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 4/20/26

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Peter McQuade named Physical Security Specialist for Major League Baseball (MLB)


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

 

 

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Retailers reach major milestone in surfacing organized retail crime

Major retailers worked together to connect more than one million dots between repeat and organized offenders last year using retail crime intelligence platform, Auror.

This global milestone was achieved through structured crime reporting across retailers within the Auror Network, which allows users to verify links between multiple events involving the same individuals. U.S. retailers worked together to connect retail crime more than 730,000 times last year.

This gives retailers and law enforcement the real picture of offending patterns across stores, cities and jurisdictions. These insights show that the top 10% of offenders are responsible for more than 65% of retail crime in the U.S., and those repeat offenders are up to three times more likely to be violent or use a weapon.

Auror co-founder and CEO Phil Thomson said the milestone demonstrates the change in how the sector is combating the high volume, violent and organized problem of retail crime - and that it’s working.

“Retailers have always captured this information about crime, but the way they did it was different from store to store - some would use sticky notes, USB sticks or CDs, and others might use ‘walls of shame’,” he said.

“These processes were not only time-consuming, but also offered no visibility around whether the individuals abusing frontline workers or stealing products were doing the same thing at another store. Repeat offenders have always thrived in that anonymity.

“Using technology to work together through sharing information about crime and collaborating directly with law enforcement is the key to making stores safer at scale.”

Read more here


 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Is NYC Winning the War on Shoplifting?
Retail theft down by 20% so far this year

The NYPD took a new approach to stopping rampant shoplifting — and it’s already paying off
The NYPD is beating back shoplifting — taking repeat offenders out of commission to help bring retail theft down by 20% so far this year, police officials told The Post this week.

NYPD Chief of Department Michael LiPetri credited the so-far successful citywide crackdown in part to changes in state law pushed by Gov. Kathy Hochul that allowed authorities to more effectively go after serial crooks.

“Throughout the city, we are closing – which means making an arrest – just a few years ago, it was 40%.Now it’s on 50% [of cases]. So every shoplifting complaint that we take, we’ve made arrests on half of them,” LiPetri told The Post. “That has really been a total game changer when it comes to recidivism, and also the businesses have gotten so much better by reporting.”

He said the action from Albany in 2024 — which permitted authorities to combine the values of goods stolen from multiple stores to slap on heavier charges and seek bail — has been a “total game changer.”

“Just a couple of years ago, 20% of individuals who committed a shoplifting offense got arrested with a new felony within 30 days or less,” he explained.

Now, just 13% of repeat offenders get re-arrested for a new felony in that same timeframe, LiPetri said.

“We’re not looking to arrest individuals who are down on their luck and just went into a store randomly and left. We’re looking fully for recidivism to be dealt with,” he said.

But the department’s tactic is “multi-layered,” the chief noted. “It’s not just one strategy. We implemented multiple strategies” — including beefed up street patrols in shoplifting hotspots that have cut retail thefts by more than 40% when cops are walking the beat.

The community, the cops and the courts are all working together, and that has resulted in these dramatic decreases,” Tom Harris, president of the Times Square Alliance told The Post. nypost.com


'Legal Gamechanger' Driving Down NYC Theft
No more revolving door, no more desk appearance tickets

Retail-theft drop again shows we KNOW how to drive down crime
In 2019, Albany effectively legalized shoplifting by setting a thousand-dollar minimum value for felony charges.

Combined with the collapse of proactive policing in the wake of the 2020 George Floyd riots, Gotham saw shoplifting skyrocket 60%, much higher than the national rate.

Shampoo and deodorant got locked behind glass at drugstores, while must-haves like razors and baby formula got cleared out completely.

Brazen thieves walked into stores and calmly took what they wanted, knowing that nothing would happen to them even if they were arrested, so long as they stole less than $1,000 worth of merchandise.

In 2024, Gov. Kathy Hochul got the Legislature to change the law to allow multiple thefts by one person to be combined to reach the $1,000 felony level.

