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 5/11/26

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Auror Grows to 85K Stores Globally
NZ firm Auror expands as facial recognition use grows in retail

New Zealand-founded retail crime intelligence company Auror has grown to more than 85,000 stores globally and increased annual revenue by 60% as retailers increasingly turn to intelligence and surveillance software to combat organised retail crime.

The Auckland-founded company, which provides software used by retailers to record theft, violence and repeat offending across store networks, says much of its recent growth has come from existing customers expanding Auror into overseas markets.

Founder and chief executive officer Phil Thomson told BNZ Business Breakfast the company's growth was increasingly being driven by existing customers taking the platform into new markets.

"What's really cool is that we're being pulled by our customers - they're seeing the value in what we do, and so they're pulling us into markets that they've got stores in as well," he said.

Despite the company's global growth, Thomson said Auror remained rooted in New Zealand.

"While only 10% of our revenue probably comes from this market now... we overinvest, over-optimise here. It's a great place to start a company and as a test market."

Read more here
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Self-Checkout Theft & Frustration Boil Over
36 million Americans have stolen from a self-checkout kiosk.

Walmart, Target, and Costco make changes to fight retail theft

Retailers are scaling back some in-store options as theft and customer frustration grow.

Many retailers rely heavily on self-checkout, and the technology has created growing problems tied to theft, customer frustration, and reliability.

“While 86% of consumers use self-checkout machines, statistics show theft increases by up to 65% at self-checkout compared to a traditional checker,” according to data from a January Capital One survey.

The survey suggested that while many consumers prefer self-checkout, retailers continue to grapple with elevated theft concerns tied to the technology.

  • 43% of consumers prefer self-checkout over traditional staffed registers.

  • More than 36 million Americans have stolen from a self-checkout kiosk.

  • 27% of consumers admit to using self-checkout to steal; 55% of them plan to re-offend.

  • The North American self-checkout systems market is worth an estimated $2.54 billion as of 2025; projections indicate it will exceed $5 billion by 2030.

Self-checkout is not universally popular, but it’s used widely, as Capital One showed that 96% of grocery stores offer self-checkout.

Costco, Target, and Walmart, however, have all scaled back self-checkout, and while that may prevent theft, it’s not the only way to do that, according to Bill Miller, president of retail tech provider GK Software USA.

He believes that self-checkout is too valuable to drop and that AI can solve the problems Costco, Walmart, Target, and many others have experienced. thestreet.com


Not Even Free Food Can Stop Theft - Police Take Hours to Show
Portland convenience store tries providing free food to deter theft

Just outside Providence Park, Stadium Superette is a family-owned convenience store — and a convenient target for shoplifters.

None of the security measures seemed to make a difference, so Chirre decided to try something else: providing free food for people who might otherwise steal. "We started making the sack lunches in hopes that maybe the word would go around, 'Don't steal from this mom-and-pop store,'" Chirre explained.

Chirre started the free food handouts this year, but she said the thefts haven't stopped. "Yesterday, we had three shoplifts," she said. "The first one, when I called it in, it was 10 hours later when somebody got back to me."

Citywide, Portland police take an average of 98 minutes to respond to low-priority calls like shoplifting, according to Portland Police Bureau data. In the Goose Hollow neighborhood, where Chirre's shop is, there have been 179 low-priority calls since the start of the year with an average response time of more than two hours.

"PPB officers took this job to help people when they call, and it's frustrating when they can't meet the need because the resources don't meet the demand," said PPB spokesperson Sgt. Kevin Allen in a statement.

Chirre is almost certainly right about things getting worse, at least in terms of police response times. Under Mayor Keith Wilson's proposed budget, PPB faces a cut of more than $17 million. Chief among the cuts is an 80% reduction to the agency's non-sworn Public Safety Support Specialists, who respond to lower-priority calls. kgw.com


California's Prop 36 Cutting Down on Theft?
Organized retail theft down, arrests up in Fresno. DA says it’s thanks to Prop. 36
Organized retail theft is down in Fresno, while arrests are up since Californians overwhelmingly approved a statewide tough-on-crime measure in 2024, according to police Chief Mindy Casto.

