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Daniel
Edward Cruz, CFI named Divisional Vice President for AMZ Risk
Management, Inc.
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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
Interface Systems Releases 2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report
Annual study of 1.6
million monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail locations shows
AI-powered technologies and interactive remote video monitoring deliver
measurable results for retail loss prevention teams
St.
Louis, MO –
Interface
Systems, a leading provider of AI-powered security and expert remote
video monitoring for restaurants, retailers, and commercial businesses,
recently released its
2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report, an annual study
based on 1.6 million remote monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail
locations and 51 brands throughout 2025.
The report provides operational data at a scale to help retail loss
prevention leaders understand when risk peaks, which threats escalate
fastest, and which intervention strategies prove most effective across
thousands of monitored locations.
Click here to read more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
The Complexity of ORC Investigations
Why Organized Retail Crime
Investigations Can Take Months to Build
By
the D&D Daily staff
Organized retail crime (ORC) incidents often generate immediate
attention, particularly when surveillance footage or reports of
large-scale thefts circulate publicly. In many cases, however, the
resulting investigations continue long after the initial incident,
sometimes taking months before arrests or charges are announced.
While individual theft cases can often be addressed quickly, ORC
investigations typically involve a broader objective: identifying and
disrupting criminal networks rather than focusing solely on a single
event.
Industry experts note that organized theft groups frequently operate
across multiple stores, retail brands and jurisdictions.
Investigators may need to determine whether incidents occurring in
different locations are connected, identify suspects involved in
multiple theft events and establish how stolen merchandise is being
moved, stored or resold.
Building those connections often requires extensive review of
surveillance footage, transaction data, license plate information,
witness statements and other evidence. Retailers may also collaborate
with one another, sharing intelligence that helps identify patterns that
would not be visible from a single incident alone.
Law enforcement agencies face similar challenges. Organized theft
investigations can involve coordination between local police
departments, regional task forces, state agencies and, in some cases,
federal partners. When activity spans multiple jurisdictions, additional
time may be required to consolidate evidence and determine the most
appropriate venue for prosecution.
Prosecutors also play a role in the timeline. Rather than
pursuing a series of isolated theft charges, investigators may work to
document larger patterns of criminal activity that support more
substantial charges related to organized theft operations, conspiracy or
trafficking in stolen goods.
As a result, the public may not see immediate outcomes following a
high-profile incident. However, many ORC investigations are designed
to build comprehensive cases that address the broader network behind the
theft activity.
For retailers, the approach reflects a long-term strategy focused not
only on recovering losses, but also on disrupting repeat offenders and
organized groups that can impact multiple businesses and communities
over time.
Retail Expansion of ALPRs
License plate readers at Lowe’s and Home Depot being used by police in
anti-theft crackdown
Cops have been granted access to
license plate cameras used at popular home improvement stores in several
US states.
Lowe’s
and Home Depot shoppers’ data could now be part of police investigations
thanks to a major crackdown on organized crime.
The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation now has access to
automatic license plate reader data from Lowe’s and Home Depot stores,
according to local NBC affiliate WRAL.
It is the latest law enforcement agency to join a pilot program
offering access to data from Flock Safety cameras in North Carolina,
South Carolina, and Virginia.
Access to ALPRs at Lowe’s stores in the three states was granted to
the SBI in August, and the data was accessible a month later. The
SBI also requested access to Home Depot’s ALPRs, but it’s unclear
whether or not this access was ever granted per WRAL.
This program was first implemented last summer with a focus on utilizing
data collected by ALPRs on state-owned highways. It is paid for in
part by a federal human trafficking grant, with fighting this crime
being one of the main uses of the ALPR data per the SBI.
“The information is used to combat organized retail theft and human
trafficking,” read a statement issued by the SBI on Monday per WRAL.
