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MAORCA & MRA ORC Conference: June 3 (Annapolis, MD)
The Mid-Atlantic ORC Alliance and
the MD Retailers Alliance will co-host an
exciting ORC Conference you won't want to miss. June 3, 2026
in Annapolis, MD. Featuring topics on important legislative
updates, the gift card fraud ecosystem, updates from the MD
State Attorney's Office, law enforcement coordination and
investigations across jurisdictional lines.
Register today, as spots are limited!
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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
House Vote on CORCA Expected This Week
Leading Retailers Urge House Members to Pass Bipartisan Combating
Organized Retail Crime Act
The
Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) commends the House of
Representatives for its bipartisan commitment to safeguarding
America’s communities and businesses ahead of this week’s vote on the
Combatting Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA). This tremendously
important piece of legislation is a decisive step toward dismantling
organized retail crime (ORC) gangs that are increasingly threatening
retail employees, consumers, communities and retailers across the United
States.
“Leading retailers are grateful to lawmakers on
both sides of the aisle for recognizing the urgent need to address the
growing threat of organized retail crime,” said Sarah Gilmore, RILA
senior director, government affairs. “American consumers and businesses
deserve to be protected from fraud-driven criminal networks engaged in
cargo theft, gift card fraud, and all too often violent in-store ORC
driven incidents. Addressing this threat requires stronger coordination
and information-sharing across public and private partners. CORCA
provides the tools necessary for coordinated action, ensuring that law
enforcement and industry partners can prosecute and dismantle the
criminal enterprises orchestrating these sophisticated schemes.”
RILA urges swift House passage of CORCA and looks forward to
working with the Senate and the administration to see this vital
legislation signed into law.
“A unified response to organized retail
crime sends a clear message to criminal networks that their
activities will not go unchecked and demonstrates a shared commitment to
keeping communities safe and prosperous,” said Gilmore.
"Organized retail crime is sophisticated,
coordinated criminal activity that puts our associates, customers, and
communities at risk,” said Scott Glenn, Vice President of Enterprise
Asset Protection at The Home Depot. “This bipartisan legislation
would strengthen coordination across federal, state, and local partners
and provide the tools needed to investigate and prosecute these crimes
at scale. We urge the House to swiftly pass CORCA and help disrupt
organized criminal networks nationwide.”
rila.org
Business Community Urges CORCA Passage
Support for H.R. 2853, the Combatting Organized Retail Crime Act
This letter was sent to Members of
the U.S. House of Representatives.
To the Members of the United States House of Representatives:
The
U.S. Chamber of Commerce supports H.R. 2853, the Combatting Organized
Retail Crime Act (CORCA). This bipartisan legislation represents a
critical step toward addressing surges in retail crime and cargo theft
that are putting the nation’s businesses and consumers at risk.
America’s businesses continue to struggle with rising business-focused
crimes. Retail crimes like organized shoplifting rings and
“smash-and-grabs” have been persistent problems. Crime numbers often
fluctuate from year-to-year but the long-term trends are clear, with
larcenies involving shoplifting having doubled since the 1970’s
according to statistics from the nonprofit Council for Criminal Justice.
Retail crime creates higher prices for consumers, results in stores
having to close their doors, and leaves communities without vital goods
and services. No business should have to close because of crime.
Cargo theft is another rising concern for the business community with
a huge impact on the economy. According to a report by the American
Trucking Associations, cargo theft costs the American economy up to $35
billion a year, resulting in higher costs throughout the supply chain
and ultimately impacting small business shippers and retailers.
Increasing cargo theft is eroding confidence in supply chains that are
critical to our nation’s businesses.
The Combatting Organized Retail Crime Act focuses on increased
coordination in curbing retail crime and cargo theft. Improved
coordination is the main pillar in the U.S. Chamber’s call to action to
stop retail crime. This bipartisan bill would establish a new Organized
Retail and Supply Chain Crime Coordination Center. The Center would
align efforts, expertise, and resources across local, state, federal,
and private-sector partners, improving information-sharing and enabling
more coordinated investigations and prosecutions. CORCA will create a
unified, national response building on the more than 30 state laws that
have been enacted since 2022.
