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Jason
Tulinski promoted to Senior Corporate Security Manager - North
America for Zebra Technologies
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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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What’s Happening at OpenEye's Booth at ISC West?
OpenEye
will be at ISC West in Las Vegas from March 25-27
ISC West is the leading security and public safety event in the U.S.,
and one of the best ways to see
OpenEye’s
surveillance solutions up close.
Use code ISCW26CIP335 for a complimentary Exhibit Hall pass
until March 12, or register for a discounted pass of $100 from March
13-24.
See OpenEye's latest AI-powered search and alert features that will help
automate operations and security for businesses. Stop by for exciting
giveaways and more—there’s lots to be seen
at booth #14039.
Learn
more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Lenient Laws, Rising Retail Theft
Policy Debate Intensifies Over Impact of Lenient Theft Laws on Retail
Crime
By
the D&D Daily Staff
As organized retail crime (ORC) continues to challenge retailers
nationwide, policymakers and industry stakeholders are increasingly
debating whether certain “soft on crime” approaches may be contributing
to the problem.
Retailers and loss prevention professionals have pointed to a rise in
repeat offenses, particularly in jurisdictions where theft below a
certain dollar threshold is classified as a misdemeanor or subject to
reduced penalties. Critics argue that these policies, while often
designed to reduce incarceration rates and prioritize serious offenses,
may unintentionally lower the perceived risk for offenders.
Industry groups have reported that some ORC networks exploit these
thresholds by directing individuals to steal goods in amounts that avoid
felony charges. In these cases, stolen merchandise is often resold
through online marketplaces or informal networks, creating a steady
revenue stream for organized groups.
Law enforcement officials in several regions have also noted
challenges in pursuing repeat offenders when penalties are limited or
when prosecution thresholds are not met. This can result in
individuals cycling through the system without significant deterrence,
according to some reports.
However, advocates of criminal justice reform caution that the issue
is more complex. They point to broader factors such as economic
conditions, addiction, and the growth of online resale platforms as key
drivers of retail crime. Some also argue that focusing solely on
penalties may not address the root causes of theft.
Retailers are responding by investing in enhanced loss prevention
strategies, including data sharing, improved surveillance technologies,
and partnerships with law enforcement and prosecutors. At the same
time, several states have introduced or passed legislation aimed at
strengthening penalties for organized retail crime and improving
coordination across jurisdictions.
As ORC evolves, the debate over enforcement, deterrence, and reform
is expected to remain a central issue for both policymakers and the
retail industry.
Retail Crime Takes Center Stage in the
UK
UK: Fight against retail crime highlighted during BCRP Awareness Week
Last week (16-23 March) marked the
second Business Crime Reduction Partnership (BCRP) Awareness Week,
focusing on reducing retail crime and the anti-social behaviour linked
to it.
Nationally,
BCRPs work closely with retailers, hospitality and night‑time economy
businesses, police, police & crime commissioners, local authorities,
community safety teams and other agencies.
By sharing intelligence on prolific offenders, deterring anti-social
behaviour and supporting police investigations, they help reduce crime
and keep both businesses and the public safe
In Sussex, BCRPs operate across the county. Last week (16-23 March),
they all visibly stepped up activity to highlight their work tackling
business and retail crime.
Throughout the week, dedicated operations ran countywide and the
Sussex Police Business Crime Team engaged with businesses across
Brighton & Hove, Eastbourne and Chichester, to encourage reporting and
better understand the barriers facing retailers.
Speaking about the importance of the week, PCC Katy Bourne said: “BCRPs
play a crucial role in linking businesses and retailers with the police
to prevent crime. Shop theft is not just a matter of lost goods and
the cost to the retailer, it can come with increased anti-social
behaviour, violence towards shopworkers and customers retreating from
the high street.”
“That’s why we take retail crime seriously in Sussex and why I’m
delighted to report a 69% decrease in violence and assaults against
shop staff in Sussex during 2024–2025 – a clear result of partners
working effectively every day.” talkingretail.com
Anti-Theft Self-Checkout Rules Spark
Backlash
Shoppers threaten to abandon carts over self-checkout changes as
customers slam Walmart’s ‘12-item rule’
FURIOUS shoppers have threatened to
abandon their shopping carts over self-checkout changes.
It comes as stores including Walmart and Costco could soon be forced
to ban shoppers from buying over 15 items at self-checkout.
The ban is part of a proposed New York anti-theft law that
includes a series of self-checkout changes lawmakers say will also make
checkouts fairer. One raging customer said her Walmart branch had
limited all self-checkouts to customers buying fewer than 12 items.
