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David
Brown named Physical Security Director for Helzberg and
BenBridge Jewelers
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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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It's 'CIS Week' on the D&D Daily!
Follow along in the 'Vendor Spotlight'
column below as
CIS
showcases LP/AP solutions for the retail
industry
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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
What's Driving Retail Theft Decline in
NYC?
New York City Retail Theft Declines as Police Highlight Data-Driven
Enforcement
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retail theft in New York City declined significantly in February 2026,
offering a notable example of how targeted enforcement strategies and
data analysis are shaping retail crime trends in major U.S. markets.
According to the NYPD’s latest CompStat data, reported retail theft
incidents dropped approximately 25% year over year in February,
falling from more than 4,300 incidents in February 2025 to roughly 3,300
in February 2026. The decline comes during a period when retail theft
has remained a key concern for retailers nationwide, particularly in
dense urban environments where organized retail crime crews and
opportunistic shoplifting often concentrate around high-traffic shopping
districts.
The reduction in retail theft is part of a broader shift in crime
trends across the city. Overall major crime in New York City
declined in February compared with the same month last year, with
decreases reported in several categories including burglary, robbery and
grand larceny.
Police officials have pointed to a more focused, data-driven approach
to enforcement as one factor contributing to the decline. The NYPD
has increased attention on locations and time periods where theft
incidents are most concentrated, allowing resources to be deployed to
specific retail corridors, transit hubs and repeat-offender cases rather
than relying solely on traditional patrol patterns.
Retail
theft enforcement initiatives have also emphasized identifying and
disrupting organized retail crime groups responsible for large-scale
theft activity. Investigators have increasingly focused on
coordinated theft operations and the resale channels that allow stolen
merchandise to move quickly into secondary markets.
For retailers operating in New York City, the numbers reflect both
progress and continued challenges. While overall theft incidents
declined, many large chains continue investing in additional security
measures, including expanded video surveillance, locked merchandise
displays and other in-store loss prevention technologies.
Industry analysts note that urban retail environments often
experience fluctuations in theft trends due to seasonal shopping
patterns, tourism activity and law enforcement initiatives. As a
result, short-term declines may not necessarily indicate that the issue
has been resolved.
Still, February’s figures suggest that targeted enforcement efforts
combined with retailer security investments may be contributing to
measurable improvements in one of the country’s largest retail markets.
For loss prevention professionals, New York City’s recent results
highlight the value of coordinated strategies that combine operational
data, store-level reporting and law enforcement partnerships to address
evolving retail crime tactics.
'Combating Organized Retail Crime Act'
in the News
Bipartisan bill targets organized retail crime networks
U.S.
Rep. Susie Lee on Monday called for federal action to combat
organized retail crime, saying coordinated theft rings are costing
Nevada millions and threatening public safety.
Speaking outside a Las Vegas JC Penney, Lee said organized retail
crime involves sophisticated networks that steal large quantities of
merchandise and resell it across state lines.
“This isn’t typical shoplifting,” Lee said. “This is a coordinated
criminal enterprise.”
Her bipartisan Combating Organized Retail Crime Act would designate
organized retail crime as a federal offense and establish a coordination
center within Homeland Security Investigations to support
multi-state investigations. The House Judiciary Committee unanimously
advanced the bill in January.
Retail leaders said the thefts often involve clearing entire shelves
or displays in minutes. Representative with the National Retail
Federation said some groups transport stolen goods across state lines
and use profits to fund other illegal activities.
According to Lee’s office, Nevada lost an estimated $85 million in
tax revenue and more than $466 million in stolen goods tied to organized
retail crime in 2021. The National Retail Federation ranked Las
Vegas sixth nationwide for retail crime impact in 2025.
Lee said federal coordination is necessary to dismantle the
larger networks behind the thefts.
“We need the tools to go after the organizations themselves,” Lee said.
news3lv.com
CA's ORC Crackdown: $3.3M Recovered &
35 Arrested YTD
California’s organized retail crime efforts result in 33,000+ stolen
goods recovered in two months
California Highway Patrol officers
have recovered more than 33,000 stolen goods in organized retail crime
sting operations so far in 2026.
