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Kevin
Larson named Regional Security Manager (West) for Waymo
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
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Everon Whitepaper
A Layered Approach to Securing Retail Entrances Against Theft
Retailers across the nation are feeling the strain and profit
loss attributed to a rise in external theft hitting their stores. Taking
an active role in layering technology and updating policies and
procedures can help retailers stem the flow of activity and risk.
Shoplifting
has been around as long as shopping itself. What changes over the years
is the methods deployed by the thieves and the magnitude of the issue
for retailers’ bottom lines. As reported by a number of industry
associations, security suppliers and retailers, the COVID-19 pandemic
has played a significant role in increasing the frequency of more
violent types of crimes.
While no one solution or even combination of solutions will
completely eradicate shoplifting from our society, taking an active role
in layering technology and updating policies and procedures can help
retailers stem the flow of activity and risk. Active prevention methods
such as signage, visible camera technologies and public view monitors,
along with solutions designed to modify consumer behavior, can have an
impact on deterring crime across the retail industry.
Shoplifting, organized retail crime and social media-driven theft
impacts everyone—from the consumer to the retailer and the communities
where they operate—so a coordinated effort between retailers, their
security partners and law enforcement is an essential first step.
To learn how
Everon's
retail security professionals can help create a safe shopping
environment and minimize shrink in your stores, discover our
comprehensive security, fire, and life safety solutions below.
Click here to read more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Memorial Day Brings Heightened Retail
Risks
Memorial Day Weekend Signals Seasonal Retail Security Challenges
By
the D&D Daily staff
For many retailers, Memorial Day weekend marks more than the unofficial
start of summer. It also signals the beginning of one of the busiest
— and potentially most challenging — periods of the year for retail
security and loss prevention teams.
Industry experts say high customer traffic, aggressive promotional
events and increased seasonal activity can create conditions that
opportunistic shoplifters and organized retail crime groups may attempt
to exploit. While there is limited data tying Memorial Day
specifically to spikes in retail theft, major holiday shopping weekends
have long been viewed as periods of elevated risk due to crowded stores,
distracted employees and increased transaction volume.
Memorial Day sales frequently focus on categories such as apparel,
electronics, beauty products, outdoor equipment and seasonal merchandise
— all products commonly targeted for resale. At the same time,
retailers often bring on seasonal staff ahead of the summer rush,
creating additional operational pressures for stores already managing
customer service demands and staffing shortages.
According to the National Retail Federation and other industry groups,
retailers continue to report concerns about organized retail crime,
repeat offenders and increasingly aggressive theft activity in stores
nationwide. In response, many companies have expanded visible
security measures, increased loss prevention staffing during peak
shopping periods and invested in technologies such as AI-assisted video
analytics, product protection systems and real-time monitoring tools.
Beyond in-store concerns, some security experts also warn about
elevated cargo theft risks around major holiday weekends. Long
weekends can create opportunities for cargo criminals when loaded
trailers remain unattended longer than usual or shipping schedules are
disrupted due to warehouse closures and reduced staffing. Retailers
moving high-demand summer merchandise may face additional exposure
during high-volume shipping periods.
Loss prevention professionals say preparation and employee awareness
remain key during busy retail weekends. Many retailers use Memorial
Day as an opportunity to review store security procedures, reinforce
safety protocols and increase coordination between store operations,
supply chain teams and security personnel ahead of the broader summer
shopping season.
Cargo Theft Making National Headlines
Freight Fraud Is Escalating. Are You Taking It Seriously Yet?
Let’s
step away from all the AI talk for a moment to focus on a growing
problem in the supply chain and logistics industry: cargo theft.
According to the Freight Fraud Index published recently by Highway,
“Fraud volume reached an all-time high in Q1 2026, and every major
indicator accelerated year over year. Highway blocked over 527,000
fraudulent email attempts in Q1 — a 49.9% increase from Q1 2025 — and
flagged 2,256 identity alerts, up 89.6% from the same period last year.
