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Jodi Palermo named Market Investigator for Victoria's Secret



Mark Freund named Security & Loss Prevention for Purolator Inc.


See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here  |  Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position

 

 

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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact

 
The Surge in Violent Retail Threats
Retail Violence Is Rising — and the Risks Are Expanding


By the D&D Daily staff

Retail violence continues to be a growing concern across the industry, with incidents ranging from organized theft-related confrontations to isolated acts of aggression inside stores. While theft-driven violence remains a serious and well-documented threat, many retailers are also seeing increases in aggressive behavior that does not involve theft at all.

Frontline associates are increasingly reporting verbal threats, harassment, and intimidation tied to routine interactions. Disputes over returns, pricing, product availability, or policy enforcement can escalate quickly, particularly in understaffed environments where employees are stretched thin. These incidents often occur without any intent to steal, yet they carry the same potential for harm to employees and customers.

Retailers are also paying closer attention to internal workplace violence. Staffing shortages, high turnover, and sustained pressure on store teams have contributed to heightened tensions between employees. While serious physical incidents remain relatively rare, reports of hostile behavior, threats, and confrontations among coworkers have increased in many organizations.

Loss prevention and asset protection teams are increasingly involved in addressing these risks. Historically focused on theft deterrence and external threats, LP functions are now collaborating more closely with store operations and human resources to improve de-escalation training, incident reporting, and response protocols. The goal is not only to reduce theft-related confrontations, but to manage risk across a wider range of safety scenarios.

Retailers are also refining how they track and analyze violence. In addition to theft-related incidents, many organizations are placing greater emphasis on documenting non-theft confrontations and verbal threats. These events can serve as early indicators of broader safety challenges, helping retailers identify trends related to staffing levels, store layout, or peak traffic periods.

Addressing retail violence requires a comprehensive approach. Recognizing the full spectrum of risks — both theft-related and non-theft-related — allows retailers to better protect employees, reduce liability, and create safer store environments in an increasingly challenging operating landscape.


ORC is a Top 2026 Focus
6 retail policy priorities for 2026

NRF in Washington: A focus on organized retail crime, swipe fees, AI and more

Organized retail crime remains a persistent threat to retailers, their employees and the communities they serve. Despite significant investments in security, training, store design and partnerships with law enforcement, retailers continue to face elevated levels of theft and violence driven by increasingly sophisticated criminal networks operating across physical, digital and international channels.

Beyond financial losses, ORC puts retail workers and shoppers at risk and forces retailers to make difficult operational decisions, including increased security measures and restricted product access. Retailers and local law enforcement across the United States are committed to maintaining safe environments, but federal support is needed to counter organized theft groups that operate beyond state and national borders.

Addressing the scale and complexity of organized retail crime requires coordinated federal action. The House Judiciary Committee’s vote on Jan. 13 to report the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (H.R. 2853/S. 1404) favorably out of committee marked a significant step toward advancing comprehensive federal solutions, moving the legislation one step closer to consideration on the House floor and passage into law.

NRF will continue pressing for the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act’s swift passage and implementation to ensure retailers and law enforcement have the tools and support necessary to protect our businesses, our workers, our customers, our communities and our national economy. nrf.com


States Continue to Battle ORC with New Laws
Organized retail crime: An expensive and growing problem
Organized retail crime is a growing and increasingly sophisticated threat impacting businesses and consumers across Arkansas and the nation, according to state officials and law enforcement leaders.

Attorney General Tim Griffin said organized retail crime costs businesses an estimated $70 billion to $100 billion annually nationwide, a cost often passed on to consumers through higher prices. The crimes can also lead to reduced store hours, job losses, or store closures, and deprive communities of sales tax revenue that funds public services.

Griffin said organized retail crime was not a major focus when he served as lieutenant governor in 2023, but it has since become a top priority. His office now has a full-time investigator dedicated to organized retail crime and participates in a multi-state partnership with Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama to disrupt criminal networks that operate across state lines.

The attorney general’s office also works with local law enforcement agencies and retailers, which officials say are often the first to identify suspects and patterns of theft. Retail industry leaders say collaboration with law enforcement is critical, noting that even modest losses can have significant impacts on businesses operating on thin margins.