New York City council members introduced the new law in an attempt to
tackle retail theft. The crime currently costs the industry a
whopping $100billion a year.
Under the proposed law change, supermarkets and pharmacies across the
Big Apple would be forced to roll out a maximum 15-item limit on
self-checkouts and increase staffing ratios on the self-service
kiosks.
It stipulates that one staff member must be present for every three
active self-checkout registers. Retailers that don’t obey the new
rules would be slapped daily fines of at least $100.
Democrat Councilwoman Amanda Farias said the controversial item limit,
already in place at self-checkouts in other states, is to “maintain
safety, accountability, and fairness in the checkout process”.
Target has already begun experimenting with the policy after
testing a 10-item limit at its self-checkout lanes in around 200 stores
in 2023 and then rolling it out nationwide in 2024.
the-sun.com
Law Enforcement, DA Crack Down on
Retail Theft
California's 'Tale of Two Propositions'
If you steal in Stanislaus County, you will be arrested
Stanislaus County District Attorney Jeff Laugero has made it a priority
to go after retail thieves. And a Fresno woman, who was arrested here on
theft charges, summed up the DA’s progress rather succinctly: “I
should not have hit up this county; it takes way too long in court.”
That’s precisely the point. There are no more slaps on the wrists
here. If you steal in Stanislaus County, you will be arrested, and
you will end up in front of a judge.
The issue of retail theft in California is really the tale of two
propositions: Prop. 36, passed by voters in 2014, and Prop. 47,
passed 10 years later.
Essentially, Proposition 47 made most types of retail theft
totaling $950 or less a misdemeanor. And authorities could not aggregate
the totals, meaning you could steal $950 worth of goods on Monday, and
then do it again on Tuesday — both misdemeanors.
It turned shoplifting into an ATM for criminals.
Proposition 36 passed with 68 percent of the vote, providing
stricter punishments for repeat offenders, those committing
smash-and-grabs, and organized rings. Perhaps equally important, Prop.
36 incentivized treatment for defendants suffering from addiction by
creating the treatment mandated felony, offering treatment as an
alternative to incarceration.
Laugero sees that as a key component.
turlockjournal.com
ICYMI: “Violent crime plummets across major
U.S. cities”
New data shows which vehicle is stolen the most in New York
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Boosting Workplace Safety with AI
AI Turns Safety Observations Into Action
New Verdantix, Quentic survey finds
65% of sustainability leaders are using AI for predictive analytics to
spot patterns earlier.
A majority of safety leaders, 84%, have expanded AI adoption as a top
priority over the next two years.
This is according to a new survey,
Safety Management and Sustainability Trends Report: AI’s Transformative
Impact on Safety and Sustainability Over The Next Two Years,
from Quentic, a solutions provider and Verdandix.
“This year’s findings show that AI belongs in daily safety and ESG
work where it saves time, strengthens investigations, and turns
observations into action," said Florian Lichtwald, operating
partner, Quentic, in a statement.
Highlights from the survey include. What the
data shows:
AI climbs the agenda: 82% expect budgets to rise.
Automation where it matters: 45% are very likely to invest in
AI-based reporting automation, signaling demand for faster, audit-ready
outputs.
From pilots to practice: 57% of EHS leaders and 65% of
sustainability leaders already use or pilot predictive analytics to spot
patterns earlier.
Keep people in the loop: 70% of ESG and 52% of EHS leaders prefer
co-pilot approaches that support staff while preserving human oversight.
Persistent gaps: Safety culture (61%) and risk visibility (57%)
top the list of concerns, with regulatory and legal risk rated very
important by 45%. Many (39%) say they are only “somewhat ready” on data
and want better governance and integration.
ehstoday.com
'Surveillance Pricing' Bills Explode
Across the Country
Grocers face state and federal lawmakers’ scrutiny over ‘surveillance’
pricing
A slew of recently introduced bills
aim to restrict how retailers use consumer data to make pricing
decisions and some even ban electronic shelf labels.
As grocers adjust their pricing practices to remain competitive,
many consumers and politicians are raising concerns that dynamic pricing
— or surveillance pricing, as critics refer to it — could put further
strain on consumers’ wallets.
Last year saw more than 100 price transparency state bills introduced
across 33 states and Washington, D.C., according to MultiState, a
state and local government relations company. And the momentum behind
efforts to bar grocers from using dynamic pricing has not slowed down in
the new year.
