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Steve Kang promoted to Senior
Director, Global Retail Standards & Enablement for Arc'teryx
Equipment
Steve has been with Arc'teryx Equipment for more than three
years, starting with the company in 2022 as Senior Director,
Brand & Asset Protection. Before his promotion to Senior
Director, Global Retail Standards & Enablement, he served as
Senior Director, Operational Solutions. Prior to Arc'teryx
Equipment, he spent a year with Canadian Tire as Manager,
Ecommerce Fraud Strategy. Earlier in his career, he held roles
with lululemon and West 49 Inc. Congratulations, Steve!
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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Loss Prevention
Strategies for Retailers
3 Best Ways to Positively Impact Your Bottom Line
Implementing
the right loss prevention strategy for your retail business is as
crucial now than it was ever before.
For many retailers, both large and small, inventory shrinkage continues
to affect the bottom line more and more significantly, which
unfortunately has led to some
businesses having to close their doors. Ultimately, the answer to
this problem lies in proper loss prevention strategies, but the
ambiguity of finding the right one for your business has led many
retailers down a rabbit hole of asset protection solutions that simply
don’t deliver.
Below, we will cover some of the best ways to identify the right
strategies for your business. First let’s look at why inventory
shrinkage is such a problem for retailers everywhere.
How Inventory Shrinkage Impacts Retailers’
Bottom Line
Inventory shrinkage is the amount of inventory that is lost by a
retailer due to external or internal causes, whether that’s theft,
merchandise damage, or miscounts.
Inventory shrinkage is largely unavoidable, at least to some extent. The
National Retail Federation reported that, on average, retailers lost
1.6% in sales due to shrinkage in 2022. Even the most vigilant shop
owners can’t account for every situation where asset loss occurs, but
that doesn’t mean the margin by which it happens can’t be reduced.
Especially as it relates to theft and
organized retail crime, there are many different methods retailers
can use to mitigate the impact shrink has on their bottom line.
Alongside theft, loss prevention strategies can also benefit other
operational areas. At the end of the day, that means retailers will be
increasing the return they get from their sales efforts, all while
limiting how much is lost in the process.
Retail Loss Prevention – 3 Indispensable
Strategies to Incorporate
Continue Reading Here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Another AI Tool Emerges for Retailers
Fighting ORC
Pose-Based AI Emerges as a New Tool in
Retail Crime Prevention
By
the D&D Daily staff
As organized retail crime (ORC) continues to evolve, retailers and
researchers are exploring new technologies to detect and prevent theft.
One area gaining attention is pose-based artificial intelligence (AI),
which analyzes body posture and movement patterns rather than
relying on facial recognition or appearance-based surveillance.
Instead of focusing on who someone is, pose-based systems track how
people move through a store. By flagging motions linked to
concealment or other unusual activity, these tools may provide
real-time alerts for store teams. Researchers note that this method can
operate alongside existing technologies, offering an additional layer
of insight into shopper behavior.
Recent academic studies highlight the potential of this technology.
Researchers have released benchmark datasets and models designed to
detect shoplifting behavior from anonymized pose data captured in retail
environments. These frameworks aim to lower false positives, improve
detection accuracy, and provide retailers with tools that are both
scalable and privacy-conscious.
Early field use has also been reported. In the Bay Area, some small
business owners have experimented with AI-driven monitoring that tracks
movement patterns tied to shoplifting, reporting fewer incidents as a
result. While these pilot projects remain limited, they highlight the
potential for retailers to add pose-based detection to the broader
suite of tools used to address ORC.
The technology is not without challenges. Pose-based systems require
clear camera placement and can struggle in crowded or poorly lit stores.
Questions remain about accuracy across diverse populations and body
types, as well as how data is stored, shared, and potentially linked
with other identifiers. Legal and regulatory frameworks governing AI
surveillance also vary widely by state, adding complexity to adoption.
For retailers, the promise lies in supplementing existing security
measures with a technology designed to focus on behavior rather than
identity. Whether it becomes a standard tool will depend on
continued research, pilot testing, and the balance between
effectiveness, cost, and compliance.
As ORC continues to adapt, pose-based AI represents one of the latest
efforts to give retailers new tools in the fight against theft—an
area that is likely to draw more attention from both industry and
policymakers in the years ahead.
Crime Scaring Young People from Retail
Jobs?
