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Calandra
Guiry named Market Manager Loss Prevention, Ontario
for TJX Canada
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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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In Case You Missed It
Big Brand Tire & Service Eliminates After-Hours Break-Ins with Interface
Virtual Perimeter Guard
AI-enabled perimeter monitoring
eliminates overnight break-ins and cuts security activations by 65
percent
 St.
Louis, MO – January 13, 2026 –
Interface
Systems, a leading managed service provider delivering remote video
monitoring, commercial security systems, business intelligence, and
network services for multi-location enterprises, today announced that
Big Brand Tire &
Service, one of the nation’s fastest-growing independent tire and
automotive service providers, has eliminated costly overnight break-ins
and significantly reduced trespassing and vandalism at a high-risk
location. The company achieved these results by deploying Interface
Virtual Perimeter Guard, an AI-powered perimeter security solution
designed to deter incidents before they occur.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Preventing Crime & Violence at the
Super Bowl
Super Bowl Security: How Authorities
Are Working to Prevent Crime & Violence
By
the D&D Daily staff
With Super Bowl LX approaching at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara
on Feb. 8, security planning has moved into high gear as law
enforcement agencies prepare for one of the largest public events in the
United States. The NFL, local police departments, and federal
partners are coordinating an extensive strategy designed to prevent
violence, deter crime, and protect millions of fans attending game-week
events across the region.
Security planning for the Super Bowl typically begins years in
advance and intensifies in the final weeks leading up to kickoff.
For Super Bowl LX, officials have emphasized coordination across local,
state, and federal agencies, with clearly defined responsibilities aimed
at maintaining public safety rather than conducting unrelated
enforcement operations. Federal involvement includes support from
agencies focused on counterterrorism, explosives detection, firearms
interdiction, and intelligence sharing.
On the ground, law enforcement agencies have expanded patrols and
deployed specialized units to monitor high-traffic areas such as stadium
entrances, transportation hubs, fan zones, and nearby commercial
districts. Explosive-detection canine teams and bomb squads are
being used to screen venues and respond quickly to any suspicious
activity, serving both as a visible deterrent and a rapid-response
capability.
Crowd management and situational awareness are also major priorities.
Officers assigned to Super Bowl operations receive additional training
focused on identifying early indicators of potential violence,
disorderly conduct, or organized criminal activity. These measures are
designed to intervene before incidents escalate, reducing the likelihood
of serious confrontations in densely packed public spaces.
Technology is playing an increasingly important role as well.
Authorities have established restricted airspace around the stadium and
surrounding areas, enforcing no-drone zones to prevent unauthorized
aerial activity. Surveillance systems, access controls, and real-time
communications networks allow agencies to share information quickly and
coordinate responses across jurisdictions.
Officials have also stressed outreach and communication with the public,
encouraging attendees to report suspicious behavior and reassuring
communities that Super Bowl security operations are focused on safety,
not routine enforcement actions.
Taken together, the Super Bowl LX security plan reflects how
large-scale events are now treated as complex crime-prevention
environments. The goal is not only to respond to threats, but to
prevent them — protecting fans, businesses, and surrounding communities
during one of the busiest weekends of the year.
RELATED: Super Bowl security ramps up as
ICE fears shadow the festivities
Clashes Between Federal & Local Law
Enforcement?
Opinion: Why the DA in Super Bowl LX’s backyard is losing sleep over ICE
Santa Clara County’s prosecutor
fears violent clashes between local police and ICE agents if feds try to
obstruct probes of killings
Gov. Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta warned California’s law
enforcement officers that the Trump administration will try to
obstruct local and state police investigations into killings by
federal agents in California.
Invoking the recent fatal shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti at the
hands of Homeland Security agents in Minnesota, Newsom and Bonta wrote
that the federal government’s conduct in those and other recent cases
“make clear that this administration not only will not investigate such
incidents but will attempt to thwart other agencies from doing so.”
California’s law enforcement, wrote Newsom and Bonta, have a legal and
moral duty to hold federal agents accountable for state crimes they
commit here.
