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 2/9/26

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Darren Short, LPC named Asset Protection Manager for UNFI


See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here  |  Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position

 

 

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Rising Prices, Rising Retail Theft


Why Retailers Should Brace for Increased Retail Theft in 2026

As 2025 draws to a close, retailers are preparing for another year of economic uncertainty. Inflation has cooled from historic highs, but prices remain elevated across essential categories — and many consumers continue to feel real pressure at the checkout. New consumer behavior data suggests a troubling reality for retailers: when wallets tighten, theft tends to rise.

As prices climb, a growing segment of consumers appears to be rationalizing theft — reframing it as a response to economic stress rather than criminal intent. In modern retail environments, where self-service, open exits, and unattended carts are common, this rationalization can quickly translate into action..
 

Learn more
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


The Gap Between Detection & Deterrence
Retail Theft Is Outpacing the Justice System


By the D&D Daily staff

Retailers have spent years improving their ability to detect and document theft. What’s increasingly breaking down, loss prevention leaders say, is what happens after those cases leave the store.

Large retailers now routinely capture high-quality video, vehicle information, transaction data and detailed incident reports tied to repeat offenders and organized retail crime (ORC) groups. Yet many cases stall once they reach prosecutors’ offices, particularly when individual theft incidents fall below felony thresholds.

The result is a widening gap between detection and deterrence — one that retailers say is being actively exploited by repeat offenders.

Loss prevention professionals report that even well-documented cases are frequently declined or delayed due to court backlogs, staffing shortages and competing priorities within local justice systems. In some jurisdictions, cases involving thousands of dollars in cumulative loss are still evaluated incident by incident, limiting prosecutors’ ability to pursue organized theft patterns.

ORC groups appear increasingly aware of these constraints. Retailers say repeat offenders often return to the same stores or retail centers within days, operating with a clear understanding of dollar thresholds, reporting timelines and enforcement limitations. In some cases, suspects openly reference the lack of consequences when confronted by store personnel.

“Retailers are doing their part,” said one LP executive at a national chain. “But the system behind us isn’t built to move at the same speed.”

Industry organizations including the National Retail Federation have repeatedly warned that retail theft has evolved beyond opportunistic shoplifting, requiring coordinated responses from law enforcement, prosecutors and the courts. Without that coordination, retailers argue, even strong internal prevention programs struggle to change behavior.

Some companies are responding by building stronger partnerships with law enforcement and focusing resources on fewer, higher-impact cases rather than pursuing every incident. Others are investing in centralized case-building teams designed to present prosecutors with comprehensive evidence packages that demonstrate patterns of organized activity.

Still, LP leaders caution that technology and documentation alone cannot solve the problem. Until enforcement and prosecution processes align more closely with how retail theft actually occurs — as repeat, organized behavior rather than isolated events — retailers say the justice gap will continue to grow.


MAORCA Leadership Announcement
The Mid-Atlantic ORC Alliance (MAORCA) Announces Leadership Growth for 2026

MAORCA is pleased to announce several leadership additions supporting its mission to strengthen public-private partnerships and coordinated responses to organized retail crime across the region.

Jonathan Maser, Organized Retail Crime Investigator for The Home Depot, has been elected to MAORCA’s Board of Directors as West & Central Regional Director. Maser brings nearly four years of ORC investigative experience, following 20 years of progressive law enforcement service with the Clearwater (Florida) Police Department. After serving on MAORCAs Advisory Committee, he has demonstrated consistent commitment to the organization’s mission. In his new role, Master will help advance partnerships and initiatives supporting stakeholders throughout Central and Western Virginia.

MAORCA is also expanding leadership participation through its newly established Executive Council and Advisory Committee. The Executive Council was created to incorporate perspectives from statewide retail / merchant associations and Attorney General’s Offices. MAORCA welcomes its first Executive Council members: Cailey Locklair, President of the Maryland Retailers Alliance, and Jenny Crittenden, CEO of Retail Alliance and in-house lobbyist for the Virginia Retail Federation.

In addition, MAORCA welcomes new Advisory Committee members Amber Rhodes, ORC Investigations Manager at Ulta Beauty, and Libby Humphries, Commonwealth’s Attorney for Fredericksburg, Virginia.

To view MAORCA’s full leadership roster, visit www.MAORCA.org.


Keeping Late-Night, High-Traffic Locations Safe
Toronto Tim Hortons Shooting Puts Retail Safety Risk in Focus
Toronto police identified 16-year-old Kian Sam as the victim shot inside a Scarborough Tim Hortons, with investigators appealing for information and video evidence. The case has gripped local media and the community, raising questions about safety in late-night and high-traffic locations.