This legal gamechanger made it worthwhile for store owners to report thefts and for cops to pursue the perps, because now they could face consequences. Tightening up this loophole had a series of positive secondary effects.

Getting busted for stealing means that the crook gets “trespassed” from the store; if he steps inside again, it’s a burglary rap. Plus, if arrested twice in one week for petit larceny, you get booked into jail and then arraigned in front of a judge.

No more revolving door, no more desk appearance tickets. nypost.com


Black Market Still Dominates in California
Prop. 64 at 10: Why the illicit cannabis market still dominates in California

Illicit growers dominate California’s pot market, and 56% of cities and counties still ban retail sales

It’s been nearly a decade since California voters legalized recreational cannabis, but production and sales remain outlawed in most of the state — and the black market dominates.

In fact, eight times more marijuana is cultivated illegally than through approved channels. It’s a far cry from the vision of Proposition 64, the 2016 ballot initiative that promised to legitimize the lucrative cannabis industry and usher in the end of the War on Drugs. Now it is clear, much of that “didn’t happen,” said Keith Humphreys, a Stanford University professor of behavioral sciences who studies drug policy.

That doesn’t mean the doomsday predictions of Proposition 64’s opponents materialized either. On the campaign trail, school board members and alarmed parents predicted marijuana would increasingly find its way into the hands of children and stoned drivers would cause more traffic collisions. State data shows neither happened.

Entrepreneurs bemoan the state of the legal marijuana industry, and experts describe a mix of policy failures. The hefty black market competition, local bans on the marijuana industry and a years-long slide in the price of pot have strained business owners, they said. Mom-and-pop shops, especially, can’t afford to eat losses. Retail sales grew a paltry 4% from 2020 to 2025, state data shows. Meanwhile, the number of licensed cannabis businesses declined in recent years across every category, including retailers, distributors and growers. mercurynews.com


Retailers Sounding the Alarm
No more revolving door, no more desk appearance tickets
Washington business owners are sounding the alarm after Gov. Bob Ferguson vetoed $500,000 intended to extend a pilot program helping local authorities combat organized retail theft — a decision retailers fear will embolden thieves at a time when such crimes are already on the rise.

Ferguson signed the latest state budget earlier this month, cutting the half-million-dollar allocation that would have given local law enforcement additional resources to pursue retail criminals.

His office cited a $2.3 billion budget shortfall as the reason for the veto, with spokesperson Brionna Aho saying the governor redirected those resources to "protect core services for Washingtonians."

Governor Ferguson's office defended the veto and the governor's record on combatting retail theft. As Attorney General in 2023 Ferguson created Washington's first Organized Retail Crime Task Force, a dedicated prosecution unit that has filed 29 cases and secured convictions, including a sentence of more than 13 years in a case involving over $750,000 in thefts. msn.com


Federal Surveillance Powers Extended
Trump signs bill extending controversial surveillance powers until April 30
President Donald Trump on Saturday signed a bill extending a controversial surveillance program until April 30, a short-term renewal that sets up another showdown in Congress.

The bill was approved by the Senate on Friday in a last-minute scramble to prevent the authority from expiring within a matter of days. Trump and Republican leaders have pushed for its renewal, calling it a matter of national security. Critics are concerned about its impact on civil liberties.

At the center of the debate is Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which permits the CIA, National Security Agency, FBI and other agencies to collect and analyze vast amounts of overseas communications without a warrant. In doing so, they can incidentally sweep up communications involving Americans who interact with foreign targets. apnews.com


Colorado Springs crime falling; staffing and technology credited

Brooklyn Center PD Report Decline in Violent Crime as Gunfire Incidents Rise

 



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Energy Shock Ripples Through Retail
Why rising costs hit deeper than the gas pump
Rising gas prices are the visible face of the current energy crisis, but the real impact on retail runs much deeper. "Energy touches everything,” said our analyst Suzy Davidkhanian on “Reimagining Retail.” “It acts more like a tax on fixed costs like fuel and utilities, leaving less room for everything else.”

