&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email)) |
|
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))



 |
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
|
Global Security Solutions Announces Bobby Mothershed as Vice President
of Business Development, US & Canada
DEERFIELD
BEACH, Fla. (December 1, 2025) –
Global Security Solutions (GSS) is expanding its leadership team
with the addition of Bobby Mothershed as Vice President of Business
Development, US & Canada, supporting the company’s ongoing growth across
North America and strengthening its position as a leader in EAS and
retail security solutions.
A seasoned retail and asset protection executive, Mothershed brings a
deep understanding of customer needs, a wealth of industry knowledge,
and decades of experience shaping operational, loss prevention, and
security strategies across large, complex retail environments. Known for
his consultative approach, he has built long-standing relationships
throughout the retail community and is widely recognized for connecting
customer challenges with practical, impactful solutions.
In
his new role, Mothershed will lead GSS’s Business Development Team and
oversee sales and support efforts across the US and Canada, with a focus
on expanding customer partnerships, advancing technology-driven
solutions, and developing new revenue opportunities across both retail
and commercial sectors. His leadership will play a key role in
identifying emerging market opportunities, strengthening strategic
partnerships, and driving growth across GSS’s evolving solutions
portfolio.
Read the full press release here |
See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 &uuid=(email))
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
In Case You Missed It
FaceFirst + ROC:
AI You Can Trust. Accuracy You Can Prove.
Gatekeeper Systems’ Strategic
Partnership with ROC Adds Top-Ranked Facial Recognition Algorithm to
Industry Leading FaceFirst Software
 Foothill
Ranch CA, December 3, 2025 —
Gatekeeper
Systems, a pioneer in intelligent theft prevention solutions, today
announced a significant enhancement to its
FaceFirst
platform with the integration of technology from ROC. ROC is the #1
American provider of facial recognition and vision AI and trusted by the
U.S. Department of Defense, numerous law enforcement agencies, and
Fortune 500 companies.
FaceFirst’s ROC algorithm integration delivers a new level of accuracy,
fairness, and operational trust to enterprise loss prevention programs.
It helps retailers reduce false alerts, improve investigative
efficiency, and strengthen risk mitigation without requiring new
hardware or additional costs.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Is D.C. Sidelining ORC Bill?
Retailers should matter to legislators
Two issues in particular — organized
retail crime (ORC) and credit card “swipe fees” — illustrate how slow
congressional action and regulatory inertia are costing businesses and
consumers alike.
Yet
despite its scale and importance, some of the industry’s most pressing
policy concerns continue to be sidelined in Washington. Two issues in
particular — organized retail crime (ORC) and credit card “swipe
fees” — illustrate how slow congressional
action and regulatory inertia are costing businesses and consumers
alike.
Organized retail crime is a big problem for retailers. This is not about
the occasional theft, but about sophisticated operations involving
stolen goods, gift card fraud and cargo theft.
A recent study released by the NRF and the Loss Prevention Research
Council, and sponsored by Sensormatic Solutions, called “The Impact of
Theft and Violence 2025,” found that retailers reported an 18%
increase in the average number of shoplifting incidents per year between
2023 and 2024. Threats or acts of violence during shoplifting or
theft events increased 17% during that same time period, the report
found.
There’s a legislative solution that retailers see as offering hope.
The bipartisan Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA) would
strengthen coordination among federal, state and local agencies;
provide better investigative tools; and impose tougher penalties on the
networks behind these crimes.
A broad coalition of retailers, including the NRF and the Retail
Industry Leaders Association, has urged Congress to pass CORCA before
year-end, warning that enforcement gaps are leaving stores and
employees vulnerable.
“As we approach peak retail and shipping season, the need for
stronger tools to combat ORC remains urgent,” retailers and their
trade associations stated in a letter to Congress last month. “Criminal
networks continue to target certain segments of the supply chain and
enforcement gaps across multiple jurisdictions.”
massmarketretailers.com
What's Fueling Cargo Theft Wave?