High-visibility violence can reduce foot traffic, pressure staffing, and trigger immediate security reviews. Operators weigh cameras, guards, layout changes, and late-night policies. Costs may rise, and insurers may tighten terms. Communication quality matters. How brands discuss Kian Sam, support employees, and engage communities can affect sentiment. For investors, we flag risk controls, disclosure tone, and any store-hour or staffing changes that signal lasting cost or revenue effects.

Liability and Regulatory Exposure in Ontario

Under Ontario’s Occupiers’ Liability Act, operators must take reasonable steps to keep patrons and workers safe. The standard hinges on foreseeability and reasonableness, not perfection. Strong risk programs include incident logging, surveillance coverage, lighting audits, de‑escalation training, and rapid response playbooks. After the death of Kian Sam, boards will ask whether site-level risks were assessed, documented, and addressed in a way that aligns with evolving expectations.

Operational Responses and Cost Levers

We expect operators to reassess CCTV coverage, sightlines, and lighting, especially near washrooms and entrances. Late-night service rules, staff pairing after dark, and panic-alert tools can help. Regular de‑escalation training and youth‑safety protocols during peak school hours support staff confidence. Clear vendor and delivery procedures limit back‑door risks. Each store’s plan should be location-specific, acknowledging lessons from the tragedy involving Kian Sam.

Brands should communicate with empathy, support affected employees, and cooperate closely with police. Transparent updates, not speculation, protect credibility. Community outreach and participation in local safety tables can rebuild confidence.  meyka.com


ORC Should Be Top Focus
Colorado AG's Anti-ICE portal: A hotline for the wrong crisis

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser wants you to report ICE.

Colorado has no shortage of public safety problems that actually chew up lives, budgets and neighborhoods. Fentanyl networks. Repeat offenders. Property crime that leaves victims paying the bill while the system shrugs. Auto theft rings that treat entire metro areas like a buffet. Organized retail theft that is not just an inconvenience, it’s a business killer and a community rot.

Where is the portal for that?

Where is the high-profile mechanism to report the revolving door? The serial offenders who rack up charges, get cut loose and cycle back through. The bureaucratic failures that let violent people stay mobile until somebody ends up dead.

Weiser did not build those portals. He built this one. That’s not oversight. That’s priority. rockymountainvoice.com


Retail Violence in Australia
Store crime spiked in 2025, led by threats against Victoria’s retailers
Bunnings’ win over the privacy commissioner on facial recognition cameras has awakened the sector to the benefits of the technology. And it could not come soon enough, as new stats show violent crime against retailers in Victoria surged in 2025.

Retailers operating in Victoria suffered the biggest increase in threats and violence last year of any Eastern state according to new data that exposes the severity of the risk to businesses from the Allan government’s crime problem.   theaustralian.com.au


Buffalo Police release January crime statistics

Lower crime rates touted by Anne Arundel Police, but data follows national trend
 



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Mall Traffic Up
Placer.ai: Returns help boost mall visits in January

Open-air, indoor and outlet centers all saw visits increase year over year to start 2026.

Placer.ai’s Mall Index for January revealed that open-air shopping centers received the largest visit gains during the, with visits up 6.2% compared to January 2025. Indoor malls, which outperformed the other formats for much of 2025, also posted solid growth of 4.5%. Outlet centers saw a 3.6% increase in visits during January.

Placer.ai found that mall traffic was heavily front-loaded to the first two weeks of the year, consistent with the post-holiday returns window. The final week of January saw a more pronounced decline in traffic due to the impact of Winter Storm Fern, which weighed on visits across all mall formats.

The Mall Index for January showed that the largest mall traffic gains were concentrated in short visits, with trips lasting 10 minutes or less increasing by double-digits across all mall formats, consistent with return trips. Indoor malls (27%) saw the largest increase in visits under 10 minutes, followed by outlet malls (21.1%) and open-air shopping centers (10.8%).

At the same time, the data also shows year-over-year growth in longer visits (more than 10 minutes), indicating that “higher-quality, more engaged” mall trips increased during the month as well. chainstoreage.com


108K Job Cuts in January
Challenger Report: January Job Cuts Surge; Lowest January Hiring on Record

Most January job cuts since 2009

U.S.-based employers announced 108,435 job cuts in January, an increase of 118% from the 49,795 cuts announced in the same month last year. It is up 205% from the 35,553 job cuts announced in December, according to a report released Thursday from global outplacement and executive coaching firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas.