But days away from hosting Super Bowl LX — an event many fear will bring
a surge of President Trump’s federal agents to Santa Clara County — the
district attorney here, Jeff Rosen, is losing sleep. For he knows
that carrying out Newsom and Bonta’s mandate will not be easy.
mercurynews.com
How Costco is Beating Theft
Costco solves problem that plagues Walmart and Target
It's not just big-box stores like Walmart and Target that have been
plagued by retail theft. There was an 18% increase in broad
shoplifting incidents in 2024 compared to 2023, reports the National
Retail Federation.
The problem has gotten so bad that a number of retailers, including
supermarket chains, are now using facial recognition technology to
identify potentially "problematic" customers. But since Walmart and
Target are such major players in the retail industry, it stands to
reason that they're also quite prone to theft.
While giants like Walmart and Target continue to lose revenue every year
to retail theft, it's much less of a problem at Costco.
In its 2025 annual report, Costco stated, "By
strictly controlling the entrances and exits and using a membership
format, we believe our inventory losses (shrinkage) are well below those
of typical retail operations."
Of course, anyone who's ever shopped at Costco knows that there are
gate-minders at the front of the store as well as on the way out. In
fact, Costco members have long complained about having to show receipts
before exiting the store. But that's a key part of Costco's loss
prevention strategy.
But the fact of the matter is that Costco's receipt-checking policy
probably saves the company a huge amount of money each year. And
through that savings, Costco can continue to offer great value for
members.
finance.yahoo.com
'Policing Alone Won't End Retail
Crime'
UK: Fed meets Cleveland PCC to discuss retail crime impact
The Fed met with Police and Crime
Commissioner Matt Storey to highlight the direct and indirect impacts of
stolen goods
Storey spoke with Fed national president Hetal Patel, local Stockton
retailer Stephen Tate and the Fed’s political engagement coordinator
Doug Oliver.
The Fed highlighted both direct and indirect impacts of stolen items,
as well as links to drug and alcohol misuse and, in some cases,
organised crime. Tate said strong deterrents are needed to discourage
retail crime.
The discussion also covered the need for a visible police presence,
rehabilitation for offenders and the importance Cleveland places on
restorative justice, which allows victims to discuss the impact of crime
with perpetrators.
Storey said tackling business and retail crime cannot be solved by
policing alone. He added: “I was pleased to develop our broader
partnership approach by speaking with the Fed’s team, and to learn more
about the issues from a business perspective as part of my engagement
work."
betterretailing.com
University researchers: Is immigration driving crime in Chicago?
Sheriff: FBI investigating London, Ky. police, prompts crime database
oversight shift
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Retail Discrimination Investigation
Nike under investigation for alleged discrimination against White
workers
The activewear giant called the
EEOC’s recent attempt to enforce an administrative subpoena a
“surprising and unusual escalation.”
The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission asked a federal court
Wednesday to enforce an administrative subpoena against Nike as part of
an ongoing investigation into alleged discrimination against White
employees, job applicants and training program participants.
According to a filing in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern
District of Missouri, the EEOC issued the subpoena last September
following three separate requests for information from Nike pursuant to
a 2024 commissioner’s charge filed by the agency’s current leader, Chair
Andrea Lucas.
Lucas cited the company’s public documents and statements — including
language the company put forth about creating a “representative”
workforce — as well as a Nike goal to fill 30% of the company’s
director-level and above U.S. positions, and 35% of its total U.S.
corporate workforce, with employees of racial and ethnic minorities by
2025.
In order to achieve those goals, Lucas alleged that Nike may have
engaged in a pattern or practice of disparate treatment against White
employees, job applicants and training program participants in
hiring, promotion, demotion and separation decisions, among others, in
violation of Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act.
An EEOC official determined that Nike “failed to fully provide the
information sought” by the agency, which included internal
documentation such as employee records, descriptions of the company’s
efforts to increase representation of racial and ethnic minorities, job
descriptions for corporate and leadership positions and several other
records.
retaildive.com
Tariffs & Border Patrol Hurting Mall
Traffic?
Border patrol, Canadian ire dampening traffic at Simon malls
CEO David Simon on Monday said he
expects tariffs to continue to weigh on retailers this year, but
shrugged off the impact of bankruptcies.