Digital Deception is Driving a New Wave of Cargo Theft
You can’t afford to treat cyber
cargo crime as just an insurance issue or an IT problem. The reality is
more complex.
Cargo
theft isn’t new. For decades, criminals have targeted trucks at rest
stops, unsecured yards, or in-transit shipments. What’s new is digital
deception. Today, cybercriminals don’t need bolt cutters or stolen
keys. They only need an email address, a spoofed carrier profile, or
a hacked dispatch system. Bad actors orchestrate physical theft through
cyber fraud, costing shippers and logistics providers dearly.
Cargonet noted a 46% increase in cargo theft in the United States
between 2023-2024, with cyber-enabled fraud playing a significant
role. The same tactics that once diverted wire transfers now redirect
entire freight loads. Theft remains the crime, but the methods have
grown more sophisticated and more difficult to defend against. These
evolving threats are serious, but there are measures you can use today
to stay protected.
When cybercrime hits the road
Traditional cargo theft conjures images of stolen trailers or fenced-in
lots. But today’s scams involve fraudulent pickups, where impostors
pose as legitimate carriers to steal freight. In one real-world
case, criminals hacked into a trucking company’s system, identified a
scheduled pharmaceutical pickup, and contacted the legitimate driver to
“reschedule.” A fake truck with the right branding arrived at the
warehouse on time, loaded the shipment, and vanished.
These crimes aren’t opportunistic. Threat actors infiltrate logistics
systems, monitor schedules, and insert themselves between shippers and
carriers. The rise of load boards and digital freight-matching
platforms, while increasing efficiency, has also created new
vulnerabilities. Because these systems often allow anyone with minimal
documentation to post or accept loads, fraudsters can pose as legitimate
carriers, secure shipments, and disappear before verification catches
up. The convenience of fast digital matching dilutes the vetting
process, giving criminals an easy entry point into the supply chain. And
when the fraud succeeds, many companies discover that their insurance
can’t handle this new reality.
Why insurance isn’t always a safety net
Many companies assume their cargo policies will respond in the event of
theft. But cyber-enabled thefts are exposing dangerous coverage gaps.
sdcexec.com
Top Theft State Searches for Solutions
As WA ranks No. 1 in U.S. for retail theft, lawmaker pushes for reform
Washington is the nation’s unfortunate leader when it comes to retail
theft — an issue that some state lawmakers are signaling needs urgent
attention.
In a 2024 Forbes Advisor survey, Washington ranked as the No. 1 state in
the nation most impacted by retail crime. Now state Rep. Mari Leavitt, a
University Place Democrat, is sounding the alarm on organized retail
crime (ORC), the coordinated stealing and reselling of goods for
financial gain, typically by large-scale crime rings.
Last session Leavitt introduced legislation that sought to crack down
on organized retail theft via sentencing enhancements, but it didn’t
move beyond a public hearing. (Opponents of the measure argued that
harsher sentences don’t deter people from committing crimes.) Since
then, Leavitt said she’s worked on the bill, which attracted bipartisan
support.
Leavitt said a King County prosecutor recommended language to make her
bill stronger, which will be incorporated into an amendment. Still, she
added, money is needed to prosecute these cases.
Leavitt noted that in 2022, then-Attorney General Bob Ferguson
developed an Organized Retail Crime Theft Task Force in the AG’s office
to help tackle the problem.
State Rep. Roger Goodman, a Kirkland Democrat who chairs the House
Community Safety Committee, called retail theft a “huge problem” during
a Dec. 4 work session, noting that legislators will be considering
ways to address it. Organized retail crime has surged nationwide,
according to a 2024 report from the National Retail Federation.
Retailers reported that in 2023, the average annual number of
shoplifting incidents was 93% higher compared with 2019.
theolympian.com
ILORCA Sounds the Alarm Over Gift
Card Fraud
Gift Card Fraud: Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association urges
vigilance this holiday season
As gift card fraud
surges, consumers and businesses should learn warning signs
Gift card fraud is a growing threat across the United States, as
criminal networks steal, tamper with, and drain gift cards to launder
money and finance further illegal activities. The Illinois Organized
Retail Crime Association (ILORCA) is sounding the alarm, urging
consumers and businesses to stay vigilant this holiday season.
