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Brigham Roberts named Senior
Director Loss Prevention Business Continuity for ProTrans
Before joining ProTrans as Senior Director Loss Prevention
Business Continuity, Brigham spent two years with CarParts.com
as Director of Safety (EHS) & Security. Prior to that, he spent
over two years with Party City as Director, AP & Safety and
Senior Manager, AP & Safety. Earlier in his career, he held
roles with Michaels, Home Depot, Walgreens, Best Buy and
Walmart. Congratulations, Brigham!
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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How do leading retailers build the business case for a strong
security operations center (SOC)?
Join
Mike Korso, MBA,
CFI, LPC, Director of Loss Prevention Intelligence at Ulta Beauty,
and
Bobby Haskins, SVP
of Law Enforcement & Retail Engagement at Auror,
for an inside look at how Ulta Beauty built its SOC to proactively
protect stores and teams.
Discover how Ulta Beauty operationalized intelligence from Auror’s
Retail Crime Intelligence platform to gain executive buy-in, reduce
alert fatigue, and turn data into decisive action. Mike will share
how his team moved from reactive incident response to a data-driven
model that drives measurable safety and business outcomes.
By the end of this session, you’ll walk away with practical insights
to build or strengthen your organization’s SOC — improving
visibility, speed, and confidence in every security decision.

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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
RFID vs. Shoplifting
How Retail Chains Are Using RFID to Prevent the Shoplifting Epidemic?
The face of retail has changed in recent years. Store managers handle
understaffing, supply-chain delays, and a culture of embedded,
organized, and opportunistic theft that has motivated most chains to
adjust store hours, shut down shop locations, or reduce merchandise
items on shelves.
To retaliate against this, more US retailers are increasingly
considering radiofrequency identification not as a one-size-fits-all
silver bullet but as a layer of a data-driven defense.
This editorial looks at the RFID retail implementations of slowing
shoplifting, restoring inventory integrity, and providing stores with
practical operational control over loses.
The Scale Of The Problem
Shrink in retail is still a very grave business issue. The recent
security surveys conducted by the National Retail Federation, compared
to lists of the previous three years, showed that shrink, which was
predominantly caused by outside thefts, cost the industry hundreds of
billions of dollars, with a significant increase in 2019.
Data released by the NRF indicates more incidents, dollar losses
correspond to the shoplifting and organized retail crime, which impact
the strategy and profit margin of the retailer.
What RFID Brings To Loss Prevention (And What
It Does Not)
RFID tags are small, cheap electronic tags that are attached to
things (or their packages). RFID does not need line of sight, as did
barcodes: a reader is able to read many tags simultaneously and
item-level tracking in nearly real time. That ability will provide that
the stores have something they have always been missing, which is the
actual continuous visibility of the location of merchandise.
Importantly, RFID cannot substitute security guards, CCTV, or legal
enforcement. Instead, it is a visibility tool which:
– Exposes item
non-locations or loss;
– Ties motion in certain areas and time addresses (that can be
associated with camera tracks); and
– Allows read exit-portals and automated alarms as tagged items surpass
thresholds without having a point-of-sale occurrence.
Concisely, RFID solutions enhance attribution, situational awareness,
exposing other loss-prevention strategies to be significantly more
effective.
markets.financialcontent.com

27% of Self-Checkout Shoppers Have
Intentionally Stolen
More than 1 in 4 self-checkout shoppers admit they’ve stolen: Survey
LendingTree: 27% of self-checkout
users say they've stolen intentionally
Self-checkout
may save time at the store, but a growing number of shoppers admit
they’ve also used it to steal. Among Americans who’ve used
self-checkout, 27% say they’ve intentionally taken an item without
scanning it — up from 15% in 2023, according to a recent LendingTree
survey.
Millennials (41%) and Gen Z adults (37%) were the most likely to
admit to stealing at self-checkout, while only 2% of Baby Boomers
said the same. Men (38%) were more than twice as likely as women (16%)
to say they’ve done it.
When asked why they stole, 47% said the current financial climate has
made it difficult to afford essentials. Nearly as many (46%) cited
higher prices — including increases they attributed to tariffs — and
many (39%) said today’s prices “feel unfair” or “too high in general.”
About a third of those who’ve stolen said they don’t feel remorseful,
and a similar share (35%) see self-checkout as “unpaid work,” so taking
small items “feels like compensation.”