Connecticut passed a law earlier this year allowing law enforcement
agencies in its state and select others to access ALPR data. But
state lawmakers have since sent letters to the CEOs of Lowe’s and Home
Depot to ask exactly how this data is used and who can use it.
the-sun.com
$2.6M in 'Criminal Tourism' -
Including 'Large-Scale Retail Theft'
Durham police say 'criminal tourism' widespread in GTA as 46 arrested in
investigation
Co-ordinated investigation links
over 200 incidents, $2.6M in financial losses
Over 200 incidents and $2.6 million in financial losses in the
Durham Region have been linked to a network of what investigators are
calling "criminal tourism," where legal visitors come from abroad to
commit profit-driven crimes before leaving Canada, police say.
Durham police announced the results of Project Jetsetter Friday, which
since 2019 has led to 46 arrests and nearly 1,500 charges laid in
Durham Region and the Greater Toronto Area.
Through multiple investigations, police targeted organized groups,
often linked to international criminal networks that travel to Canada to
commit a wide range of crimes, police said. They
include large-scale retail theft,
vehicle-purchasing scams, vehicle financing fraud and staging collisions
to commit insurance fraud.
A rise in jewelry distraction thefts is also connected to criminal
tourism, Durham police Chief Peter Moreira told reporters at a news
conference Friday, with vulnerable people like seniors
disproportionately targeted.
"They will exploit opportunities wherever they exist, and while the
methods may vary, the goal remains the same: to profit at the expense
of our residents, our businesses and communities," Moreira said.
Det. Brad Chapman said the majority of suspects and accused are from
Romania, and a smaller number are from India. Det. Brad Chapman said
the majority of suspects and accused are from Romania, and a smaller
number are from India.
As the Toronto area prepares to welcome thousands of visitors for the
World Cup this month, Chief Moreira said Durham police will continue
to work with provincial, national and international partners to disrupt
these networks.
cbc.ca
Can Stolen Phones Be Locked?
Make stolen phones unusable, Met Police urges tech giants
The Metropolitan Police is calling on tech firms to make stolen phones
harder to reuse and prevent criminals from profiting.
The force revealed on Thursday that it had started sharing data with
Apple to build a "global picture" of what happens to stolen handsets,
including whether they are being reconnected to a network.
"If stolen phones cannot be reactivated, their
value collapses, and so does the incentive to steal them,"
Met Police Commissioner Sir Mark Rowley said.
Sir Mark has asked the home secretary for legislation to make phone
companies publish data on stolen devices, and to enforce measures
rendering handsets effectively unusable.
In working with Apple to improve security, Sir Mark said only a minority
of stolen phones were being reactivated compared to a few months ago,
making it "harder for criminals to profit".
He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that, currently, illicit
software enables phone snatchers to "factory reset" devices, which
means they can be sold as if they are a new device on foreign markets.
But now, he said, Apple believes it has "cracked" the engineering
problem and data is starting to show that "the vast majority of
phones" stolen in recent weeks in the capital were not factory reset.
"I'd never say we're going to get down to zero crime, but this is going
to make a massive difference," Rowley told the BBC. "If they can only be
broken up for parts, if you start to make it harder for criminals,
they will steal fewer of them."
bbc.com
FBI targets violent crime across Connecticut with 'Operation Summer
Heat'
Patel touts 'most historic run of crime reduction in American history'
under Trump
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Leveraging AI for Safer Stores
AI's Emerging Role in Workplace Safety
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retailers continue to explore new applications for artificial
intelligence, many are looking beyond traditional security and loss
prevention use cases and examining how AI can support workplace
safety efforts.
While AI-powered video analytics have often been associated with theft
detection and security monitoring, the technology is increasingly
being evaluated for its ability to identify potential safety hazards in
retail environments before incidents occur.
Retail stores, stockrooms and distribution facilities contain a variety
of conditions that can contribute to workplace injuries, including
obstructed walkways, spills, improperly stored merchandise and unsafe
equipment usage. Historically, retailers have relied on safety
audits, employee reporting and routine inspections to identify and
address these issues.
Advances in AI are creating additional opportunities to monitor
environments more continuously. Some systems can analyze video feeds
and alert managers when predefined safety concerns are detected, such as
blocked emergency exits, unattended objects in walkways, unauthorized
access to restricted areas or the absence of required safety equipment.