Various aspects of U.S. policy are buffeting retailers at Simon
Property Group centers, but a rash of store closures and retail
bankruptcies isn’t fazing the mall company.
That’s because distressed retailers like Francesca’s and Saks can
eventually be replaced with healthier tenants that pay more, CEO
David Simon told analysts Monday. Francesca’s is in the process of
shuttering all 450 or so locations across the U.S., many of them in
malls. Saks Global is a couple of weeks into a bankruptcy that has
already entailed store closures and rent disputes affecting Simon’s
properties.
Simon was less upbeat about the financial toll from tariffs,
which he said continue to impact retailers, other than giants like
Costco, Amazon or Walmart, because they are working to shield their
customers from price hikes.
Tariffs are undermining what has otherwise been a bounce back from
the pandemic years, with “sales, tenant demand, traffic ... all
moving in the right direction,” according to Simon.
There are isolated areas of weakness, though, he said. Simon centers
along the northern U.S. border have lost some momentum because
“Canadians are really pissed off” and there’s been “a little bit of
sales disruption in certain markets where there were a lot of ICE
[border control] activity,” Simon said.
retaildive.com
Returns Continue to Be Retail
'Pressure Point'
Where’s the Friction Line When it Comes To Evolving Retail Returns?
With the holiday sales season, and the entire year of 2025, in the
rear-view window, new data is coming to light on the current state of
retail returns.
As refund volumes (and value) continue to increase significantly
year-over-year, according to the latest data provided by ACI’s annual
Global Ecommerce Report, despite increasingly strict return policies
being adopt by retailers writ large, what does this tell us about the
mindset and behavior of shoppers in 2026 and beyond?
And although earlier reportage from RetailWire, based on NRF data,
suggested that retail returns were declining and that shoppers were
becoming adversarial to the end of existing perks (free return shipping,
tolerance of bracketing behavior, etc.), ACI’s data draws a very
different picture.
The top-line results: Refund volumes throughout 2025 trended upward
by a notable 18.1% as compared to 2024’s figures, while refund value
ticked up by a more modest, but still substantial, 12.7% YoY.
“The sharp rise in refund volumes is exposing a growing pressure
point for retailers—one that directly threatens margins, especially
during peak periods and extended return windows,” Adriana Iordan,
head of merchant product management and payments intelligence at ACI
Worldwide, said.
“Retailers need smarter, AI‑driven controls that spot abuse in real
time and adapt policies dynamically, without adding friction for
genuine customers. By bringing fraud and refund management together,
merchants can curb losses, protect profitability, and still deliver a
customer seamless experience—even as refund volumes continue to climb,”
Iordan added.
retailwire.com
Bye Bye Amazon Palm Pay
If you ever paid with your palm at Whole Foods, Amazon has some bad news
Amazon’s physical stores and its sci-fi ID system have ended up on
the chopping block. The online retail juggernaut is bidding farewell
to its Amazon One service that utilizes a palm recognition system. It’s
set to go away later this year, according to the company’s announcement
on Tuesday night.
That means Whole Foods, which is owned by Amazon, will do away with
the palm recognition system at all locations, according to a support
page at amazonone.aws.com. The support page for the service and emails
sent to customers also state that the Amazon One service is set to be
discontinued at retail businesses on June 3, GeekWire reported.
“In response to limited customer adoption, we’re discontinuing Amazon
One, our authentication service for facility access and payment,” an
Amazon spokesperson said. “All customer data associated with Amazon One
will be securely deleted after the service ends.”
pennlive.com
DSW parent company confirms layoffs
Walmart debuts latest Supercenter in Jacksonville, Florida
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AI-Driven Cybercrime
Autonomous attacks ushered cybercrime into AI era in 2025
Malwarebytes urged companies to
adopt continuous monitoring and lock down identity systems as AI models
get better at orchestrating intrusions.
Cybercrime “began its shift toward an AI-driven future” in 2025,
the security firm Malwarebytes said in a report published Tuesday that
charted AI’s influence on the rapidly growing hacking ecosystem.
AI is making cyberattacks faster and more effective through
deepfakes, vulnerability discovery, autonomous ransomware attacks and
growing connectivity between AI models and penetration testing
tools, according to the report.