Proposition 36 allows prosecutors to charge people convicted of certain third-time drug and theft-related offenses with a “treatment-mandated felony.” Offenders can avoid jail time by completing rehabilitation treatment, but opting out could lead to a state prison sentence.

Casto on Friday touted 152 retail theft-related arrests this year, so far, at a conference with public safety and retail leaders from across Fresno County. The police department, which tallied 277 arrests in 2025, is on track to surpass its previous number of related arrests this year.

We are very grateful for the passage of Prop. 36 not only for the tool that has given us to fight theft in our city, but also the message is sent that the large proportion of voters in the state, they support the enforcement law to help stay safer,” Casto said.

Known as the “Homelessness, Drug Addiction, and Theft Reduction Act,” Prop. 36 amended Prop. 47, which reduced some drug possession and property crimes from felonies to misdemeanors in 2014.

Since Prop 36 was implemented, the Fresno County jail has booked 1,422 individuals on charges that previously would not have resulted in jail time, according to Fresno County Sheriff John Zanoni. Of those, 848 people were arrested in Fresno and 265 in Clovis.

Fresno County District Attorney Lisa Smittcamp said Prop. 47 failed because the reduced charges for such crimes came without funding for rehabilitation treatment, continuing the cycle of drug abuse. yahoo.com


The Controversial SAFE-T Act
Editorial: Illinois built a police decertification system as part of the SAFE-T Act. Now, it must make it work.
The SAFE-T Act has become synonymous with the end of cash bail. But this 764-page piece of legislation does a myriad of other things, including creating a statewide system to decertify police officers who engage in serious misconduct.

The law itself has become a favorite punching bag of conservative candidates, and every Republican gubernatorial candidate this cycle told us they would slash it. We, too, have questioned the culture SAFE-T, and the movement that spawned it, has cultivated in the courts; we’ve argued numerous times that the act should be opened up and improved in the wake of high-profile tragedies involving people out on pretrial release, and with a string of other crimes on their record, to boot.

Yet there’s more than meets the eye when it comes to this act, including plenty of provisions we suspect even conservatives would like, if they knew these things existed. One of them entails changes to police decertification, a little-known but consequential effort to ensure officers who engage in serious professional misconduct cannot simply move from one department to another.

The SAFE-T Act created a statewide decertification framework, which is meant to act as a catch-all method of preventing department-hopping by bad actors. While the Chicago Police Department gets an outsized amount of attention, Illinois has more than 800 law enforcement agencies. chicagotribune.com


MVPD sees uptick in retail thefts
Mount Vernon police report a sharp rise in retail thefts, echoing a statewide surge as organized retail crime grows and new rules limit when officers can arrest suspects.

ICYMI: Retail crime remains a problem in Illinois

Yamhill County, OR: Law enforcement targets retail theft

 



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Government-Run Stores Face LP Challenges
Government-Run Grocery Stores Could Create New Challenges for Retail LP

As New York City moves toward publicly backed grocery stores, security and operational questions are emerging alongside affordability debates

By the D&D Daily staff

New York City’s plan to open government-supported grocery stores as part of Mayor Zohran Mamdani’s affordability agenda is drawing national attention — not only from economists and grocery operators, but also from retail loss prevention professionals watching closely for potential operational and security implications.

The proposal calls for five city-supported grocery stores, one in each borough, with the first planned for East Harlem. The initiative is designed to address food insecurity and rising grocery costs by using public funding and reduced operating expenses to lower prices on staple goods.

While much of the public debate has focused on economics and competition with private retailers, LP professionals may see the proposal through a different lens: shrink, theft prevention, staffing accountability and operational consistency.

Industry experts interviewed in recent reports have warned that publicly subsidized grocery operations could face elevated theft risks if strong loss prevention systems are not built into the model from the beginning. One economist pointed to the closure of a municipally backed grocery store in Kansas City that reportedly struggled with both inventory shortages and retail theft.

Unlike traditional retailers, government-backed stores may operate under different performance pressures and financial expectations. In the private sector, shrink directly impacts profit margins, influencing staffing levels, security investments, self-checkout controls and merchandise protection strategies. LP leaders may question whether a publicly funded model would maintain the same urgency around theft deterrence and operational discipline.

