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Strengthen Retail Security & Enhance Workplace Safety with
Off-Duty Law Enforcement

Discover how off-duty law enforcement enhances safety and deters crime while protecting employees and assets.

Retailers are under more pressure than ever to prevent theft, ensure employee safety and maintain business continuity across stores. Criminal activities are on the rise, and they can severely disrupt operations, leading to financial losses and a tarnished reputation. Workplace security not only safeguards assets and sensitive information but also protects employees and visitors, fostering a safe and productive environment.

Hiring off-duty law enforcement is a proven way to level up your retail security strategy. Off-duty personnel are uniquely positioned to deter criminal activities, respond swiftly in emergencies and provide an added layer of protection. By integrating off-duty law enforcement into your security strategy, you can create a safer, more secure workplace environment.

Protos Security's workplace security blog explores ways that off-duty law enforcement can benefit retailers and increase workplace safety.

Read more here
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Predictability Fuels Organized Retail Crime
Why Organized Retail Crime Depends on Predictability


By the D&D Daily staff

Organized retail crime is often discussed in terms of bold thefts and rapid exits, but the real advantage for ORC groups isn’t aggression or speed. It’s predictability.

Modern retail is designed to be consistent. Store layouts are standardized. Staffing levels follow models built around traffic forecasts. High-value merchandise is placed in the same locations after each reset. For customers, this predictability creates familiarity and efficiency. For organized theft groups, it creates a roadmap.

ORC crews are not operating on impulse. They observe patterns. They learn when stores are least staffed, which entrances receive minimal attention, how long it takes for a response to occur, and which processes slow down during peak hours. Over time, even small consistencies — a single associate covering multiple departments or a self-checkout area that remains open during staffing gaps — become reliable opportunities.

Once a method works, it can be repeated. Predictability allows theft to scale. A tactic refined in one location can often be deployed across dozens of stores with minimal adjustment, particularly within the same retail banner. That repeatability lowers risk for ORC groups and increases efficiency, turning isolated theft into an ongoing operation.

The issue extends beyond the sales floor. Predictable return workflows, uniform buy-online-pickup-in-store processes, and standardized reverse logistics all create familiar handoff points. When these systems function the same way every time, they become easier to exploit. Stolen merchandise doesn’t just leave the store — it moves smoothly into resale channels that mirror legitimate retail processes.

This doesn’t mean retailers should abandon consistency. Retail depends on it. But predictability without variation creates exposure. Small, deliberate disruptions can make a meaningful difference: rotating staffing responsibilities, varying audit timing, changing high-risk product placement, or introducing occasional friction at key process checkpoints.

The goal isn’t to make stores confusing or inefficient. It’s to make them less readable.

Organized retail crime doesn’t succeed because retailers are negligent. It succeeds because retail operations are optimized, repeatable, and designed for scale. Recognizing how predictability fuels ORC is a critical step toward countermeasures that protect assets without compromising the customer experience.


'Designs Against Shoplifting'
From mirrors to micro-mechanisms: How young retail designers rethink anti-theft packaging

Mirrors that talk back, shelves that create the illusion of human presence, self-destructing security tags and a perfume tester that dispenses pre-sprayed paper.

These are just some of the ideas revealed in the Designs Against Shoplifting report by ECR Retail Loss in collaboration with Central St Martins. The innovations emerged from a design competition that challenged students to rethink how to cut retail theft without locking products away, frustrating shoppers or adding to packaging waste.

Working alongside retailers and the Design Against Crime Research Lab, the students developed a series of practical and sustainable concepts to deploy in stores. The winning concepts explore how design itself can subtly reshape behaviour, raising perceived risk, reducing opportunity and disrupting theft techniques at the point they occur. And they achieve this without resorting to overt deterrents such as cages, oversized packaging or staff-dependent controls.

Standout concepts for design-led deterrence, not fortress retail

Reflect Points places mirrors and culturally resonant messaging next to high-theft cosmetic products. Aimed particularly at teenage shoppers, the design replaces warnings and surveillance with humour and self-recognition, prompting a pause at the moment of temptation rather than confrontation after the fact.

