even
as refund volumes continue to climb.”
chainstoreage.com
Record-Breaking Delivery Speed
Amazon hits fastest-ever Prime delivery speeds – again
Amazon set a familiar record with
its global Prime delivery service in 2025.
The online giant said that, for the third straight year, it delivered
its fastest speeds ever to members of its Prime paid subscription
service, with more than 13 billion items arriving the same or next
day globally. In the U.S., Prime members received more than 8
billion items the same or next day, an over 30% increase compared to the
prior year, with groceries and everyday essentials making up half of the
total items.
According to Amazon, members saved $105 billion on fast, free
delivery worldwide and $550 on average in the U.S. during 2025.
The company says its Prime delivery speed improvements have come
primarily from placing products closer to customers. Personnel
picking, packing, and driving to customers’ homes are doing the same
work for orders that arrive the same or next day as orders that used to
arrive in two or more days.
chainstoreage.com
Amazon, OpenAI In Talks To Customize AI Models To Power E-commerce
Giant's Products Such As Alexa: Report |
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Santa Monica, CA: Police bust $100,000 retail theft ring
The Santa Monica Police Department's Criminal Investigations Division
executed multiple search and arrest warrants across Los Angeles,
Riverside and San Bernardino counties as part of a three-month organized
retail theft investigation. The operation, conducted in coordination
with specialized enforcement teams and regional law enforcement
partners, resulted in five arrests and the recovery of approximately
$100,000 in stolen merchandise. Partnering agencies included the Los
Angeles Police Department Organized Retail Theft Task Force and the
California Highway Patrol Border Division Organized Retail Crime Task
Force. The investigation focused on an organized retail theft operation
responsible for thefts from multiple retailers throughout Southern
California, spanning from San Diego County to Santa Barbara County,
including a Lululemon store in Santa Monica. The thefts occurred between
June and October 2025.
smdp.com
Cranston, RI: Woman charged in multi-state Victoria's Secret thefts
The Cranston Police Department said a woman was arrested in connection
with a multi-state theft ring of multiple retailers, including
Victoria's Secret. 54-year-old Lisa Robertson was charged with receiving
stolen goods and related offenses. The department said that the
investigation began in October 2025 and alleged that Robertson "traveled
throughout New England on weekends, stealing merchandise from major
retail establishments and returning the property to her residence in
Cranston." Robertson allegedly used rental vehicles, booster bags, and
other tools designed to "defeat retail security systems." A search
warrant for Robertson's residence was obtained on Jan. 22 and allegedly
found approximately $30,000 in suspected stolen merchandise from
multiple regional retailers, including at least 107 Victoria’s Secret
items originating from 12 different store locations throughout New
England.
thenationaldesk.com
Orland Park, IL: $5,000 in stolen merchandise found in car
Two Chicago men were arrested last month and charged with stealing more
than $5,000 worth of merchandise from village stores, police said.
Terrance K. Barber, 38, of Chicago, and Lawrence R. Coleman, 33, of
Chicago, were arrested on Jan. 17 and charged with retail theft and
seven other offenses at True Religion, 120 Orland Square, police said.
Police said they observed two subjects whom they thought were females
and later identified as male. Police said they found a large amount of
merchandise in their vehicle. According to the police report, the
vehicle had 98 stolen items from True Religion, Ross Dress for Less,
Bath and Body Works, Victoria Secret, and Tilly’s. All told, police
said they recovered more than $5,000 in stolen merchandise.
southwestregionalpublishing.com
Jonesboro, AR: Three women accused of stealing $4,000 in merchandise
from Jonesboro stores
Three Northeast Arkansas women face felony theft and shoplifting charges
for stealing more than $4,000 in merchandise from multiple Jonesboro
retail stores. A judge found probable cause Monday to charge Mikayla
James, Baylee Nicole Brown-Olloway, and Hannah Dawn Leach each with
organized retail theft and shoplifting, both Class D felonies.