At the same time, some retail analysts argue that the impact on loss prevention could ultimately depend on how the stores are structured. Several reports suggest the city may rely on private operators to manage day-to-day operations under government guidelines rather than running stores entirely through municipal employees.

If that model moves forward, many standard LP practices — including CCTV monitoring, exception reporting, inventory audits, organized retail crime coordination and employee training — would likely remain essential.

The broader retail industry will be watching closely. Whether the experiment succeeds or struggles, New York’s public grocery initiative could become a case study in how loss prevention operates inside a government-supported retail environment.


Retailers Having Immigration Concerns
Retail/hospitality employers most concerned about immigration policy changes
Immigration enforcement remains a significant concern among employers — particularly those in the retail and hospitality industries.

The majority (70%) of employers in the retail/hospitality industries expect to be impacted by immigration policy changes over the next year, according to an annual survey from Litter, the world’s largest employment law firm. That compares to 49% of all respondents in the survey.

Employers in the retail and hospitality industries have also taken more steps than employers in other industries to address workforce staffing impacts of immigration policy and enforcement over the past year, revealed Litter’s 14th Annual Employer Survey. The survey draws on insights from more than 300 U.S.-based C-suite executives, in-house lawyers and human resources professionals, with the largest percentage of respondents (14%) in the retail and hospitality industries.

More than half of all employers (54%) and 69% of large employers have prepared for government audits, inspections or site visits over the past year, the leading answer choice by a substantial margin. For employers in the retail and hospitality industries, the percentage taking action in this area rose to 78%. This comes as recent immigration site visits (audits/raids) illustrate the scale of potential workforce disruption.

Roughly half of large employers say they conducted immigration compliance training (54%) and adjusted visa sponsorship strategies (48%). Among those in the hospitality/retail industries, 70% say their organizations have conducted immigration compliance training, compared with 49% of all respondents. chainstoreage.com


In-Store Traffic Down 5.5% YoY in April
April In-Store U.S. Traffic Trends
Sensormatic Solutions ShopperTrak Analytics indicates that U.S. in-store retail traffic was down 5.5% year-over-year (YoY) in April, an expected decrease with the shift of Easter from April 2025 to March 2026 (per the NRF calendar). Due to the shifting calendar, retailers often combine March and April to analyze YoY results. Combined, March and April in-store traffic declined 2.4%, which is on par with year-to-date shopper traffic trends.

Grant Gustafson, head of retail consulting and analytics at Sensormatic Solutions, noted, “With Easter shifting to NRF’s March calendar, April traffic declined, but this is not a negative signal for retailers. On the contrary, shopper behavior has held steady over the past year, proven by stable conversion rates and transaction sizes. Shoppers are continuing to emphasize value and the essentials.

Looking ahead, Mother’s Day and Memorial Day will shape May traffic as shoppers prepare for each holiday, purchasing gifts for the former and party/outdoor supplies for the latter.” sensormatic.com


Another Ruling Against Tariffs
Federal court overturns temporary 10% tariffs
President Donald Trump has once again had tariffs he imposed blocked by a legal decision.

In a split two-to-one decision, the U.S. Court of International Trade in New York has ruled that 10% tariffs Trump imposed on all global imports in February 2026 exceed the tariff authority he is granted as president.

According to the Associated Press, the decision only specifically covers legal challenges against the tariffs brought by state of Washington and two private businesses. Jeffrey Schwab, an attorney who represented the two businesses, told the Associated Press “it’s not clear’’ if this ruling also means other entities will have to keep paying those tariffs, which are scheduled to expire July 24, 2026. chainstoreage.com


Numerator: Consumer good prices stay volatile with April increase

Placer.ai: Open-air, indoor centers see visits rise in April


Last week's #1 article --

Store Workers Face Violence Surge
Illinois retail workers confront rising violence as organized crime surges

Top offenders responsible for most incidents; industry groups call for stronger coordination between law enforcement and retailers.

Illinois retail workers are facing increasing levels of in-store violence, driven in large part by repeat and organized offenders, according to new data from global retail crime intelligence company Auror.

The data shows that one in seven retail crime incidents in Illinois involve violence, weapons, or threatening behavior, while the top 10 percent of offenders accounted for more than 63 percent of reported incidents last year. Overall, violent events increased by seven percent compared with the previous year. Firearms were involved in nearly 40 percent of weapon-related incidents, followed by knives and other blades.