State officials say the fight against organized retail crime requires a coordinated approach involving local, state and federal authorities, along with private-sector partners. While enforcement efforts are increasing, authorities say the problem remains widespread and ongoing.

Two Arkansas laws are now targeting organized retail crime from nearly every angle. Act 321 allows police to add up repeat thefts across multiple stores, turning small thefts into felony charges. Act 555 goes after the entire crime ring, including organizers and fencers who profit from stolen goods. Together, these laws are designed to shut down theft networks and protect Arkansans from higher prices. fox16.com


ORC 'Most Prevalent Crime Affecting Businesses'
San Jose DA and police chief outline retail theft crisis and staffing challenges ahead of Super Bowl
Some of the biggest problems facing businesses in San Jose were laid out by Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen and San Jose Police Chief Paul Joseph on Wednesday. During a panel at the San Jose Chamber of Commerce, the pair discussed crime issues affecting local businesses and the city's efforts to address them.

The most prevalent crime affecting businesses is organized retail theft, which includes smash and grab crimes and serial stealers, according to Rosen. "It's horrible for the people that work in the stores, it's a horrible experience for them," Rosen said after screening footage of a San Jose smash and grab crime. "They feel powerless."

He added that when people see lawlessness without consequences they begin to lose faith in those who are supposed to protect them.

Joseph echoed that assessment, saying that while overall crime is trending downward, retail theft driven by repeat offenders continues to plague local businesses. Proposition 36, passed in late 2024, was aimed at curbing organized retail theft by imposing harsher penalties on serial offenders while mandating drug and mental health services. bizjournals.com


UK: Shoplifting offences up 5%, to 520,000 recorded incidents
The number of shoplifting incidents recorded by police rose by 5% last year, with a total of 519,381 offences logged in the Crime Survey for England and Wales for the 12 months to September 2025.

Los Angeles saw fewer homicides in 2025 than any year since 1966, new stats show

How local, state officials are preparing if ICE comes to Milwaukee
 



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Retail CEO Exodus Impact
Is High Exec Turnover Hurting Retailers?
C-level departures have accelerated in recent years, and while shaking up top management can reduce complacency within an organization and improve performance, it also has downsides.

The exec exits most called out are at the CEO level, a role where turnover just wrapped up its second consecutive record year, according to analysis by Russell Reynolds Associates.

Russell Reynolds attributes the faster pace of CEO changes to continued economic and political volatility, rapid technological change, and pressure from activist investors. The management consulting firm said the shift to shorter CEO tenures shows the CEO role is shifting from the “long-term steward of the organization to a catalyst for transformation. Leadership success is increasingly being defined by a CEO’s ability to drive rapid, visible results, with far greater pressure to deliver immediate impact.”

Top Retailers Swapping CEOs in Recent Years

At the retail level, new CEOs hired in 2024 at Macy’s, Nike, Starbucks, VF Corp., Petco, and Under Armour led to extensive changes in other c-level roles — and the pattern continued for many retailers in 2025. CEO departures over the last year occurred at Kohl’s, Kroger, Ulta Beauty, L.L. Bean, Lululemon and The Container Store, with Walmart and Target both seeing new CEOs, effective Feb. 1.

Tagro Solutions, a human resources consultant, in a blog entry said high c-level turnover can strain longstanding client and customer relationships and impact morale as existing employees worry about job security. Tagro also noted that the loss of loss of institutional knowledge that can lead to training gaps and project delays.

A survey from Gartner — of 227 supply chain execs taken in mid-2025 — showed 54% reporting that leadership turnover significantly disrupted their supply chain operations in the past three years.  retailwire.com


Friday's Walkouts: Stores Closed & Americans Urged to Skip Shopping
National Shutdown: General strike on January 30 aims to push ICE out of Minnesota. Stores closed, protests scheduled in all 50 states

Organizers are urging Americans nationwide to skip work, school, and shopping today after two fatal shootings by ICE agents.

Following the anti-ICE economic blackout in Minnesota last month and national Free America Walkout, organizers once again urged Americans to stop working, attending school, and spending money to protest the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement crackdown surging across the country.

National Shutdown Day on January 30 was a call to strike—to disrupt business as usual—as a way for Americans to register their mounting anger at the Trump administration’s deployment of ICE and U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents in Minneapolis and other cities nationwide.