The U.S. business community stands ready to work with Congress to
advance this bipartisan legislation. We urge the House to pass H.R.
2853 when it comes to the floor later this week.
uschamber.com
Receipt Fraud Concerns Grow
Quietly
Why Retailers Are Paying Closer Attention to “Receipt Shopping” Fraud
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retail loss prevention teams have long focused on shoplifting,
organized retail crime and refund fraud, but some retailers and
investigators are also monitoring a lesser-discussed tactic sometimes
referred to as “receipt shopping.”
The practice can involve individuals collecting discarded receipts
from parking lots, trash bins, self-checkout areas or kiosks and then
attempting fraudulent returns. In some reported cases, suspects
allegedly re-enter stores, select matching merchandise from shelves and
attempt to return the items using the recovered receipt as proof of
purchase.
While the tactic itself is not new, industry discussions around
return fraud and self-checkout security have led some retailers to pay
closer attention to receipt-related scams. High customer volume,
faster checkout processes and limited staffing at service counters can
create opportunities for fraudulent returns to go unnoticed.
Loss prevention professionals say the challenge for retailers is that
some of these transactions may initially appear legitimate.
Investigators may need to compare timestamps, item details, payment
methods or purchasing patterns before identifying suspicious activity.
Retail security experts have also noted that receipt-related fraud
can sometimes overlap with broader theft or refund fraud schemes
involving frequently targeted products such as health and beauty
items, tools, electronics accessories and over-the-counter medications.
To help reduce risk, some retailers are encouraging the use of
digital receipts connected to loyalty accounts or payment cards,
making it more difficult to use abandoned paper receipts during return
attempts. Others are using analytics systems designed to flag unusual
return behavior, including excessive returns tied to multiple store
locations or accounts.
As retailers continue balancing convenience with fraud prevention,
receipt-related scams remain one of several smaller but persistent
issues being discussed within the loss prevention industry.
Cargo Theft Fueling Price Increases?
LAPD
says surge in multimillion-dollar cargo thefts is driving up consumer
prices
The
Los Angeles Police Department says a spike in cargo theft across the
region is helping fuel inflation, with stolen goods from
multimillion-dollar heists ending up for sale on online marketplaces and
livestream shopping apps.
An ABC7 On Your Side Investigates crew was granted exclusive access as
LAPD's Cargo Theft Task Force and partner agencies raided a used car lot
in Bell. Undercover officers swarmed the property, breaking locks and
doors to reveal what they described as stacks of stolen merchandise.
According to the undercover detective, a European manufacturer of
high-end adult toys contacted LAPD after discovering products from a
stolen shipment being resold online. The company purchased some of
its own products on the site, and LAPD traced the shipping address back
to the Bell car lot.
"Unfortunately, we're in the capital of cargo theft -- both train and
commercial cargo theft -- out here in Los Angeles," the undercover
detective said. Investigative Reporter Kevin Ozebek asked LAPD whether
livestream shopping apps and independent online sellers are contributing
to the problem.
"I think so. Yeah, it's just easier. It makes it easier for the
people like this to sell their items," the undercover detective
responded.
Hamilton said foreign crime leaders are directing the theft of cargo
moving through Los Angeles. After shipments arrive at the port, he
said, they are often stolen from train cars.
abc7.com
NMDOJ touts statewide progress with new ‘crime gun’ data tracking
initiative
National Police Week 2026: Memorial events honoring fallen officers in
Washington, D.C.
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Looming Problem for Retail?
Study: Leadership pipeline shrinking amid lack of 'enthusiasm'
A lack of enthusiasm among younger workers and existing managers
could be a looming problem for retail and hospitality businesses.
According to global technology company SafetyCulture’s latest Feedback
from the Field survey, 62% of frontline managers report that younger
workers are reluctant to take on leadership roles. SafetyCulture
noted that this reluctance could lead to a shrinking pipeline of future
leaders.
Among those already in leadership roles, enthusiasm is declining, as
66% of managers would rather not lead if given the choice.
Frustration among existing frontline managers is widespread, with nearly
nine-in-10 (88%) reporting challenges in their day-to-day roles, often
driven by "heavy workloads, administrative burden and limited
operational support."