Supporters of the technology believe these capabilities may help
organizations identify hazards more quickly and reduce the
likelihood of accidents. Faster detection can also allow store teams to
address issues before they affect employees, customers or daily
operations.
Industry experts note that AI is generally intended to complement
existing safety programs rather than replace them. Employee
training, safety procedures and management oversight remain critical
components of workplace safety strategies. In many cases, technology is
viewed as an additional tool that can improve visibility and support
more proactive decision-making.
As retailers continue to evaluate investments in AI, workplace safety
is emerging as an area of growing interest. Beyond reducing
potential injuries, organizations may also see benefits related to
operational continuity, workforce well-being and risk management.
Although adoption levels vary across the industry, the expanding use
of AI for safety-related applications reflects a broader trend toward
leveraging technology to support both security and operational
objectives throughout the retail environment.
AI & Retail Training
Walmart Gets Serious About Training Frontline Workers in AI — Are There
Any Downsides?
In a recent report penned by Mitchell Parton for Modern Retail, the
story surrounding Walmart’s ramping-up of AI training and
certification concerning its store-level employees was detailed.
Agentic AI in the bakery is guiding employees in the proper practice
of dealing with fresh foods and cake decoration, with this app
capability having been designed by a Walmart employee. Using Walmart’s
internal guidance as a judgment metric, the app can facilitate feedback
around how an employee’s cake decoration looks based on a photo for
context.
Walmart exec Daniel Danker suggested that AI implementation can allow
store management to draft digital scheduling dashboards on the fly in a
matter of minutes, or that an associate tasked with merchandising
could transform a wall of text into a useful graphic in mere moments.
“We’re all builders now,” Danker wrote in a LinkedIn post.
Optimization of workflow is key, as well. Stomski gave the
example of a Walmart Google AI-certified logistics manager who built an
app assisting drivers in finding the best available loads to allow them
to arrive home in time as the week draws to a close.
The OpenAI training program involves getting ChatGPT to query
employees around their personal goals, then the model aims to facilitate
a solution — with “structuring plans, creating agendas, tailoring
messaging, organizing ideas and drafting communications,” being the
central ideas, as Parton indicated.
retailwire.com
Will C-Stores Benefit from Family
Dollar Closures?
How C-Stores Can Capture Shoppers After Family Dollar Store Closures
As Family Dollar and other discount retailers shutter locations,
c-store retailers have an opportunity to win displaced shoppers with
essentials, value offerings and foodservice.
To learn more about what this means for c-store retailers and how
they can potentially use it to their advantage, CStore Decisions sat
down with John Matthews, founder and president of Gray Cat Enterprises,
Inc., a Raleigh, N.C.-based management consulting company.
John Matthews (JM): When a Family
Dollar or other dollar store closes, the first shopping missions up for
grabs are typically fill-in grocery trips, household essentials,
personal care items, snacks and beverages, and emergency purchases.
Convenience stores that expand these categories can capture both
immediate-need trips and recurring neighborhood shopping traffic.
Convenience stores should focus on value, not lowest price. Use
meal deals, bundled offers, loyalty rewards, multipack discounts and
key-value-item pricing on essentials like milk, bread and beverages.
Emphasize convenience, speed and fresh food to differentiate rather than
matching dollar-store pricing item-for-item.
cstoredecisions.com
Person With Measles Visited Retail
Stores
South Bay resident with measles visited SFO airport, San Jose locations
The Santa Clara County Public Health
Department urges potentially exposed individuals to monitor symptoms and
quarantine if unvaccinated
On Monday, June 8, the contagious individual visited San Francisco
International Airport’s International Terminal — including passport
control, customs and the international baggage claim area — between 8:30
a.m. to 11 a.m., the agency said, and also went to Trader Joe’s on
Coleman Avenue and the International Halal Market on E Santa Clara
Street between 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Members of the public who visited the sites at those times on June 8
may be at risk of developing measles seven to 10 days after they were
exposed, the department said. Officials also warned that any
unvaccinated individual traveling or joining large gatherings should be
aware of their increased risk of measles if exposed.