With the tagline “No work. No school. No shopping. Stop funding ICE,” the nationalshutdown.org website reads, “The people of the Twin Cities have shown the way for the whole country—to stop ICE’s reign of terror, we need to SHUT IT DOWN. The entire country is shocked and outraged at the brutal killings of Alex Pretti, Renee Good, Silverio Villegas González, and Keith Porter Jr. by federal agents. . . . It is time for us to all stand up together in a nationwide shutdown and say enough is enough!” fastcompany.com


Nearly 65 Closures
Saks to close most of its Off 5th and Last Call discount stores
The parent company of Saks Off 5th and Last Call will close most locations to focus on its luxury retail stores after filing for bankruptcy this month.

Saks Global announced on Thursday that it will shutter almost 60 of its Off 5th locations and five Last Call storefronts. One dozen Off 5th locations will remain open, according to the company’s press release.

By shutting down the discount stores, Saks Global’s attention has shifted to its luxury offerings at Saks Fifth Avenue, Neiman Marcus and Bergdorf Goodman. It’s a major shift for the company, which floundered under a heavy debt load following its purchase of rival Neiman Marcus in 2024. However, even before the purchase, the company was already in a precarious financial situation. cnn.com


Survey: Consumers to cautiously keep spending in 2026
Consumers concerned about economic stability in 2026, but many still planning to spend steadily.

Starbucks to open 150 to 175 U.S. stores in 2026; sees 'big' long-term opportunity

Target to open seven stores in March — here’s where

What Lessons Can Be Learned From Eddie Bauer’s Retail Exit?

Cheerios, Pringles, Nutella among thousand of products recalled over rodent, bird waste


Last week's #1 article --

Repeat Offenders, High Dollar Thefts Fueling Retail Crime?
UK: Force's focus on repeat shoplifters behind success

A police force with a top record for tackling shoplifting said its success was down to focusing on prolific offenders and shops with a high number of thefts.

Cleveland Police said it solved 33% of reported shoplifting offences in the last year, above the national rate of 23%, which made it "top of the country". Supt Alan O'Donoghue said a "significant proportion" of offences happened in a "small number of repeat locations", with about 40 offenders found responsible for about a sixth of all crimes.

The force said it received 8,876 reports of retail crime offences in the last year. Over two days in December, officers charged two people with 53 shoplifting offences. O'Donoghue, the force's strategic lead for retail crime, said: "We'll continue to prioritise the identification, arrest and prosecution of prolific, abusive and violent retail offenders."

The force said it was working to identify root causes of shop thefts, as well as helping with staff training and supporting witnesses and victims. Shop workers often suffered the impacts of the crime, including verbal and physical abuse, O'Donoghue said.

"They have to come into work worrying when the next offence will occur, we absolutely take this seriously and understand the impact this has on employees," he said. He added some shops were not reporting crimes because they felt police would not take the matter seriously.

"That's absolutely not the case, we need retailers to report crime that's occurring within their stores because then we can deploy to the right areas."  bbc.com

 



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AI Secrets Stolen From Google
DOJ: Ex-Google engineer found guilty of stealing AI secrets
A federal jury in California convicted former Google software engineer Linwei Ding, also known as Leon Ding, on seven counts of economic espionage and seven counts of theft of trade secrets tied to AI technology.

Ding faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for each count of theft of trade secrets and up to 15 years for each count of economic espionage.

What happened?

According to court records, Ding accessed and removed more than 2,000 pages of confidential information from Google systems between May 2022 and April 2023 while employed as a software engineer. Prosecutors said the material was uploaded to Ding’s personal Google Cloud account. In December 2023, shortly before his resignation, Ding downloaded the data to a personal computer.

Evidence at trial also showed that Ding maintained relationships with two technology companies based in the People’s Republic of China during his employment.

Trade secrets tied to Google’s AI supercomputing infrastructure

Jurors found that the stolen information related to hardware and software used in Google’s AI supercomputing data centers. The material included detailed designs for Tensor Processing Unit chips, graphics processing unit systems, and software used to manage communication and task execution across large scale computing environments.