Gift card fraud has grown increasingly sophisticated, with
organized criminal groups using a variety of tactics. Common methods
include tampering with cards, hacking online accounts, and scamming
victims into providing redemption codes. Stolen funds are often used to
buy goods for resale, helping finance criminal operations. These thefts
could be particularly devastating for families stretching their budgets
during this time of economic uncertainty and inflation.
"This time of year, people are spending more money and may be especially
busy and distracted as the holidays approach, making our communities
vulnerable to crimes like gift card fraud,” said Anne Sagins, Executive
Director of the Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association. "We’re
urging consumers to check gift cards carefully for any signs of
tampering so their gifts reach loved ones as intended.”
To spread awareness, ILORCA hosted a virtual briefing for retailers
and law enforcement. The session provided insights from the
Department of Homeland Security about how these criminal schemes operate
and offered strategies to help businesses detect and prevent gift
card-related fraud. Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) implemented
Project Red Hook, a groundbreaking initiative that became federal law
enforcement’s longest running and most successful operation against
organized retail crime.
springfieldherald.news
Top Items Stolen From Self-Checkouts?
More shoppers admit to stealing from self-checkout. What do they take?
The fact that shoppers are admitting to stealing essential staples and
not expensive products like electronics is a signal that Americans
are struggling with the affordability crisis, Matt Schulz, Lending
Tree's chief consumer finance analyst, told USA TODAY.
The percentage who admit to self-checkout theft has also grown by 12%
since Lending Tree last did the survey in 2023.
"It's just further confirmation that a lot of people are still really
struggling with high prices," Schulz said. "There are certainly
plenty of people who are doing just fine, but there are also an awful
lot of people in this country who are really struggling to make ends
meet."
usatoday.com
DC police chief resigns amid Trump pressure and crime data manipulation
probe
NYC ends record 12-day streak of no murders with man shot in the Bronx
&uuid=(email))
Saks vs. Nordstrom
Saks Global sues to block Bergdorf chief merchant’s move to Nordstrom
The luxury company alleges that Yumi
Shin violated her noncompete agreement, stole proprietary information
and must give back nearly $50,000 in payouts.
Saks Global is attempting to block former Bergdorf Goodman chief
merchant Yumi Shin from taking the same role at rival Nordstrom,
in a federal lawsuit alleging a host of improprieties and
requesting a temporary restraining order.
Shin worked for Bergdorf in New York from October 2018 until October
2025, when she resigned to go to Nordstrom; she was promoted to
chief merchandising officer in January 2019, per court documents.
“Saks will be immediately and irreparably harmed if Shin is permitted
to begin her new position with Nordstrom,” the company said in a
Nov. 25 complaint filed with the U.S. District Court for the Northern
District of Texas in Dallas.
A few days later Shin asked the court to dismiss the lawsuit, in
part on jurisdictional grounds. She also argues that her agreements with
Saks Global, especially following the $2.7 billion acquisition of
Bergdorf-owner Neiman Marcus Group, often contradict each other. Shin on
Nov. 26 also filed a complaint against Saks Global in the Delaware
Chancery Court.
The luxury department store giant, which formed about a year ago when
the merger deal was finalized, demands that Shin return nearly
$50,000 in payouts and accuses her of stealing proprietary information,
per court documents.
Saks Global argues that Shin’s move “is a direct violation of her
contractual non-competition restrictions, and she is doing so in a
role that would inevitably require her to use and disclose Saks’
confidential and trade secret business information for the benefit of
her new employer.”
retaildive.com
The Big Winners of the Tariff Era
Off-price retailers neutralize tariff impact
Inventory and pricing strategies
helped TJX, Ross and Burlington protect margins in Q3, and they expect
even greater success in Q4.