The findings, drawn from some of North America’s largest retailers using Auror’s crime reporting platform, highlight the growing risks despite investments in security and loss prevention. The platform allows retailers and law enforcement to identify repeat offenders and organized crime patterns across multiple jurisdictions, helping connect incidents that might otherwise appear isolated.

“Organized retail crime hurts Illinois communities on multiple levels,” said Anne Sagins, executive director of the Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association (ILORCA). “It puts workers in harm’s way and targets local businesses through coordinated operations by criminal groups. Addressing this threat requires strong coordination between retailers and law enforcement.”

The violence and theft are completely unacceptable,” said Raul Aguilar, head of law enforcement for Auror in the Americas. “Consistent reporting and shared intelligence are helping identify repeat offenders who operate across state lines. These are not isolated incidents—they are organized, multi-state operations.”

ILORCA, the nation’s first statewide intelligence-sharing network for organized retail crime, continues to coordinate efforts across the supply chain, including railroads, trucking companies, and distributors, to combat organized crime comprehensively.  chambanatoday.com

 



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Help Stop Intrusion, Theft, and Vandalism Before It Starts


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Are Businesses Hiding Ransomware Attacks?
Businesses hide vast majority of ransomware attacks, report finds

The security firm BlackFog said the number of disclosed incidents it tracked in Q1 was roughly one-tenth of the number of undisclosed incidents.

Companies around the world have been keeping the vast majority of ransomware attacks secret, according to a new report from the security firm BlackFog.

The number of undisclosed attacks in the first quarter of 2026 was almost 10 times as large as the number of disclosed attacks, according to the report published Wednesday.

BlackFog’s report, based on information from dark-web leak sites, also includes data on the most targeted sectors and new tools that have emerged in the cybercrime ecosystem.

BlackFog’s threat intelligence team identified 264 publicly disclosed ransomware attacks in the first three months of 2026, but it also identified 2,160 undisclosed attacks. While the number of disclosed attacks represented a 15% year-over-year decrease, the number of undisclosed attacks ticked up slightly from Q1 2025.

The U.S. was by far hackers’ dominant target, with U.S. organizations accounting for half of all undisclosed attacks (1,070) and 61% of all disclosed attacks.

“While the decline in total attacks may suggest incremental progress,” BlackFog researchers wrote, “the sustained volume of incidents, high rate of data exfiltration, and significant proportion of unattributed activity demonstrate that ransomware continues to evolve and pose a significant risk to organizations worldwide.” cybersecuritydive.com


U.S. Companies Targeted
Ransomware hackers access US Organizations data from Russian Servers
What may initially sound unbelievable appears to be backed by official court records and press releases released by authorities in the United States. According to the reports, a Latvian hacker named Deniss Zolotarjovs has been sentenced to eight years in prison for carrying out ransomware attacks against both public and private organizations in the United States. Among the victims was reportedly a children’s healthcare organization, making the case especially alarming because of the sensitive nature of the targeted institution.

Court documents state that Zolotarjovs was associated with a ransomware group known as KaraKurt. Investigators believe the gang was formed by individuals who had previously been connected to the notorious Akira and Conti ransomware operations, both of which have been linked to several high-profile cyber extortion campaigns over the past few years. KaraKurt allegedly specialized in stealing sensitive data from victims and threatening to release it publicly unless ransom demands were met.

Authorities arrested Zolotarjovs in Georgia in 2023 before extraditing him to the United States in August 2024. His extradition marked a significant development in international cybercrime enforcement, highlighting growing cooperation between countries in pursuing individuals accused of conducting cross-border ransomware attacks.

However, the case appears to extend far beyond ordinary cybercrime. According to information cited by the U.S. Department of Justice, investigators allegedly uncovered evidence suggesting that Zolotarjovs maintained links with Russian intelligence networks. Officials claim he and his associates bribed senior personnel to gain access to databases containing information related to U.S. citizens and organizations. If proven accurate, such allegations would point to a deeper intersection between organized cybercrime and state-linked intelligence operations. cybersecurity-insiders.com


Google Discrimination?
Google settles racial discrimination lawsuit for $50 million

The lawsuit echoed years of complaints from Black employees at the company.