This push from states to establish price transparency legislation
comes as more retailers equip their stores with electronic shelf labels
that allow them to update prices quickly. Walmart, for example,
announced earlier this month that it aims to bring ESLs to all of its
locations within the next year.
In February, the United Food and Commercial Workers International Union
launched a national campaign to ban the “predatory practice of
‘surveillance pricing,’ target the encroachment of AI-driven
technology in grocery stores, and deliver fair prices for families while
preserving good, union grocery jobs.”
retaildive.com
High-Income Shoppers Going to Dollar
Stores
Wealthy consumers are heading to dollar stores
Inflation pushed dollar stores to
expand their price points. Higher-income shoppers, pressured by the same
headwind, came along for the ride.
Dollar store executives have been touting gains with higher income
shoppers over the past few quarters. That’s a customer acquisition
win several years in the making and tracks with broader habits among
higher income consumers.
Inflationary environments where there are job cuts and other
macroeconomic pressures might influence these consumers to see a
retailer such as Dollar Tree as a more affordable option, the professor
added.
An inflationary environment is what drove discount stores to target a
new income cohort a few years ago.
retaildive.com
Simon Property Group Announces the Passing of David Simon
It is with profound sorrow and immense respect that the Board of
Directors of Simon Property Group, Inc. announces the passing of
David Simon, the Company's visionary Chairman of the Board, Chief
Executive Officer and President — the singular leader who built
Simon Property Group into the largest and most admired retail real
estate company in the world. He was 64 years old.
Mr. Simon passed away peacefully on March 22, 2026 surrounded by his
family, after a courageous battle with cancer. The Board of Directors,
the Company's employees, and the entire global Simon community mourn
this immeasurable loss.
Simon’s board of directors has appointed Eli Simon as the new CEO and
president and of the company. In addition, he will continue as chief
operating officer and director.
prnewswire.com
Torrid shutters 151 stores, more closures expected
Survey: Price, value driving grocery spending changes
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If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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Shopping Cart
Ordinances Are Escalating
—What Retailers Need to Know Now
Shopping cart management has historically been regulated at the municipal
level, with cities nationwide enforcing their own ordinances. California’s
decision to implement a statewide ordinance in 2026 amplified the issue,
reflecting a growing willingness by governments to shift responsibility and
cost back to retailers.
California Raises the Stakes with SB-753
Signed
into law in October 2025, California's
Senate Bill 753 updated how shopping carts found off retail property are
handled statewide. Under SB-753, local governments now have expanded
authority to retrieve and return abandoned carts and charge retailers fees
for that service. Municipalities may also issue fines for carts left
off-premises and impound or dispose of unclaimed carts after defined
timelines, provided proper notice and documentation requirements are met.
What was once treated primarily as a local nuisance issue is now a formal
compliance matter with financial and operational implications. Each stray
cart can trigger retrieval fees, fines, and added administrative
burden—especially for retailers with large cart fleets.
Beyond California: Cities Continue to Act
California is not alone. Cities across the U.S. continue to strengthen local
enforcement, including Phoenix, which recently enacted a new shopping cart
ordinance aimed at reducing abandoned carts in public spaces. Phoenix's
ordinance places responsibility on retailers to prevent carts from leaving
store property and allows the city to recover costs associated with cart
retrieval and enforcement.
Phoenix's ordinance currently focuses on certification, cart containment
measures, and retailer accountability—underscoring a broader trend toward
prevention rather than reactive retrieval.
Why This Matters to Retailers
-
Regulatory complexity is increasing. Retailers must
navigate a growing patchwork of city and state requirements.
-
Costs add up quickly. Retrieval fees, fines, and labor
strain margins over time.
-
Manual recovery doesn’t scale. Reactive cart retrieval
becomes harder as enforcement expands.
-
Community relationships are impacted. Abandoned carts
remain a visible issue for municipalities and residents.
How Gatekeeper Systems Helps
Gatekeeper Systems' CartControl cart containment and management
solutions are designed to prevent carts from leaving store premises in the
first place. By stopping cart loss before it happens, retailers can reduce
exposure to fines and retrieval fees, simplify compliance across
jurisdictions, and maintain cleaner operations—helping them stay ahead as
shopping cart ordinances continue to evolve nationwide.
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Retail Supply Chain Under Attack
Threat Actors Target the Entire Retail Supply Chain
A report by Black Kite found that threat actors treat wholesalers and
retailers as one organization, as their level of connection makes
them particularly vulnerable.