January’s total is the highest for the month since 2009, when 241,749 job cuts were announced. It is the highest monthly total since October 2025, when 153,074 cuts were recorded.

“Generally, we see a high number of job cuts in the first quarter, but this is a high total for January. It means most of these plans were set at the end of 2025, signaling employers are less-than-optimistic about the outlook for 2026,” said Andy Challenger, workplace expert and chief revenue officer for Challenger, Gray & Christmas. challengergray.com


Store Safety Closures?
Syracuse-area Aldi store failed 4 food safety inspections. NY wants to shut it down
The state of New York wants to shut down an Aldi grocery store on Brewerton Road that it says failed four food safety inspections in a row.

The state Department of Agriculture and Markets filed a motion in state Supreme Court in Albany County on Jan. 30, seeking a preliminary injunction forcing the store’s closure until it passes two consecutive sanitary inspections.

In each case, inspectors labeled the violations “critical deficiencies,” the state’s term for serious violations. The products were destroyed during the inspections so they could not be sold, the inspectors said in their reports.

Szubielski said the department works with retail food establishments to educate them on the state’s food safety requirements and help them take corrective actions before there is any need for penalties or legal steps. syracuse.com


Retail Leaders Optimistic About 2026
Survey: 2026 finds retailers optimistic, but concerned about inflation and consumer confidence
Two-thirds of retail and restaurant store managers in the Northeast reported that their 2025 sales were the same or higher than in 2024 and that traffic was higher or unchanged.

Additionally, seven-in-10 of them expected that their register rings would be either much higher or somewhat better in 2026, though nearly the same percentage said they would be keeping close eyes on inflation, rising costs and consumer confidence.

2026 is shaping up as a year where execution will matter more than ever,” said Levin’s CEO Matthew K. Harding. “With consumers focused on value, retailers are doubling down on fundamentals — strong service, tight inventory discipline and technology that improves efficiency in the store.”  chainstoreage.com


Consumer sentiment inches up in February to highest level since August
U.S. consumer sentiment improved in February, reaching a six-month high, even as consumers remain concerned about the labor market and the rising cost of living.
 
Luxury retailer closing stores: See the list

Goodwill to open its biggest retail store in North Texas this spring


Last week's #1 article --

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
 



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In Case You Missed It

Big Brand Tire & Service Eliminates After-Hours Break-Ins with Interface Virtual Perimeter Guard

AI-enabled perimeter monitoring eliminates overnight break-ins
and cuts security activations by 65 percent


St. Louis, MO -- Interface Systems, a leading managed service provider delivering remote video monitoring, commercial security systems, business intelligence, and network services for multi-location enterprises, announced that Big Brand Tire & Service, one of the nation’s fastest-growing independent tire and automotive service providers, has eliminated costly overnight break-ins and significantly reduced trespassing and vandalism at a high-risk location. The company achieved these results by deploying Interface Virtual Perimeter Guard, an AI-powered perimeter security solution designed to deter incidents before they occur.

Operating more than 300 locations nationwide, Big Brand Tire & Service faced persistent after-hours security challenges at several sites. Store perimeters became frequent targets for trespassing, illegal encampments, and theft of high-value items, including tires and tools. Incidents also included repeated vandalism, such as broken windows and property damage, creating safety concerns and operational disruption.

Interface deployed its AI-powered Virtual Perimeter Guard at a high-risk Big Brand Tire location using the existing network infrastructure, allowing the system to be implemented without interrupting daily operations. During an initial calibration phase, the system learned the site’s environment and activity patterns to improve detection accuracy.

Following deployment, the site saw immediate and measurable results. Break-ins stopped entirely after installation, and monitoring reports showed a steep decline in trespassing and loitering as repeat offenders stopped returning. Ninety-one percent of events were resolved through automated deterrence without human intervention, and overall security activations were reduced by 65 percent within weeks.

The improvements also had a direct impact on daily operations, reducing late-night alerts and eliminating the need for overnight responses to secure the property.

Based on the success of the initial deployment, Big Brand Tire & Service is now evaluating a broader rollout of Virtual Perimeter Guard across additional locations as part of its perimeter security strategy.

Click here to read the full press release.

For a more detailed case study, please click here.

To learn more about Interface Systems, click here.