Interestingly, those with household incomes of $100,000 or more were
the most likely (40%) to say they’ve intentionally taken an item
without scanning it. Just 17% of those making less than $30,000 said the
same.
Self-checkouts have become more common in recent years, but major
retailers have started to pull back.
Aldi shoppers in the Chicago area
recently noticed that some stores had removed their self-checkout
stations, prompting several frustrated customers to post about it on
social media. Dollar General said
last year it had removed self-checkout from 12,000 stores, citing the
“ongoing challenge from shrink,” the industry term for inventory lost to
theft and other non-sales factors.
Target rolled out express
self-checkout in March 2024 at most of its stores, but limits the option
to 10 items or fewer. Meanwhile, Amazon
has largely removed its cashierless Just Walk Out technology from Amazon
Fresh stores.
ktla.com
RELATED: Wealthy Americans are more likely
to steal from self-serve checkouts
Canadian Retailers Launch Anti-Theft
Blitz
Holiday retail theft rises as Sask. police launch December blitz
Retailers
and police across Saskatchewan say shoplifting is becoming more
organized, more violent and far more costly as the holiday season ramps
up — a trend mirrored across the country and prompting stepped-up
enforcement in Saskatoon this month.
According to national data from the Retail Council of Canada,
retail losses have more than doubled over the
past 12 years. Losses were estimated at $4 billion in 20122,
rising to $5 billion in 2018 and jumping to $9.1 billion in 2024.
Rui Rodriguez, the council’s executive advisor for loss prevention, says
it’s not just the number of thefts that are increasing — it’s the
severity.
“We’re seeing more incidents involving weapons, more violence and more
organized retail crime groups,” Rodriguez said. “It’s not just people
stealing for themselves. It’s groups stealing large quantities to
resell online or through illicit markets.”
retailcouncil.org
New DA Makes Fighting ORC a Top
Priority
Los Angeles County DA Hochman Marks First Year in Office with Restored
Accountability and Rebuilding Trust
One year after taking office and restoring prosecutorial discretion and
criminal accountability, Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan J.
Hochman is marking his first 365 days with an
increase in public safety efforts, major takedowns of organized crime
and burglary crews, busting the largest illegal cannabis
operation in Los Angeles County history, aggressive prosecution of human
traffickers, exonerating factually innocent convicted individuals, and
filing thousands of Proposition 36 charges
against repeat retail thieves.
Those are just a few of the initiatives Hochman has successfully
spearheaded since taking his oath of office last December 3.
District Attorney Hochman’s Year-in-Review will offer a more in-depth
look at the Office’s public-safety priorities, including residential
burglary, organized retail theft,
fentanyl poisoning, illegal cannabis and drug operations, human
trafficking, holding public officials accountable, exonerating the
factually innocent, environmental justice and combating street
takeovers.
goldrushcam.com
Canada: Shoplifting in Kingston more than doubles
Bulgaria: Retail Theft Doubles in Some Non-Food Sectors, Retailers Warn
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LP: A Smart Career Move in 2026
Retail Loss Prevention Remains a
Strong Career Path as the Industry Evolves
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retailers continue to adapt to shifting consumer behaviors, changing
store formats, and increasingly sophisticated threats, loss
prevention continues to stand out as a stable and high-growth career
path. While the work has long been associated with shrink reduction
and apprehensions, today’s LP landscape increasingly blends technology,
operations, safety, and data-driven strategy — creating a wider array of
opportunities for those entering the field.
Industry leaders say one of the biggest strengths of loss prevention
careers is the breadth of skills gained on the job. Entry-level
roles often expose employees to investigations, surveillance technology,
audit processes, safety protocols, and store operations. As retailers
deploy AI-enabled analytics, RFID visibility tools, and centralized
monitoring, LP professionals are finding themselves working more closely
with IT, supply chain, and asset protection teams than ever before. This
interdisciplinary environment has made LP a strong foundation for
long-term retail careers, whether employees remain in the field or
transition into other areas of the business.
Another advantage is upward mobility. Many current LP directors and
regional leaders began their careers as store-level associates or
specialists. The job typically offers clear progression paths — from
store LP roles to multi-unit positions, then to corporate strategy or
field leadership. As retailers continue to invest in organized retail
crime mitigation, safety programs, and new technology, the demand for
skilled LP talent remains steady.