SafetyCulture noted that as fewer employees step into leadership
roles and existing managers come under increasing strain,
organizations could face slower decision-making, inconsistent processes,
and a greater risk of errors or safety incidents.
“Management roles are becoming harder to sustain because the reality
of the job is often overwhelming,” said Tom Murdock, managing
director, Americas, SafetyCulture. “Frontline managers are expected to
do more with less, balancing people, processes and performance without
enough support. If businesses don’t address this, they risk losing the
next generation of leaders, and with it, the operational stability that
strong frontline management provides.”
chainstoreage.com
AI Fears Growing
Employees fear AI impact on their jobs
Artificial intelligence is spreading
through the workplace, and many employees are worried about how it will
affect them.
More than half (53%) of employees feel concerned that AI tools will
make their role feel less necessary. Those employees cited the
ChatGPT (35%) and Google Gemini (18%) agentic AI platforms most often.
In addition, 52% of U.S. professionals surveyed by Software Finder say
AI tools are not significantly changing their value, while 21% say they
increase their value.
Senior managers/executives were most likely to say AI is increasing
their value (45%), compared to respondents who are managers (26%)
and individual contributors (15%). Respondents with four to six years of
tenure were more likely than those with less than one year to say AI is
increasing their value (26% vs. 15%).
More than four-in-10 (43%) overall respondents feel pressure related
to performance, expectations, or job security during software
changes. Among technology industry workers, 46% report feeling this way.
Managers are the most likely job level to cite job security or being
replaced as their top pressure source (27%), compared with
individual contributors, whose top pressure source is learning quickly
(30%).
More than one-quarter (27%) of employees have also avoided using a
new workplace tool entirely out of fear of making mistakes.
chainstoreage.com
Managing Environmental Risks is Key To
Business Success
Executives Tie Environmental Performance to Business Success
“Business performance increasingly
depends on how well companies manage environmental risks, resource
efficiency and regulatory compliance,” said Vijay Manthripragada, CEO of
Onterris
Environmental performance is tied to growth outcomes, not just
compliance requirements.
This is according to a recent report, The Onterris Outlook: Why
environmental performance is business-critical, which found that 54%
of executives say environmental performance is central to long-term
growth, signaling a shift in how companies define business value.
Environmental risks are increasingly shaping policy, markets and
regulatory requirements, directly affecting how companies operate and
invest. What were once viewed as longer-term or indirect challenges
are now directly influencing input costs, asset reliability and supply
chain stability. At the same time, organizations must navigate evolving
regulations, emerging technologies and heightened scrutiny from
regulators, customers and capital providers.
“Business performance increasingly depends on how well companies
manage environmental risks, resource efficiency and regulatory
compliance,” said Vijay Manthripragada, CEO of Onterris, in a
statement.
ehstoday.com
Vector's LPF Scholarship Applications
Close May 22
Apply Today for Vector Security Networks’ 2026 LPF Scholarships
Scholarships support LPQ and LPC
certification for loss prevention professionals and hopefuls
Loss prevention professionals, as well as those who aspire to work in
loss prevention in the United States and Canada, can apply for
Vector Security Networks’ annual
Loss Prevention
Foundation (LPF) scholarships now through May 22, 2026.
The scholarships provide financial support to loss prevention
professionals or hopefuls seeking to obtain LPQ and LPC certifications.
Vector Security began awarding the scholarships in 2009 in support of
career development and continuing education for professionals in this
important and rapidly-evolving industry.
Over 400 scholarships have been awarded since the program began.
The scholarships cover the course fee for LPF’s Loss Prevention
Qualified (LPQ) or Loss Prevention Certified (LPC) certifications and
one exam attempt. Upon completion of the course, you will need to pass a
proctored exam to become certified.
This year, up to 18 LPC or LPQ scholarships will be awarded to U.S.
based professionals.
Details and application information can be found
here.
The Growing Risk of High Gas Prices
Consumer spending is healthy, but gas prices remain a risk
Higher-income shoppers have kept
retail sales healthy, but the economic impact of the war in Iran
presents an unknown, according to industry analysts.