 

 

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Retail's Evolving Cybersecurity Risks
Retailers Face Growing Cybersecurity Risks as Digital Systems Multiply


By the D&D Daily staff

Retailers are confronting an increasingly complex cybersecurity landscape as stores rely on more connected technologies to run daily operations, manage inventory, process payments and engage customers. From point-of-sale systems and self-checkout kiosks to cloud-based workforce tools and connected cameras, the modern retail environment has dramatically expanded the number of potential attack surfaces.

Cybersecurity experts warn that while retailers have made progress in securing payment systems, attackers are now shifting their focus to less-protected operational technology and internal systems. These can include employee scheduling platforms, third-party logistics software, digital signage systems and in-store Wi-Fi networks — all of which may provide entry points into broader corporate environments if not properly secured.

One growing concern is the rise of ransomware and extortion attacks targeting retail organizations. In these incidents, threat actors often seek to disrupt operations during high-traffic periods, such as weekends or peak shopping seasons, increasing pressure on retailers to restore systems quickly. Even short disruptions can lead to lost sales, strained customer trust and operational chaos across stores and distribution centers.

Supply chain and vendor-related risks are also drawing increased scrutiny. Retailers frequently rely on dozens — or even hundreds — of third-party technology providers, each with varying security standards. A single compromised vendor account or software update can potentially expose sensitive data or provide attackers with access to internal systems, underscoring the importance of vendor risk management programs.

At the store level, employee awareness remains a critical factor in cybersecurity resilience. Phishing emails, fraudulent password reset requests and social engineering attempts continue to be common attack methods. Retail employees who split time between sales floors and back-office systems may not always recognize subtle warning signs, making regular training and clear reporting procedures essential.

Industry analysts say retailers are responding by investing in multi-factor authentication, network segmentation and real-time monitoring tools designed to detect unusual behavior before it escalates. Many are also re-evaluating incident response plans to ensure store operations can continue safely during cyber disruptions.

As retail technology ecosystems continue to grow more interconnected, cybersecurity is increasingly viewed not just as an IT issue, but as a core operational priority tied directly to business continuity and customer confidence.


More AI Cybersecurity Risks
AI caricature trend poses privacy risks, cybersecurity expert warns
The latest social media trend has people uploading personal photos to create AI cartoon caricatures, but a local expert warns sharing those images could come with hidden risks.

When users upload photos to AI tools, they give the platforms more than just a picture, according to a UAB cybersecurity researcher. Those images train the AI model, which studies facial features and everything in the pictures.

“But there are some things you don’t want the model to learn. For example, you upload your image and your bio features are literally there, right? So the color of your eyes and your hair color and these kind of bioinformations. That can be also learned by this model,” said Shuya Feng, UAB cybersecurity researcher and assistant professor.

The information is often used to access bank accounts or medical records on phones. Images uploaded to an AI model always have the possibility to be leaked. wbrc.com


CISA warns of SmarterMail RCE flaw used in ransomware attacks
SmarterMail is a self-hosted, Windows-based email server and collaboration platform from SmarterTools. The product provides SMTP/IMAP/POP mail services along with webmail, calendars, contacts, and basic groupware functionality.

It is commonly deployed by managed service providers (MSPs), small and medium-sized businesses, and hosting companies offering email services. According to SmarterTools, its products are used by roughly 15 million users across 120 countries.

The flaw, which has no identification number, permits resetting the administrator password without any verification and has been exploited by hackers shortly after the vendor released a patch. bleepingcomputer.com


The hidden cost of putting off security decisions

CISA orders feds to disconnect unsupported network edge devices

 


 

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E-Commerce Fraud Surged 207% From 2024 to 2025
Digital marketplaces are a scammer's hot spot. Here's how to protect yourself.
Scams on Facebook Marketplace and other e-commerce platforms are fairly common and expected to more than double over the next five years, data shows. The U.K.-based TSB Bank found more than a third of advertisements on Facebook Marketplace placed in 2023 were potential scams and said Facebook Marketplace transactions made up 73% of all purchase fraud reported to the financial institution.

Between 2024 and 2025, e-commerce fraud increased 207% in North America, according to Capital One, which estimated in a September report that, globally, online schemes would cost $138.56 billion in 2025. For scam victims, the toll of the experience is both financial and emotional, said an October Identity Theft Resource Center report.

The repercussions of the crime often inflicts "deep and lasting wounds on the emotional and physical well-being of victims," the report said, with the "stress, fear and violation associated with these crimes" manifesting through a range of psychological and physical symptoms.