LP also offers a variety of work environments. Depending on the
company and structure, professionals may focus on investigations,
digital fraud, training and compliance, incident response, or emerging
technology deployment. This variety allows employees to find a niche
that fits their strengths, whether they prefer fast-paced field work or
analytical corporate roles.
Despite ongoing challenges facing the retail sector, the role of loss
prevention has only grown more central to organizational success.
With a combination of job stability, skill development, and clear
advancement opportunities, LP continues to provide a compelling and
rewarding career path for those looking to make an impact in one of
retail’s most essential functions.
AI Is a Must for Competitive Pricing
Retailers see Agentic AI as critical for pricing, but lack plans
Most retailers think agentic AI will be a necessary component for
competitive pricing, but preparations lag awareness.
Two-in-three (67%) retailers expect to increase their investment in
artificial intelligence technologies during the next two years. And
nearly one-in-three retailers surveyed for a new research study
conducted by Chain Store Age for Revionics, an
Aptos company, anticipate a significant increase. No
respondents foresee a decrease in investment.
Agentic AI looms large
Two-in-three respondents said that the use of
AI agents for pricing will be essential to staying competitive by
2030. But while the majority of respondents say agentic AI is critical,
only 21% have a clear roadmap for it.
"The next pricing frontier is agentic AI,” said Matthew Pavich,
senior director, strategy & innovation, Revionics. "While retail
executives agree that AI agents are key to future success, our report
highlights a readiness gap. This is where strategic partnership becomes
critical."
chainstoreage.com
Retail Job Cuts Up 139% YTD
Job Cuts Climb as Labor Economy Workforce Trades Down
A trio of labor reports, spanning government, private sector data and
PYMNTS Intelligence findings, shows that uncertainty is rising among
hourly workers even as their spending continues. Jobless claims are at a
three-year low, but companies are planning more cuts, and wages
for the 60 million workers who make up the Labor Economy have slipped.
Retail cuts increased from 2,431 in October to 3,290 in November.
In terms of year-to-date cuts, the retail
sector has announced 91,954 job cuts, up 139% from the same period last
year. The food sector has cut 34,165 jobs, up 26% from
last year.
PYMNTS Intelligence’s Wage to Wallet Index identifies the Labor Economy
as roughly 60 million workers earning $25 an hour or less. These are
hourly and frontline workers in logistics, healthcare support,
construction, food service and retail. They make up one-third of the
workforce and account for approximately 15% of total consumer spending
in the United States.
Even small shifts in their income influence spending in local
services and retail.
pymnts.com
Dollar General announces 450 new US stores opening in 2026 as part of
expansion
Retailer also plans thousands of remodels
and a continued push into Mexico
How a 'continuous peak' is rewriting retail’s biggest season
Ulta Beauty: Tariff-driven price increases accelerated in Q3
Last week's #1 article --
Retail Crime Continues to Surge
Despite Police Data
Amid shopping season, UF experts warn retail theft is growing more
sophisticated
The Loss Prevention Research Council
and its affiliated UF researchers offer evidence-based insights as
retailers report rising crime and safety concerns
With the busiest shopping season of the year approaching, new findings
from the National Retail Federation’s
Impact of Retail Theft and Violence 2025 report — developed by
the University of Florida’s SaferPlaces Lab and the
Loss Prevention
Research Council — show retailers are facing increasingly
complex and technology-driven threats. UF researchers say early
preparation, better data and stronger collaboration will be essential as
stores brace for heavier foot traffic and heightened safety risks.
Despite public reports that retail theft is decreasing, Read Hayes,
Ph.D., a UF research scientist and director of the LPRC at
UF Innovate,
said retailer surveys tell a different story:
Incidents of shoplifting, organized retail crime, online fraud and other
external theft continue to rise, even as some law enforcement statistics
appear flat or declining. The gap, he said, reflects how much
crime goes unreported or unrecorded.
“Retailers have always had a difficult time reporting much of their
crime, and if you look only at police data, like calls for service
or arrests, it can look like retail crime is flat or even slightly
down,” he said. “But when we survey retailers, who are the actual
crime victims, they consistently report year-over-year increases in
theft and violence.”