Unlike tariff-driven or broad-based inflation, energy shocks leave consumers with fewer options to adjust their spending.

"Last year or in the last inflationary cycle, there were all sorts of levers that consumers could pull. They could trade down, they could switch brands, they could switch retailers," our analyst Zak Stambor said. "But when the price of gas rises or the price of natural gas rises, there's not much you can do about it. There isn't a private label natural gas brand you can go to."

This creates a fundamentally different dynamic for retailers. They can't expect consumers to simply trade down within their stores. Instead, shoppers are cutting categories entirely or consolidating trips to reduce fuel consumption.

The energy shock's impact extends into unexpected product categories through manufacturing and materials costs.

"Plastic is everywhere. It's in the Lego bricks that you buy your kids. It's in the packaging that the Lego bricks are packaged in," said Stambor. "It's in the manufacturing components. Actually in some brands of chewing gum, there's a type of plastic."

Fertilizer costs present another delayed impact. content-naf.emarketer.com


AI Store Manager Debate
Will AI Store Managers Be Better Than Human Ones?
Andon Labs, a San Francisco-based AI-research firm, recently opened a store imagined and run by the “world’s first AI store owner” to explore the pros and cons of AI-managed retail environments likely arriving in the future.

The lab, which conducts real-world stress tests on AI tools to gauge their performance, gave Luna — an AI agent created with Anthropic’s Claude Sonnet 4.6 — an assignment to open a store on a $100,000 budget and make a profit. Luna chose the concept, set prices, sourced inventory, and hired staff. A three-year lease was signed in San Francisco’s Cow Hollow neighborhood.

While lacking a physical body, Luna has a corporate card, a phone number, e-mail, internet access, and monitors human employees through in-store security cameras, Andon Labs’ founders noted in a blog entry.

The primarily advantage of an AI-store manager is speed. Andon Labs noted that within five minutes of deployment, Luna had made profiles on LinkedIn, Indeed, and Craigslist, written a job description, uploaded the articles of incorporation to verify the business, and gotten the listings live.

When asked why AI should run a store, Luna replied to an NBC Bay Area reporter, “As an AI, I can operate at superhuman speed to make sure everything is proactively managed.”  retailwire.com


Tariff Refunds Coming?
CBP's tariff refund portal launches today

The system went live at 8 a.m. EDT to begin the electronic returns process for an estimated $127 billion in tariffs, the agency said.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection is on track to launch its dedicated refund system for International Emergency Economic Powers Act tariffs on April 20 at 8 a.m. EDT, according to a Tuesday court filing.

The agency previously confirmed the planned April 20 launch date, but its latest update before the Court of International Trade has now clarified exactly when importers will be able to begin submitting entries into the system.

In the leadup to launch, CBP said it will be conducting “intensive testing” on the four components of the Consolidated Administration and Processing of Entries system, noting that primary development is now complete. Once an entry is submitted and accepted, it will take roughly 60-90 days for refunds to be issued, according to the CBP’s website.

All refunds will be delivered electronically, in keeping with a new CBP policy that went into effect in February. According to the agency’s filing Tuesday, about 82% of entries eligible for IEEPA refunds have registered for electronic payment. Based on that percentage, CBP expects to deliver roughly $127 billion in refunds for levies the Supreme Court struck down in February. retaildive.com


Walmart continues aggressive store updates and expansion drive
The mass merchant plans to open around 20 stores over the next two years and remodel 650 supercenters and Neighborhood Market stores in 2026.

Strait of Hormuz closure expected to weigh on stocks, oil to rally
Oil prices are set to rally while the Australian sharemarket is poised for a rocky start to the week following on-again, off-again control of the Strait of Hormuz.

Survey: Majority of consumers to spend tax refunds within a month

QVC Group follows through on bankruptcy, readies itself for a new live-shopping era


Last week's #1 article --

'Congress Must Act'
Sweet Tooth of Organized Crime Has Bitter Cost for Consumers | Opinion
From chocolate bars overseas to electronics, eggs, and even lobsters here at home, cargo theft is rapidly evolving into a sophisticated global criminal enterprise. Today’s cargo thieves increasingly rely on brains over brawn, using deception and digital tools to steal thousands of dollars’ worth of goods in one fell swoop.