Market research firm Juniper Research projects e-commerce fraud will explode 133% in the next few years, rising from $56 billion in 2025 to $131 billion in 2030. Many fraudsters will build out their own sites posing as businesses and take advantage of e-commerce and peer-to-peer platforms like social media marketplaces, according to Merchant Risk Council, a fraud prevention nonprofit.

“Scammers are obviously out there because they’re trying to make a quick buck,” said Darius Kingsley, head of consumer fraud and scam prevention at JPMorgan Chase. “One of the fastest ways to do it is to latch onto the fact that so much of the way we live and shop today is online.”

The Federal Trade Commission has called social media a “golden goose for scammers.” Both buyers and sellers on e-commerce platforms should be wary of potential swindlers on the hunt for both money and personal information, experts said. Don't give out personal information and be suspicious about offers that seem too good to be true. newsday.com


China regulator hits Kuaishou e-commerce unit with $3.8M fine over counterfeits
China’s market regulator has fined Kuaishou’s e‑commerce unit Rmb26.7 million for failing to act on trademark infringement, prompting renewed warnings for brand owners as the live‑selling platform pledges to tighten compliance.

Amazon's tax bill plunges after GOP tax cuts

Amazon’s $200 Billion Spending Plan Raises Stakes in A.I. Race


 


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Ramsey County, MN: Jay Icon And His Wife Apple Pled Guilty To Roseville Lululemon $1 Million Theft
Jamaican social media influencers Jay Icon and his wife Apple admitted in Ramsey County District Court to stealing from several Lululemon Twin Cities locations last year. The couple will be ordered to make restitution for the $1 million organized retail theft during their sentencing hearings. The hearings were scheduled for January 30. The couple, Jadion Anthony Richards, 45, and Akwele Nickeisha Lawes-Richards, 46, is accused by authorities of being part of a group that plundered nearly $1 million in goods from Lululemon stores across the U.S. Both pleaded guilty to one count of felony organized retail theft under a “global resolution” agreement. The agreement covers charges filed against them in both Ramsey and Hennepin counties for thefts at Lululemon stores in Roseville, Edina, Minneapolis, and Minnetonka.  dancehallmag.com


Cincinnati, OH: Investigators speak out after arrest of two women connected to years-long retail theft scheme
After seven years on the run and a combined 32 warrants for their arrest, U.S. Marshals say that they arrested a pair of women whom investigators are calling two of the most wanted retail theft suspects across the Tri-State. "Multiple counties, multiple stores within those jurisdictions, so you're talking a pretty large-scale scheme that they were undergoing, taking all this merchandise, then re-selling it," Sgt. Brandon McCroskey, an investigations supervisor for Fairfield Township police, said. "They were taking thousands and thousands of dollars." Latoya Carter and Danielle Custard were the two identified as the retail theft suspects that were arrested this week by U.S. Marshals. Despite knowing their names and faces, investigators say that they have been trying to find them since 2019. The pair are alleged to have repeatedly and systematically stolen different products, clothing and perfume from Old Navy, Walmart and various other department stores.   wlwt.com


Riverside, CA: Police Arrest Vegas Woman for Allegedly Robbing Irvine Ulta
A 31-year-old Las Vegas woman was arrested for allegedly stealing more than $2,000 in merchandise from an Irvine Ulta beauty store, authorities said Saturday. Jasele Alicia Villanueva was also alleged to be responsible for more than $60,000 in thefts from Ulta stores across Nevada and Arizona, the Irvine Police Department stated. IPD detectives worked with law enforcement counterparts in those two states and learned Villanueva had an active extradition warrant for her arrest for the cases in both states, police said.  mynewsla.com
 



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Shootings & Deaths


Toronto, Canada: Man dead after ‘targeted’ shooting at Woodbine Mall
A man in his 30s has died following a shooting at Woodbine Mall in Rexdale on Saturday afternoon. Toronto police said a call came in at 3:31 p.m. for a shooting at the mall located in the area of Rexdale Boulevard and Highway 27. Speaking to reporters at the scene, Insp. Errol Watson said officers found the victim with apparent gunshot wounds. The man was transported to the hospital with life-threatening injuries but was pronounced dead shortly after, Watson said. The victim’s identity has not been released. Images from the scene show a white SUV with bullet holes in the windshield and the driver’s side window shattered. Police said a suspect or suspects fled in a vehicle. “At this time, it’s still an active investigation and we’re still working on those details,” Watson said when asked about suspect information. The circumstances that led to the shooting are not immediately known but Watson said investigators believe it was a targeted incident.
The homicide unit is investigating the incident.  ctvnews.ca