mercurynews.com
USA Today names Florida mall the nation’s best for second year in a row
Sleep Number files for bankruptcy, inks merger deal
Dollarama sales surge over 20% amid ‘weakening’ consumer confidence
Oil prices fall on US, Iran deal announcement
Papa Johns shuts down dozens of locations across 17 states
Last week's #1 article --
Auror's Crime Data Making Headlines
New data shows organized retail theft hitting North Texas harder than
national average
Report finds repeat offenders
account for most retail crime incidents in the region.
Retail
theft is taking a growing toll on North Texas businesses, and new
data suggests repeat offenders are driving much of the problem.
A report released by retail crime intelligence platform Auror found that
North Texas retailers experience repeat and organized retail crime at
a higher rate than the national average.
The company, which works with 265 retailers in North Texas, recorded
more than 20,000 retail crime events annually across the region.
Raul Aguilar, Auror's head of North America law
enforcement partnerships and a retired deputy assistant
director with the Department of Homeland Security, said the goal is to
help retailers and law enforcement identify patterns and share
information more quickly.
"We want to make sure that those events are then shared in a quick way,
so they can look at it and try to see what's impacting the community,"
Aguilar said.
The top 10% of offenders in North Texas are responsible for 72% of
recorded retail crime events. Nationwide, the top 10% of
offenders account for 66% of recorded retail crime events.
Auror said agencies in Dallas, Fort Worth, Arlington, Plano, Addison
and the Texas Department of Public Safety use its platform.
nbcdfw.com
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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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Visible security and proactive prevention hit the shopper
experience differently. Retailers have spent years leaning on entrance gates and
security guards to fight pushout theft. It works for a while, that visible
presence makes offenders think twice. Then the offenders adapt. They find
workarounds, and losses keep climbing, and the honest shoppers are the ones most
impacted.
In 2025, a national grocer in a global market put it to the test. They invested
in gates, guards, and Gatekeeper's
Purchek® technology, then measured what actually worked. The results were
telling.
Gatekeeper
Systems' research from that study shows 49% of pushout attempts bypassed
entrance gates entirely. Another 27% went through self-checkout, with nearly a
third of those involving offenders tailgating behind paying customers after
AI-enabled gates opened. The remaining 24% went through manned or unmanned
registers. Gates give you visibility, but they still need good timing, an
attentive employee, and an offender who doesn't know how to undermine it. That's
a lot of things to go right.
Guards faced their own challenges. Coverage depended on schedules, attention
shifted with service demands, and policies limited what they could do in the
moment. Pushouts happen in seconds. By the time a guard assesses intent and
weighs safety, the cart is already moving toward the door.
Meanwhile, paying customers feel the weight of all that security. Gate-and-guard
setups slow the exit for everyone, and that friction wears on the shopping
experience over time.
Gatekeeper's Purchek® technology takes a different angle. Instead of relying on
compliance at a gate or a guard's judgment call, the system acts on the cart
itself. When a cart with unpaid merchandise hits a defined boundary, the wheels
lock. The event ends quietly, no chase, no confrontation. Nearby shoppers often
don't notice anything has happened. It runs the same way every time, applying
little to no friction to paying customers and direct control where it counts.
The financial case backs it up. One $500 pushout requires over $16,000 in sales
to break even at a 3% operating margin. Multiply that across hundreds of
incidents a year and the margin damage stacks fast. Every stopped cart reduces
the volume of sales needed to stay whole.
The takeaway from this retailer's 2025 data was straightforward. Gates didn't
prevent pushout theft. Guards didn't stop it. Purchek® did. Getting ahead of the
problem protects shrink, preserves margins, and keeps store teams out of harm's
way.