Criminal groups are also becoming more sophisticated. Hayes said
offenders are increasingly using technology to defeat protective
systems, disrupt cameras and identify vulnerable stores. They also rely
heavily on social media platforms such as TikTok and Reddit to
coordinate attacks and share tactics.
“It’s a little disconcerting how much criminals rely on social media
now to scout stores, map out easy targets, learn from each other or just
plain brag about how they did it,” he said.
LPRC scientists monitor social media signals to help retailers and law
enforcement understand emerging threats — not in real time, Hayes said,
but to help build best practices organizations can use to defend
themselves.
Safety remains retailers’ top concern, Hayes said. LPRC’s
latest report, developed in collaboration with the security
technology company Verkada, found that frontline retail workers
report feeling less safe than ever, a trend that typically
intensifies during the holiday rush. Rising incidents of in-store
violence, limited law enforcement support in some areas and increased
guest-related confrontations are pushing retailers to reassess how they
protect both employees and customers.
news.ufl.edu
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'Tis the Season for Cyberattacks
Retail Cybersecurity Faces Heightened
Risks During the Holiday Season
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retailers manage the busiest shopping period of the year, cybersecurity
teams are bracing for a parallel surge in digital threats. The
holiday season consistently brings elevated transaction volumes,
expanded staffing needs, and accelerated promotional activity, creating
conditions that cybercriminals routinely exploit.
Historically, the weeks between Thanksgiving and New Year’s
generate a significant uptick in online and in-store transactions,
stretching IT and asset protection teams across multiple systems. High
sales velocity often requires rapid system updates, temporary
integrations with third-party vendors, and increased use of mobile
point-of-sale devices — all of which can widen the attack surface. Even
small configuration errors or delayed patching can create
vulnerabilities that threat actors quickly target.
Phishing campaigns, credential-harvesting attempts, and ransomware
remain the most prominent risks during this time of year. Security
analysts say retailers are especially susceptible to email-based attacks
directed at seasonal employees who may be unfamiliar with company
protocols. Short-term staff members often receive fast-tracked
onboarding, increasing the risk that malicious links or fraudulent
invoices slip through standard defenses. Additionally, attackers
frequently mimic shipping notifications, holiday promotions, and vendor
communications to capture login credentials.
E-commerce platforms also face heightened pressure. Spikes in web
traffic can mask bot-driven attacks aimed at card-testing, account
takeovers, and distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attempts. Fraud
teams report that cybercriminals often use the holiday rush to blend
unauthorized transactions into legitimate high-volume activity, making
detection more difficult. Retailers that rely heavily on third-party
payment processors or drop-ship partnerships may encounter additional
visibility challenges when monitoring for anomalies.
Despite these risks, industry experts emphasize that planning and
preparedness can significantly reduce exposure. Many retailers are
deploying multifactor authentication across more systems, enhancing
endpoint detection, and conducting targeted refresher training for
seasonal employees. Others are implementing stricter vendor-access
controls and increasing real-time monitoring of e-commerce traffic.
As consumer spending accelerates this month, cybersecurity leaders
say vigilance is essential. The combination of increased digital
activity and operational complexity makes the holiday season one of the
most challenging periods for protecting retail networks. Retailers that
proactively reinforce safeguards stand the best chance of maintaining
secure operations throughout the final stretch of the year.
New AI Guidance for Companies
US, allies urge critical infrastructure operators to carefully plan and
oversee AI use
New guidance attempts to temper
companies’ enthusiasm for the latest exciting technology.
The U.S. government and key Western allies on Wednesday published
guidance to help critical infrastructure operators safely use
artificial intelligence.
The guidance document describes four key principles for integrating
AI into operational technology, detailing the issues that
infrastructure operators should consider as they adopt AI. The advice
covers general risk awareness, need and risk assessment, AI model
governance, and operational fail-safes.
CISA, the FBI and the NSA produced the guidance in partnership
with cybersecurity agencies from Australia, Canada, Germany, the
Netherlands, New Zealand and the U.K.
The document urges companies to understand AI’s unique risks, educate
their employees about using automated systems, develop clear
justifications for using AI, establish strong security expectations with
their vendors and carefully evaluate the challenges of integrating AI
into existing operational technology. In addition, the document
says, companies should develop clear AI use and accountability
procedures, thoroughly test their AI systems before implementing them
and continuously validate the AI’s compliance with regulatory and safety
requirements.
cybersecuritydive.com
How Will the Administration Fight AI
Hackers?