Malwarebytes urged businesses to “shrink their attack surfaces, harden
identity systems, close blind spots, accelerate remediation, and adopt
continuous monitoring.”
Security experts have predicted for years that AI would make it
easier for hackers to design, prepare and launch cyberattacks, and
the past year has vindicated those predictions, with high-profile
reports of AI automating key aspects of the cyberattack life cycle.
“Hands-on-keyboard intrusions still dominated” the landscape in
2025, Malwarebytes said in its report, “but the year delivered the first
confirmed cases of AI-orchestrated attacks—alongside deepfake-enabled
social engineering and AI agents that outperformed humans at discovering
vulnerabilities.”
Malwarebytes predicted that in 2026, AI’s “emerging capabilities will
mature into fully autonomous ransomware pipelines that allow
individual operators and small crews to attack multiple targets
simultaneously at a scale that exceeds anything seen in the ransomware
ecosystem to date.”
The report cited several concerning findings, including an IBM report
that 16% of breaches involved AI, with a third of those incidents
involving deepfake media; the fact that the autonomous
vulnerability-reporting agent XBOX topped HackerOne’s leaderboard,
becoming the first AI model to do so; and Anthropic’s discovery of how
cybercriminals were abusing its Claude tool for attacks.
cybersecuritydive.com
37 Countries Hit by Massive Espionage
Campaign
Asian government’s espionage campaign breached critical infrastructure
in 37 countries
The victims included national
telecommunications firms, finance ministries and police agencies, with
most targets suggesting an economic focus, Palo Alto Networks said.
Hackers working for an Asian government have breached at least 70
government agencies and critical infrastructure organizations in 37
countries over the past year as part of an espionage campaign likely
aimed at collecting information about rare earth minerals, trade deals
and economic partnerships, Palo Alto Networks said in a report published
on Thursday.
“While this group might be pursuing espionage objectives,” researchers
with the company’s Unit 42 group wrote in the report, “its methods,
targets and scale of operations are alarming, with potential
long-term consequences for national security and key services.”
The security firm provided indicators of compromise and described the
threat actor’s techniques and infrastructure.
In addition to penetrating targets in 37 countries — including
law-enforcement agencies, finance ministries and trade departments —
the threat actor has cast a much wider net, conducting reconnaissance
against government networks in 155 countries between November and
December, according to Palo Alto Networks’ report.
cybersecuritydive.com
From First-Gen Smartphones to
Cybersecurity:
BlackBerry CEO on the company’s reinvention
Speaking at the World Government Summit, John Giamatteo told Euronews
Next how the once mobile maker now powers secure systems for
governments and cars.
Once favoured by corporate professionals in the early 2000s,
BlackBerry was one of the first devices to let people send secure emails
on the move, long before smartphones became part of everyday life.
Combining push email, web browsing, calls and photography in one device,
it became a symbol of secure communication, particularly after
the 9/11 attacks when cellular networks struggled.
Many assumed the qwerty keyboard signature faded with the rise of
touchscreen smartphones. Instead, it quietly survived and reinvented
itself.
Today, BlackBerry operates largely out of public view, focusing on
cybersecurity and the Internet of Things (IoT).
euronews.com
International sting dismantles illegal streaming empire serving millions
Critical flaw in SolarWinds Web Help Desk under exploitation |
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Solutions to Curb E-Commerce Returns
Study: 360-Spin Views Cut E-Commerce Returns by 37%, Says Retouching
Zone
Retouching Zone, a global leader in
high-volume
eCommerce image editing, today released findings from a
comprehensive industry study revealing that interactive 360-degree
product views can reduce e-commerce return rates by an average of 37%.
The report, based on data analysis from Retouching Zone's portfolio of
over 10,000 global brands, highlights how "visual certainty" has
become the primary driver for consumer confidence in high-stakes
categories like jewelry, furniture, and apparel.
As global e-commerce return rates hit record highs in 2026, the
study underscores a critical shift in digital retail: shoppers are
moving away from static galleries in favor of interactive experiences
that mimic a physical showroom. By allowing customers to inspect leather
grains, stone clarity, and structural dimensions from every angle,
brands are effectively bridging the "expectation gap" that leads to
costly reverse logistics.