As part of the state’s aggressive efforts to combat organized retail
theft and protect businesses and communities, Governor Gavin Newsom
today announced state officials have recovered more than 33,000 stolen
items so far in 2026. Sending a clear message to all Californians that
organized crime has no place in our society, the Organized Retail Crime
Task Force, led by the California Highway Patrol, has resulted in 75
investigations, made 35 arrests, and recovered 33,354 stolen items
worth over $3.3 million in two months.
Sending a clear message to all Californians that organized crime has no
place in our society, the Organized Retail Crime Task Force, led by the
California Highway Patrol, has resulted in 75 investigations, made 35
arrests, and recovered 33,354 stolen items worth over $3.3 million in
two months.
This task force works closely with local law enforcement, district
attorneys, and retail partners to identify and dismantle organized
theft rings operating across jurisdictions. Investigations often involve
coordinated enforcement actions, surveillance operations, and
partnerships with retailers to track stolen merchandise and disrupt
resale operations.
In February alone, due to a significant enforcement action, CHP-led
operations resulted in 28 investigations and 19 arrests, while
recovering 30,982 stolen items valued at more than $3.15 million.
gov.ca.gov
Cargo Theft Impacting Insurance
Industry
The Insurance Industry take on Rising Cargo Theft
Insurance is becoming Harder to Get,
Large Insurance Company Says
US cargo theft continues to rise rapidly and is much in the news lately,
driven by organized crime entering the mix and with it highly
sophisticated types of fraud to secure solen loads.
The numbers for cargo theft in the US and Canada in 2025 are recently in
from cargo security firm Verisk CargoNet, and they tell the story.
Cargo theft losses surged nearly 60% to about $725 million in 2025,
even though the total number of incidents remained relatively stable at
roughly 3,594 theft events across the US and Canada.
CargoNet found the rising cost of theft reflects a shift toward more
targeted thefts. The average value per theft jumped 36% to roughly
$273,990, as organized groups increasingly focus on higher-value
shipments.
A key player in this arena is the insurance industry, which has been
covering the fast-growing losses.
As losses mount, insurers are taking a closer look at how logistics
companies manage theft risk. Griffith told IB that Marsh is introducing
tighter underwriting standards and greater scrutiny during renewals. In
some cases, insurers are imposing sub-limits on certain types of
theft exposures, particularly those linked to organized crime tactics.
scdigest.com
Strategic cargo theft drives underwriting pressure in logistics
insurance
Data shows overall crime is down in San Diego for the fourth consecutive
year
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Shrink Returns to Pre-Pandemic Levels
Target’s ‘shrink’ back to pre-pandemic levels, but it’s not all about
theft
Shrink, the industry term for lost
inventory, is often associated with theft but disrupted supply chains
can also lead to higher levels
Retailers
across the country, including Target, say one metric is finally
improving: Shrink is returning to pre-pandemic levels.
That’s good news for the Minneapolis-based retailer’s bottom line. At
one point amid the supply chain crisis following the pandemic,
executives said they expected shrink, mainly from theft and organized
retail crime, to reduce 2022 profits by $600 million.
Shrink — the industry term for lost inventory — is often associated with
theft, in part because of industry surveys and retailer-driven
narratives about shoplifting.
Target Chief Financial Officer Jim Lee, for example, told the crowd at
the company’s annual investors day March 3 that the reduction was “a
testament to the great work of our team, along with the industry and
community efforts to combat retail theft across the country.”
The recent improvement in shrink levels may have less to do with a
dramatic drop in shoplifting and more to do with supply chains
stabilizing after the pandemic, analysts say.
“Shrink has been going down for at least the last year across all
major retailers, and everybody’s high-fiving. But the most
significant contributor is inventory predictability and stability,” said
Brand Elverston, an independent retail consultant who formerly helped
lead asset protection at Walmart.
The reprieve may be short-lived. Analysts warn tariffs, and the price
changes they trigger, could potentially push shrink higher again.
startribune.com
No Kohl's Closures Coming
Kohl’s rules out major store closures despite disappointing Q4
The struggling department store is
simplifying promotions and adding value-priced merchandise to appeal to
its lower- to middle-income customer. But is it going far enough?