Additional information covered software used to coordinate thousands of chips into systems capable of training and running large AI models. The trade secrets also involved Google’s custom SmartNIC technology, which supports high speed networking inside AI infrastructure and cloud services. helpnetsecurity.com


Fewer Ransomware Attacks in Q4 2025
Cisco sees vulnerability exploitation top phishing in Q4

The company’s recommendations included monitoring for abuses of multifactor authentication, a growing threat to the enterprise.

The share of cyberattacks that relied on vulnerability exploitation as the initial means of access dropped in the fourth quarter of 2025, although it still remained high, researchers from Cisco’s Talos threat intelligence team said in a blog post published on Thursday.

Nearly 40% of the incidents to which Cisco responded in Q4 began with the exploitation of public-facing network services, compared with 62% in the third quarter.

Cisco also saw fewer ransomware attacks in Q4 (13% of all incidents) compared with Q3 (when it was 20%) and the first half of the year (when it was nearly 50% in both Q1 and Q2). Notably, Cisco said it “did not respond to any previously unseen ransomware variants.”

While vulnerability exploitation remained high in Q4, there were no major exploitation campaigns that accounted for the lion’s share of the activity, Cisco said — a departure from Q3, when the ToolShell campaign unleashed a wave of attacks. Still, there were multiple attacks targeting a flaw in Oracle’s E-Business Suite and a vulnerability in React Server Components.

Phishing ranked second behind exploitation on the list of most common initial access methods that Cisco observed, and the company described a campaign targeting a victim community that rarely features in threat intelligence reports: Native American tribal organizations. cybersecuritydive.com


Another Sector Facing Surge in Cyberattacks
Manufacturers fortify cyber defenses in response to dramatic surge in attacks

IT/OT convergence and other trends are making the manufacturing industry’s networks more vulnerable and more frequently targeted, but sector leaders are working to improve their cyber posture.

As U.S. manufacturing firms weather a constant barrage of cyberattacks, the various industries in that sector — which underpin everything from military readiness to everyday necessities — are banding together to learn from past incidents and boost their collective defenses.

Even as other critical infrastructure sectors like energy, healthcare and telecommunications receive more attention from most policymakers, cybersecurity firms have repeatedly found that manufacturing is the most targeted of the 16 critical infrastructure sectors recognized by the U.S. government. Hackers see manufacturers as especially enticing victims, because they make and store sensitive intellectual property, operate businesses that can’t afford interruptions and rely on complex supply chains. For those same reasons, industry leaders, cybersecurity experts and government officials increasingly warn that both U.S. national and economic security depend on protecting the heavily besieged manufacturing sector. cybersecuritydive.com


Apple’s new privacy feature limits how precisely carriers track your location

EFF calls out major tech companies on encryption promises

 


 

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Agentic Shopping Gaps
Bot payments lag in agentic commerce

Within the emerging world of agentic commerce, a broad gap exists between bot shopping and autonomous payments.

Despite their transformative potential, digital shopping bots will likely spend their early days among mundane staples: milk, toothpaste, cat litter.

These goods carry lower prices, fewer risks and minimal complexities, allowing for simpler transactions as consumers acclimate to an e-commerce world where digital agents make their purchases.

Amid this “getting-to-know-you” phase by consumers, agentic commerce is driving a massive shift of payment and merchandising technology and protocols in the e-commerce world akin to the changes required a generation ago when retail merged with the internet.

As agentic commerce assumes a more prominent role in 2026, banks and card networks are plotting their way through issues of fraud, consumer trust and identity verification, while merchants are confronting concerns over the potential loss of customer data and a tangle of new technical protocols for how to sell through digital bots.

Consumer behavior with AI is very fluid,” making it difficult to know which protocols or AI providers are likely to gain mass adoption, said Adam Behrens, the co-founder and CEO of New Generation, a software startup that builds agentic commerce tools for merchants. The company’s parent is Internet Forest, based in San Francisco.

“If you invest resources into one ecosystem or platform right now, you are going to find yourself in a spot where the market is going to change, consumers are going to change, and you are going to have to then redo that effort in three months or six months,” Behrens said in an interview last week. paymentsdive.com
 

AI Fueling Amazon Layoffs?
Amazon’s layoffs are staggering. We’ve seen this before
Big Tech continues to wrestle with mass layoffs, most recently with Amazon’s announcement to slash 16,000 jobs. It’s a trend that started long before the AI race: organizational change brought by the arrival of new technology.