"When we think about the supply chain, we often picture logistics and
warehouses, but today the real threat is the expanded ecosystem,"
said Ferhat Dikbiyik, Chief Research & Intelligence Officer, Black Kite.
"The bottom line is that wholesale and retail's greatest risk is their
shared supply chain, and as we have seen time and time again, just one
vulnerability in a common vendor can create systemic impact affecting
both simultaneously. The era of checklist compliance is over. Third
party risk management programs must evolve by securing the weak points
across every partner in the ecosystem."
One of the report's findings is the widespread presence of compromised
credentials, meaning that initial access has already been granted to a
majority of the industry. In fact, over 70% of major retailers,
nearly 60% of wholesalers, and 52% of the supply chain have exposed
credentials.
Additional key findings include:
-
17% of retail ransomware
victims had revenue over $1B, demonstrating that threat actors
prioritize ”big game hunting” in the retail sector — a specific target for
high-value extortion.
-
39% of wholesale ransomware
victims had revenue in the mid-market range of $20M–$100M as attackers
play a 'volume game' on smaller enterprises.
-
42% of critical supply chain
vendors are exposed to at least one vulnerability from the CISA Known
Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) Catalog, listing flaws currently under
active attack.
-
Two vendor categories -
Professional & Technical Services (793) and Information (705) — totaling
1,498 companies — dominate the supply chain, outnumbering physical
categories by a significant margin.
Read the report.
Synthetic Identity Fraud Difficult to
Detect
Fraudsters Build Synthetic Identities That Fool Traditional KYC Checks
In the early days of digital banking, identity fraud largely meant
stolen credentials: a breached password, a compromised Social
Security number or a copied credit card.
But digital banking is no longer early innings, and the growing
category of identity fraud firms are facing is fundamentally different.
Instead of stealing identities, criminals are manufacturing them.
“Synthetic identity fraud is different because the identity itself is
engineered, not stolen,” Henry Patishman, executive VP, identity
verification solutions at Regula, told PYMNTS.
“Frauds combine real data elements, like real SSNs for instance, with
fabricated attributes and increasingly AI-generated artifacts. It’s
a combination of some real and some fake data, and that creates a
synthetic identity,” Patishman said.
This blending of legitimate and fabricated signals allows synthetic
identities to pass through verification systems designed to confirm
individual data points. The fraud doesn’t happen in a single moment.
Instead, it unfolds slowly.
The delayed nature of the fraud makes it particularly difficult to
detect. Unlike traditional identity theft, there is often no
immediate victim whose complaint triggers an investigation.
pymnts.com
Cyberattacks Related to Iran Conflict
Lockheed Martin targeted in alleged breach by pro-Iran hacktivist
The
group is demanding millions of dollars to not sell the information to
U.S. adversaries.
Lockheed Martin was the target of an attack by an alleged pro-Iran
hacktivist, which claims to have a large trove of data that it is
threatening to sell on the dark web, Cybersecurity Dive has learned.
The threat actor, tracked as APT Iran, claims to have stolen 375
terabytes of data from the aerospace and defense industry company,
according to information from multiple security researchers, including
Flashpoint and Check Point Software.
The group claims to have copies of blueprints of F-35 aircraft,
which is America’s most advanced jet fighter, and other corporate
information, according to Flashpoint.
The group has since posted additional claims demanding more than $400
million in return for not selling the information to adversaries of
the U.S., according to information from Halcyon.
cybersecuritydive.com
Stryker confirms cyberattack is contained and restoration underway
Network edge devices still widely used after reaching end-of-life status |
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Scandal Tied to Amazon Data Centers
How a small Oregon company’s dealings with Amazon created a scandal
Four public officials, three other civic leaders, one company and one
nonprofit are facing civil charges related to Amazon’s huge cluster
of data centers in tiny Morrow County (population: 12,000).
The Oregon Department of Justice alleges that a local fiber-optic
provider, Windwave Communications, sold in 2018 for far less than it was
truly worth because the sellers and buyers hid the value of
Windwave’s business serving Amazon. Before 2018, Windwave had been
owned by a nonprofit called Inland Development Corp.
Four of Windwave’s buyers were public officials who helped attract
Amazon to Morrow County with land sales and enormous tax breaks. The
four officials sometimes acted while they were in the process of buying
the fiber-optic provider and sometimes acted after they had acquired
Windwave.
Windwave sold for $2.6 million in 2018. The Department of Justice says
Windwave was really worth at least $9.5 million, more than triple its
sale price. They allege Windwave’s buyers were “established community
leaders who abused their authority and breached the public trust for
their personal financial gain” because they didn’t account for the
value of the company’s business with Amazon when they proposed the sale
price.