Read the Full White Paper Here
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Retail's Cybersecurity Risks
Why retail's contractor problem is a cybersecurity risk in disguise
Ask any retail operations manager what keeps them up at night and you'll
hear the usual suspects: shrinkage, staffing, margin pressure. Rarely
will they mention the contractor who arrived unannounced at a
back-of-house entry, plugged a device into a network port, and left
forty minutes later without a record in sight. Yet for Australia's
enterprise security community, that scenario is not a hypothetical -
it's a recurring gap that sits at the intersection of physical and
digital risk.
The adoption of retail visitor management software has accelerated
sharply across Australian retail networks in the past two years, driven
in large part by organisations finally connecting the dots between
who walks through the back door and what that means for their broader
security posture. Platforms like Site360 have moved this
conversation from the facilities team's desk to the CISO's agenda - and
it's about time.
The Physical Access Gap Nobody Talks About
In most enterprise security frameworks, access control is treated as a
technology problem - identity providers, MFA, zero trust network
architecture. These are critical layers. But they assume the threat
originates from a keyboard. The reality inside a multi-site retail
environment is far messier.
Large retailers routinely manage hundreds of contractors, service
vendors, equipment technicians, and delivery personnel across dozens or
hundreds of locations. These individuals - many of them third-party,
many unaccompanied - have legitimate reasons to be on-site. They also
frequently have proximity to POS systems, server rooms, staff devices,
and network infrastructure. Without a verified, auditable record of who
entered, when, why, and whether they were qualified to be there, the
attack surface is effectively invisible.
This is not a theoretical risk. Social engineering attacks that begin
with physical access - tailgating, impersonation, device implants - are
well documented in the threat intelligence literature. Retail
environments, with their high foot traffic and contractor dependency,
are particularly exposed.
securitybrief.com.au
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1 Billion ChatGPT Users
ChatGPT Reaches 1 Billion Users as the AI Economy Takes Shape
ChatGPT reached 1 billion global monthly active app users in May,
CNBC reported on Friday (June 12), making it the fastest application in
history to reach that scale.
Google Maps, TikTok, Instagram and YouTube each needed between five
and eight years to reach the same threshold. ChatGPT did it in
three.
The growth tracks what PYMNTS Intelligence has been measuring in
consumer behavior for months. More than 60% of consumers now begin
daily planning, learning and shopping inside AI platforms—not
layering AI on top of existing habits but replacing those habits
outright. That’s according to a PYMNTS Intelligence survey of 2,113 U.S.
adults that tracked adoption across 54 personal-use cases spanning
shopping, finance, health, education and travel.
Product discovery is the clearest signal of that shift. A
separate PYMNTS Intelligence report found that 31.4% of AI users turned
to generative AI to find product links in February—the highest adoption
rate of any personal AI task in the dataset—with month-to-month variance
of just 2.6 percentage points, the tightest of any task measured. Low
variance at high volume is the signature of a settled habit.
As of January, 41% of consumers had used dedicated AI platforms for
product discovery and 43% said they had fully replaced their prior
methods. These shoppers are not running searches on Google and
cross-checking with ChatGPT. They open ChatGPT first and ignore Google
altogether.
Overall U.S. adult AI adoption crossed 54% in January, up ten
points in a single month. ChatGPT sits at the center of that adoption.
The app posted 62% year-over-year growth, with OpenAI processing 2.5
billion prompts per day across the platform as of last July.
pymnts.com
Do AI Agents Open the Door for
Hackers?
Agentic AI surges in financial sector even as many firms fail to manage
security risks
One-fifth of firms aren’t even sure
if they’ve been hacked through their AI tools, according to a new
report.
Financial services organizations are widely using AI agents for
common business operations, but many of them aren’t sure whether
their AI tools have opened the door for hackers, according to a new
report.
Sixty-two percent of financial services firms have deployed AI agents,
and 93% of those firms have given them some level of autonomy, the Cloud
Security Alliance (CSA) said in its Tuesday report.
The report’s authors said the main conclusion from their survey, which
consisted of interviews with 340 global IT and security professionals
between Jan. 15 and March 1, is that “financial institutions have
deployed AI faster than they have secured it.”
cybersecuritydive.com
Editorial: Data centers are a lightning rod. Some state regulation is
reasonable.