Tech giants flourish or falter based on their decisions to overhaul themselves, often leaving tens of thousands of workers to pay the price. The 1990s and 2000s saw a wave of layoffs from industry stalwarts like IBM, Hewlett Packard and Microsoft, which embraced technological advancements like personal computers, mobile devices and the cloud.

Amazon’s staggering jobs cuts this week, the second wave since October, brings the commerce giant’s recent layoffs to roughly 9% of its corporate workforce.

While Amazon’s layoffs aren’t a direct result of AI, they’re tangentially related. Advancements in AI have sparked widespread concern about the future of jobs, as fellow tech giants Microsoft, Meta and Verizon all made layoffs last year. cnn.com


Exclusive: Saks ending e-commerce partnership with Amazon, source says


 


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Petaluma, CA: 2 arrested in Petaluma smash-and-grab robbery, additional suspects sought
Two men were arrested after a smash-and-grab robbery at a Petaluma jewelry store on Saturday afternoon, and police are searching for four other suspects. Petaluma Police Department officers were called just after 4:45 p.m. to the Gold Rush Jewelers store at 385 North McDowell Blvd. on reports of six armed suspects entering the building and smashing display cases, according to a department statement. Police also reported that an "uninvolved bystander" saw the suspects enter the building and "drove the suspect’s unattended vehicle into the front of the store." "The crash prompted the suspects to flee. Once outside the store one suspect pepper sprayed the bystander as he attempted to get away from the vehicle," the PPD said. "Four suspects then entered the vehicle and drove out of the shopping center while two others ran from the area." The bystander was treated and released for minor injuries, and no one else was reported injured in the robbery.  ktvu.com


Dover, DE: Perth Amboy Man Charged with Identity Theft, Fraud at Delaware Home Depot Stores
A 31-year-old Perth Amboy man faces 28 counts of identity theft and other felonies allegedly committed at Home Depot stores throughout Delaware, according to the Delaware State Police. Authorities charged Christian Pacheco, from Perth Amboy, in connection with fraudulent purchases at various Home Depot stores between August and September 2025, according to a prepared statement from the Delaware State Police Fraudulent Crimes Unit. The suspect allegedly made more than $24,000 in fraudulent purchases, authorities said. Pacheco was taken into custody on Jan. 5th at a New Jersey airport and taken to Delaware, where he was charged with 28 counts of identity theft; 28 counts of forgery; 28 counts of theft under $1,500; 28 counts of using stolen or forged credit cards from victims aged 62 or older; 19 counts of conspiracy; 9 counts for unlawful credit card use; and shoplifting under $1,500. After a court arraignment, Pacheco was released from custody on a $63,750 cash bond.  tapinto.net


Lakeville, MA: Detectives disrupt multi-state vape shop theft ring
Lakeville Police said four teenage suspects are behind a multi-state vape shop theft ring leaving several businesses out of thousands of dollars. Police said that the suspects allegedly stole from 11 stores in Rhode Island, Massachusetts, and Connecticut over two weeks turnto10.com


Rice Lake, WI: Couple facing $2,900 retail theft charges, man breaks bond condition within week

Detroit, MI: Man accused of stealing $1,400 worth of meat, liquor from Shelby Township Kroger
 



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Shootings & Deaths


Baltimore, MD: Two injured in southwest Baltimore store shooting
Baltimore police are investigating a shooting that left two men injured late Saturday night in southeast Baltimore. On Jan. 31, around 10:27 p.m., officers were on patrol in the 4100 block of Eastern Avenue when they saw several people running out of a store, according to police. When officers went inside, they found a 20-year-old man suffering from a gunshot wound to his hand and a 25-year-old man with gunshot wounds to his arm. Both victims were taken to a nearby hospital for treatment and were reported to be in stable condition.  foxbaltimore.com