kait8.com
Terrell, TX: Police Seek Public Assistance in $2,000 Buc-ee’s Theft
Investigation
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Shootings & Deaths
Spencer, MA: Millbury Police Officer wounded, barricaded suspect killed in
shootout at Spencer shopping plaza
A Millbury police officer is recovering after being wounded by a barricaded
suspect during a shootout at a shopping plaza in Spencer on Tuesday night. The
Worcester District Attorney’s Office says the suspect shot another person
earlier Tuesday evening before leading police to the Big Y plaza on West Main
Street. According to the DA’s office, just after 5 p.m., Spencer police were
called to a multi-family home on Main Street. When they got there, they found a
person who was suffering from a gunshot wound. Twelve minutes later, a person
matching the suspect’s description was spotted near West Main Street. The DA’s
office says when officers approached the suspect, he fired a gun toward them and
ran into the Family Dollar store. Officers quickly evacuated the business. The
CEMLEC SWAT team located the suspect hiding in a bathroom in the back of the
store. “The suspect discharged a firearm towards police officers, striking and
injuring a Millbury police officer who was a member of the CEMLEC SWAT team,”
said Jeff Travers, the Senior First Assistant DA. “That officer is reported to
be in stable condition at this time.” The DA’s office says the officers returned
fire, killing the suspect.
boston25news.com
Renton, WA: Shooting inside Renton grocery store leaves one dead; suspect
arrested
A 35-year-old man was shot and killed after a fight broke out inside a Mexican
grocery store in Renton Tuesday night, police say. Surveillance video inside the
Los Jalape?os grocery store showed the man in an argument with a 32-year-old man
around 9:30 p.m. on the 3700 block of Northeast Fourth Street, said Renton
police spokesperson Meeghan Black. The two got into a physical fight before the
32-year-old man shot and killed the 35-year-old, Black said. The 32-year-old
drove away in a car before abandoning it a short while later and running away on
foot, police said. Police searched for the man with a K-9 and the King County
Guardian 1 helicopter while detectives began their investigation, but the search
was initially unsuccessful, police said. During the investigation, police
discovered the man lived close by, Black said. Officers set up a perimeter
around the man’s home and arrested him once he returned around midnight.
seattletimes.com
Houston, TX: AutoZone burglary ends in deadly Katy Freeway feeder crash
A deadly crash shut down part of the Katy Freeway feeder road in west Houston
overnight after investigators say three burglary suspects crashed into a wall
following a break-in at a nearby auto parts store. The crash happened just after
3 a.m. Wednesday on the westbound feeder road of the Katy Freeway near Witte
Road, close to Memorial City Mall. According to investigators, the three people
were inside a maroon car that had been involved in a burglary at a nearby
AutoZone, about two miles from the crash site. Authorities say the suspects were
stealing car batteries and left the store shortly before the crash occurred.
After loading the stolen batteries, police say the vehicle took off. Not long
afterward, the car struck a wall along the feeder road with significant force,
trapping all three occupants inside. Investigators say all three were believed
to be in their 30s. Houston Fire Department crews had to cut the driver out
of the car. The driver was pronounced dead at the scene. The other two
people inside the vehicle were injured and taken to a nearby hospital, but their
conditions have not been released.
khou.com
Toole City, UT: Tooele police shoot, kill man while investigating prior shooting
About 10:20 a.m., officers were near 1100 N. Main following up on a shooting
investigation from Tuesday night when they were "confronted by a male in his 40s
(who) presented a firearm," said Tooele Police Sgt. Colbey Bentley. Tooele
officers shot the man and then rendered aid to him after it was determined to be
safe to approach him, but Bentley says he was pronounced dead a short time
later. The shooting occurred in a gravel parking lot. Police had been looking
for a man suspected of shooting another man multiple times at a convenience
store. About 11:10 p.m. Tuesday, officers were called to the parking lot of
Quality Quick Stop, 188 N. Broadway, where they found a man in his 40s who had
been shot multiple times.