Kohl’s is working on a host of changes to merchandising, pricing and
marketing to address what have become chronic declines. For the full
year, net sales fell 4% to $14.8 billion, with comparable sales down
3.1%. Gross margin expanded by 34 basis points to 37.5%, and net income
rose 150% to $272 million.
But the company is ruling out major changes to its brick-and-mortar
fleet.
Last year, the department store closed nearly 30 locations, and
it is committed to an annual review of store performance. “Well over
90%” of those that remain are profitable, Bender told analysts Tuesday
morning.
“I would not anticipate any sort of grand plan of ... taking stores out
or adding stores at this point,” he said. “The focus for us is
actually on optimizing what we already have, and we’ll be focused on
making sure that we continue to push the stores’ productivity as far as
we can.”
retaildive.com
5th Month of Growth
NRF: Retail sales grow in February for fifth consecutive month
Retail sales grew again in February on both a month over month
and year over year basis.
Core retail sales (excluding restaurants, auto dealers and gas stations)
inched up 0.28% month over month in February and were up 6.24% year
over year, according to the CNBC/NRF Retail Monitor released
Wednesday, March 10, by the National Retail Federation.
Those figures compare with increases of 0.2% month over month and 5.72%
year over year in January 2026. Total sales were up 6.04% year over
year for the first two months of the year, and core sales were up 5.76%.
Total retail sales, including restaurants but excluding automobile
dealers and gasoline stations, were up 0.28% month over month In
February and up 6.24% year over year in February, according to the
Retail Monitor. That compared with increases of 0.2% month over month
and 5.72% year over year in January.
chainstoreage.com
Middle East conflict: Impact on logistics
Recent freight disruption is uneven by mode,
and it’s important not to conflate operational noise with where the real
cost impact is building.
Target readies next-day delivery for 20 more metros this spring
UK economic confidence declines amid global conflict and rising fuel
costs
A Better Framework to Manage Psychological Risk
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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Meet the Gen6 SP Slide and the H-Rack Boot!
Gen6 SP Slide
The
Gen6 SP Slide is a sleek, powerful, tamper resistant recoiling alarm
tether engineered to work seamlessly with CIS Smart Padlock Tags.
Key features include:
-
98 dB alarm — loud enough to stop theft
instantly
-
49 strand stainless steel cable with a
durable protective poly sleeve
-
Slide to Lock design that secures
directly into CIS Smart Padlock Tags
-
One step IR deactivation and release —
fast, simple, and frustration free for staff
The Gen6 SP Slide delivers reliable, high
impact security without slowing down your sales floor.
H Rack Boot
Designed
with discretion and protection in mind, the H Rack Boot mounts to the top
or bottom rack support and securely holds 16 Gen6 SP Slide tethers—8 on
each side. Add multiple boots as needed to fully protect your rack.
Gen6 SP Slide tethers have already proven themselves in real world environments.
On racks equipped with the original boot, organized retail crime (ORC) groups
attempting sweep thefts were stopped when they realized they were dragging the
entire fixture with them. In many cases, they abandoned the attempt, moved on to
the next store, and left when they saw the same protection in place.
A clear win for those stores - and an opportunity for yours. Join the
winners.
Contact us for more information. Let’s have a
conversation!
info@cisssinc.com / 772-287-7999
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Businesses Frustrated by Government
Cybersecurity Regulation
Conflicting definitions and timelines cause cybersecurity regulation
morass, industry reps say
A recent Government Accountability
Office report highlights businesses’ frustrations with the way the
government currently oversees cybersecurity.
Inconsistent definitions, overly burdensome information demands and
duplicative requirements are some of the problems that U.S. businesses
face in dealing with cybersecurity regulations, according to a
recent Government Accountability Office report.
Critical infrastructure organizations want federal agencies to work
together to streamline their rules, according to the March 5 summary
of a GAO panel discussion with infrastructure representatives.
Businesses recommended several possible solutions to the
regulatory sprawl, including agencies converging on common definitions
of key terms.
One problem participants identified was the overlapping regulatory
frameworks to which many sectors are subject. Financial-services
firms must comply with rules from banking regulators and the Securities
and Exchange Commission, one participant said, with the resulting
requirements being “duplicative and overly burdensome.”