The defendants note that they presented their plans to the Department of
Justice before the 2018 sale and the state did not object at the time.
They argue it’s not fair to revisit the case, now, simply because
Windwave outperformed its forecasts.
“According to a plan they formulated in private,” the state alleges, “a
small cadre of insiders” arranged to buy Windwave from the nonprofit
they ran. Windwave’s buyers were five current and former members of
Inland’s nonprofit board. Three of them quit the board right before
Windwave’s sale and appointed their replacements, then asked the newly
appointed board to approve the deal.
Two of Windwave’s buyers served on the Port of Morrow commission. One
was the port’s director. A fourth buyer was on the Morrow County
commission. Those four were all involved in negotiating property tax
breaks for Amazon’s local data centers. Those incentives have saved
Amazon more than $430 million since 2017.
oregonlive.com
Amazon's Rural Delivery Push
How Amazon Is Bringing Fast Delivery to Rural America
The e-commerce giant is building
shipping hubs in the U.S. hinterlands as it looks to reduce reliance on
the U.S. Postal Service
In dozens of thinly populated regions across the country, Amazon
is building new delivery hubs to deliver packages in around two days.
That might not seem especially rapid at a time when the e-commerce giant
is introducing one-hour delivery in some areas, but residents of some
far-flung Montana hamlets were used to waiting up to a week for their
orders.
The effort helps Amazon reduce its reliance on the U.S. Postal
Service, a relationship that has become rocky following a dispute
over contract terms. Amazon says it aims ultimately to have 200 rural
delivery hubs serving around 13,000 ZIP Codes covering around 1.2
million square miles of America—an area the size of Texas, California
and Alaska combined.
wsj.com
Alibaba unveils AI agent platform to automate global e-commerce for
small businesses
Why Google will win the agentic e-commerce race and what it means for
travel |
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Plano, TX: Plano Police seize $100K in stolen goods in 'Operation Mario Kart'
retail theft bust
A monthslong investigation, "Operation Mario Kart," dismantled a retail theft
ring following a raid in Irving that recovered more than $100,000 in stolen
goods. Plano police seized $42,000 in cash and a massive cache of electronics
after tracking a "fence" who allegedly resold items stolen from major retailers.
One suspect is in custody facing organized retail theft charges, though their
identity has not yet been publicly released by authorities.
fox4news.com
Harford County, MD: Update: Abingdon woman sentenced to 5 years for retail theft
spree across Harford County Stores
An Abingdon woman was sentenced to five years in prison after pleading guilty to
stealing merchandise from multiple retail stores in Harford County. Jessica Mary
Hubbard, 33, entered a guilty plea on Friday, March 13, on charges of organized
retail theft, theft scheme, second-degree assault, and two counts of theft
involving merchandise valued between $100 and $1,500. According to court
records, Hubbard committed the crimes between August 2025 and January 2026,
stealing from retailers including BJ's Wholesale Club, Kohl's, Target, Lowe's
Home Improvement, Walmart, and Dick's Sporting Goods — totaling $8,395.06 in
stolen merchandise.
wmar2news.com
Warner Robins, GA: Male shoplifter sentenced for stealing from same store 13
times in month-long span
Jackson has been sentenced to 20 years, with the first 11 to be spent in prison
without the possibility of parole, according to the district attorney's office.
Jackson had eight prior shoplifting convictions before this case. Through the
use of surveillance footage and facial recognition software, investigators found
that Jackson repeatedly entered the Lowe's and stole from the store via the same
method: he would obtain a trash can or tote bag, place the power tools within
the container, and exit the store without paying for the items.
13wmaz.com
Vancouver, BC, Canada: An organized meat theft ring may be operating
Richmond RCMP has released a warning for local shoppers after a sharp rise in
reported meat theft from retail locations across the city. The alert comes after
the detachment received reports of 39 meat theft incidents from Richmond shops
and stores between December 2025 and March 2026. According to Richmond RCMP, the
pattern and volume of many of the thefts suggest that the incidents may be
caused by organized activity, with the meat potentially stolen for resale.
dailyhive.com
New York, NY: NYPD Looking for 3 Jewelry Store Robbery Suspects; merchandise
valued at over $40,000
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Shootings & Deaths
Virginia Beach, VA: Investigation continues after 7 people shot at KempsRiver
Crossing shopping center
Virginia Beach police have released additional details on Sunday night's
shooting at the KempsRiver Crossing shopping center. Police say seven people
were shot during the altercation, and police are still trying to determine
exactly how many shooters there were. According to Virginia Beach Master Police
Officer John Hlebinsky, officers were called to the 1200 block of Fordham Drive
just before 9 p.m. for a large gathering in the parking lot. As officers
arrived, they heard gunfire. Police said they then found three people suffering
from gunshot wounds. Those three were taken to hospitals; one remains in
critical condition while the other two have non-life-threatening injuries.