ksl.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Gurnee Mills, IL: Woman charged in random car crash incidents, stabbing outside
Gurnee Mills mall
A Wisconsin woman is facing charges in connection with two apparently random
hit-and-run crashes and a stabbing outside the north suburban Gurnee Mills mall
on Monday, police said. Katelyn A. Harmon, a 25-year-old Waukesha, Wisconsin
woman, is facing charges of attempted first-degree murder, aggravated battery
and leaving the scene of a crash. Police said Harmon drove a vehicle through a
parking lot aisle, hitting a 79-year-old man, who was standing near his vehicle.
The driver then hit another person, a 60-year-old woman. The man, who suffered
serious injuries, was taken to Advocate Condell Hospital, and the woman, who
suffered a non-life-threatening ankle injury, was taken to Lake Forest Hospital,
police said. Harmon fled the scene before officers arrived, police said, but
while officers canvassed the area, they saw a physical altercation between a
30-year-old man and a woman near the 6400-block of Grand Avenue. Officers
ordered the two to separate, and that's when the woman, Harmon, stood up and
aggressively approached an officer, who deployed a Taser, police said. Officers
then took Harmon into custody.
abc7chicago.com
Clinton CT: Smash-and-grab robberies target several CT jewelry stores
An investigation is underway following a smash-and-grab robbery at a Clinton
jewelry store on Tuesday evening, the latest in a series of jewelry store
robberies across Connecticut. The robbery occurred at around 5:30 p.m. when
police say two men smashed multiple display cases with a hammer, snatched
jewelry and ran. Police have not said how much the thieves got away with as that
is still being sorted out. Other Kay Jewelers stores in Connecticut have been
targeted recently. There have been smash and grab robberies in places like
Waterbury, Bristol, Milford and now Clinton. Lt. J. Paul Vance, retired and
a law enforcement analyst for Channel 3, said agencies will work together to
determine if the cases are connected.
wfsb.com
Kinston, NC: North Carolina man broke into Little Caesars after closing and
started making and selling pizzas
A man in North Carolina has been charged with multiple felonies after he
allegedly broke into a Little Caesars pizza shop after it had closed and began
making and selling pizzas. The rogue pizza-maker, 41-year-old Jonathon Hackett,
allegedly entered the Kinston-area shop while it was closed on Sunday, and kept
all the profits from his pizza sales for himself, according to a statement from
the Kinston Police Department. Hackett is reportedly a former employee at the
shop, the Charlotte Observer reports. He may have gotten away with his alleged
crime, but police say he tried to break into the shop a second time and was
arrested.
the-independent.com
St. Petersburg, FL: Suspect Arrested After $45,000 Jewelry Store Burglary in St.
Petersburg
Martin County, FL: Miami man among 3 arrested with fraudulent credit cards, fake
military IDs
Hamilton, ON, Cananda: Police searching for 4 suspects who allegedly attempted
to rob jewelry store in Stoney Creek, Ont. mall
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•
Auto - Houston, TX –
Burglary / Susp killed
•
Auto – Suffolk County,
NY – Burglary
•
C-Store- Glenpool, OK
– Robbery
•
C-Store – Kansas City,
KS – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Central
Valley, NY – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Woodbury, NY
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Lee County,
FL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Charlotte,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Hempstead,
NY - Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Hinsdale,
IL – Burglary
•
Grocery – Hannibal, MO
- Robbery
•
Hardware – Huntington
Beach, CA – Robbery
•
Jewelry - Clinton, CT
– Robbery
•
Restaurant - Pacific
Beach, CA - Burglary
•
Restaurant – Suffolk
County, NY – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Chicago,
IL – Burglary
•
Shoe – San Antonio, TX
– Armed Robbery
•
Sport – Eden Prairie,
MN – Robbery
•
Tobacco – Waterford,
CT - Armed Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 13 robberies
• 6 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 1 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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