According to GAO, another industry representative said federal
regulations that exceed their industry’s baseline level of security
“are duplicative and do not result in a better outcome.”
Multiple people said agencies sometimes adopt definitions — or even
specific requirements — that are vague or don’t account for the
peculiarities of a specific sector. “Several participants stated
that different frameworks have similar controls and reporting
requirements but have small differences that can create unnecessary
overlap and confusion,” the GAO report observed.
cybersecuritydive.com
Cyber Risk Rises As Iran War Continues
US entities face heightened cyber risk related to Iran war
The military campaign against Iran
is putting local governments, critical infrastructure providers and
major U.S. companies at heightened risk of disruptive attacks.
Ratings agencies warn that the U.S. and Israeli bombing campaign against
Iran could raise the level of cyber risk for U.S. public finance
issuers.
Fitch Ratings, in a report released Monday, warned that hacktivists,
state-sponsored groups and lone wolf actors could use cyber to target
critical infrastructure and U.S. public entities in reaction to the
war.
“So that’s the challenge I think we’re seeing now, because,
historically, municipal and local entities have not benefited from the
same robust investment in cybersecurity,” Omid Rahmani, director, US
Public Finance at Fitch Ratings, told Cybersecurity Dive.
Fitch Ratings warned the threat could range from distributed
denial-of-service hacks to financially motivated attacks and other
attempts to disrupt operations of these entities. They warned that
attacks on critical infrastructure providers such as power companies or
water utilities could lead to downstream impacts.
“Heightened geopolitical tensions involving Iran increase the risk of
retaliatory cyber activity, particularly against organizations linked to
the U.S., Israel and allies as past incidents have shown,” said
Leroy Terrelonge, cyber risk senior credit officer at Moody’s Ratings.
cybersecuritydive.com
Cybersecurity Pilot Program
Trump administration will test infrastructure cybersecurity approaches
in pilot program
The government can’t rely on a
“universal solution” to the challenges facing vital services, a top
White House official said.
The Trump administration plans to pilot-test security technologies
with specific critical infrastructure communities across the country
as it implements its new cybersecurity strategy.
The goal of the pilot programs is to “make sure that we can deploy
new technology much more quickly than we’ve done in the past,”
National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross said on Monday during an event
hosted by USTelecom.
The White House is still inviting states and businesses to apply to
participate in the program, but Cairncross said confirmed
participants include the water sector in Texas, the beef industry in
South Dakota and rural hospitals in unspecified states.
The administration’s goal is “finding solutions at cost and an
ability to scale that meet the moment and the threat,” Cairncross
said.
cybersecuritydive.com
HR, recruiters targeted in year-long malware campaign
Messenger can warn you about sketchy links without knowing what you
clicked |
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Amazon Impacted by Iran War
Iran’s attacks on Amazon data centers in UAE, Bahrain signal a new kind
of war as AI plays an increasingly strategic role, analysts say
The tech industry often talks about “the cloud” as though it were
something abstract and untouchable. But the cloud runs on data
centers, those data centers have an address, and that address can be hit
by a drone.
Last week, three data centers operated by Amazon Web Services (AWS),
two in the United Arab Emirates and one in Bahrain, were struck by
Iranian drones or missiles. The attacks forced the facilities
offline and led to service outages affecting banking, payments, delivery
apps, and enterprise software across the region.
The U.S. military also uses AWS to run some of its workloads,
including running Anthropic’s AI model Claude for some intelligence
functions, and Iran’s Fars News Agency said on Telegram that the Bahrain
facility had been deliberately targeted “to identify the role of these
centers in supporting the enemy’s military and intelligence activities.”
AWS has declined to comment on the Iranian claim, and it is not known
whether the attacks impacted U.S. military computing workloads.
Still, the attack is believed to be the first time data centers have
been deliberately targeted for air strikes in a conflict. Experts
say it almost certainly won’t be the last. Data centers are rapidly
emerging as vital strategic assets—and vulnerable targets.