Change-of-ownership reports surged most dramatically, climbing 169.6% as
bad actors continued exploiting MC transfers to establish seemingly
legitimate authorities. The pattern is consistent across channels: fraud
groups are scaling operations across digital and physical vectors
simultaneously, and the pace is accelerating.”
“Behind the numbers, a deeper shift is underway,” the report
adds. “New federal licensing rules are reshaping the carrier population,
and the instability is creating openings that fraudsters are calculated
enough to exploit. As produce season drives freight volumes higher
through Q2, the commodities fraudsters target most — meat, seafood,
and electronics — will move in even greater volume through the corridors
where theft activity is already concentrated.”
Freight fraud and cargo theft have become such serious problems that
they’ve caught the attention of mainstream media. Last month, for
example, the television news program 60 Minutes aired a segment
titled, “Risk on the Road.”
Even Congress is finally paying attention. Last week, the House
of Representatives overwhelmingly passed the bipartisan Combating
Organized Retail Crime (CORCA) Act (H.R. 2853) by a vote of 348 to 60.
The real question is: Are you taking this problem seriously — and
doing something about it?
talkinglogistics.com
Will CA Bail Ruling Unleash Crime
Wave?
San Francisco DA Brooke Jenkins warns ‘devastating’ California court
ruling will unleash crime wave
San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins has warned a recent court
ruling will allow scores of career criminals to walk free — with
“devastating” consequences for public safety across California.
A decision from the California Supreme Court on April 30 found bail
for accused criminals must be “attainable” and only those accused of
violent crimes may be held in jail pending trial — a ruling with
far-reaching consequences for prosecutors, Jenkins told The California
Post in an interview.
Jenkins, who was first appointed to the position in 2022 and has
taken a tough stance with drug dealers and petty thieves plaguing San
Francisco in recent years, said the ruling will make it exceedingly
difficult to keep accused criminals locked up — even if they’ve been
arrested repeatedly or flouted court orders.
Only people accused of violent crimes — like murder and assault
involving bodily harm — can be held on an “unattainable” bail or
without bail, Jenkins explained.
That means accused repeat drug dealers, auto burglars,
retail thieves, and even felons wielding guns
will be freely released under the new legal precedent,
according to Jenkins.
“Not only is this a devastating ruling for the DA’s office, but a
devastating ruling for our state and for San Francisco,” Jenkins
said.
In recent years San Francisco has struggled with rampant auto theft,
open-air fentanyl sales and organized retail crime that is among the
worst in the nation. Images of shattered windows, locked-up
Walgreens stores and massive drug markets made embarrassing headlines
for the city.
nypost.com
Chicago homicides in 2026: 150 people slain. How that compares with
previous years.
Read the full DC police report detailing investigation into crime data
manipulation
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Businesses Become Protest Hubs
Chicago restaurants and bars become spaces for political protesting:
‘Everyone’s experiencing some level of rage’
After Operation Midway Blitz last fall, Chicago’s local hospitality
scene has become a central front in resistance against ramped-up federal
immigration enforcement, combining community-driven economic support
with food and shared meals or beverages.
The Chicago Postcard Protest is intended to offer residents another way
to denounce the myriad social justice issues plaguing communities in
Chicago and elsewhere. It’s especially appealing to folks who can’t
physically protest in the streets but want to use their time and
voice for the same causes, Bujdoso explained.
Though visible immigration confrontations have faded since the height of
the Trump administration’s Operation Midway Blitz last fall,
Immigration and Customs Enforcement has taken on a “quieter” approach,
focusing on street-level arrests, residential stops and targeting
individuals at courthouses.
Bujdoso said the activist community and groups in Chicago’s hospitality
industry are shifting their gears too, finding new outlets for
resistance.
“The best thing we can do is be creative about how we’re pushing back
against ICE and against the government,” she said. “If they’re going to
try and surprise us, we’re going to try and surprise them … stir up some
‘good trouble.’”
chicagotribune.com
Spotting Cannabis in the Workplace
Strategies for Dealing with Effect of Cannabis in the Workplace
NSC suggests training supervisors to
recognize and respond to impairment from cannabis use.