Google sues China-based scammers over Gemini AI abuse |
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Same-Day Delivery Wars
Walmart plans to bring delivery drones to Philly. What that means for
Amazon and the same-day delivery wars.
Walmart is raising the stakes in the high-speed delivery war with
Amazon, with part of this latest battle playing out in Philadelphia.
Wing, the first company to offer commercial drone delivery to homes in
the United States, announced this week that it will expand its
partnership with Walmart to bring drone service to seven new cities,
including the City of Brotherly Love, sometime in 2027.
Philadelphia’s inclusion in Walmart’s drone program would be the first
for the Northeast, part of a plan to bring drone delivery to 270
stores.
“Expanding into new markets with Wing allows us to provide an innovative
delivery option for customers, utilizing our vast store network to
make everyday shopping and fulfilling last-minute needs just a little
bit easier,” said Greg Cathey, Walmart’s senior vice president of
eCommerce fulfillment transformation in the U.S, in a statement.
The move, according to industry observers, would intensify the
competition with Amazon, which has been feverishly working to offer
increasingly faster deliveries to consumers through a mix of human
couriers and drones. While Amazon has been testing out drone delivery
since 2016, the competition lies not in who has the better machines, but
in who can deliver goods faster.
Walmart, which launched its pilot that began in 2021, has used
Atlanta and Dallas-Fort Worth as a testing grounds for its drones.
Just last month, the e-commerce giant launched “Amazon Now,” a
30-minute-or-less (human) delivery service in Philadelphia, also
available in Atlanta, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Seattle.
Early Walmart reports tout an average delivery time of 23 minutes
with their drones.
inquirer.com
Don't Get Scammed During Prime Day
Stay Safe This Prime Day: 9 Crucial Tips to Avoid Online Shopping Scams
Prime Day, holiday sales, and flash
deals create opportunities for shoppers—and scammers. Follow these
practical safety tips before you click "Buy Now."
1. Only Shop on Known, Reviewed Websites
2. When in Doubt, Look for the Lock
3. Research the Seller Before Buying
4. Lie or Omit Personal Information on Shopping Forms
5. Don't Use Your Debit Card to Shop Online
6. Watch Out for Fraudulent Gift Card Exchanges
7. Don't Tap the Ads
8. Install and Update Your Security Apps
9. If You Get Scammed, Don't Get Mad, Get Revenge
pcmag.com
Father’s Day Shopping: How to Avoid Online Scams | BBB
How Amazon and the White House ended Anthropic's Fable |
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Berlin, CT: Three wanted in organized retail theft case targeting Harbor
Freight
Police are seeking three suspects in connection with an organized retail
theft operation targeting a Harbor Freight store. Lukasz Rejch, 36, of
Connecticut, Barbara Tattersall, 62, of Connecticut, and Paul J.
Demanuele, 36, of Connecticut, are wanted on felony arrest warrants
charging them with larceny third degree and organized retail theft. The
charges stem from an investigation into thefts of welders from the
Harbor Freight store in Berlin. Hugo Mariera Esquilin was previously
arrested by Berlin police for a theft on Nov. 20 and for an active
arrest warrant involving 14 prior thefts at the store. Esquilin was
charged with larceny second degree and organized retail theft. Police
identified Rejch, Tattersall and Demanuele as accomplices during the
ongoing investigation. Rejch and Tattersall each have court-set bonds of
$50,000, while Demanuele has a $25,000 bond.
newportdispatch.com
Marysville, WA: Update: Convicted felon arrested in connection with
$47,000 JC Penney jewelry theft
A convicted felon was arrested in connection with the theft of more than
$47,000 in jewelry at the JCPenney store in Marysville. The Marysville
Police Department (MPD) concluded its investigation into the 2025
burglary, MPD announced Friday. During the break-in, suspects shattered
a rear glass pane, breaking into the store and stealing nearly $50,000
in jewelry after smashing a display case. Patrol officers responded and
began collecting evidence. Detectives continued the case through
physical evidence processing, reviewing surveillance footage, and
multiple forensic exams. Investigators were able to identify the
convicted felon as a suspect. On April 27, detectives established
probable cause, linking the man to the burglary based on DNA analysis
and corroborating investigative findings. On May 27, Marysville officers
found the man in the Bothell area. He was armed with a handgun, even
though, as a convicted felon, he is prohibited from possessing a gun.