UK: Retail boss warns shoplifting fears deterring young staff
Jonathan James, who runs 40 Select
Convenience stores, said he is struggling to recruit staff worried about
being targeted by criminals
Young people are turning away from retail jobs because of fears they
could be attacked by shoplifters, a convenience store owner has
warned. Jonathan James, who runs around 40 stores under the Select
Convenience brand said he is struggling to recruit staff concerned about
being targeted by criminals.
“It’s just completely going unchecked and that is having an impact,
obviously on morale, but it’s also having an impact on recruitment,” he
told The Telegraph. “People are just seeing in the local paper that the
shops have been done and staff have been assaulted.
“It’s a hell of a job to recruit because they don’t want to put
themselves in harm’s way.”
Figures from the Association of Convenience Stores (ACS) show more than
6.2 million shoplifting incidents were recorded in the past year,
costing businesses over £2.2bn. James said it was the first time in his
25 years in retail that he was designing stores around security and
staff safety rather than profitability.
The British Retail Consortium’s annual crime survey reported
violence and abuse against retail workers rose
by more than 50% in the past year and 340% since 2020. It
said incidents had climbed from 455 a day in 2020 to over 2,000 a day,
the highest level recorded. 70 of those daily incidents involved a
weapon – more than double the previous year.
Chris Noice, communications director at the ACS, said: “Retailers and
their colleagues have to deal with everything from theft and abuse to
assault, violence and being threatened with weapons.
“In the last two years, retailers have spent over half a billion
pounds on making their shops safer and more secure. This must be
backed up by the police when incidents are reported to stop the prolific
offenders that are targeting shops on a regular basis.”
betterretailing.com
More PDs Boost Tech to Fight Retail
Crime
Freeport, Ill. police to enhance body cams, ShotSpotter with new Retail
Crime grant
The Freeport Police Department has been awarded significant funding
to enhance its technological capabilities, with a $9,000 Organized
Retail Crime grant from Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul and
$630,000 in FY26 appropriations from US Senator Dick Durbin’s office.
The funding will support technological upgrades for the department,
including maintaining existing Shot Spotter
coverage and expanding the use of body-worn cameras.
The appropriations will also allow the Freeport Police Department to
acquire two additional squad video cameras and DVRs, a drone, license
plate reader cameras, and a mobile command trailer. These
enhancements are aimed at improving the department’s ability to respond
to and manage incidents more effectively.
However, the implementation of these plans is contingent upon the
passage of the appropriations bill, which will determine the
availability of the $630,000 funding from Senator Durbin’s office.
mystateline.com
National Guard Helping Cust Crime in
NM
Democratic New Mexico Gov. says National Guard cut crime significantly
New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham tells NewsNation that deploying
the National Guard to combat crime in Albuquerque has led to dramatic
results, with felony arrests up 22% and misdemeanor arrests
increasing 30%.
The Democratic governor, who declared a public safety emergency in April
and deployed several dozen National Guard troops to Albuquerque’s
Route 66 corridor, defended her decision as necessary to ensure
residents feel safe in their communities.
“I’m not looking for a reputation. I’m looking to solve a problem until
every New Mexican meets their constitutional right … to feel safe in
their church and home and grocery store,” Grisham told NewsNation.
newsnationnow.com
Has safety in downtown Cleveland changed? Here is crime data for the
past 3 years
These are the most dangerous and safest MS cities, crime data shows
The Importance of 'Psychological
Safety'
Psychology Safety Policies Missing at Companies
Just 16% say their organization
currently has a written psychological safety policy, and just 36% say
the term is formally defined and communicated internally.
Psychological safety is a concept so important to employee health
that it's included in ISO 45003 and increasingly employees are rating it
as a necessary factor in terms of engagement.
A recent survey, The Status of Psychological Safety in the Workplace,
from Veriforce, found a disconnect between understanding the
importance of psychological safety (68%) and the need to have a
specific policy. Just 16% say their organization currently has a written
psychological safety policy, and just 36% say the term is formally
defined and communicated internally.
More than half (52%) report that their company lacks formal training
or workshops on psychological safety. The research also found that
formal training has a measurable impact on employees’ comfort levels to
speak up. Those at companies with formal training on psychological
safety reported an average comfort score of 4.0 out of 5, compared to
3.2 in companies without.
Nearly 1 in 5 (19%) say their leadership does not actively promote or
model psychologically safe behaviors. Leadership support emerged as
another critical factor.
ehstoday.com
Sluggish Holiday Sales Coming?