The regulations surrounding cannabis changed on April 23, 2026, when the
Department of Justice announced that FDA-approved cannabis products and
products containing cannabis subject to a Qualifying State-issued
License are moving from Schedule I to Schedule III of the Controlled
Substances Act.
For EHS professionals, this is an important issue as a 2024 study in the
American Journal of Preventive Medicine found that 15.9% of full-time
employed adults used cannabis in the past month, and 6.5% met criteria
for cannabis use disorder (CUD).
The same study found that more recent and frequent use, as well as
greater CUD severity, were associated with higher rates of both illness
and injury-related absences and skipped work.
A 2024 systematic literature review in Frontiers in Pharmacology
found that THC-containing cannabis products in healthy volunteers were
associated with slower reaction time and impaired attention,
learning, and working memory, with stronger effects at higher THC doses.
To help employers deal with this issue, the National Safety Council (NSC)
offers advice on the issue in its article "Cannabis
and Safety: It's Complicated.
ehstoday.com
Consumer Caution Boosts Off-Price
Retailers
Off-Price Picks Up Even More Steam in Q1 2026 – Led by Ross
Off-price retailers captured 65.7% of combined visit share with
department stores in Q1 2026, up from 56.2% in Q1 2022, reflecting a
structural and accelerating shift in consumer shopping behavior.
When consumers get cautious, off-price gets busy. And as shoppers
continued trading down in Q1 2026 amid rising gas prices and
tariff-driven uncertainty, Ross Dress for Less stood out as a top
performer, capturing demand from consumers seeking the deepest
discounts.
Off-price’s momentum is most visible in its widening lead over
department stores. The category captured 65.7% of combined visit
share in Q1 2026, up from 62.2% in Q1 2025 and just 56.2% in Q1 2022.
These steady, multi-year gains underscore a structural shift in where
consumers are choosing to shop – one that continues to accelerate as
value becomes a central decision driver.
placer.ai
How AI Can Restore Consumer Trust
Why furniture shopping is broken and how AI is starting to fix it
Furniture ranks among the categories with the lowest consumer trust
scores, according to research conducted by furniture.com. The issue
stems from multiple friction points that compound the shopping
challenge.
Furniture.com’s AI assistant, called Dottie, represents a shift from
traditional keyword search to natural language interaction. While
Google searches typically contain three to four words, according to
Bennett, AI prompts average 23 to 24 words, allowing for more nuanced
requests.
Early results show promise: Since launching the unified checkout
experience in February 2024, furniture.com has seen "dramatic
reduction in returns," Bennett noted, though the return cycle
requires time to fully materialize.
content-naf.emarketer.com
Retailers Walking a Tightrope
Retailers can’t afford complacency as consumer strain tests loyalty
US consumers aren’t happy, even after years of corporate investment
in customer experience.
Fixing that gap is getting harder as retailers facing rising
costs—from tariffs to the ripple effects of the war in Iran—look to
protect margins without adding to consumer frustration. For example,
many retailers have introduced return fees as ecommerce return rates
outpace sales growth: 72% now charge for at least one return option,
per the National Retail Federation. But those policies can backfire,
with 57% of consumers saying they’ve stopped shopping with a retailer
after it started charging for returns. content-naf.emarketer.com
Study: Family Dollar closed ‘at least’ 350 stores in past 10 months —
here’s where
The local AI search visibility platform
compared Family Dollar's public store locator at the start and end of
the period. Each store listing that had been removed and returned a 404
error was then independently verified against Google Maps. The result:
350 stores marked permanently closed, or 4.69% of the 7,462 locations
listed at the start of the period.
Claire’s eyes expansion to 7K retail locations
A licensing agreement with Centric Brands
will scale the retailer’s presence across partners, including Walmart,
Kohl’s and CVS and will push the brand into new categories.