msn.com
Millersville, PA: Police say man broke into store, stole collectibles,
then tried to sell them
Millersville police are charging a man with breaking into a game store,
stealing collectible cards and trying to sell them. Police say that on
Tuesday, Johnathan Delarosa was caught on camera using a hammer to break
the glass door at Owl Center Games on Manor Avenue and smash the display
case to steal the merchandise. They say he was later apprehended at a
card shop in Manheim Township after attempting to sell the stolen items.
Police say the total estimated loss including property damage and
stolen merchandise is valued between $5,700 and $7,700.
wgal.com
Doylestown Borough, PA: Man Who Charged $6,000 of Eyewear on a Stolen
Credit Card at Doylestown Store
Bellaire, TX: Walgreens theft suspect accused of stealing $1.1K in FIFA
merchandise
Cape Coral, FL: TikTok influencer who stole from Target arrested again
for violating probation
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Shootings & Deaths
Richland County, SC: Man, 25, killed in local restaurant shooting that wounded 7
others
Authorities have released the name of an Irmo man who died in a shooting that
also wounded seven others early Sunday morning. Richland County deputies
responded around 3:30 a.m. to the Jerk Hut restaurant on Zimalcrest Drive, where
they found multiple victims suffering from gunshot wounds. Investigators said
one person died as a result of the shooting. EMS crews transported two victims
from the scene to a hospital, while several others sought treatment at area
hospitals in private vehicles. On Sunday evening, the Richland County Coroner's
Office identified the deceased victim as 25-year-old Ty'shon Vogt of Irmo. Crime
scene tape surrounded the business for hours as investigators collected evidence
and interviewed witnesses in an effort to determine what led to the gunfire. For
nearby business owner Jassingh, the violence came as a surprise. He said he had
closed his store just a few hours before the shooting occurred.
wltx.com
Senatobia, MS: Officer involved shooting leaves one person dead at Walmart in
North Mississippi
The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation is examining an officer-involved
shooting at Walmart on U.S. 51 in Senatobia, Mississippi, involving the
Senatobia Police Department and Tate County Sheriff’s Office. Law enforcement
officers responded to a shoplifting call at the Walmart. Upon arrival, officers
encountered two subjects and a juvenile child fleeing from the store into a
vehicle. Officers attempted to stop the vehicle, but the driver drove in the
direction of the officers, almost striking one. An officer then discharged their
weapon, and the vehicle fled the scene. The subjects later arrived at a local
hospital, where one juvenile child in the vehicle was pronounced deceased, and
another subject sustained critical injuries. No law enforcement officers
received any serious physical injury.
wapt.com
Los Angeles County, CA: Teen killed in parking lot of Los Cerritos Center mall
An investigation was underway near a Chick-fil-A in Cerritos after a teenage boy
was shot and killed on Saturday. The incident was reported in the 18600 block of
Gridley Road, near the Los Cerritos Center, at around 4 p.m., according to the
Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department. Investigators say the boy was taken to
the hospital, where he died. No one else was shot, officials said. Details about
what led up to the shooting or a possible suspect were unknown. Deputies asked
the public to avoid the area while the investigation continues.
nbclosangeles.com
Columbus, OH: One dead after shooting outside Kroger on Saturday
An 18-year-old man is dead after a shooting in north Columbus on Saturday
afternoon. At about 3:22 p.m., police officers were dispatched to the 1400 block
of Worthington Centre Drive on the report of shots fired. When officers arrived,
they were unable to find a victim, according to the Columbus Division of Police.