Lawmakers question White House on strategy for countering AI-fueled
hacks
The Trump administration has said
little about how it will prevent hackers from abusing AI.
A pair of U.S. senators wants to know how the government is tracking
and responding to hackers’ use of AI platforms to conduct
cyberattacks.
“The emerging threat to U.S. cybersecurity posed by foreign
adversaries deploying autonomous AI systems requires a robust response
from your office and other federal agencies,” Sens. Maggie Hassan,
D-N.H., and Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, wrote in a Tuesday letter to National
Cyber Director Sean Cairncross.
The bipartisan letter comes several weeks after Anthropic revealed that
Chinese government-linked hackers had manipulated the company’s Claude
platform into breaching companies and government agencies around the
world. The attack, which Anthropic called “the first documented case
of a large-scale cyberattack executed without substantial human
intervention,” has exacerbated worries within the security community
about the growing offensive capabilities of AI tools.
cybersecuritydive.com
As AI fuels new cyber threats, can dealerships and vendors stay ahead?
China-nexus actor targets multiple US entities with Brickstorm malware |
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Holiday Shopping Fraud Surge
Visa Reports 3X Leap in Fraud Attempts on Black Friday
Visa blocked 280% more suspected fraud attempts on Black Friday
in the United Kingdom this year compared to last year and 140% more
across Europe.
Compared to the previous Friday (Nov. 21), the company blocked 63%
more suspected fraud in the U.K. and 40% more across Europe, it said
in a Thursday (Dec. 4) press release emailed to PYMNTS.
“Black Friday still remains a prime time for retailers — and
especially for online shopping,” David Capezza, interim chief risk
officer, Visa Europe, said in the release. “However, where there is
money to be spent, fraudsters will always try to take advantage — which
is why Visa’s network never takes a day off.”
PYMNTS reported Friday (Nov. 28) that holiday spending trends raise
the risk of fraud because the combination of higher digital spending
and heightened price sensitivity is ideal for scammers.
It was reported in September that online fraud losses in the European
Union are approaching $5 billion per year, with the rise of
artificial intelligence making it harder to spot scams.
In the United States, 3 in 10 consumers or members of their
households have lost money in a scam in the last five years,
according to the PYMNTS Intelligence and Featurespace collaboration “The
Impact of Financial Scams on Consumers’ Finances and Banking Habits.”
Visa identified five types of scams that are common during the
holiday season, according to its
Holiday Threats Report released Friday.
These include fake shopping sites that pose as well-known stores and
steal shoppers’ card information, package delivery scams that send
fake “delivery problem” texts to steal recipients’ information, “extra
holiday cash” job scams that make fake job offers, travel fraud that
uses fake travel sites and phishing emails to target travelers, and
holiday charity scams that seek donations to phony charities, according
to the report.
Over the past five years, Visa has invested $12 billion in technology
and infrastructure, including cybersecurity and fraud prevention,
per the press release.
pymnts.com
"Returnless Refund' Options
Amazon upgrades tools for seller returns
The e-commerce giant introduced
another way for sellers to determine “keep it” returns eligibility and
launched a dashboard with returns insights.
Amazon sellers can now
adjust their products’ eligibility for “returnless” refund options
by price, the e-commerce giant announced Nov. 20.
The new tool allows sellers to set a maximum item price between $1 and
$75 to determine which products can qualify for refunds without
customers needing to return the item, a program known as
Returnless Resolutions. Sellers can also enable Returnless
Resolutions on a product-by-product basis.
Additionally, all Amazon sellers can now tap into a returns and
inventory recovery dashboard, the company said Nov. 12. The
dashboard offers merchants information on top return reasons,
recommendations to reduce return rates, and metrics such as recovered
value of returned units.
retaildive.com
Ashley offers AI-powered shopping experience |
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Cleveland, OH: Colombian National sentenced for nationwide jewelry theft
ring
A Colombian National was sentenced in a nationwide jewelry theft ring
that targeted mall-based stores and kiosks across the country, including
a business in Mentor, Ohio. Jorge Giovanni Escobar Gonzalez, 41, was
sentenced to 57 months in prison, according to a news release from the
U.S. Department of Justice. Escobar Gonzalez is a citizen of Colombia
but was last living in Kissimmee, Florida. According to court documents
and statements made in court, from May 2023 through April 2024, Escobar
Gonzalez and several other Colombian nationals burglarized jewelry
stores and kiosks in malls and then transported the stolen property or
the proceeds from it across state lines. Before the burglaries, Escobar
Gonzalez and his associates surveilled the stores, and Escobar Gonzalez
once posed as a customer to assess the store’s security measures.