In the third quarter, the three major off-price chains in the U.S.
reported a feat accomplished by few other retailers this year: the
vanquishing of new tariffs imposed by the Trump administration.
Through judicious inventory management and
hyper-vigilant pricing, TJX Cos., Ross and Burlington in
recent weeks successfully protected margins in Q3, and all three expect
that to continue in Q4.
“In other words, we’ve rolled right over tariffs,” Burlington CEO
Michael O’Sullivan told analysts last month.
That looked slightly different at each company. TJX had the greatest
success, blunting the impact of new levies entirely. Gross margin
there inched up one percentage point to 32.6%, and net income rose 11%
to $1.4 billion. Overall, Q3 net sales there rose 7% year over year to
over $15 billion. Comps at Marmaxx, which includes U.S. retailers T.J.
Maxx, Marshalls and Sierra, rose 6% year on year; at U.S. HomeGoods,
which includes the company’s Homesense stores, comps rose 5%.
“Importantly, we are very pleased with our mitigation strategies, which
allowed us to offset all the tariff pressure we saw in the third
quarter,” TJX Chief Financial Officer John Klinger said during a call
with analysts last month.
retaildive.com
'Safety First' Must Be a Core Value
Why Safety Can’t Be an Afterthought After an Acquisition
"Safety is not just a rulebook, it
is who you are," says Timothy Devore, Manager, HS&S International Auto
Processing.
If your safety plan relies on luck, you are already losing. Luck is
great for lottery tickets, but not for keeping people alive.
At one of the new company’s safety retreats, our new executive said
something that stuck with me: “If your safety plan is based on luck,
you will eventually fail.” That is not just a slogan; it is the
truth.
Safety is not just about avoiding fines or filling out OSHA logs. It
is about making sure everyone comes to work safe, works safely, and goes
home with all their fingers and toes. It is about creating a culture
where safety is taken seriously. That does not happen overnight or with
a memo; it happens when leadership sets the tone and employees buy in.
But leadership cannot do it alone. Employees drive the culture. You
cannot enforce safety with a clipboard. You have to make it something
people live every day. That means empowering folks to speak up,
report hazards, and hold each other accountable; and yes, sometimes that
means calling out your friends for doing something unsafe. Awkward?
Sure. Necessary? Absolutely.
ehstoday.com
Poundland to close 14 additional stores
China’s trade surplus tops record US$1 trillion, defying trade war
uncertainty
|
|

|
All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|

&uuid=(email)) |
|
|

|
|
From Surveillance to Strategy:
Unlocking Retail Intelligence with Video
Analytics

Video surveillance is a treasure trove of data; however, most of that valuable
intelligence goes unused. With the addition of AI-based video analytics, retail
businesses can uncover new insights from their video security systems,
transforming the processes their organization uses across departments, including
optimizations for loss prevention, operations, marketing, and security teams.
Hear from Ocean State Job Lot and
OpenEye as we discuss:
-
How to transform your retail
business' video security from reactive to proactive.
-
The various benefits of AI-based
video analytics for different teams.
-
Ocean State Job Lot's experience
using video analytics to improve their business' operations.
Watch now
 |
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
|
Has Ransomware Peaked?
Ransomware peaked in 2023 prior to law enforcement actions
U.S. Treasury report shows drop in
threat activity in the wake of aggressive takedown efforts.
Ransomware activity reached an all-time high in 2023,
totaling more than 1,500 incidents and $1.1
billion in reported payments, before dropping the following
year after two high-profile law enforcement takedowns.
The two critical law enforcement actions were the 2023 U.S.-led
takedown of AlphV/BlackCat and the 2024 disruption of LockBit by U.S.
and U.K. authorities, according to a new U.S. government study.
The report by the U.S. Treasury’s Financial Crimes Enforcement Network
shows ransomware fell to 1,476 incidents in 2024, with reported
payments reaching $734 million.
More than $2.1 billion in ransomware payments were reported
between 2022 and 2024, according to the report.