A short time later, officers were notified that the victim — later identified
Aboubacar Fofana — sought treatment at a local hospital; despite receiving
treatment, he was pronounced dead at 5:11 p.m. Columbus police said Mohamed L.
Jalloh, 18, is wanted in connection with the shooting. His whereabouts are
unknown at this time.
nbc4i.com
Whitakers, NC: Deputies identify two men who died after shooting each other
inside Nash County Dollar General
Nash County Sheriff’s Office identified the two men who died after a shooting
Saturday morning. Deputies were called at 9:55 a.m. to reports of a shooting
inside a Dollar General on South White Street in Whitakers. When they arrived,
deputies said they found a man, later identified as 35-year-old Herbert Earl
Lawrence Jr, who had been shot in the chest. Lawrence died from his injuries,
deputies said. While investigating, deputies found a second man just a half a
mile away at the intersection of Nash and White Streets who had also been shot.
Deputies later identified him as 32-year-old Wilbert Silver III. He also died
from his injuries. According to the investigation, deputies said the two men
were arguing before exchanging gunfire. One of the men worked at the Dollar
General.
wral.com
Greenville, SC: Teen charged as adult after weekend shooting inside Haywood Mall
Greenville City Dispatch officials confirmed units responded to a shooting at
Haywood Mall on Saturday. Police said that at about 1:11 p.m., an officer
stationed at the mall heard what sounded like gunshots in the plaza between
Macy’s and Belk. The officer went to the area and found a woman who had been
shot in the foot, then went to Belk and found a man with a gunshot wound to the
shoulder and neck. Officers said Kamari Walker, 17, is being charged with high
and aggravated assault and battery. Officers explained this allows him to be
charged as an adult. Police said Walker has other charges, but they cannot be
publicized due to Walker’s age.
foxcarolina.com
Dayton, OH: 1 hospitalized after shooting near Dayton convenience store
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Warrington, PA: Shoplifting at Walmart Leads to Million-Dollar Bail for
Philadelphia Men
Police said an attempted shoplifting at a Warrington led to charges when one of
the men pulled a knife on security personnel employed by the store. On May 9,
2026, police say that Mark Alexander, 38, and Joel Long, 33, tried to steal a
Nintendo Switch from the Warrington Walmart. They said that Alexander asked an
employee to remove the gaming system, which costs just over $500, from the case
and then distracted the employee while Long concealed the item and left the
store without paying. When confronted by loss prevention employees from the
store, police said that Long pulled a knife out of his pocket and held it while
speaking to employees. Officers later found Alexander at a nearby bus stop. They
said he provided a false name before being arrested. Long returned to the area
shortly afterward and was also arrested. Police said they recovered the stolen
Switch and clothing Long allegedly discarded. Police also learned that both men
had arrest warrants out of Philadelphia. Both men were charged with offenses
including robbery, retail theft, making terroristic threats and harassment. Bail
was set at 10% cash of $1 million for Long and 10% cash of $250,000 for
Alexander.
tapinto.net
Gainesville, FL: Homeless man on probation arrested for threatening to “shoot
up” Burger King restaurant
Westchester County, NY: DOJ: 22-year-old charged in Armed Robbery spree that
targeted New Rochelle, Mount Vernon convenience stores
Greenville, SC: Greenville County man pleads guilty to armed carjacking of pizza
delivery driver
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•
C-Store – Colorado
Springs, CO – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – New
Rochelle, NY – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Mount
Vernon, NY – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Laredo, TX –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – San Antonio,
TX – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Washington
DC – Armed Robbery
•
Collectables –
Millersville, PA – Burglary
•
Dollar –
Winston-Salem, NC – Armed Robbery
•
Dollar – Madison
County, AL – Armed Robbery
•
Eyewear – Doylestown
Borough, PA – Robbery
•
Hardware – Redondo
Beach, CA – Burglary / 2x same day
•
Hardware – Redondo
Beach, CA – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Toledo, OH – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Lebanon, TN
– Armed Robbery
•
Pharmacy - Bellaire,
TX - Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Gainesville, FL - Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 13 robberies
• 3 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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