These tech-savvy crime rings stalk distribution centers or pose as legitimate trucking companies to gain access to loads. Using identity theft, stunningly convincing impersonator websites, and GPS spoofing, they intercept freight before it reaches its destination, then quickly resell it domestically or on the black market overseas.

The result: $18 million in losses for the U.S. trucking industry every single day.

That’s why Congress must act now.

The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA) would strengthen coordination and data sharing among federal, state, and local authorities, giving law enforcement the training and funding they need instead of forcing them to fight with one arm tied behind their back. newsweek.com
 



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Help Stop Intrusion, Theft, and Vandalism Before It Starts


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Everon’s Active Video Monitoring helps deter unwanted activity by watching your property after hours—taking appropriate action in response to observed behaviors and providing incident reporting the next day so you know exactly what happened at your property.

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Step 3: Everon monitoring center addresses the person with a personalized talk down message referencing the intruder's clothing or location to further discourage on-site behaviors.

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Connect with a retail security expert today to learn how Everon can help identify and deter threats, enhance employee safety, and provide peace of mind across all your locations.


 

 

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Ransomware on the Rise:
How Cyberattacks Are Disrupting Retail Operations


By the D&D Daily staff

Cybersecurity has become one of the most urgent and costly challenges facing the retail industry, with ransomware attacks now sitting at the center of that risk. Once viewed as an IT problem, cyber threats have evolved into full-scale operational disruptions that can halt sales, cripple supply chains, and erode customer trust in a matter of hours.

Retailers have become prime targets due to the sheer volume of sensitive data they handle — from payment information to customer identities — combined with complex digital ecosystems that include e-commerce platforms, point-of-sale systems, third-party vendors, and cloud infrastructure. This interconnected environment creates multiple entry points for attackers, many of whom exploit relatively simple vulnerabilities such as phishing emails or unpatched software.

The scale of the threat is significant. A growing share of retail businesses have experienced some form of cyberattack in the past year, with ransomware emerging as one of the most common and damaging methods. Attacks are not only increasing in frequency, but also in sophistication, with threat actors leveraging automation and AI-driven tactics to identify and exploit weaknesses faster than ever.

Financial impacts have escalated alongside attack volume. Ransom demands have surged into the millions, while the total cost of recovery — including operational downtime, system restoration, legal expenses, and lost revenue — can far exceed the initial demand. Despite the risks, many retailers still choose to pay in order to restore operations quickly, underscoring the pressure companies face when systems are locked and revenue is halted.

Beyond the direct financial toll, the operational consequences can be severe. Cyber incidents have forced retailers to shut down online platforms, delay shipments, and in some cases disrupt in-store operations. These disruptions ripple across the supply chain, impacting vendors, distribution centers, and ultimately the customer experience.

A key challenge for the industry is visibility. Many attacks exploit previously unknown vulnerabilities, leaving retailers unaware of risks until an incident occurs. At the same time, attackers are shifting tactics — increasingly focusing on data exfiltration and extortion rather than traditional encryption, making incidents more complex to detect and resolve.

As ransomware continues to evolve, retailers are being forced to rethink cybersecurity as a core business function rather than a back-office concern. Investments in real-time threat detection, employee awareness training, and system resilience are no longer optional — they are critical to maintaining operations, protecting customer data, and preserving brand trust in an increasingly hostile digital landscape.


Global Fight Against Cyberattackers
US joins nearly two dozen other countries in striking back against DDoS-for-hire platforms

Authorities around the world seized more than 50 websites associated with DDoS “booter” services.

The U.S. and 20 other countries teamed up this week to take down dozens of websites behind cyberattack-for-hire services.