The boundary between commercial cloud computing and military
operations has largely vanished. The Pentagon’s Joint Warfighting
Cloud Capability and its Joint All-Domain Command and Control networks
run on the same commercial infrastructure that serves banks and
ride-hailing apps. Meanwhile, several news organizations have reported
that the U.S. military used Anthropic’s AI model Claude—which runs on
AWS—for intelligence assessments, target identification, and battle
simulations during the Iran strikes.
That dual-use reality means that attacks on commercial data centers
can have immediate military consequences—and vice versa. “If data
centers become critical hubs for transiting military information, we can
expect them to be increasingly targeted by both cyber and physical
attacks,” Zachary Kallenborn, a PhD researcher at King’s College London,
told Fortune.
fortune.com
Digital Commerce Remains Strong
eCommerce Emerges as Bright Spot Amid Overall Retail Sales Dip
Consumer spending cooled slightly in January, although strong growth
in digital retail channels suggests that the broader trajectory of
household consumption remains intact.
Within those figures, the most consistent strength came from digital
commerce. Nonstore retailers, a category that includes eCommerce
merchants, recorded a 10.9% increase compared with January 2025 and
rose 1.9% from December, underscoring the continued expansion of online
retail channels even as overall monthly sales edged lower.
pymnts.com
How to make your e-commerce product visible to AI agents?
Amazon holds engineering meeting following AI-related outages |
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St Louis, MO: Undocumented Romanian Sentenced to 21 Months in Prison for
Fraud of Nearly $200,000 in 22 States
U.S. District Judge John A. Ross on Monday sentenced a Romanian national
to 21 months in prison and ordered him to repay the almost $200,000 he
stole from a nationwide retailer via “sleight-of-hand” schemes. Bobi
Covaciu, 39, tricked store cashiers in at least 22 states into believing
that he had paid the full amount of cash for a purchase. Covaciu counted
out cash matching the purchase price and then took the cash back from
cashiers and secretly pocketed bills, shortchanging the retailer by
hundreds of dollars or more per transaction. Covaciu would then return
the merchandise to a different store for a full cash refund. In at least
90 fraudulent transactions from February 2022 to September 2024, Covaciu
stole about $196,220 in money and property. Covaciu will be deported
after his release from prison. Covaciu’s criminal history shows that he
became involved in the fraud scheme as early as December 2016, just one
month after he illegally entered the U.S., a sentencing memo filed by
Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin Ladendorf says.
justice.gov
Idaho Falls, ID: Police seek public’s help finding burglars who stole
over $100,000 from local camera store
A local camera and supply store was burglarized early Thursday morning
when thieves smashed the front and stole numerous items. Idaho Falls
Police spokeswoman Jessica Clements says that at 2:30 a.m., the
department was alerted to a break-in at Perfect Light Camera Store on
17th Street by an alarm company. The glass of the front door was
smashed, and it was the main entrance for the burglars. The number of
people involved is not available at this time. EastIdahoNews.com spoke
with Chris Balmer, owner of Perfect Light, who said that the burglars
stole over $100,000 in merchandise from the store.
eastidahonews.com
Paramus, NJ: ICE Seizes Man Following Shoplifting in Paramus
A Jamaican-born U.S. citizen was seized by ICE after he and a companion
were busted by Paramus police for shoplifting at several Garden State
Plaza stores. Omar A. Brown, 32, and Sydomie Simmonds, 44, of Mount
Vernon, NY, were nabbed by Officers Matt Orefice and Clario Sampson
after fellow Officer Sean Casey spotted the pair in the mall parking lot
last Friday, Police Chief Robert Guidetti said. They were carrying
$8,722.43 worth of merchandise stolen from Alo Yoga, Lululemon, Pacsun,
Express and the Gap, the chief said.
tapinto.net
Albuquerque, NM: Police say man used his dog to help steal from stores
Albuquerque police are searching for a man they say uses his dog to
assist in retail thefts, targeting stores like Lululemon, Northface,
and AutoZone. The suspect, identified as Cuauhtemoc Pruess-Silva,
has a warrant for his arrest. Police say he uses his black Belgian
Malinois to intimidate employees during shoplifting incidents. Court
documents reveal that Pruess-Silva employs tactics such as kicking or
shaking the dog to agitate it, enabling him to flee stores with stolen
merchandise. Deborah Vigil, a trainer who works with law enforcement
K-9s, explained the potential dangers of using a dog in this manner.