Retail industry segments dependent on broad-based or price-sensitive
spend are facing weaker outlooks, according to a Tuesday report from
Moody’s Ratings analysts. However, credit and debit card payment
volume through the end of 2025 shows consumer spending remained healthy.
A growing dependence on higher-income households continues to be of
concern, however, as spending growth within the economic cohort
outpaced lower-income households who are prioritizing essentials and
trading down.
retaildive.com
US inflation rose to 3.8% in April, eroding Americans’ paychecks
Grocery shoppers are trading down to lower-priced retailers, report
finds
PwC: UK consumer sentiment suffers sharpest decline in four years
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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.
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Agilence AI - Artificial Intelligence Delivering
Next-Level Fraud Detection and Loss Prevention
Agilence AI is a set of AI
features across the entire Agilence product suite that include fraud detection,
natural language queries, and more.

MOUNT LAUREL, N.J. -
Agilence, the leading
provider of data analytics and loss prevention (LP) solutions for retail,
supermarket, restaurant, and hospitality organizations, announced the launch of
Agilence AI, a groundbreaking suite of artificial intelligence capabilities
integrated across Agilence Analytics, Agilence Case Management, and Agilence
Audit Management. This new technology empowers businesses to combat fraud more
effectively by delivering tailored insights and streamlining workflows to
address high-risk activities faster than ever.
Key Capabilities of Agilence AI:
AI Transaction Fraud: Precision Scoring - Agilence AI surfaces
high-priority risks by scoring suspicious transactions inside Agilence
Analytics. This adaptive system learns from user input to refine its fraud
prediction accuracy. Fraud scores seamlessly integrate into dashboards, reports,
and queries, enhancing analysis for faster and better decisions.
AI Alerts: Priority Ranking - Agilence Analytics alerts are based on
business criteria, conditions, and metrics that provide actionable insights to
correct and resolve fraud issues. Agilence AI ranks alerts so your teams focus
on the most pressing threats. The system learns in order to minimize "noise,"
preventing alert fatigue and ensuring high-impact issues are addressed promptly.
Related alerts are grouped, enabling teams to spot and stop potential widespread
fraud faster.
Natural Language Query (NLQ): Intuitive Data Exploration - Users can now
investigate their Agilence Case Management and Agilence Audit Management data
using plain-language questions, accelerating fraud analysis and making insights
more accessible across all levels of expertise. Real-time visualization of
queries simplifies data exploration and fosters faster comprehension.
AI Automations: Workflow Efficiency - Agilence AI enables rapid creation
of automated workflows for Agilence Case Management and Agilence Audit
Management using natural language inputs and queries. This technology enhances
compliance, assigns tasks for resolution, and reduces the burden of manual
oversight, ensuring quicker corrective actions and improved operational safety.
Agilence AI boosts team productivity with AI-driven scoring, helping prioritize
critical fraud cases and saving time through NLQ-powered insights. It uncovers
hidden fraud, adapting to complex patterns like refund, loyalty, and ecommerce
abuse. Tailored to your business, it evolves with your data, offering flexible
workflows, alerts, and dashboards aligned with organizational priorities.
For more information about Agilence AI and how it can transform your loss
prevention efforts, visit
www.agilenceinc.com. |
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Retail's Growing Cybercrime Threat
UK retail co-ops face up to the rising cyber-crime threat
Co-op News catches up with Longwall
Security, which works with a number of retail co-ops, about the growing
threat
Last year’s cyber-attack on the Co-op Group is just the tip of the
iceberg. Other retailers – including Coop Sweden – have faced
problems, and agri co-ops, credit unions and energy co-ops around the
world are vulnerable to a criminal practice that cost the world £12tn
last year.
UK businesses face an estimated 21,315 cyber attacks daily – around
7.78 million annually – with a business targeted every 44 seconds.
Small businesses alone encounter around 65,000 hack attempts daily, with
4,500 resulting in breaches.