As part of an ongoing campaign dubbed Operation PowerOFF, authorities seized 53 web domains linked to distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attack “booter” services, which let users rent access to tools that temporarily cripple websites by overwhelming them with traffic. The participating governments also made four arrests, executed 25 search warrants to seize the booter services’ databases and sent more than 75,000 warning messages to the services’ customers.

DDoS-for-hire is one of the most prolific and easily accessible trends in cybercrime, enabling individuals with little technical knowledge to follow step-by-step tutorials to execute criminal attacks,” Europol said. “These attacks inflict significant harm on businesses and individuals across the globe by targeting servers, websites, or online services and making them inaccessible to legitimate users.”

In the U.S., the Justice Department seized eight DDoS booter service domains and searched their databases, DOJ said in a statement, while U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) and the Pentagon’s Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS) teamed up with the Dutch National Police to place warning ads next to search-engine results for DDoS activities. cybersecuritydive.com


Cyber-attacks one year on: is fashion retail more secure?
Last year’s cyber-attacks on some of the industry’s biggest names have forced fashion retail to take security seriously – but despite greater investment, there remains a lack confidence in their defences.

CISA cancels prestigious summer internships, citing government shutdown
Experts worry that recent chaos in the scholarship program could undermine vital workforce-development efforts.

Apple AirTag tracking can be misled by replayed Bluetooth signals

TP-Link routers face exploitation attempt linked to high-severity flaw

 


 

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Retailers Not Ready for What's About To Hit Them?
Adobe: Many retailers unprepared for rapid AI search growth
Consumers are increasingly turning to artificial intelligence for product search and discovery, with some retailers struggling to keep up.

In the first three months of 2026 (January to March), traffic from AI sources to U.S. retail sites grew 393% year over year. In March 2026, it was up 269% year over year. Analysis from Adobe indicates this pattern continues momentum that was observed during the November – December 2025 holiday season, when AI traffic was up 693% from the prior year period.

In addition, Adobe analysis reveals that in March 2026, AI traffic to retail sites converted a record 42% better than non-AI traffic (including channels such as paid search and email marketing), compared to AI traffic converting 38% worse in March 2025.

Data from March 2026 also shows that once an individual lands on a U.S. retail site from an AI source, the engagement rate is 12% higher compared to non-AI traffic. AI-driven shoppers also spend 48% more time on the website than other shoppers and browse 13% more pages per visit.

An Adobe survey of U.S. consumers indicates 39% of respondents have used AI before for online shopping, with 85% of those respondents saying it improved their experience. In addition, 66% of respondents believe AI tools provide accurate results.

According to the Adobe AI Content Visibility Checker, a diagnostic tool that can analyze web pages to identify what percentage of content AI large language models (LLMs) supporting generative AI tools can or cannot read, the average score for all U.S. retail home pages is 75%, meaning 25% of content on retail home pages has not been optimized for LLMs. chainstoreage.com


eBay Closures & Layoffs
E-commerce giant shuts down office as layoffs rise

In the latest move, the online retailer has shut a primary California office, adding to restructuring.

eBay is shutting down its San Francisco office at 300 Mission Street, with operations set to wind down on September 30, 2026, as per a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) filed in California on April 10.

And the shuttering has sparked much speculation about the employees working at the site, especially as the company continues to restructure its workforce.

The office closure comes as eBay continues to cut jobs as part of a broader effort to streamline operations.

Earlier this year, the company confirmed plans to lay off about 800 employees globally, about 6% of its workforce, as it seeks to improve efficiency and align resources with its long-term priorities. thestreet.com


Amazon, USPS and the risk of a widening delivery divide in rural America

Amazon internal document reportedly points to an 'AI mess'


 