Colliers: Strip center retail pricing increased 5% YoY
QuikTrip Launches Next Generation of Convenience Stores
7 charts that explain why the job market is so tough right now
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ORC Is a Given. Being an
Easy Target Isn't.
2026 opened with a clear signal from Washington: organized retail crime is now a
national priority. But while enforcement ramps up, ORC isn't slowing down. It's
evolving.
Today's crews are coordinated, mobile, and highly informed. They know which
stores to hit, which protections to test, and which ones will fail in seconds.
The pattern is consistent: they go where it's easiest.
That's the reality retailers are operating in now.
Sekura has been on the
ground across the U.S., working directly with LP teams and store operations to
address these gaps in real time, deploying solutions where they have immediate
impact.
What we're seeing across the market:
 |
Known vulnerabilities
are being repeatedly exploited. |
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Low-strength detachers are still widely in use and widely defeated. |
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Stores that don't upgrade are being revisited. |
Read more in Sekura's quarterly V-Newsletter
here

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AI Bots Reshape Retail Cybercrime
Retailers Face Rising Threat From AI-Powered Fraud Bots
By
the D&D Daily staff
For years, retailers have battled automated bots targeting
limited-release sneakers, gift cards and online checkout systems. Now
cybersecurity experts are warning that artificial intelligence could
make those attacks far more sophisticated — and much harder to detect.
Security researchers say newer AI-assisted bots are increasingly
capable of mimicking legitimate shopper behavior, allowing
cybercriminals to bypass traditional anti-bot defenses. Unlike older
scripted bots that repeatedly refresh pages or flood websites with
traffic, AI-powered tools can adapt in real time, vary browsing patterns
and imitate human purchasing activity more convincingly.
The concern comes as retailers continue dealing with rising levels of
account takeover attacks and loyalty fraud. Criminals frequently use
stolen usernames and passwords obtained through previous data breaches
to access customer accounts, redeem loyalty points or drain stored gift
card balances.
According to multiple cybersecurity firms, attackers are also
beginning to use generative AI tools to automate phishing campaigns,
improve fake customer communications and accelerate credential-stuffing
attacks. The technology lowers the barrier to entry for
cybercriminals while increasing the speed and scale of attacks.
Retailers with large e-commerce operations may be especially
vulnerable because many existing bot detection systems were built to
identify repetitive or obviously automated behavior. AI-driven attacks
are often more difficult to distinguish from normal customer activity.
Industry experts say retailers should begin focusing more heavily on
behavioral analytics, device fingerprinting and real-time anomaly
detection instead of relying solely on CAPTCHAs or basic traffic
filtering. Monitoring unusual purchasing speeds, repeated failed
login attempts and suspicious loyalty account activity may become
increasingly important.
The issue is expected to grow as AI tools become more accessible and
cybercriminal organizations continue experimenting with automation.
While AI-powered retail fraud is still evolving, many cybersecurity
professionals believe retailers should treat it as an emerging threat
now rather than waiting for large-scale incidents to force changes
later.
AI Finding & Fixing Serious
Vulnerabilities
How a government contest launched a revolution in AI-based bug hunting
Security researchers have spent
months honing AI systems that can find and fix serious vulnerabilities.
Critical infrastructure everywhere could benefit.
At a time when the U.S. cybersecurity workforce is stretched thin and
adversaries are using AI to speed up their attacks, the nation’s
best hope could be automated tools that find and help fix
vulnerabilities before they lead to chaos.
After DARPA announced its challenge’s three winners in August 2025, it
created a $1.4 million bonus prize pot for competition finalists who
used their AI systems to find and fix vulnerabilities in critically
important software. The agency reviewed teams’ proposals to
scrutinize important open-source packages and tracked how they engaged
with the projects’ maintainers. Each of the seven competition finalists
could earn up to $200,000, with a maximum of $10,000 per project.