Investigators say Escobar Gonzalez was one of the thieves who broke into
the stores and display cases while other co-conspirators served as
lookouts. To date, none of the stolen jewelry has been recovered by law
enforcement. On April 9, Escobar Gonzalez pleaded guilty to interstate
transportation of stolen property. He has been detained since May 19,
2024, when he was arrested in Florida on state charges related to
another jewelry burglary.
wkbn.com
Burbank, CA: $100,000 in Pokémon, sports cards stolen during burglary
A trading card shop in Burbank says that they were hit for more than
$100,000 in stolen Pokémon and sports cards during an overnight burglary
earlier this week. LA Sports Cards, located in the 1900 block of W.
Olive Avenue, had the front door of their shop broken by a crowbar
before a trio of burglars used power tools to bypass a bolted metal gate
on Dec. 2. "Total loss is many six figures," said Kiet Nguyen, the store
owner. "The perpetrators were in and out in two minutes. Quick."
cbsnews.com
Citrus Heights, CA: Smash-And-Grab Crew Cleans Out Citrus Heights Thrift
Shop Of $50K In Jewelry
Citrus Heights detectives are hunting a smash-and-grab crew that broke
into a thrift shop and stole about $50,000 in gold and silver jewelry.
Surveillance stills show at least three men rifling through display
cases before fleeing in an SUV. Investigators hope the images will help
neighbors or dash-cam footage identify the suspects.
hoodline.com
Waterbury, CT: 2 men allegedly steal $10,000 worth of jewelry from Brass
Mill Center in Waterbury
Police are actively investigating an alleged jewelry store theft that
took place on Saturday night in Waterbury. Police said around 8:31 p.m.,
two masked men wearing black entered Banter Jewelry inside the Brass
Mill Center shopping mall. The men allegedly shattered the glass jewelry
cases with a hammer and stole approximately $10,000 worth of jewelry
from the kiosk before fleeing the mall. No injuries were reported,
according to police.
wtnh.com
Baltimore, MD: Police investigate unarmed robbery at Baltimore clothing
store involving seven suspects
Baltimore police are investigating after seven people stole items from a
DTLR clothing store on Saturday. During the evening of Dec. 6, officers
responded to the store located on Sinclair Lane for an unarmed robbery.
Seven unidentified people ran into the store, took clothing items and
then fled the area on foot.
foxbaltimore.com
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Shootings & Deaths
Saginaw County, MI: Update: Man receives life in prison for Family Dollar murder
in 2024
A Saginaw man professed his innocence on being sentenced to spend the rest of
his life in prison for the brazen execution of a man inside a local dollar
store. It’s a fate the presiding judge said was more than justified for the
“calculating and ruthless” murderer. A shackled Ronald L. Kinchen Jr., 39, stood
before Saginaw County Circuit Judge Darnell Jackson for sentencing on Thursday,
Dec. 4. A jury in October convicted Kinchen of first-degree murder and eight
firearm-related charges in connection with the June 2024 killing of 44-year-old
Omar R. Morrow.
mlive.com
Santa Ana, CA: Stabbing victim found dead in Santa Ana restaurant's drive-thru
A man was found dead with multiple stab wounds in the drive-thru of a restaurant
in Santa Ana on Saturday, authorities confirmed. According to the Santa Ana
Police Department, reports came in at about 4:40 p.m. when a man was found on
the ground in the drive-thru of a Pollo Campero located at 2320 S Bristol
Street. The man was suffering from multiple stab wounds, police said. He was
transported to a local hospital, where he was later pronounced dead. He's yet to
be identified publicly. The death is under investigation. Authorities said no
suspect information was available as of Sunday morning.