The medium amount of a single ransomware transaction rose from
$122,097 in 2022 to $155,257 in 2024, according to the report. The
most common payment amount was less than $250,000 during the period.
AlphV/BlackCat was the most prevalent ransomware variant during
the 2022–2024 period, according to the report. The other most reported
variants included Akira, LockBit, Phobos and Black Basta.
Manufacturing, financial services and healthcare were the industries
most impacted by ransomware. Manufacturing had 456 incidents
totaling more than $284 million. Financial services had 432 incidents,
totaling more than $365 million, and healthcare had 389 incidents,
totaling $305 million in payments.
cybersecuritydive.com
Agentic AI Risks
NVIDIA research shows how agentic AI fails under attack
Enterprises are rushing to deploy agentic systems that plan, use
tools, and make decisions with less human guidance than earlier AI
models. This new class of systems also brings new kinds of risk that
appear in the interactions between models, tools, data sources, and
memory stores.
A research team from NVIDIA and Lakera AI has released a safety and
security framework that tries to map these risks and measure them inside
real workflows. The work includes a new taxonomy, a dynamic
evaluation method, and a detailed case study of NVIDIA’s AI-Q Research
Assistant. The authors also released a dataset with more than ten
thousand traces from attack and defense runs to support outside
research.
Agentic systems need new testing methods
Agentic systems behave in ways that are harder to predict and test. The
paper explains that these systems rely on LLMs that generate plans and
actions that can vary even with the same inputs. This leads to
hazards that can appear in many parts of the workflow and can also grow
through compounding effects when one step influences another.
Traditional LLM testing tends to look at prompt and response behavior.
The authors argue that this misses system level risks that emerge from
the way tools, memory, and other components shape the final outcome.
The framework treats safety as the prevention of unacceptable
outcomes for people and organizations and treats security as protection
against adversarial compromise. Since a security failure can produce
a safety harm, the two ideas are examined together. The paper outlines
how prompt injection, memory poisoning, tool misuse, and retrieval of
untrusted content can cause harmful results for users even if the
underlying model behaves as intended.
helpnetsecurity.com
Employee & Partner Data Compromised
Major drug research company confirms cyberattack compromised employee
and partner data
Indiana-based Inotiv said it was
still evaluating the hack’s impact on its business.
The pharmaceutical research company Inotiv has confirmed that a
cyberattack in August exposed some of its data to hackers.
“While we have identified the likely scope of the incident, the full
operational and financial impacts are still being evaluated,” West
Lafayette, Ind.–based Inotiv said in a filing with the Securities and
Exchange Commission on Dec. 3.
Because the evaluation remains ongoing, Inotiv said it has not
determined if the incident will have a material impact on its
finances.
Inotiv said in late August that it was investigating an attack that
occurred a few weeks earlier. At the time, the Qilin ransomware gang
claimed credit for the intrusion.
cybersecuritydive.com
What security leaders should watch for when companies buy or sell a
business
Download: Evaluating Password Monitoring Vendors |
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
|
Online Shopping Scams
About a third of Americans say they’ve had an online shopping scam
happen to them
As the holiday gift-giving season kicks off, many Americans are wary
of online scams. The vast majority of U.S. adults (85%) say online
scams and attacks are a problem on shopping sites and apps, according to
a spring Pew Research Center survey. This includes 50% who say they’re a
major problem.
Sizable
shares also say they have personally experienced such scams. Overall,
36% of U.S. adults say they’ve ever bought an item online that either
never arrived (31%) or was counterfeit (17%) and was not refunded.
And 12% of Americans say they experienced at least one of these issues
within the past year.
Of the six types of online scams and attacks we asked about in our
survey, online shopping incidents were among the most common.
Experiences of online shopping scams by
demographic group
The vast majority of Americans (92%) say they buy things online.
Even so, some demographic groups are more likely than others to say
they’ve experienced e-commerce scams while shopping online:
Americans under 30 (42%) are much more likely than those ages 65 and
older (26%) to say they’ve ever bought something online that was
counterfeit or never delivered and they weren’t reimbursed.