“When we teach dogs to bite, we don’t teach them to bite with their
fronts, we teach them to bite with a grip,” Vigil said. “If you think
about the end of a jaw, if you hit it hard enough, it’s like hitting a
brick wall that can snap the jaw.” Aggravated battery is one of the
charges Pruess-Silva faces, as law enforcement considers the dog a
deadly weapon in these thefts.
kob.com
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Shootings & Deaths
Anderson County, SC: Upstate man gets 20 year prison sentence for Dollar General
robbery
An Upstate man will spend 20 years in state prison after he pleaded guilty to
shooting a cashier at a Dollar General and stealing money from the store.
According to the 10th Circuit Solicitor’s Office, Thomas Britt Alewine, of
Williamston, pleaded guilty in February to charges of attempted murder and armed
robbery in connection with a 2026 incident at the Dollar General in Anderson
County. A judge sentenced Alewine to 20 years in the South Carolina Department
of Corrections. Due to the nature of Alewine’s charges he will not be eligible
for parole, the solicitor’s office said.
wspa.com
Chattanooga, TN: DOJ: Chattanooga man sentenced in 2023 mall shooting connected
to gang violence
A shooting that happened at Hamilton Place Mall in 2023 was tied to gang
violence, and one Chattanooga man has been sentenced to prison, according to the
U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). On March 6, 2026, Chief Judge Travis R.
McDonough sentenced 21-year-old Jaquan Andre Smith to 10 years in prison. After
serving 10 years, he will be on supervised release for three years. The DOJ says
Smith also goes by “Lil Quanie.” Investigators arrested Smith on May 9, 2023. He
later pleaded guilty to possessing a machinegun. Smith used a model 17 Glock 9mm
pistol with an extended magazine and a machinegun conversion device, known as a
“switch.” This made the pistol fire fully automatic. It is illegal to possess an
MCD, which is classified as a machinegun. Chattanooga police officers responded
to a shooting at Hamilton Place Mall on Saturday, April 29, 2023, shortly after
5:00pm. Multiple shots were fired in the mall’s parking lot. Officers witnessed
several vehicles damaged by the gunfire. After their investigation, police
identified Smith as the shooter.
local3news.com
Brooklyn, NY: Innocent NYC shopper shot in broad-daylight burst of violence:
‘Everyone just scattered’
A 30-year-old innocent female bystander was shot while shopping in a crowded
outdoor plaza in downtown Brooklyn in broad daylight Monday, cops and sources
said. The woman took a stray bullet to the leg around 2:15 p.m. in front of the
clothing store Primark in Albee Square near Fulton Street, police said.
nypost.com
Port Orange, FL: High School senior shot outside 7-Eleven
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Fresno, CA: Detectives recover stolen goods, 2 unregistered guns in Lowe’s theft
probe in Fresno
Detectives investigating a string of thefts targeting Lowe’s stores in Fresno
and surrounding cities have identified a suspect and recovered thousands of
dollars in stolen merchandise, along with two firearms. The Fresno Police
Department’s Organized Retail Theft (ORT) team said it investigated thefts
reported between November 2025 and February 2026 and identified Isaac Navarro as
a suspect in cases with losses totalling more than $7,000.
kmph.com
Bedford, IN: Employee charged with $10,000 theft
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•
C-Store - Hatfield, PA
- Burglary
•
C-Store – Hart County,
GA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – York, PA –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Manchester,
NH – Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Irvine, CA
– Robbery
•
Cellphone – Bronx, NY
– Robbery
•
Grocery – Chicago, IL
– Burglary
•
Guns - Denham Springs,
LA – Burglary
•
Jewelry – San
Bernardino County, CA – Robbery
• Jewelry – Lawrenceville, NJ – Robbery
•
Liquor – Jefferson, NJ
– Robbery
•
Restaurant – Bronx, NY
- Robbery
•
Restaurant – Oak Lawn,
IL – Burglary
•
Tobacco – Brooklyn, NY
– Armed Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 10 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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They Remember Vendors Who Admit When Something Isn’t a Fit
Nothing builds credibility faster than,
“That’s not what we’re best at.” That honesty usually turns into more
opportunities later.
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