DARPA, the competition finalists and cybersecurity experts said it’s
almost impossible to overstate how much AI will change the process of
finding vulnerabilities.
Software security assessments that used to take multiple people six
months can now be done by AI in a matter of hours, often with better
results, Nighswander said. “That scale and efficiency is incredible.”
The technology is obviously a double-edged sword. Nick Reese, the former
director of emerging technology policy at the Department of Homeland
Security, said the same tools that “present a significant opportunity
for security professionals” also create “a potential advantage for
attackers if they get access to the same data.”
But DARPA views things optimistically. It took years for the
self-driving cars that emerged from DARPA’s first challenge in 2004 to
hit the market; with the AI bug-fixing competition, Carney said, the
agency never thought it’d see “a technical miracle” that was
“economically feasible at the same time.”
“I’m extraordinarily excited,” Carney said, “at the performance and
impact that the technology continues to have.”
cybersecuritydive.com
Junk Security Reports?
AI is drowning software maintainers in junk security reports
AI-assisted vulnerability research has exploded, unleashing a
firehose of low-quality reports on overworked software maintainers
who are wasting hours sifting through noise instead of fixing real
problems.
Linus Torvalds, the Linux kernel’s creator, says the flood has made the
project’s security mailing list “almost entirely unmanageable, with
enormous duplication due to different people finding the same things
with the same tools.”
Jarom Brown, Senior Product Security Engineer at GitHub, acknowledged
last week that while AI lowering the barrier to entry for security
research is a welcome development, his team is being inundated by
submissions that fail to demonstrate any real security impact.
These include reports without a proof of concept, theoretical attack
scenarios that don’t hold up under scrutiny, and findings already
covered by GitHub’s published ineligible list.
helpnetsecurity.com
The AI backdoor your security stack is not built to see
AI shrinks vulnerability exploitation window to hours |
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Why Amazon Is Tough to Beat
Why does Amazon have no Western rivals?
Why does Amazon, launched by Jeff Bezos in 1995 as an online bookstore
out of a rented garage, have so few serious rivals in the West when it
comes to e-commerce? Couldn't we consumers benefit from a bit more
competition?
First, to be sure, Amazon isn't without competitors in any of the
segments it is in, including e-commerce. Major US retailers like Walmart
and Target both have broad-based, rapidly expanding online retail arms,
and offer their own versions of Amazon's Prime subscription service.
In the US, Amazon accounts for 40.5% of all online retail sales,
while its nearest rival Walmart has 9.2%, according to figures from last
month. Ebay is down at around 3%.
Amazon also strongly dominates in the UK, where it accounts for
about 30% of online retail sales.
A combination of factors has made Amazon exceptionally difficult to
rival, note experts.
One is a 'first-mover' advantage. Among the earliest to scale
online retail – and with a clear vision of how the internet could
revolutionise shopping with convenience and speed – it captured market
share faster than many rivals.
Today Amazon has a big advantage over retail rivals in that it can
use funds from its most lucrative businesses – notably AWS, its main
profit engine – to sustain its lower-margin retail operation and invest
in new ventures.
Positioning itself as a technology company also helped.
Algorithms, automation and data have been central to Amazon's ability to
scale, driving efficiency and shaping its customer experience.
Moreover, it has a culture of bold experimentation, says Sunil
Gupta, also a professor at HBS, entering areas from cloud computing and
consumer devices to own-brand products, original content production and
healthcare – and moving on if something fails.
bbc.com
Walmart vs. Amazon
Walmart and Amazon race to win over rural America with speedier
deliveries
Walmart and Amazon are racing to speed up online order deliveries in
rural areas of the U.S., a rich source of untapped sales that major
retailers long wrote off as too sparsely inhabited, too remote or too
impoverished to serve profitably.
Walmart has a running start in the contest to build a loyal customer
base in rural America. Roughly 90% of U.S. residents live within 10
miles of a Walmart store, and 45% of the company’s full-service
Supercenters are in places with populations under 20,000, according to a
report by investment bank Morgan Stanley.