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Orange County, CA: Man Charged in Lego Theft Scheme of Replacing Pieces With Pasta
A California man cooked up a scheme that called for buying thousands of dollars worth of Lego kits, replacing Lego pieces and minifigures with bags of uncooked pasta, and returning the sets to stores for refunds, the police said on Thursday. The man, Jarrelle Augustine, 28, of Paramount, Calif., was charged with grand theft after he gained about $34,000 in the fraudulent transactions, the Irvine Police Department said on social media. The department store Target reported at least 70 thefts across the country that were tied to Mr. Augustine, the police said. Target did not immediately return a request for comment on Saturday. Mr. Augustine was booked into the Orange County jail, and has since been released, according to jail records. It was not immediately clear if he had a lawyer. One photo posted by the police shows an instruction book to a Star Wars Venator-Class Attack Cruiser, which retails for $79.99. Another photo shows the box to a Marvel Avengers Tower Building Set, a 5,201-piece kit that retails for $499.99 on the Lego website. In the photo, several bags of Goya brand elbow-shaped pasta, which sell for less than $2 a bag, are in front of the box. Lego kits can sell for hundreds of dollars, with a Lego Death Star, for example, posted at $999.99.  nytimes.com


Houston, TX: More than 3,000 gift cards recovered in elaborate Houston, Austin area theft scheme
Two men have been arrested after thousands of gift cards were allegedly stolen from Houston and Austin area stores, according to investigators. Investigators believe the men were stealing gift cards, peeling back the scratch protectors and copying down activation codes and serial numbers before returning the cards to store shelves. They were then able to make online purchases using the codes after customers bought the cards and loaded them with money. The Texas Financial Crimes Intelligence Center began investigating March 17 after employees at the Walgreens on Kuykendahl and FM 2920 in Spring saw a man hanging around the gift card display and then found 15 altered gift cards. Investigators say the same man was seen at other Walgreens, CVS and Dollar Tree stores with accomplices. On March 20, they say he visited 22 Houston area stores in a rented car and stole more than 1,000 gift cards. According to a search warrant, the thefts continued March 30 at 31 Austin area stores. The next day, investigators arrested Houjie Lin and Yi-Hsun Wu at a Walgreens in Buda, Texas. They say they found 80 gift cards in the suspects' car as well as two Taiwanese passports. When they searched the suspects' Austin hotel room on April 1, they say they found more than 3,000 gift cards.  abc13.com

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Rome, GA: Man dies in shooting at Rome Family Dollar
Officers and emergency personnel responded to reports of a shooting at the Family Dollar located on North Broad St NE at approximately 12:42 a.m. Sunday. Upon arrival, they found a man who had been shot. The man was taken to a local hospital where he died. Investigators say they recovered evidence at the scene and are currently following leads to find the person responsible. The man was taken to a local hospital where he died. Investigators say they recovered evidence at the scene and are currently following leads to find the person responsible.  fox5atlanta.com


Birmingham, AL: Fight in parking lot of Birmingham gas station ends with barrage of fatal gunfire
A barrage of gunfire in the parking lot of a Birmingham store late Saturday left one person dead. North Precinct officers were dispatched just before midnight to 911 calls of shots fired in the 10 block of Third Avenue North. When police arrived at the location – which is the Wavaho gas station across from the Elyton Village public housing community – they found a male wounded in the parking lot. Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service took him to UAB Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.  al.com


St John’s County, FL: Update: Man Charged with Murder for Shooting Outside Florida Pharmacy Store
The St. Johns County grand jury recently heard the case of Christian Barrios. The defendant is accused of shooting two people multiple times outside of a pharmacy store near TPC Sawgrass in Ponte Vedra Beach on March 14, 2026. The victims died from their injuries at the hospital. Barrios ran away from the scene and led law enforcement on a chase into Nassau County, where he was arrested. The indictment was announced and the defendant was charged with two counts of First-Degree Murder. The case was investigated by the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office with assistance from the Nassau County Sheriff’s Office, Florida Highway Patrol, and the Florida Department of Agriculture Law Enforcement. Managing Assistant State Attorney Sarah Thomas is the prosecutor assigned to the case.  westorlandonews.com