Jacksonville, FL: 2 men shot during store robbery in Lakeshore area, store clerk in life-threatening condition
A store clerk and another man were shot on Saturday during a robbery in the Lakeshore area, the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office said. Police responded to the 4600 block of Shirley Avenue for a person who was shot in the chest at around 12:45 p.m. The victim, a store clerk in his early 20s, tried to stop someone from stealing from the store. He was confronted by another man who began shooting at him, JSO said. There was an exchange of gunfire with surrounding businesses and cars being struck, investigators said. Jacksonville Fire and Rescue took the store clerk to a nearby hospital with life-threatening injuries. Sometime later, another man in his early 20s was taken to a hospital in a private car with a gunshot wound to his abdomen and is in critical conditon, JSO said. There are several people detained in relation to this incident and there is no further threat to the community. news4jax.com

 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Greece, NY: One 17-year-old hospitalized after stabbing at Greece mall, another arrested
A 17-year-old boy was hospitalized Saturday afternoon after sustaining a stab wound, according to the Greece Police Department. "I'm grateful to our first responders. I feel terrible for the victim. He's a Greece kid," Councilmember Spencer Bernard said of the incident, Saturday. Officers found the 17-year-old victim stabbed in the upper body, after responding at the mall shortly before 1:20 P.M. The mall's private security officers detained the suspect without incident, a 17-year-old from Rochester, who was charged with assault in the first degree. He is expected to be arraigned. The victim was hospitalized with non-life-threatening injuries. Greece police also said the victim and suspect knew one another.  wjactv.com


London, England: Shock moment hammer-wielding thugs break into London jewelry store in brazen robbery in front of terrified onlookers
The thieves looted the window display of a family-run jewelers in Richmond, west London in broad daylight on Saturday morning. In appalling footage circulating on X, two men dressed in black can be seen taking a large hammer to the shop window of Gregory & Co. Unable to smash through, one of the men can be seen trying to rip the glass back. They then start plundering the valuables on display and shoving them into a blue carrier bag. Members of staff can also be seen inside the shop trying desperately to take the valuables off the display to stop them being stolen.  thesun.co.uk


Broward County, FL: BSO Captures Former CVS Worker Wanted in Years-Long Grand Theft Investigation
A wanted former CVS Pharmacy employee, who authorities say stole thousands of dollars from the store over a multi-year period, has been captured and arrested. According to Broward County Sheriff’s Office records, Mikailovenski Lorgeat, 28, of Tamarac, was taken into custody on January 3. Investigators allege the thefts date back to late 2019, when Lorgeat was employed as a shift supervisor at the CVS Pharmacy located at 3915 West Commercial Boulevard. Arrest affidavits state that CVS loss-prevention officials began investigating irregularities tied to store deposits and register shortages. Asset protection personnel later provided time records and internal documentation that allegedly matched the dates on which cash deposits went missing. Investigators say Lorgeat ultimately admitted to stealing money from both store registers and deposit safes over approximately three years. The total documented loss to CVS Pharmacy was calculated at $17,165.06.   tamaractalk.com


Sparta, GA: Brothers sentenced to 20 years in prison for stealing from store video poker machines in 12 counties

Cincinnati, PH: Man broke into Bengals Paycor Stadium, attempted to steal 'merchandise and food'

Winnipeg, Canada: Winnipeg Police Service’s Property Crime Unit crack theft case through social media sales

Montgomery County, MD: No one hurt after firecrackers set off inside Montgomery Mall


 


 

Adult – Santa Fe, NM – Armed Robbery
C-Store - Birmingham, AL – Armed Robbery/ shots fired
C-Store – Prince Fredrick, MD – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Colorado Springs, CO – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Honolulu, HI – Armed Robbery
Clothing – Jacksonville, FL – Armed Robbery
Clothing – St George, UT – Robbery
Dollar – Beaumont, TX – Armed Robbery
Grocery - Detroit, MI - Robbery
Hardware – Wauwatosa, WI - Robbery
Jewelry - Petaluma, CA – Robbery
Jewelry -- Stockton, CA - Robbery
Jewelry -Springfield, MA – Armed Robbery
Motorcycle – Colorado Springs, CO – Burglary
Restaurant – Rockingham, NC – Burglary
Restaurant – Phoenix, AZ – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Honolulu, HI – Burglary
Storage – Nassau County, NY – Burglary
Tobacco – San Antonio, TX – Armed Robbery
Tobacco – Bradford County, PA – Robbery
Tobacco – Baltimore, MD – Armed Robbery / 2 wounded
Vape – Lakeville, MA – Burglary                     

 

Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 2 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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