Hispanic (43%) and Black adults (41%) are more likely than White adults
(33%) to say they’ve experienced at least one of these online shopping
scams. Roughly a third of Asian adults (35%) say the same.
Men and women are about equally likely to say they have fallen
victim to e-commerce scams. And experiences differ little by education
level: Adults with some college experience or less education are only
slightly more likely than college graduates to say they’ve experienced
at least one of these online shopping scams (38% vs. 34%).
How have the number of online shopping scams
changed in recent years?
Over 387,000 reports of fraud involving online shopping were filed in
the United States in 2024, according to data from the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC). That figure was up from the previous two years, but
down from nearly 463,000 in 2021.
pewresearch.org
Tips for avoiding online holiday shopping scams
With the gift-giving season just around the
corner, shoppers looking for good deals are getting savvier — but so are
holiday scammers. Last year, scams involving items that were either
counterfeit or never delivered cost people more than $700 million.
Amazon says it's in discussions with USPS about future relationship
More than 200,000 power banks sold on Amazon recalled over fire and burn
risks |
|
|
&uuid=(email))
|
|
Montgomery, AL: 3 teens charged in multi-state organized retail theft
operation
Authorities have arrested three Montgomery teens in connection to a
multi-state retail theft operation responsible for stealing about
$110,000 in merchandise throughout southern Alabama and northern Florida.
According to the Alabama Law Enforcement Agency, the three suspects,
Jayden Zakhia Orum, 19, Timia Lashay McCall, 24, and Brooklyn Janae
Denson, 20, were arrested on Dec. 3 after a brief vehicle chase in Troy.
Officers say the chase began when Orum, who was driving the vehicle,
refused to pull over for a state trooper, leading to a pursuit that
ended in the 1000 block of U.S. Highway 231. Troopers say they found
stolen merchandise from the Walmart in Enterprise inside the car.
wsfa.com
Polk County, FL: Sheriff Grady Judd: 8 out-of-state football teens
nabbed in felony retail theft scheme at Davenport store
On Saturday, Dec. 6, eight teenagers – who were in Polk County from
Pennsylvania to compete in a football tournament, the sheriff's office
said – were arrested for felony retail theft, which occurred at Posner
Plaza in Davenport. Around 11 a.m., the teenagers entered Dick’s
Sporting Goods in two separate groups to commit fraud from the store,
officials said. Their ages range from 14 to 15 years old. According to
surveillance footage, the sheriff's office said the first group walked
around the store looking at merchandise, while the second group made a
purchase near the front of the store. After, the teens met in the middle
of the school and began putting more store merchandise in the bag,
deputies said. Three teens took the bag past the point of sale and out
of the store. The other five remained inside. The store manager
contacted the sheriff's office about the theft and deputies detained all
eight suspects.
fox35orlando.com
Redmond, WA: Guitar Center theft suspects caught after listing stolen
instruments online
One suspect was charged on Wednesday after allegedly stealing multiple
guitars from a Redmond Guitar Center as part of an organized retail
theft operation spanning three states. On Nov. 24, Laurentiu Miclescu,
25, along with an accomplice, allegedly stole two guitars from a Guitar
Center in the 7400 block of 164th Avenue N.E., the Redmond Police
Department (RPD) announced. The two suspects were filmed on video
surveillance working together to reportedly steal two high-value guitars
by using a large jacket to conceal them and exit the store. An RPD
investigation into the incident began on Nov. 26, which led to a Guitar
Center employee from another state locating the stolen guitars for sale
online. The employee also recognized both suspects from similar
incidents.