Google has settled with Black employees who alleged systemic racial disparities in hiring, pay, and advancement in a lawsuit filed in 2022.

April Curley, a former Google employee, had sued the tech giant for racial discrimination, saying it engages in a “pattern and practice” of unfair treatment for its Black workers. The suit claimed the company steered them into lower-level and lower-paid jobs and subjected them to a hostile work environment if they speak out. Other former Google workers also joined the suit, which later received class action status.

“This case is about accountability, plain and simple,” said civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who represented the plaintiffs, in a statement. “For far too long, Black employees in the tech industry have faced barriers that limit opportunity. This settlement is a significant step toward holding one of the world’s most powerful companies accountable and making clear that discriminatory practices cannot and will not be tolerated.

The settlement was announced in May 2025 and granted final approval this week. Google said when the settlement was reached that it strongly disagrees with the allegations that it treated anyone improperly and remains “committed to paying, hiring, and leveling all employees consistently.”   mercurynews.com


Cyberattack hits Canvas system used by thousands of schools as finals loom

Anthropic’s Claude used in attempted compromise of Mexican water utility

 


 

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How Amazon Sets Its Prices
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy explains how Amazon keeps retail prices low

Jassy discussed the behind-the-scenes work that allows Amazon to lower costs for customers.

Amazon CEO Andy Jassy recently told CNBC's Jim Cramer that the company's retail prices are down compared to last year—and explained what it takes to keep them there.

"We have an expression that we've used for almost a couple decades at Amazon, that it's pretty easy to lower prices, but it's much harder to be able to afford lower prices, and it's really true," Jassy said. "We spend a disproportionate amount of time, A, inventing, and then B, trying to figure out how we can lower our cost-to-serve inside our fulfillment network so that we can continue to keep prices low for customers."

Jassy pointed to a series of behind-the-scenes infrastructure investments designed to reduce the cost of getting products to customers.

"We've completely rearchitected our regional network in the U.S., so we're able to store items closer to end users so they travel shorter distances, they get there quicker, and it's less expensive to serve customers that way," he said.

Amazon has also introduced features such as "Add to Order," which lets customers add items to an existing shipment, which reduces packaging waste and delivery costs.

"Think about the logistics of an order that you're already processing and then being able to get that item in the same order," he said. "The work we do to get more units in each box, it's better for customers because they don't have to open as many packages and have environmental waste, and it's just a much better, faster experience. And it happens to be more cost effective for us too." aboutamazon.com


Counterfeit Lawsuit
Amazon and Philips file joint lawsuit concerning sale of counterfeit toothbrush heads

Legal action targets suspected bad actor of selling fake toothbrush heads

Amazon and Philips, a global leader in health technology, have filed a lawsuit with the Regional Court Frankfurt am Main against an individual who is alleged to be responsible for the sale of fake Philips Sonicare toothbrush heads to customers. The proceedings are ongoing.

The defendant is claimed to have sold counterfeit Philips toothbrush heads. The lawsuit seeks damages for Philips and injunctive relief. Amazon and Philips consider these steps necessary to protect legitimate sellers, brand owners, customers, and the Amazon store.

The investigation, conducted by Amazon's Counterfeit Crimes Unit (CCU) in partnership with Philips, included multiple test purchases that revealed the counterfeit nature of the products sold by the defendant via Amazon. The counterfeit toothbrush heads exhibited visible quality defects, used inferior materials and lacked the innovative technology incorporated in genuine Philips products, compromising functionality, clinical outcomes and compatibility with Philips toothbrushes. aboutamazon.eu


Uber Eats adds Ulta Beauty to its US retail marketplace

TikTok launches international ad platform campaign


 


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Organized retail theft crew arrested by Colorado Springs police after several months-long investigation
Colorado Springs police arrested a group of suspects Thursday morning whom officers said had been stealing from retail stores throughout the city for several months. Colorado Springs police said officers arrested 55-year-old Donald Stettnisch, 31-year-old Jessica Trujillo and 32-year-old Chad Lavely around 10 a.m. Police said officers worked with El Paso County deputies and deployed their SWAT team to arrest an organized retail crime crew that had been stealing from stores for the past several months. Police said the three were arrested on different felony charges, including theft, money laundering, robbery and narcotics charges. Police said the investigation wraps up several months of work by detectives.  kktv.com