Holiday retail sales projected to grow 4%, below 10-year average
While in-store sales are expected to
grow 2.75% from last year, e-commerce sales growth is slowing, according
to a recent report from Bain & Company.
Retail sales for November and December are projected to grow 4% year
over year and surpass $975 billion, according to a holiday report
from Bain & Company.
In-store sales are expected to grow 2.75% from last year. The
strongest gains in store will be seen in apparel and accessories,
general merchandise (excluding department stores) and health and
personal care, which are projected to grow at least 5%.
Growth from non-store sales, which include e-commerce and mail
orders, is expected to slow, with sales projected to be up 7% year
over year. That’s compared to 9% to 10% growth in the category over the
past two years. However, non-store sales are still expected to account
for half of overall sales growth this season.
retaildive.com
RELATED: The holidays should be OK for
retailers that try hard enough
Consumer Remains Resilient
Against the odds, Americans are still spending
Americans still opened their wallets last month, despite persistent
fears about the economy, a slowing labor market and higher tariffs.
Spending at US retailers rose 0.6% in August, the Commerce
Department said Tuesday, unchanged from July’s upwardly revised 0.6%.
Last month’s figure came in much better than economists’ expectations of
a 0.2% increase, according to a poll by data firm FactSet. Retail sales
are adjusted for seasonal swings but not inflation.
Employers have hit the brakes on hiring in recent months as
Americans once again grow pessimistic about the economy’s future.
President Donald Trump’s widespread tariffs have also began to push up
some prices, according to the Consumer Price Index.
Yet, US consumers haven’t cut back their spending meaningfully,
and they may continue to spend, so long as layoffs don’t surge.
cnn.com
Medical Costs Hitting Retailers
Retailers battle the rising costs of medical, liability claims
Second quarter earnings results
across the industry showed that heightened claims costs are impacting
even the strongest performers.
Rising costs related to medical and liability claims are hitting
the industry at large. And although that was somewhat expected heading
into the year, the precise impact has been a bit of a surprise — even
for one of the country’s largest retailers.
Going into this year, a report from professional services company Aon
showed that the average cost of employer-sponsored health plans were
expected to grow 9% in 2025 if no cost reduction actions were taken.
Plus, a survey from Mercer released this month found that the cost of
health benefits per employee could climb an average of 6.5% next year.
retaildive.com
Cupertino Whole Foods cleared to reopen after rodent infestation
The Whole Foods passed inspection nearly
five months after being closed down for rodent droppings
UK: Poundland halts store closures amid restructuring plan
Kirkland’s to convert all stores to Bed Bath & Beyond, pivot to
wholesale
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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From Analyst-Dependent to Field-Driven:
Modernizing Loss Prevention at ULTA Beauty
and CVS Health with Agilence

Loss prevention is evolving — and the smartest retailers are
empowering their field teams to lead the charge. In this live
webinar, discover how
Agilence's
powerful, easy-to-use software is eliminating bottlenecks, removing
analyst dependency, and putting actionable insights directly into
the hands of the people on the ground. The payoff? Faster
investigations, more confident teams, and measurable results.

You'll hear from Melinda Black, VP of Loss
Prevention Field at ULTA Beauty, John Robinson, Director of Asset
Protection for CVS Health, and
Keneavy Krenzin, VP of Product Management at Agilence.
Melinda will reveal how ULTA reimagined its LP strategy from rollout
to full adoption — with Store Managers spending just 1.5 hours a
week in Agilence to uncover fraud at record speed, where 4 out of 5
cases lead to admissions. John will share how CVS rolled out
Agilence to Field AP Managers and Store Managers, enabling targeted
reporting and streamlined investigations. With Store Managers
spending just 15 minutes a week in the platform, CVS improved
alerting capabilities and achieved a 33% actionable alert rate.
Plus, get an exclusive sneak peek at Agilence's upcoming AI
capabilities, built to give field users an even greater edge in
spotting issues early and stopping loss before it starts.
If you're ready to transform your loss prevention approach, empower
your teams, and modernize LP without adding headcount, this is your
blueprint.
Register Here
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Phishing Op Busted by Microsoft
Microsoft disrupts global phishing campaign that led to widespread
credential theft
Officials say the operation led to
ransomware and BEC attacks on U.S. hospitals and healthcare
organizations.
Microsoft
on Tuesday announced that it had dismantled the infrastructure behind
a major phishing-as-a-service operation that had powered attacks on
healthcare organizations around the world.