mynorthwest.com
Phoenix, AZ: Update: Three men arrested in Phoenix-area jewelry store
heist spree
Three men have been arrested in connection with a series of jewelry
store burglaries across the Phoenix area that netted thousands of
dollars in stolen merchandise, according to court documents filed in
Maricopa County Superior Court. Gerard Lavon Segers, Alexander Townsend,
and Eric Waller face multiple felony charges, including burglary in the
third degree and possession of burglary tools. Segers also faces a
weapons charge for allegedly possessing a firearm as a prohibited
person. The arrests stem from three separate jewelry store burglaries
that occurred between August and September 2025, with investigators
using DNA evidence, fingerprints, and surveillance footage to link the
suspects to the crimes. ABC15 obtained surveillance video of the heists
in December following a September public records request. The stolen
merchandise was valued at approximately $7,000, according to court
documents.
abc15.com
Genesee County, NY Sheriff’s office, regional partners work together to
thwart organized retail theft
&uuid=(email))
|
|
|
|
&uuid=(email))
|
|
|
|
 &uuid=(email))
|
|
|
Shootings & Deaths
Los Angeles, CA: Suspect shot, killed by LAPD officers in 7-Eleven parking lot
in Reseda
Los Angeles police shot and killed a suspect in the parking lot of a 7-Eleven
store in Reseda overnight. The incident happened near Sherman Way and Wilbur
Avenue around midnight Monday after officers responded to an assault with a
deadly weapon call, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. A police
helicopter helped them find the suspect in front of the convenience store. "When
the officers confronted that suspect, an officer-involved shooting occurred. The
suspect was struck by gunfire and taken into custody," said Bruce Borihanh,
public information officer for the department. The suspect, only described as an
adult man, was then pronounced dead. A gun was recovered at the scene, police
added.
abc7.com
Bessemer, AL: Man shot, killed outside Family Dollar in Bessemer
An investigation is underway after a fatal weekend shooting in the parking lot
of a Bessemer store. The Jefferson County Coroner’s Office identified the victim
as 36-year-old Nicholas Kenneth Ratliff of Detroit. The shooting happened at
7:50 p.m. Saturday outside Family Dollar in the 4300 block of Ninth Avenue
North. Ratliff was pronounced dead on the scene at 8:06 p.m.
al.com
Kansas City, MO: 23-year-old man dies following shooting late Sunday night at
convenience store
A 23-year-old man has died following a shooting late Sunday night at a
convenience store in Kansas City, Missouri. Police were called to the 2900 block
of Van Brunt Boulevard on a reported shooting around midnight. When they
arrived, they did not find a victim, but police did find evidence of a possible
crime scene. Just after midnight, officers received a call about a man who had
arrived at a local hospital with gunshot wounds. Police responded to both scenes
and were able to determine the victim was shot in the 2900 block of Van Brunt.
KCPD was notified just after 2 a.m. the victim, Michael G. Weintraub, died of
his injuries at the hospital.
kshb.com
Valdosta, GA: 2 injured in weekend shootings outside of Valdosta Mall
Two people were shot in two separate shootings outside of the Valdosta Mall on
Saturday and Sunday, a Valdosta Police spokesperson said Monday. A 21-year-old
male was injured in the first shooting on Saturday around 1 a.m., an official
said. Valdosta Police Department (VPD) officers were looking for the source of
gunshots reported by a citizen when the man showed up at a local medical center
with a non-life-threatening gunshot wound to his leg. The next day, another man
was injured in a shooting in the same area outside of Fins and Feathers.
Officers responded to the area around 1:10 a.m. after several people reported a
large fight and a gun being shot in the parking lot.
wsav.com
Kingstree, SC: Police arrest man accused in Kingstree Vape store shooting
Police in Kingstree have arrested a 21-year-old man who is accused of shooting a
man several times at Smokers Town Vape Store over the weekend. Kanya Delvin
Tisdale is charged with attempted murder and possession of a weapon during a
violent crime. Officers with the Kingstree Police Department responded to a
reported shooting at the vape store on N. Longstreet Street on Saturday, Dec. 6.