13newsnow.com
Tacoma, WA: Police investigate reports of gunfire near Tacoma Mall, no victims
found
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Thurston County, WA: Suspect with 97 prior arrests taken into custody again
after retail theft spree
A man was arrested for the 98th time by the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office
after going on a retail theft “spree” on Sunday. The sheriff’s office was tipped
off by other local law enforcement agencies that a pair of organized retail
theft suspects were fleeing northbound on I-5 in a truck from Lewis County into
Thurston County after committing a series of retail thefts. “One of our deputies
spotted the vehicle north on I-5 in Olympia, and before even activating their
emergency lights, the truck fled,” Thurston County Sheriff Derek Sanders wrote
on social media. “A pursuit was initiated and quickly terminated after an
unsuccessful PIT attempt as the vehicle fled into downtown Olympia at high
speeds.” After the truck blew through intersections heading into Lacey at high
speeds, deputies found it abandoned near College Street. A K9 unit was
dispatched before Sanders himself located the two suspects walking through a
nearby neighborhood. Both of them were taken into custody at gunpoint. According
to the Thurston County Sheriff’s Office, the driver is a four-time convicted
felon for numerous thefts. He has 27 misdemeanor convictions and 97 prior
arrests.
mynorthwest.com
Salem, OR: Suspect accused of hitting store employee with getaway car during
Salem robbery
A 35-year-old man was arrested Saturday in connection with a robbery that ended
with a store employee being hit by a getaway car, according to police. At about
3 p.m. on March 21, officers responded to a robbery in the 2800 block of
Broadway Street Northeast. Police said a suspect stole over $100 in merchandise
and got into a fight with an employee who tried to stop him. The suspect got
into a getaway car, which police said hit the employee, causing minor injuries.
Officers later found the suspect car and spoke with the driver, 35-year-old
Gilberto Hernandez-Betancourt, who gave a false name. Police said officers
learned he had an outstanding warrant for his arrest. During the investigation,
police said officers found a large amount of stolen items in the suspect car
that was linked to a theft from Lowe’s in Keizer.
kptv.com
San Ramon, CA: Update: Suspect sentenced to 2 years in $1.1 million San Ramon
jewelry store robbery
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•
Beauty – Hammond, LA –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Olympia, WA
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Camden
County, GA – Robbery
•
C-Store – Enosburgh,
VT – Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – San Mateo,
CA – Robbery
•
Clothing –
Philadelphia, PA – Robbery
•
Clothing -
Canandaigua, NY – Robbery
•
Grocery – Fairfield
County, SC – Armed Robbery
•
Grocery – Arlee, MT –
Burglary
•
Jewelry - New York, NY
- Robbery
•
Jewelry - Winchester, VA – Robbery
•
Jewelry - Atlanta, GA – Robbery
•
Jewelry - San Maros, TX – Robbery
•
Jewelry - Laurel, MD – Robbery
•
Marijuana – Turner, ME
– Burglary
•
Pawn – Grand Junction,
CO – Burglary
•
Pawn – Manitou
Springs, CO – Burglary
•
Pharmacy – Radnor, PA
– Robbery
•
Thrift - Marietta, GA
– Robbery
•
Walmart – Utica, NY –
Robbery
•
Walmart –
Fayetteville, WV – Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
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Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
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Vice President, Corporate Loss Prevention Operations
Menomonee Falls, WI
The Vice President of Loss Prevention Operations is responsible for
developing and executing a comprehensive strategy to reduce and prevent loss
across all aspects of the company’s operations. This role includes leadership of
the corporate loss prevention team, collaboration with senior management, and
the implementation of risk management programs...
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Group Director, Asset Protection - Fulfillment Centers
Bentonville,
AR
The Group Director, Asset Protection – Fulfillment Centers is
responsible for leading the operations and strategy of the Asset Protection
department across Walmart’s Fulfillment Centers. This role ensures the safety,
security, and profitability of fulfillment operations by overseeing risk
management, crisis response, financial performance, and team leadership...
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