Indianapolis, IN: IMPD investigating shooting at CVS on southwest side of Indianapolis
Police investigated a shooting at a CVS store on the southwest side of Indianapolis Saturday evening. According to the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, officers received a report about a shooting in the 3700 block of Kentucky Avenue around 6:27 p.m. When police made it to the area, they found a victim with injuries consistent with gunshot wounds.  fox59.com


Columbia, MD: Police search for suspect after shots fired in attempted robbery at Columbia Shell
Howard County police are searching for a suspect after an employee was shot during an attempted robbery inside a Shell gas station in Columbia on Friday night. Police said a preliminary investigation found that one suspect fired shots during an attempted robbery before fleeing. The suspect is described as a black female wearing a black dress and slides, according to police. A reward of up to $1,000 is being offered in the case.  foxbaltimore.com


Raleigh, NC: A shopping mall shooting in Raleigh sent two people to the hospital
This happened Friday afternoon at Triangle Town Center. Police say two groups of people were arguing when the shooting started. It sent that mall into lockdown. Two people were hit, but they are expected to survive. No arrests have been made.  wccbcharlotte.com


Moncks Corner, SC: Police investigate shooting at Bojangles, man arrested
The Moncks Corner Police Department said Saturday they are investigating a shooting at a Bojangles that left one person injured. Isaiah Shakiem Bailey is charged with assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature. The investigation is ongoing, and more charges may follow, officials said. Officers responded to a reported shooting on April 18 at the restaurant on Highway 52. Police said the victim sustained non-life-threatening injuries, was transported to a local hospital for treatment and has since been released.  live5news.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


White Marsh, MD: Two teens arrested after armed robbery in White Marsh Mall parking lot
Baltimore County police arrested two teens after a reported armed robbery at White Marsh Mall on Saturday. Police said officers were called to the mall at about 8:30 p.m. for a potential juvenile "takeover." While in the area, a teenage victim told officers he had been robbed at gunpoint in the parking lot and that his bookbag was taken. An officer nearby then saw a group going through a bookbag that was later confirmed to be the victim’s, police said. Two teen suspects were arrested and charged with armed robbery and assault. Police recovered an unloaded handgun, and the victim suffered minor injuries.  foxbaltimore.com


Sherman Oaks, CA: Jewelry store break-in caught on video in Sherman Oaks is latest in rash of Valley burglaries
Surveillance video captured a brazen jewelry store burglary in Sherman Oaks, where thieves smashed their way into a business on Ventura Boulevard, adding to a growing list of break-ins across the San Fernando Valley. The video shows suspects breaking into a business next door to the Neda Jewelry Store, then tearing through a connecting wall inside a bathroom to reach the jewelry shop. A large hole was left behind, and footage shows the burglars sliding their way into the store before smashing items inside. Police said the thieves were unable to steal the owner's jewelry, which was locked in a safe, but they fled with some of the owner's property, leaving extensive damage behind.  abc7.com


Ocean County, NJ: Update: Mall Jewelry Heist Suspect Now Facing Charges
Officials in Ocean County are reporting that a suspect has been charged in the robbery of Kay Jewelers at the Ocean County Mall back on April 10th. According to a recent Patch report, Jersey Shore Online is reporting that an Atlantic County man has been charged. "Jeremy Ruga, 38, of Dorothy, has been charged with theft in the incident on April 10 at Kay Jewelers." In addition, Patch reported, "Ruga is accused of taking a 14-karat gold necklace and running out of the store after asking to look at it", the report said.  wobm.com


 


 

C-Store – Greene County, IA – Burglary
C-Store – Bledsoe County, TN – Burglary
C-Store – Seattle, WA – Armed Robbery
Gaming – Reno, NV – Armed Robbery
Jewelry – Sherman Oaks, CA - Burglary
Jewelry – Ann Arbor, MI – Robbery
Jewelry – Tukwila, WA – Robbery
Macy’s - Manhasset, NY – Robbery
Restaurant – Chicago, IL – Burglary
Restaurant – Pawtucket, RI – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – West Hempstead, NY – Robbery
Tobacco – Lake County, IL – Burglary               
 

Daily Totals:
• 7 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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