Much of this is low-level, but every week the UK’s National Cyber
Security Centre (NCSC) handles four “nationally significant” incidents,
which it deems to have “a serious impact on central government, UK
essential services, a large proportion of the UK population, or the UK
economy”. The 2025 figures marked a 50% increase in highly
significant incidents for the third year running.
The NCSC acts as the public-facing arm of GCHQ for cybersecurity, and in
its Annual Review 2025, urged businesses to take a more integrated
approach. “For too long, cybersecurity has been regarded as an issue
predominantly for technical staff,” said CEO Richard Horne. “This
must change. All business leaders need to take responsibility for cyber
resilience.”
Shirine Khoury-Haq, then-CEO of the Co-op Group, shared an open letter
in the report. On 25 April, the Group, M&S and Harrods were the
victims of a multi-stage cyber attack, as confirmed by the NCSC and
the National Crime Agency (NCA).
“While you can plan meticulously, invest in the right tools and run
countless exercises, nothing truly prepares you for the moment a real
cyber event unfolds,” wrote Khoury-Haq. “The intensity, urgency and
unpredictability of a live attack is unlike anything you can rehearse."
thenews.coop
Cyber Victims Now Facing Physical
Threats
Ransomware hackers are now threatening to indulge in Physical Harm or
Violence
Cybercrime has evolved rapidly over the past decade, transforming from
simple computer viruses and data theft into highly organized criminal
operations. Among the most dangerous forms of cybercrime today is
ransomware, a type of malicious software that encrypts a victim’s
files or systems and demands payment in exchange for restoring access.
While ransomware attacks were once limited to financial extortion
through digital means, recent developments reveal a far more
alarming trend: cybercriminals are now resorting to physical
intimidation and threats of violence to force victims into paying
ransoms.
Over the years, the world has witnessed numerous incidents in which
ransomware attacks disrupted essential services, especially in sectors
such as healthcare, manufacturing, transportation, and government
administration. In several hospitals across the globe, ransomware
attacks have encrypted patient records and interrupted medical
procedures, delaying treatment and in some tragic cases contributing to
patient deaths. These incidents highlight how cyberattacks are no longer
confined to the digital world; they can now directly affect human
lives and public safety.
A recent analysis conducted by cybersecurity firm Semperis has shed
light on an even more disturbing pattern in ransomware operations.
According to the report, a significant percentage of ransomware
attacks recorded in 2025 involved criminals threatening physical harm
when organizations refused to pay ransom demands. More than half of
the attackers reportedly intimidated company staff with threats of
violence. The study further revealed that such incidents are
increasingly common in Western nations, particularly in the United
States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and parts of the Middle East.
cybersecurity-insiders.com
Dark Web Marketplace Shut Down
Police Shut Relaunched Crimenetwork Dark Web Marketplace
Police in Germany and Spain have moved to shut down a new version of
the Crimenetwork dark web marketplace.
Spanish investigators arrested a 35-year-old German citizen at his home
in Mallorca last week after liaising with the Frankfurt am Main Public
Prosecutor's Office – Central Office for Combating Internet Crime (ZIT)
– and the Federal Criminal Police Office (BKA) in Germany.
The individual is said to have built an entirely new online
infrastructure to host Crimenetwork just days after its previous
version was shut down and its administrator arrested in December 2024.
The original site had been operating since 2012 and built up a
following of over 100,000 users and more than 100 sellers, mainly
from German-speaking countries.
The 35-year-old German national arrested in Mallorca is suspected of
operating criminal trading platforms on the internet and trafficking in
narcotics.
The relaunched Crimenetwork facilitated a brisk trade in stolen data,
drugs, and forged documents – among other illegal goods and services
– and had garnered over 22,000 users and more than 100 vendors,
according to the BKA.
infosecurity-magazine.com
Google researchers uncover criminal zero-day exploit likely built with
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Amazon Phishing Scam
Don’t fall for this Amazon Prime scam hitting New Jersey inboxes
New Jersey officials are warning Amazon Prime users about a phishing
scam using fake membership renewal emails to steal passwords and
financial information. The scam emails claim your payment method
failed and your Amazon Prime membership is about to expire, but the
links lead to fraudulent login pages.
Residents who clicked the links are urged to contact their bank
immediately, report fraud, and change their Amazon password as soon as
possible.