The operation, which Microsoft dubbed “Raccoon0365,”
sold subscription-based phishing kits that
allowed unsophisticated cybercriminals to steal Microsoft 365 account
usernames and passwords, the company said in a blog post. It
estimated that hackers used Raccoon0365 phishing kits to steal
approximately 5,000 credentials from users in 94 different countries
since July 2024.
Microsoft seized 338 of Raccoon0365’s web domains after obtaining
permission from a federal judge in the Southern District of New York.
Raccoon0365 sold its phishing kits on a Telegram channel through
subscriptions ranging from 30 to 90 days, according to Cloudflare,
which worked with Microsoft on the operation to disrupt the service.
Cyber criminals used the kits to target more
than 2,300 organizations in the U.S. in a wide variety of industries.
Many attacks sought to steal credentials and deploy malware during tax
filing season, Microsoft said.
Microsoft told the court that it had conducted four separate “test
buys” in which employees purchased phishing kits from Raccoon0365
and learned key details about how the operation worked.
The phishing operation has at least 850 members on its Telegram
channel and has received more than $100,000 in cryptocurrency payments,
Microsoft said. The alleged head of the operation is Joseph Ogundipe, a
Nigerian-based man with a computer programming background, according to
the company’s court filings.
cybersecuritydive.com
'Encouraging Businesses to Share Cyber
Threat Data'
House spending bill would reauthorize key cybersecurity programs
The two programs, which encourage
information sharing and fund local improvements, are seen as critical
for national cyber resilience.
The U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday took a significant step
toward reauthorizing two key cybersecurity programs.
The newly released draft of the House’s temporary government-funding
bill includes language reauthorizing both the Cybersecurity
Information Sharing Act and the State and Local Cybersecurity
Grant Program. Both programs are set to expire on Sept. 30 unless
lawmakers renew them.
The CISA law has received widespread support from cybersecurity experts
and industry groups that describe it as essential for encouraging
businesses to share cyber threat data with one another and the
government. Trump administration officials have also endorsed its
renewal.
“Without the protections codified by this statute, businesses may be
less willing to share cyber threat information for fear of legal
exposure,” a coalition of financial, energy, tech and operational
technology trade groups warned congressional leaders on Sept. 4. “Any
chilling effect on this information exchange directly benefits the
nation-state attackers and cybercriminals seeking to degrade U.S.
economic and national security interests.”
cybersecuritydive.com
Fallout Continues After Cyberattack
Bridgestone Americas restores facilities’ network connections following
cyberattack
The tire maker said it has begun to
ramp up production but is still closely monitoring its processes for any
issues.
Bridgestone Americas said it has restored connections between its
facilities and its central computer network following a cyberattack
earlier this month that disrupted its production operations.
The company, a subsidiary of Japan-based Bridgestone Corp., said the
attack interrupted production at several of its North American and
Latin American manufacturing and retreading facilities.
Bridgestone has begun to ramp up production at its affected facilities
as part of its return to pre-hack output levels.
“With the safety and security of our systems being our top priority,
we will continue to monitor for any signs of issues related to this
limited cyber incident,” a Bridgestone Americas spokesperson told
Cybersecurity Dive.
cybersecuritydive.com
Many networking devices are still vulnerable to pixie dust attack
How a fake ICS network can reveal real cyberattacks |
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Transforming Amazon Sellers
Amazon introduces agentic AI across the seller experience, transforming
how sellers manage their businesses
Powered by Amazon Bedrock, Seller
Assistant evolves into an always-on, agentic AI-powered partner that
helps sellers launch, manage, and grow their business.
Independent sellers are crucial partners in the success of the Amazon
store. These entrepreneurs—ranging from kitchen table startups to global
brands—inspire us every day with their passion for creating amazing
products, and drive us to build solutions that accelerate their
growth while saving them valuable time and effort.
For over 25 years, Amazon has been developing and applying machine
learning and AI technologies across nearly every aspect of our business,
including tools and features that support our selling partners. Last
year, we introduced
Seller Assistant, a generative AI—powered expert for sellers, that
provided immediate answers to questions and guided sellers to helpful
resources. Today, I’m excited to announce the next evolution of
Seller Assistant, enhanced with agentic AI capabilities—an important
step forward that allows AI to not just respond, but to reason, plan,
and help take action with a seller’s permission.
This represents a significant advancement in how sellers can run
their businesses with Amazon. Our agentic AI capabilities are
designed to work seamlessly throughout the entire selling experience,
which means sellers can go from handling every task themselves to
collaborating with an intelligent assistant that works proactively on
their behalf around the clock, while always keeping sellers in control.