A pivotal takeaway from the 2026 report is that high-fidelity imagery
is no longer just for human eyes; it is the fundamental data layer for
the next generation of commerce. Retouching Zone's study identifies
two critical pillars for modern digital success:
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO):
As AI-driven search engines become the primary discovery tool, they
require dense visual data to accurately recommend products. 360-spin
views provide the multi-angle data points that allow generative engines
to rank a product as a "high-confidence" match for complex user queries.
Visual Search Optimization (VSO):
With the surge in "point-and-shoot" shopping, VSO ensures products are
instantly recognizable by visual AI. Precise editing ensures that when a
consumer snaps a photo of a product in the real world, AI search tools
can instantly find the exact match in a retailer's catalog.
finance.yahoo.com
Is E-Commerce Becoming Overwhelming?
Online Shopping Has Never Been Easier — Or More Overwhelming
Thousands of stores, endless offers, filters, reviews, coupons, and
prices that change every day. The result? Many shoppers end up buying
without truly knowing whether they’ve found the best option.
This is where a new way of shopping emerges: conversational commerce.
And at the heart of this evolution lies the intelligent assistant
developed by Comparor.
From searching to asking: AI that delivers real
savings
Until now, shopping online meant opening countless tabs, manually
comparing prices, jumping from store to store, and investing a
significant amount of time just to make a decision. With Comparor’s
intelligent assistant, that process changes completely.
The core of the assistant is an artificial intelligence system
capable of understanding natural language and turning it into a smart
query. It’s not a traditional search engine, but a powerful engine
that processes vast amounts of data in real time, identifies equivalent
products, compares prices, and ranks results by relevance and cost.
The goal is simple: save time and money. Instead of spending
minutes — or even hours — searching manually, users get a clear,
actionable overview of where to buy best in just seconds.
ritzherald.com
Allbirds Closes Harvard Square Store in Shift Toward E-Commerce
Amazon pulls ‘Melania’ documentary from Oregon theater after marquee
mocks film |
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Allegheny County, PA: Update: Seven teens charged in burglary ring
targeting Pa. gun stores
Eight people, including seven teens, were charged with being part of a
burglary ring that targeted gun stores in western Pennsylvania and Ohio.
Allegheny County police said Thursday that the group stole nearly 80
guns in January 2025, one of which has been linked to the fatal shooting
of a 7-year-old boy in Pittsburgh. Fifty-six of those firearms were
stolen from Allegheny Arms in Bethel Park on Jan. 13, 2025, and 23
others were stolen from Expert Outfitters in North Lima, Ohio, six days
later. Officials have recovered a majority of the stolen firearms;
however, about two dozen remain unaccounted for.
abc27.com
University Place, WA: Pierce County business owner accused of
trafficking stolen Lululemon items
A Pierce County business owner is facing felony charges after a
multiyear investigation uncovered what authorities describe as an
operation trafficking stolen Lululemon merchandise. Marra Carrissimo,
owner of New Lu Store and More, a small shop inside a University Place
jewelry store, has been charged with three counts of trafficking in
stolen property in the first degree. The investigation involved
University Place police, which is staffed by the Pierce County Sheriff’s
Office, Homeland Security, and Lululemon Loss Prevention Team
investigators. Court documents state that investigators seized more than
$100,000 of stolen Lululemon items through multiple search warrants of
the business, although they believe the real number of stolen items is
much more than what they were able to confirm. Investigators believe
many of the items were likely stolen in cargo thefts around the world.
king5.com
Albuquerque, NM: Four charged in $50K Albuquerque beauty store thefts
Four people were charged this week after allegedly stealing nearly
$50,000 worth of merchandise from beauty supply stores across
Albuquerque over two years. Renee Romero, 31, Michael Lovato, 42, Samuel
Begel, 57, and Tiffany Ramsay, 28, are each charged with organized
retail crime in connection with the thefts from Ulta Beauty locations.