If you have Amazon Prime, there is a scam alert that New Jerseyans need
to be aware of, according to the State of New Jersey. The warning was
posted on the Chester Township NJ Facebook page, warning Amazon Prime
customers to watch out for emails claiming their payment method is
invalid and that their membership is about to expire.
Clicking the link takes people to a fake login page built to steal
their password, credit card number, and personal information. “The
emails look real—they include the Amazon Prime logo and appear to come
from ‘Prime Notification,’ but the actual sender address has nothing to
do with Amazon,” Chester Township warned.
If anyone gets one of these emails, don’t click anything. If you have
already clicked and entered information, contact your bank immediately
and report potential fraud and change your Amazon password.
Some Facebook users quickly responded to the post, offering their
advice, too. One person said they received one of these emails and went
to their real Amazon page to check the renewal date. That’s how they
knew the email was a scam.
nj1015.com
Amazon Warehouse Fire
Fire that forced Amazon warehouse evacuation under investigation
It was a mass exodus out of the Amazon. "I heard there was a fire on
the third floor and then it spread to the fourth floor," said
Melanie Lovell, an Amazon employee. Firefighters from Berks and
Schuylkill counties responded to a fire at the Amazon warehouse in Upper
Bern Township Friday morning.
Firefighters were dispatched around 9 a.m. to the warehouse in the 3500
block of Mountain Road for a reported structure fire. All employees
were later sent home.
wfmz.com
New AI warning for online shopping
Alibaba wants online shopping to feel more like a conversation |
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Rochester, MN: Update: Ex-Employee charged in $100K Theft from Rochester
business enters Plea Agreement
A former employee accused of stealing from a southwest Rochester business has
entered a guilty plea He was one of two people charged in the theft scheme that
court documents say resulted in a more than $100,000 loss for the business. The
Rochester men are accused of running the scheme from Nov. of 2022 through
January of 2023. Court documents say the two employees would open new lines for
the same group of individuals who had phone numbers and pass codes for existing
accounts. Members of the group of people coming into the store would pay the
sales tax on the transaction, then leave the store with new devices without
paying for them, the charges say. A store manager told Rochester police the duo
gave out over 100 phones, tablets and watches. In exchange for opening lines,
the defendants would get increased commission payments on the fake sales,
according to the court documents. The complaints do not name the victimized
business. The two men who were charged in the case were identified as
29-year-old Tavontae Timmy Kidd-Starks and 30-year-old Ajuda Mastar Nywesh. Last
year, Kidd-Starks entered a plea agreement and admitted to a felony theft charge
involving the diversion of corporate property. He was sentenced in December to
five years probation and ordered to pay $36,849 in restitution. Nywesh
entered a plea agreement last week. He admitted to an amended felony theft
charge in exchange for the dismissal of the two other counts and a recommended
stayed prison sentence of up to five years. The agreement also calls for
Nywesh to pay $64,199.38 in restitution.
krocnews.com
Bakersfield, CA: BPD arrests serial retail theft suspect who allegedly stole
$14K of goods from Lowe’s
The Bakersfield Police Department’s Organized Retail Theft Unit recently ended
an investigation into a serial retail theft suspects who stole a variety of
items from several local Lowe’s home improvement stores. Jaime Ramirez, 43, was
arrested on Thursday, May 7, for his involvement in at least 35 different theft
incidents between July 2025 through April 2026. In total, BPD believes Ramirez
has stolen more than $14,000 of products from the stores. Ramirez was arrested
and boked into the Kern County jail on grand theft, organized retail theft,
conspiracy and shoplifting charges.