Competition for the underserved market, which the bank’s analysts
estimated could be worth up to $1 trillion in annual sales, has
intensified as remote workers swell the populations of small towns and
communities on the far fringes of metropolitan areas.
The same technology that makes it possible for more people to do
office work from wherever they want is making it easier for the
nation’s two biggest retail companies to get merchandise to them more
efficiently.
apnews.com
Amazon's massive investment fueling job growth on Florida's Space Coast |
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Cook County, IL: Illinois sheriff recovers $1.5 million worth of laptops
along with stolen semi truck and trailer
The Cook County Sheriff’s Office (CCSO) is investigating a major cargo
theft incident involving laptop computers. On May 14, 2026, CCSO’s
Organized Retail Crime unit received information that a 53-foot trailer
stolen out of Bridgeview may be located on North Austin Avenue in
Chicago, Illinois. When CCSO arrived on scene, they found the stolen
trailer with $1.5 million worth of laptop computers inside.
Investigators learned that that the semi truck attached to the trailer
was also reported stolen.
cdllife.com
Manitowoc, WI: Man Arrested for Stealing Thousands in Merchandise from
Walmart
A Manitowoc man has been arrested after stealing from the Manitowoc
Walmart. Officers with the Manitowoc Police Department were called to
Walmart on Calumet Avenue on Thursday (May 14th) for a retail theft
complaint. Upon arrival, authorities made contact with an individual in
loss prevention, who claimed that a man had switched the price tag on
merchandise on four occasions between May 7th and May 13th, resulting in
the theft of just over $1,500 of Walmart items. Police learned that the
individual in question, later identified as a 31-year-old Manitowoc man,
was seen on surveillance video removing the price tags from toy cars and
putting them on items with much higher prices. He would then purchase
them at the price of the toy cars before exiting the store. Security
camera footage from the parking lot was able to capture the 31-year-old
entering his vehicle and obtain its license plate number.
seehafernews.com
Chesapeake, VA: 3 people were indicted in a retail theft bust in
Virginia and North Carolina
Fairfield, CT: Suspect Tries To Steal Items ($1800) From Store In
Fairfield By Filling Luggage With Them
Clarion, PA: Four Women Charged in Alleged $600 Retail Theft Scheme at
Clarion Walmart
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Shootings & Deaths
Allentown, PA: Bethlehem teen dies after McDonald’s shooting in Allentown
The victim in Friday night’s shooting at a McDonald’s in Allentown died Monday
from his injuries, according to investigators. The 18-year-old man from
Bethlehem was pronounced dead at 1:55 p.m. at Lehigh Valley Hospital-Muhlenberg
in Bethlehem, Lehigh County Coroner Daniel Buglio said. Buglio ruled the death a
homicide due to gunshot wounds.
lehighvalleylive.com
West Philadelphia, PA: Man hospitalized after being shot 5 times in break-in
A man has been hospitalized in critical condition, officials say, after he was
shot five times and found at a West Philly gas station. According to police, the
incident happened at about 12:30 a.m. on Monday morning when a 33-year-old man
was found at a gas station located along the 3700 block of West Girard Avenue in
West Philadelphia after he had been shot five times. At that time, police said,
the man was suffering from gunshot wounds to his left arm, back and neck. The
man was taken to a nearby hospital where he was listed in critical condition,
officials say, following the overnight incident.
nbcphiladelphia.com
Detroit, MI: Argument over washing machine ends in shooting at Clinton Township
laundromat
A man was shot in the arm, and another was taken into custody after a dispute
over a washing machine escalated into gunfire at a Super Laundromat. Clinton
Township Police are investigating the shooting that happened just before 11:30
a.m. at the Super Laundromat on Harper Avenue near 16 Mile Road. A woman told me
that she and her 28-year-old son were doing laundry when another customer
insisted on using the exact machine they were already using. She says she
pointed out several other empty machines, but the other customer called her own
son to the laundromat. The argument then escalated into a fight between the two
men.