Perry, FL: Suspect at large after fatal Perry convenience store shooting
The Perry Police Department (PPD) is seeking the public’s help in finding a man who is wanted in connection to a fatal shooting at a Perry convenience store, per a PPD social post. Ulysses Woodfaulk Jr., 48, was last seen fleeing on foot from a convenience store, locally known as Choo Choos Convenience, following a fatal shooting on Saturday. Officers said he is extremely dangerous. He is wanted for first-degree murder while armed and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon. Perry Police said they suspect Woodfaulk fatally shot Austin Shane Wilkinson and fled the scene with a handgun. “Woodfaulk has a violent history, including prior escapes, battery on law enforcement, and weapons charges,” the police department revealed.  wctv.tv


Jacksonville, FL: JSO seeks help after four wounded in Paxon Shopping Center shooting
Four people were shot early Sunday morning at the Paxon Shopping Center on Edgewood Avenue. Police say all four victims, ages 44, 49, 54 and 57, were taken to the hospital with non-life-threatening injuries and are listed as stable. Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office officers responded to the 700 block of Edgewood Avenue North around 12:30 a.m. Authorities are still searching for a male suspect last seen wearing dark clothing who ran from the scene. At the scene, the storefront shows signs of damage. The store manager said she received multiple calls around 1:30 a.m. and that several security personnel were working that night.  news4jax.com


Stockton, CA: Update: Theft suspect who shot officer in Stockton Macy’s sentenced to 12 years in prison
A man was sentenced to 12 years in prison after a violent retail robbery at a Macy’s in Stockton, where he shot a Loss Prevention Officer in the leg, according to the San Joaquin County District Attorney’s Office. On April 30, 2025, a loss prevention officer at Macy’s on Pacific Avenue confronted two theft suspects while they were stealing clothing items valued at over $500. The LPO attempted to stop one of the suspects, David Reyes, as he was exiting the store, but Reyes continued walking, according to the district attorney’s office. The LPO was able to grab the Reyes from behind in a bear hug while the second suspect continued to flee and was pursued by another employee. While being held down by the LPO, the district attorney’s office said that Reyes shot the officer in the leg and fled the scene.  fox40.com


Hartford, CT: Update: Man convicted in killing of Hartford c-store owner 15 years ago

San Antonio, TX: 2 hospitalized after drive-by shooting near East Side corner store


Fort Worth, TX: Police investigate overnight Fort Worth shooting that injured 1
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Sacramento, CA: Dollar Tree theft operation in South Sacramento raises concerns over jobs, prices
A major retail theft crackdown led to 21 arrests at a Dollar Tree in South Sacramento, where sheriff’s deputies say repeat theft has taken a heavy toll on the store. The operation took place on Thursday at the Dollar Tree on Florin Road after the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said the store reported nearly a 65% loss compared with last year. Deputies arrested almost two dozen people during an eight-hour retail theft operation, according to the sheriff’s office. The store declined to comment on the operation, but customers shopping there shared mixed reactions. Sgt. Edward Igoe of the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said those arrested represented a wide range of people. Twenty-one people were taken into custody, including four juveniles, he said.  abc10.com


Los Angeles, CA: Burglar cuts through roof of Woodland Hills jewelry store and steals nearly $100k in merchandise
$100K worth of jewelry stolen from Woodland Hills store. Police on Saturday were searching for a burglar who stole an estimated $100,000 worth of items from a Woodland Hills jewelry store after entering through the roof, a break-in that was captured on surveillance video and marked the second burglary at the business in six months. The burglary occurred around 2:40 a.m. and triggered alarms at Nafiseh Jewelry Store, alerting the owners on their phones. Surveillance video shows the suspect rummaging through display cases inside the store, spending about six minutes before fleeing, according to the owners.  nbclosangeles.com


 


 

Beauty – Tampa, FL – Armed Robbery
Beauty – Riverside County, CA – Robbery
Cellphone – Joliet, IL – Armed Robbery
C-Store - Citrus Heights, FL – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Henry County, GA – Burglary
C-Store – Andover, MA - Burglary
C-Store – Sioux City, IA – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Lebanon, TX – Robbery
Gas Station – Lee County, AL – Armed Robbery
Grocery – Colorado Springs, CO – Robbery
Jewelry - Los Angeles, CA – Burglary
Liquor – Montville, CT - Armed Robbery
Tobacco – East Lansing, MI – Armed Robbery
Vape – Lincoln, NE – Burglary
Vape - Buffalo, NY – Robbery                          

 

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



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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District Asset Protection Manager
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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...

 



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