kget.com
Macoupin County Trio charged in Jerseyville Retail Theft Spree
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Shootings & Deaths
Fort Worth, TX: Father and son arrested after Security Guard killed in Fort
Worth
Fort Worth Police arrested a father and son in connection with the shooting
death of a security guard in the southeast part of the city early Sunday
morning. Officers responded to a restaurant on Miller Avenue near Highway 287 at
around 5:45 a.m. where they found a security guard and a woman who had been
shot. The security guard, identified as 38-year-old Dominique Coleman, had been
working at a nightclub and crossed the street to confront some customers from
the club, police said. That is when the suspect, 21-year-old Dadrian Freeman,
shot Coleman multiple times, including in the back of the head, according to an
arrest warrant affidavit. Dadrian Freeman also shot a woman who was involved,
then struck her on the head with the butt of his gun, police said. He then left
the scene, along with his father Dedrian Freeman, 46, and brother Dedrian
Freeman, Jr., 22. Coleman was declared dead at the scene. Police said the woman
who was shot faced a non-life-threatening injury and was treated at a hospital.
cbsnews.com
Patterson, NJ: 2 killed, 4 wounded in Paterson, N.J. shooting Sunday night
Paterson Police responded to the incident just before 8:30 p.m. outside a liquor
store at Rosa Parks Boulevard and Godwin Avenue. They found six people with
gunshot wounds. CBS News New York's Nick Caloway reports.
cbsnews.com
Cincinnati, OH: 1 dead after shooting on Fountain Square, suspect taken into
custody
One person is dead after a shooting on Fountain Square. According to interim
Cincinnati police chief Adam Hennie, officers were called to Fountain Square for
a report of shots fired around 8:30 p.m. on Friday night. Hennie said an adult
man was struck by gunfire during the shooting. He was later transported to
University of Cincinnati Medical Center, where he died. On Saturday, the victim
was identified as 25-year-old Darius Wheeler. A suspect, who was identified on
Saturday as 36-year-old Christopher Shipman, was taken into police custody soon
afterward. He is facing one count of murder from prosecutors.
wlwt.com
Gastonia, NC: Video shows moments before undercover officer shot man who had
fake gun
Newly released video shows the moments leading up to a deadly officer involved
shooting inside Jakob’s Food Mart in Gastonia, a case the district attorney has
ruled a justified homicide, meaning no charges will be filed against the
officers involved. The shooting happened in January, when Derrick Manigault got
into an argument with another man outside the store and then continued the
confrontation inside. In the video, Manigault can be heard asking the man if he
“wanted to lose his life tonight” before pulling out what investigators later
confirmed was a fake gun.
wsoctv.com
Everman, TX: 3 teens recovering after a shooting broke out at a party in an
Everman strip mall
Trenton, NJ: Shooting outside of NJ Weedman’s Joint in Trenton leaves three
injured
Newton, NC: Driver shot in neck at Love’s Truck Stop, suspect escapes in another
vehicle
Durham, NC: Suspect denied bond in Durham restaurant shooting on Mother's Day
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Marion County, FL: Paddock Mall gun scare sends Mother’s Day shoppers running,
forces temporary shutdown
Mother’s Day shoppers scrambled for cover inside Paddock Mall after a fight
broke out and someone waved a gun. The incident forced the mall to shut down
temporarily, and Ocala police are now searching for three people they say were
involved. Officers responded just after 1 p.m. Sunday after a report of a
shooting. When they arrived, police confirmed no one had been shot or injured.
The cause of the altercation has not been released. Cell phone video captured
the terrifying scene: a mother and her four children rushing into an office to
hide. In the footage, one of the suspects can be seen coming out of the Zales
jewelry store.
clickorlando.com
Redwood City, CA: Man stabbed in weekend attack at Redwood City grocery store
Orlando, FL: Epic Universe Guest Detained After Alleged Theft Sparks Chase
Across Universal Park
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•
Auto - Louisville, KY
– Robbery
•
C-Store – Franklin
County, NC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Arlington
County, VA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Portsmouth,
VA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Cleveland,
TN – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Baltimore,
MD – Robbery
•
Gas Station – Fruita,
CO – Armed Robbery
•
Gas Station – Bristol,
CT – Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry – Culver City, CA – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Gloucester, VA – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Schaumburg, IL – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Palmdale, CA – Robbery
•
Kratom – Manchester
County, NJ – Robbery
•
Liquor – Oxford, AL –
Armed Robbery
•
Tobacco – Portland, OR – Armed Robbery
•
Vape – Kinston, NC –
Armed Robbery
•
Walmart – Springfield,
MO - Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 0 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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