Mukwonago, WI: Man arrested for retail theft involving trading cards
On May 8, 2026, Officers from the Village of Mukwonago Police Department apprehended a suspect involved in the theft of trading cards from a retail store. The suspect is also believed to be connected to similar thefts in two other jurisdictions and he was turned over to those agencies for municipal and felony charges. Cooperation between law enforcement agencies is crucial in addressing and preventing these types of incidents.  channel3000.com


Gainesville, FL: Convicted thief arrested for stealing over $700 in items from JC Penney

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Oshkosh, WI: One person is dead following Oshkosh retailer incident, DOJ investigating
One person has died after Oshkosh police shot a man who was carrying a handgun outside a retailer Sunday morning. The Wisconsin Department of Justice Division of Criminal Investigation is now investigating the incident. According to a press release from the Wisconsin Department of Justice, officers from the Oshkosh Police Department were called to Fleet Farm at 177 N. Washburn Street around 8:18 a.m. Sunday for a man who had a handgun. Once on scene the uniformed Oshkosh Police officer encountered the man, who did not comply with commands from the officer. The man continued walking towards the officer and retrieved a firearm from their waistline. The officer then discharged their weapon, striking the subject. A firearm was recovered at the scene. The subject received life saving measures by EMS and they were transported to a local hospital, where they were later pronounced deceased. No members of law enforcement or the public were injured during the incident.  fox11online.com


Camden, AR: Man shot to death at Camden tobacco store
Camden Police have made one arrest in connection with a homicide that took place Saturday afternoon, May 9, 2026 at the Fairview Tobacco Warehouse in the Cardinal Shopping Center, 1085 Fairview Road SW. Jamario Bush, a lieutenant with the Criminal Investigation Division of the Camden Police, said in a statement that officers arriving at a reported shooting found Bobby Kuhn on the ground, suffering from multiple gunshot wounds.   magnoliareporter.com


Pine Bluff, AR: Pine Bluff gas station shooting leaves 2 people dead, 2 others injured and facing charges
Two people were killed and two others injured and facing murder charges in a shooting Thursday night at a Pine Bluff gas station, police said. Officers responding just after 9:30 p.m. to the shooting at the business at 101 N. Blake St. found one man near the front door and another in the parking lot, both suffering from apparent gunshot wounds. The man near the front door was pronounced dead at the scene. The second victim was transported to Jefferson Regional Medical Center, where he was later pronounced dead. Police said two additional men who had been shot were located a few blocks away and taken to the hospital.  nwaonline.com


Los Angeles, CA: Man shot and killed while breaking up fight at Los Angeles pizza restaurant
A man was shot and killed while trying to break up a fight at a pizza restaurant in L.A.’s Wilmington neighborhood. Los Angeles police were called to Red West Pizza on the 600 block of Pacific Coast Highway around 5:41 p.m. on Saturday night. The victim, identified only as a 26-year-old man, was trying to break up a fight between two women at the restaurant when a male suspect pulled out a handgun and opened fire.  msn.com


Birmingham, AL: Man injured in shooting at Birmingham Walmart
One person was injured in a late-night shooting at a Birmingham grocery store. Birmingham police said a man was shot at the Walmart on Montclair Road at about 10:30 p.m. Saturday and suffered non-life-threatening injuries. He has not been identified, and his condition is not immediately clear. No one is in custody in connection with the incident, police said.  wvtm13.com


Summit County, OH: Teen in custody after shooting in Summit Mall parking lot
A teen is in police custody after a shooting in the Summit Mall parking lot on Friday afternoon. According to the Fairlawn Police Department, officers responded to the mall around 3 p.m. after the Summit Emergency Communications Center received several 911 calls. When they got there, officers found the suspect, a 17-year-old boy, who ran away on foot. After a short chase, officers caught the teen and placed him under arrest. A preliminary investigation revealed that the teen allegedly fired two gunshots into the air during an altercation with another group of juveniles outside the mall, Fairlawn police said.  fox8.com