Investigators believe Tisdale walked into the store and fired multiple rounds at
the victim, hitting him several times. The victim did return fire, but did not
hit Tisdale.
counton2.com
Oslo, Norway: Norway police say suspect detained in shooting at shopping center
Norwegian police said Monday that a shopping center in the capital, Oslo, was
safe to reopen for business after a gunman opened fire inside. No one was
immediately reported injured and the suspect was taken into custody. Police, in
a statement, determined that the shopping center was safe after the perpetrator,
who appeared to have acted alone, fired at least one shot inside.
abcnews.go.com
Salt Lake City, UT: Shot fired during c-store robbery; no injuries reported
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Boyce, VA: Thieves Steal $42,000 of Domaine de La Romanée-Conti from Virginia
Restaurant
Lakeville, MA: Man Arrested After $3,000 Lakeville ACE Hardware Break-In
|
|
&uuid=(email))
|
|
|
|
|
•
C-Store – Salt Lake
City, UT – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Napa Valley,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Cumberland
County, TN – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Coweta
County, GA - Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Odessa, TX –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Albany, GA –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Sanford, ME
– Robbery
•
C-Store – Cincinnati,
OH – Armed Robbery
•
Grocery – Van Lear, KY
– Burglary
•
Hardware – Lakeville,
MA – Burglary
•
Hotel – Windsor Locks,
CT – Armed Robbery
•
Liquor – Tulsa, OK –
Armed Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Macon, MS –
Burglary
•
Restaurant – Boyce, VA
– Robbery
•
Restaurant – Moline,
IL -Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Houston,
TX – Armed Robbery
•
Sports – Polk County,
FL – Robbery
•
Tobacco - Loudoun
County, VA – Robbery
•
Vape – Kingstree, SC –
Armed Robbery
•
Walgreen – West
Peoria, IL – Robbery
|
|
|
Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 3 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
|
|

Click map to enlarge
|
|
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
Featured Job Spotlights
|
Staffing 'Best in Class' Teams
Every one has a role to play in building an
industry.
Filled your job? Any good candidates left over?
Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build
a 'Best in Class' Community
|
 |
Manager Field Loss Prevention
Arizona (Remote)
The Field Loss Prevention Manager (FLPM) coordinates Loss Prevention and
Safety related programs intended to protect Staples assets and ensure a safe
environment for associates and customers within Staples US Retail locations.
FLPM’s support the Field and are relied on as a subject matter expert in
operations, audit, training and investigation...
|
 |
District Asset Protection Manager
Jacksonville, FL
As a District Asset Protection Manager, you will develop, teach, and
lead the implementation of the company’s asset protection, shortage control and
safety programs for all stores in your district. You will train, mentor, and
collaborate with store management and shortage control associates to ensure the
effective execution and proper implementation of company policies, while driving
improvements in inventory management and loss prevention...
|

|
Director, Safety
San Francisco, CA
The Director of Safety is responsible for developing, implementing, and
overseeing comprehensive safety programs across all retail locations, corporate
offices, and some distribution operations. This leadership role ensures
compliance with federal, state, and local safety regulations while fostering a
culture of safety excellence that protects employees, customers, and company
assets...
|
Featured Jobs
To apply to any of today's Featured Jobs,
Click Here
 |
|
View Featured
Jobs |
Post Your Job
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
|
Insight,
humor & heart from
one of LP's most trusted voices |
|
|
Culture Isn’t What You Say — It’s What You Tolerate.
You can plaster values on every wall, but
if your daily actions contradict them, you’re just decorating. Culture
is defined by behaviors leaders allow, encourage, or ignore. When poor
conduct goes unchecked, it becomes the standard. Protect culture like
revenue — because it drives revenue.
Follow this space every day to see more of 'Hedgie's Hot Takes' |
|
|
|
Not getting the Daily? Is it ending up in your spam folder?
Please make sure to add d-ddaily@downing-downing.com to your contact list,
address book, trusted sender list, and/or company whitelist to ensure you
receive our newsletter. Want to know how?
Read Here |
|
FEEDBACK
/
downing-downing.com
/
Advertise with The D&D Daily |
|
 |