Begel and Ramsay have not yet been taken into custody, but warrants have
been issued for their arrest. Romero and Lovato are behind bars at the
Metropolitan Detention Center. "Victimizing the same store multiple
times is violent and distressing for the employees who work there and
threatens community safety and well-being," states a pretrial detention
motion filed in Bernalillo County Metropolitan Court for Romero. "The
court should not trust someone capable of this type of serial criminal
conduct to have any respect for passive conditions of release." Court
records allege the group's retail theft scheme ran from 2024 to January
2026.
abqjournal.com
Roseville, CA: Update: Beauty Store Bandit Sentenced to Almost Ten Years
in State Prison
On Jan. 22, 2025, the Honorable Judge Gazzaniga sentenced 23-year-old
Andrew Morando to nine years and eight months in the California
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation for felony grand theft,
burglary and more. In March 2025, the defendant burglarized a local
Lincoln beauty store, stealing merchandise valued at over $24,000 and
causing more than $10,000 in damage. The defendant was later arrested by
the California Highway Patrol following a high-speed vehicle pursuit
ending in a crash, where stolen merchandise and a crowbar were recovered
from the vehicle. Through the Placer County District Attorney’s Retail
Theft Program, the defendant was also linked to an organized retail
theft scheme spanning across seven counties, resulting in approximately
$290,000 in stolen merchandise and property damage. The defendant
primarily targeted beauty stores but also burglarized other brand retail
locations.
placer.ca.gov
Cleveland, OH: Man arrested for $8,000 theft of trading cards from
Richmond Heights Meijer
Rancho Cucamonga, CA: Law Enforcement Conducts Retail Theft Suppression
Operation in Rancho Cucamonga
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Shootings & Deaths
Los Angeles, CA: 3 dead, several hurt after vehicle crashes into grocery store
Three people were killed and at least six others were hurt when a car slammed
into a grocery store Thursday afternoon in Los Angeles, authorities said. The
crash was reported shortly after noon at a 99 Ranch Market in the city's
Westwood neighborhood, according Los Angeles Fire Department spokesperson
Lyndsey Lantz. Three victims died at the scene, Lantz said. Paramedics were
treating six or seven patients, some in serious condition, she said. TV news
footage showed a silver sedan fully inside the store on Westwood Boulevard.
Preliminary reports say the driver was a female, according to Lantz, but it
wasn't immediately known if she was among the injured or dead. The cause of the
crash was under investigation. A spokesperson for the Los Angeles Police
Department said its investigators were still gathering information.
wral.com
Portland, OR: Portland police shoot and kill suspect during standoff at Pearl
District apartment
Portland police officers shot and killed a suspect while serving a search
warrant at his Pearl District apartment building Thursday morning. Days before
the deadly shooting, the suspect had falsely identified himself as a Secret
Service agent before trying to shoot a grocery store security officer, according
to Portland police. He also had a loaded shotgun with threatening messages
written on the shells that named President Donald Trump, the bureau said. During
the investigation, Northwest Savier Street to Northwest Quimby Street and
Northwest 13th Avenue to Northwest 15th Avenue are closed. "We're always
saddened at the lost of life," Portland Police Chief Bob Day said. Police
initially started investigating the suspect, who has not been identified, on
Saturday, Jan. 31, around 1:04 p.m. after officers responded to a report of a
threat involving a weapon at the Safeway on Northwest Lovejoy Street, said
police spokesman Kevin Allen at press conference Thursday morning. When
officers arrived, they learned that a suspect approached two uniformed Safeway
security officers, falsely identified himself as an agent from the Secret
Service, pulled out a hand gun at one of the security officers and pulled the
trigger, Portland police said. The hand gun did not fire. Then, the security
officers and the suspects "scuffled." The security officer pulled a backpack off
the suspect, who then ran away with the hand gun. In the days following,
Portland police's Enhanced Community Safety Team worked with the U.S. Secret
Service. Investigators determined the suspect's identity and learned he lived in
an apartment on Northwest 16th Avenue. Police obtained a a search warrant for
the suspect for charges including attempted assault in the first degree.