cbsnews.com
Fort Worth, TX: Fort Worth Police arrest suspect in connection with shooting at
Hulen Mall
A man was arrested after allegedly shooting and injuring a man in a parking lot
just outside Hulen Mall in Fort Worth, Saturday afternoon, police say. Fort
Worth police spokesperson Cynthia Wood said police were called to the shooting
in the 4700 block of S. Hulen Street around 2 p.m. Dec. 6 and directed to a
grassy area between Macy's and Red Robin, where they found a man with a gunshot
wound to one of his legs. An off-duty officer and off-duty emergency personnel
were with the man when Fort Worth fire crews and EMS responded to provide
medical assistance. "Early details in the investigation show that the victim was
walking outside toward the building when a suspect pulled a gun and shot him,"
Wood said. "We can share both that the victim and the suspect are adult males
and it is believed that they know each other." The man who was shot was taken to
a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries, she said. No other injuries
are reported at this time. Wood said police are still working to determine the
identity of the suspect. Sunday, Fort Worth Police Chief Eddie Garcia announced
the arrest of a suspect in connection with the shooting. Kyonte Mitchell, 21,
was arrested Dec. 6 and was charged with aggravated assault with a deadly
weapon, police said.
wfaa.com
Montgomery, AL: Shooting at Eastdale Mall under investigation
An investigation is underway after a shooting at an area mall Saturday evening,
according to the Montgomery Police Department. Officers responded to the 1000
block of Eastdale Mall on reports of shots being fired. Investigators determined
there were no injuries or property damage. A preliminary investigation shows the
shooting stemmed from an altercation between juveniles. There is no known
suspect or motive as this investigation continues.
wsfa.com
Las Vegas, NV: Las Vegas police investigating shooting in parking lot at Boca
Park
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police are investigating a shooting that occurred
Thursday evening in a parking lot of the Boca Park shopping center. The shooting
happened in the 700 block of South Rampart Boulevard, according to police.
Officers were in the area conducting a follow-up on a wanted suspect when they
heard a gunshot. Police later found a person with a gunshot wound who is being
treated by medical personnel.
ktnv.com
Pittsburgh, PA: Man charged after 24 shots fired during fight outside Springdale
restaurant; no injuries
Houston, TX: Houston Police investigate Circle K parking lot shooting
Baltimore, MD: Suspect in custody after juvenile shot near Essex liquor store
Brooklyn Center, MN: Police investigate shooting outside restaurant; one man
wounded
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Newark, DE: Police seeking suspect in Walgreens Armed Robbery
An investigation is underway, officials said, after two workers were bound with
zip ties by an armed robber in an attack that happened at a pharmacy in Newark,
Delaware. According to the Delaware State Police, officers responded to a
Walgreens pharmacy along the 2700 block of Pulaski Highway, in Newark, Del.,
after an armed robbery occurred there at about 8 a.m. on Sunday morning. During
this incident, police said, an armed man -- described as having curly hair and
wearing dark clothing and a black mask at the time the crime occurred -- entered
the business and produced a handgun. The man, officials said, approached an
employee and directed them to the back of the store. In a rear office, police
said, another employee was counting money at the time. Officials said the gunman
tied up both employees with zip ties before he is alleged to have stolen an
undisclosed amount of cash from the counter.
nbcphiladelphia.com
South Windsor, CT: Suspect in South Windsor Target armed robbery sought
An armed robbery took place Saturday at about 2 p.m. at the Target on Buckland
Hills Drive and the suspect remains at large, local police said. The incident
apparently targeted a specific individual, according to South Windsor Police
Department. The suspect was armed with a firearm and an extended magazine during
the incident, police said.
ctpost.com
Albany, GA: Suspect in Stop & Shop armed robbery taken into custody
Waikiki, HI: Arrest made in apparent armed robbery at Waikiki hotel
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•
C-Store – San Luis
Obispo County, CA - Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Pismo Beach,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Cottonwood
Heights, UT – Robbery
•
Clothing - Baltimore,
MD - Robbery
•
Collectables –
Burbank, CA – Burglary
•
Grocery – Albany, GA –
Armed Robbery
•
Hotel - Waikiki, HI
Armed Robbery
• Jewelry – Flint, MI – Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry - Citrus
Heights, CA - Burglary
•
Jewelry – Waterbury,
CT – Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Glasgow, DE
– Armed Robbery
•
Target – South
Windsor, CT – Armed Robbery
•
Walmart – Leesburg, FL
– Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 2 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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