wxyz.com
Philadelphia, PA: Update: Witnesses testify after rival motorcycle gang fight
leads to Oct 2025 Wawa shooting
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Sacramento County, CA: Man gets life in prison for Sacramento County armed
robberies targeting families in retail store parking lots
A man convicted of robbing families at gunpoint in the parking lot of retail
stores across Sacramento County was sentenced to 251 years to life in prison,
authorities said Monday. The Sacramento County District Attorney's Office said
in a press release that 44-year-old William Ellis was sentenced on Friday. Ellis
was convicted last month of seven counts of robbery and felony evasion; he was
also found to have had two previous strike convictions and multiple aggravating
factors during the trial, the DA's Office said. In three separate incidents in
July and August 2023, Ellis was armed when he threatened and robbed victims of
personal property, including family heirlooms and wedding rings, the DA's Office
said. Among the victims were families with young children. According to
prosecutors, Ellis pointed a revolver at his victims, including pressing it
against the ribcage of a 5-year-old boy and the body and neck of a 15-year-old
girl. The robberies happened in retail store parking lots as victims were
getting into their vehicles, the DA's Office said.
cbsnews.com
Norwood, MA: Kentucky man arrested after stealing firearms from Mass. gun shop
Police responded to a Massachusetts firearms shop overnight after the business
owner reported that he was watching a break-in remotely through his surveillance
cameras. Aaron Woodrum, 33, of Kentucky, was arrested several hours later on
charges including breaking and entering a firearm distributor, four counts of
larceny of a firearm and two counts of vandalizing property, police said. The
owner of Liberty Ordnance Supply at 100 Access Road in Norwood reported the
crime in progress at 11:42 p.m. Police said the video showed a man in a dark
hooded sweatshirt, mask and gloves taking weapons from the display cases.
Officers from two shifts responded and searched the area with K-9s. Police said
one of the dogs led investigators to the backyard of a home along Neponset
Street, where they found stolen firearms and clothing.
wcvb.com
Douglas County, GA: Man freed after spending 16 years in prison for robbery
Brandon Pugh was fully exonerated last Wednesday after serving 16 years in
prison for a 2008 Douglas County bank robbery he did not commit. A formal
investigation by the Douglas County District Attorney’s Justice Integrity Unit
proved that an absolute exculpatory timeline made it impossible for Pugh to be
the suspect. Conclusive forensic re-testing by the Georgia Bureau of
Investigation determined that red stains on Pugh's hands and trash can were
completely unrelated to bank security dye.
fox5atlanta.com
Brentwood, TN: Baseball Gloves stolen from Brewers prospects recovered at Play
It Again Sports
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•
C-Store – Westwood, OH
– Robbery
•
C-Store – Fresno, CA –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Alachua
County, FL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – LaGrange, GA
– Robbery
•
Clothing - Fairfield,
CT - Robbery
•
Collectables – Ocala,
FL – Burglary
•
Dollar – Macon, GA –
Armed Robbery
•
Dollar – Twiggs
County, GA – Armed Robbery
•
Guns – Norwood, MA -
Burglary
•
Jewelry – San Antonio, TX – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Albuquerque, NM – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Yorktown Heights, NY – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Manassas,
VA – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Logan, WV
– Burglary
•
Shoes – Montgomery
County, MD – Burglary
•
Sports - Brentwood, TN
– Burglary
•
Tobacco – Bensalem
Township, PA – Robbery
•
Vape – Ellsworth, ME –
Burglary
•
Walmart – Clarion, PA
– Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 12 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 0 shootings
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Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
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Regional AP & Safety Business Partner - South Region
Texas
This position is considered Field based and is considered to be a blend
of onsite and remote work activity. Field associates will spend their time both
traveling to and spending time in various PetSmart locations and can expect to
be asked to travel to Phoenix Home Office periodically throughout the year.
Field associates typically work out of their home office when not traveling as
outlined above...
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