kgw.com
Kalamazoo, MI: Jury convicts Kalamazoo man in 2024 shooting outside Little
Caeser’s that left 4 injured
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Chicago, IL: Teens charged after hiding in Macy's past closing for heist they
mapped on paper
According to the post, two teens hid out in the downtown department store after
it closed, stole some merch and later walked out. “You can't make this kind of
stuff up" and "truth is stranger than fiction" came to mind when I saw this post
on the Cook County Sheriff's Instagram. The picture is of a very crude-looking
map of Macy's on State Street in Chicago. Why the map? Oh, it's because two
teens created it allegedly to use in a heist. This happened on the night of
February 1, and officers from the Sheriff's Police Community Safety Team
responded the next day after a couple of Macy's employees recognized two people
in surveillance footage from inside the store, who were seen taking sunglasses,
cologne, and clothes. The troublesome teens were found the same day, "wearing
clothes stolen the night before," and taken into custody. The teens later
admitted they had hidden in the store and that one of them had created a map
plotting out the now-failed scheme.
nbcchicago.com
Overland Park, KS: Police search for suspects after Oak Park Mall theft
Police are searching for two people accused of a jewelry heist inside Oak Park
Mall. Overland Park Police said the suspects stole the jewelry from a kiosk
inside the mall around 7:30 p.m. on January 8. Detectives said the kiosk had
already closed for the day. The suspects are accused of grabbing a “significant”
number of necklaces before running away from the mall. Police released pictures
of the two suspects. They are each believed to be in their twenties.
kctv5.com
Hamilton, ON, Canada: Would-be jewelry thieves did a U-turn when they spotted
cops at Eastgate Square
Four would-be smash-and-grab perpetrators were in for a shock when the entered
Eastgate Mall masked and armed with sledgehammers and crowbars. When they
entered the Mall they were confronted with Hamilton Police officers who were
conducting a proactive visit to the Mall’s jewellery stores. Spotting Police and
mall security, the group then fled the mall and returned to a waiting vehicle
driven by a fifth individual. The suspects were last seen leaving the area in a
black sedan. Investigators are continuing to work on obtaining detailed
descriptions of the suspects. Police are concerned the group may attempt to
target another business, as this attempt was unsuccessful.
bayobserver.ca
Roanoke, VA: Bridal shop served as ‘hub’ for human trafficking, drug-dealing
operations, prosecutors say
Hughesville, PA: McDonald’s Managers Charged In Restaurant Deposit Theft;
fabricated robbery
Bradford, ON, Canada: Man accused of Walmart robbery has violent criminal past
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Auto – Asheboro, NC -
Burglary
•
C-Store – Memphis, TN
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store- Omaha, NE –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Bakersfield,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store - Iredell Coun,
NC – Burglary
•
Cellphone – Baltimore,
MD – Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Germantown,
MD – Armed Robbery
•
Gas Station – Norwich,
CT – Armed Robbery
•
Grocery – Geddes, NY –
Armed Robbery
•
Grocery - Cleveland,
OH - Robbery
•
Hardware – Arlington,
VA – Burglary
•
Laundry – Oshkosh, WI
– Burglary
•
Liquor – Des Moines,
IA – Robbery
•
Liquor – Montville, CT
– Armed Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Queens, NY
– Burglary
•
Pharmacy – Monroe, MI
– Robbery
•
Restaurant – Miami
Gardens, FL – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Gastonia,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Osceola
County, FL – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Des
Moines, IA – Robbery
•
Tobacco – Miami
Springs, FL – Burglary
•
Walmart – Clarkston,
WA – Burglary
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Daily Totals:
• 15 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
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Staffing 'Best in Class' Teams
Every one has a role to play in building an
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'Best in Class' Community
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District Asset Protection Manager
Cincinnati, OH
As a District Asset Protection Manager, you will develop, teach, and
lead the implementation of the company's asset protection, shortage control and
safety programs for all stores in your district. You will train, mentor, and
collaborate with store management and shortage control associates to ensure the
effective execution and proper implementation of company policies, while driving
improvements in inventory management and loss prevention...
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Director, Safety
San Francisco, CA
The Director of Safety is responsible for developing, implementing, and
overseeing comprehensive safety programs across all retail locations, corporate
offices, and some distribution operations. This leadership role ensures
compliance with federal, state, and local safety regulations while fostering a
culture of safety excellence that protects employees, customers, and company
assets...
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