Margate, FL: Margate Police investigating shooting near Margate strip mall, no injuries reported
Margate Police Department detectives are investigating a shooting that took place Saturday night at a strip mall. The incident took place in the area around State Road 7 and Broward Boulevard. Officials said that three or four people had a confrontation, leading to shots being fired. No injuries were reported.  wsvn.com


Portsmouth, VA: Two injured in shooting at Portsmouth shopping center
Two men are injured following a shooting at the Victory Crossing Shopping Center in Portsmouth Saturday evening. According to the Portsmouth Police Department, officers responded to reports of a shooting in the 4000 block of Victory Boulevard at approximately 5:52 p.m. While securing the scene, officers were informed that two adult men sought treatment at a local hospital for non-life-threatening gunshot wounds in connection with this incident. The following pictures were taken by our crew on scene. The pictures show multiple police cars and tape between the DTLR store and the America’s Best Wings restaurant.  wavy.com


Durham, NC: Workplace Violence : Employee charged after fight leads to shooting on Mother’s Day inside Durham restaurant, 1 injured
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Gloucester County, VA: Jewelry store robbery leads to police chase ending in York County
A reported robbery at a jewelry store in Gloucester County resulted in a police chase that ended in York County on Saturday. The robbery happened at 5:13 p.m., according to a media release from Gloucester County Sheriff’s Office. The robbery had just occurred at Kay Jewelers on Fox Center Parkway. While they were responding to the scene, law enforcement officers saw the suspect vehicle leaving. A pursuit was initiated, and it ended without incident in York County, the sheriff’s office said. The suspect was being treated for minor injuries at a local hospital. The York-Poquoson Sheriff’s Office and Virginia State Police assisted during the pursuit, the sheriff’s office said.  13newsnow.com


Sacramento, CA: Break-In Causes $1,500 in Damage to Sacramento Flower Shop Ahead of Mother’s Day
A Sacramento flower shop on Walerga Road says one of its newly launched flower vending machines was broken into overnight, causing an estimated $1,500 in damage. Everest Flowers and Gifts shop owner Daniel Lapatski said the machine — believed to be among the first flower vending machines in Sacramento — was damaged after someone broke in and stole a single bouquet of flowers. The Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office said reports of the theft came in around 8:15 a.m. Video from the shop’s Ring camera shows a suspect wearing a white hoodie kicking and shattering the vending machine’s glass before removing a bouquet. A second person wearing green was also seen nearby. While only one bouquet was stolen, Lapatski said the custom-built machine suffered significant damage, including a broken door that could take weeks to replace. “We just launched our vending machine a couple months ago,” Lapatski said. “It may take weeks to get it fixed and the other flowers are in danger of being ruined.”  abc10.com


Denver, CO: Twin brothers plead guilty to string of armed robberies
Twin brothers from Aurora pled guilty this week to committing a string of armed robberies across the Denver metro area. FBI Denver said on Thursday that the two brothers, identified as Javae McClain, 19, and Javaris McClain, 19, robbed a combined 19 convenience stores over a period of 6 weeks while out on state bond for a previous armed robbery in Denver in September 2024.  aol.com


Kitchener, ON, Canada: Attempted jewelry store robbery sees four suspects at large


 


 

C-Store – Bristol, CT – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Fort Wayne, IN – Robbery
C-Store – Suffolk County, NY – Robbery
C-Store – Okaloosa County, FL – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Everett, MA – Armed Robbery
Collectables – Miami Township, OH - Burglary
Collectable, - Mukwonago, WI - Burglary
Flowers – Sacramento, CA – Burglary
Hardware – Vacaville, CA – Robbery
Jewelry - Gloucester County, VA – Robbery
Jewelry – Austin, TX – Robbery
Jewelry – Santa Fe, NM – Robbery
Liquor – Augusta, GA – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Nashville, TN – Robbery                        
 

Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 3 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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Regional AP & Safety Business Partner - South Region
Texas
This position is considered Field based and is considered to be a blend of onsite and remote work activity. Field associates will spend their time both traveling to and spending time in various PetSmart locations and can expect to be asked to travel to Phoenix Home Office periodically throughout the year. Field associates typically work out of their home office when not traveling as outlined above...
 



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