Seller Assistant will be able to handle everything from routine
operations to complex business strategy, so sellers can focus on
innovation and growth.
Powered by
Amazon Bedrock, and leveraging
Amazon Nova and
Anthropic Claude, Seller Assistant combines leading foundation
models with the expertise and knowledge we’ve accumulated from
supporting sellers for nearly 25 years. This powerful combination
allows it to not only monitor account health and optimize inventory, but
also to anticipate sellers’ needs, develop strategic solutions, and act
when authorized, moving from passive assistance to active partnership.
aboutamazon.com
Slower Online Holiday Sales Growth
This Year?
US online holiday sales growth to slow as shoppers tighten budgets,
Salesforce forecasts
U.S. online sales growth during the 2025 holiday season is expected
to slow from last year, as price-conscious shoppers stay picky with
their spending amid rising living costs, according to a Salesforce
forecast released on Tuesday.
Salesforce projects online spending between November 1 and December
31 to rise 2.1% to $288 billion, lower than a 4% increase to $282
billion in the same period last year.
The outlook echoes recent reports from Deloitte and PwC, underscoring
a subdued holiday season that will see shoppers prioritize essentials,
hunt for deeper discounts and cut back on discretionary purchases as
economic uncertainty weighs on sentiment.
reuters.com
Online complaints surge to 27K in eight months, e-commerce & illegal
websites top the list |
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Walnut Creek, CA: Police detain group of juveniles in grab-and-run
robberies at downtown stores
Walnut Creek Police said a group of juveniles was detained in connection
with robberies at downtown businesses on Tuesday. Around 1:45 p.m.,
officers received a report that a group of juveniles ran into a
Lululemon, grabbed merchandise, and then left, police said. According to
police, officers were at the scene within minutes and were able to
detain four juveniles in connection with the robbery. Police said they
recovered merchandise belonging to other Broadway Plaza stores and that
the total amount recovered was worth thousands of dollars.
cbsnews.com
Cleveland, OH: Thief makes off with 12 guns from Westlake gun store
after smash-and-grab burglary
Authorities are searching for a suspect who they say broke into a
Westlake gun store and stole a dozen firearms over the weekend. At about
midnight Saturday, a thief climbed a ladder to break a second-story
window at Westlake Classic Firearms on Center Ridge Road before smashing
a display case full of handguns. The thief made off with 10 handguns
from the display case and two rifles from the wall, said William Halusek,
a spokesman for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
Both rifles were assault weapons, one a Pioneer Arms AK-47 and the other
a Para Ordnance TTR, an AR-15 style weapon, according to a police report
on the incident.
cleveland.com
Mankato, MN: Update: St. Peter man sentenced for theft of body armor,
firearm magazines from store
The man accused of stealing over $2,000 worth of survival gear,
firearm magazines, bear spray and body armor at the Mankato Scheels
on April 17 has been sentenced to jail. Mohamed Adan Mohamed, 24, was
sentenced this week to eight months in jail for theft and related
charges but will serve 80 days in Blue Earth County Jail. Scheels
employees observed Mohamed entering the store wearing a heavy winter
jacket, green cap, COVID mask and gloves. He selected several
high-priced items, including multiple magazines for a 9mm firearm, bear
spray and body armor, without checking prices. Mohamed also claimed to
sales people that he possessed an AR-style rifle calibrated to 9mm,
according to a court complaint.
mankatofreepress.com
South Portland, ME: Windham man took $25K in stolen merchandise from
Newbury Comics store over 18 months
Laredo, TX: LPD charges a suspect involved with retail theft of
televisions
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Shootings & Deaths
Anchorage, AK: Update: Grocery store security guard says he was shot after
asking to check customer’s receipt
A security guard at a grocery store in Alaska was shot last weekend over a
reported receipt dispute. Kendrick McFarland says he was shot while working
security at Carrs grocery store on Minnesota Drive on Sunday. McFarland said he
had been working that morning since about 5 a.m., mostly checking receipts at
the door, when, around 8:30 a.m., he asked a man to present his receipt, at
which point the man pulled a gun and shot him. “[I] don’t know the gentleman,”
McFarland said. “We don’t know each other, and it was just a crazy turn of
events.” Only about three weeks into the job, McFarland said he was working for
a private security contractor that the grocery chain hired to monitor the store.
“The new program that we started as the security company was just checking the
receipts of customer on the way out as they exit with their products,” he said.
“But that conversation led to the dispute.”
wsaw.com
Columbus, OH: Juvenile arrested after shooting on Sunday in East Linden that
injured 2
A juvenile is facing multiple charges after a shooting in East Linden on Sunday
left two people injured. Officers were called around 5:30 p.m. to the 1800 block
of Hudson Street after reports of gunfire inside a store. Investigators said the
suspect fired shots, striking two victims.
myfox28columbus.com
Tulare County, CA: Man sentenced for deadly shooting at Visalia C- store
Savannah, GA: 16-year-old Oglethorpe Mall shooting suspect denied bond
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Warrington Township, PA: Two boys (12 and 14-Year-old) Arrested In Gunpoint
Robbery At Vallet Square Shopping Center
Two boys are in custody in connection with an armed robbery that took place at
the Valley Square Shopping Center just days before the start of the new school
year, police announced Wednesday. The two boys — ages 12 and 14 — allegedly held
a third boy at gunpoint and stole personal belongings on Aug. 30, Warrington
police said. Warrington Police said they launched an investigation after
receiving a cyber tip from the Pennsylvania State Police regarding a video
posted on social media, which showed an armed robbery involving juveniles.
Authorities determined the incident happened at Valley Square Shopping Center on
Easton Road. Warrington Township Police Department executed a search warrant at
a home in the 500 block of Bradford Avenue at approximately 6 a.m. Wednesday.
Police said both juvenile suspects have been taken into custody without
incident.
patch.com
Los Angeles, CA: Pair of L.A. 7-Eleven stores targeted in early-morning
robberies
Austin, TX: Felon charged with 7 counts in connection to armed robberies of
restaurants and C-stores in Austin
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•
C-Store – Ahoskie, NC
– Armed Robbery/ shot
•
C-Store – Beloit, WI –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Beloit, WI –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Valdosta, GA
- Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Asheville,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Bronx, NY –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Laurel
County, KY – Robbery
•
C-Store – Lexington
County, SC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Houston, TX
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store- Los Angeles,
CA- Armed Robbery
•
C-Store- Los Angeles,
CA- Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Walnut
Creek, CA – Robbery
•
Electronics – Laredo,
TX – Robbery
•
Gas Station – Niles,
OH – Armed Robbery
•
Guns- Westlake, OH –
Burglary
• Jewelry – Orlando, FL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – New
Lenox, IL – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – San
Diego, CA – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Fayetteville, NC - Armed Robbery
•
Tobacco – Mobile, AL –
Armed Robbery
•
Tobacco –
Winston-Salem, NC – Armed Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 18 robberies
• 3 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
Staffing 'Best in Class' Teams
Every one has a role to play in building an
industry.
Filled your job? Any good candidates left over?
Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build
a 'Best in Class' Community
|
 |
District Asset Protection Manager
Braintree, MA
As a District Asset Protection Manager, you will develop, teach, and
lead the implementation of the company’s asset protection, shortage control and
safety programs for all stores in your district. You will train, mentor, and
collaborate with store management and shortage control associates to ensure the
effective execution and proper implementation of company policies, while driving
improvements in inventory management and loss prevention...
|
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Director, Contact Center, Fraud Operations
Bentonville, AR
Lead the Fraud & Risk Operations strategy, partnering with Fraud
Strategy, Technology, and other key stakeholders to detect, prevent, and reduce
fraud in the digital and retail space. Direct large-scale operations teams
(internal, outsourced, and offshore) with accountability for fraud KPIs, risk
outcomes, and productivity metrics...
|

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Director, Safety
San Francisco, CA
The Director of Safety is responsible for developing, implementing, and
overseeing comprehensive safety programs across all retail locations, corporate
offices, and some distribution operations. This leadership role ensures
compliance with federal, state, and local safety regulations while fostering a
culture of safety excellence that protects employees, customers, and company
assets...
|
Featured Jobs
To apply to any of today's Featured Jobs,
Click Here
 |
View Featured
Jobs |
Post Your Job
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Insight,
humor & heart from
one of LP's most trusted voices |
|
Outcomes Are More Important Than Bells & Whistles
You're not buying features. You’re buying
outcomes. Retailers: Don't get wowed by bells and whistles. Ask: what
does this actually do for my business? Solution providers: Sell the
outcome, not the interface. People don't care how many buttons you
have—they care about results. Remember to think, "WIIFM" What's In In
For Me?
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