Uncanny embeds soft lighting and ambient sound into shelving to create the illusion that someone else is nearby. The design seeks to unsettle opportunistic theft in otherwise unstaffed aisles, while remaining almost invisible to genuine shoppers.

The Lift(er)-Proof Tag reimagines the humble security label as both a deterrent and a sustainability intervention. Made from perforated, paper-based materials, the tag is designed to tear and fragment if tampered with, making quick removal difficult and visibly damaging the product for resale. retailtechnologyreview.com


Retail Crime Scripts:
How theft really happens in your stores
Retail crime scripts are a practical way to describe “how theft gets done” in the real world. Think of a script like a play: there are scenes (the stages of the theft), a cast (offenders, staff, shoppers), and props (bags, tools, packaging, fixtures, policies and technology).

  • Most theft looks impulsive only from a distance.

  • Up close, it often follows a recognisable pattern.

  • Offenders repeat what works.

  • They avoid what slows them down.

  • And they adapt when the environment changes.

Retail crime scripts turn that messy reality into something you can design against. Instead of treating every incident as unique, you look for the repeated steps that make theft easy, quick, or low-risk.

The stages of a retail crime script

Most retail crime scripts contain the same broad stages, even if different thieves emphasise different parts:

  • Preparation: what the offender brings or knows (bags, tools, product locations, staff routines, resale routes).

  • Entry: when and how they choose the store, timing, and conditions (busy vs quiet, staffing levels, sightlines).

  • Selection: how they choose items (value, size, concealability, resale demand, packaging and tags).

  • Handling / manipulation: how they defeat controls (tag removal, “popping” packaging, barcode switching, concealment).

  • Exit: how they leave with minimal attention (blending, misdirection, speed, distractions).

  • After the theft: what happens next (personal use, resale, return fraud, fencing networks).

If you can disrupt one key step, the whole script becomes slower, riskier, or less rewarding. ecrloss.com


Crime fell nationwide last year—but in S.F., drug offenses soared 54%
San Francisco, like the rest of the country, experienced fewer homicides, aggravated assaults, and robberies last year, but in drug offenses, San Francisco’s profile was sharply different. The rate of drug offenses jumped by nearly 54 percent.
 
Hamilton County expands its real-time crime data center

Newsom urges California law enforcement to investigate possible federal agent crimes
 



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The Best Approach Retailers Can Take?
Is Silence Target’s Best Response To Backlash Over Minnesota ICE Raids?
Target is facing social media outcry and boycott threats largely over not making its own public remarks after immigration officials detained two Target employees during their shift in a Minnesota store. Videos of the employees’ arrest by about a half-dozen masked ICE agents quickly spread on social media. The employees, both U.S. citizens, were later released.

The detentions on January 8 came a day after an ICE agent shot and killed Minneapolis resident Renee Good, an act that has sparked widespread protests throughout the city.

Target, however, may be limited as to how it can respond because ICE agents are able to operate in public places, such as stores. John Medeiros, a corporate immigration lawyer at Nilan Johnson Lewis, a Minnesota law firm, told the New York Times, “You can ask them to leave, but there’s not necessarily a constitutional violation of them doing that because of the location.”

Employees of Target retail locations in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region, according to a report from Bloomberg, have reportedly been calling out of work more frequently in recent weeks. Corporate workers at Target, which is headquartered in Minneapolis, have postponed scheduled in-office work due to anxiety over the clashes between heavily armed federal agents and protesters.

Workers on internal Slack channels have raised concerns that the lack of a statement from corporate is sowing confusion, although other employees are encouraging management to stay neutral — as taking a public stance risks making the company a bigger target for immigration operations.

With polls showing voters split along party lines on whether they support President Trump’s immigration crackdown, corporations have been careful not to alienate large numbers of their customers by taking a side. They also risk angering Trump, who has publicly rebuked companies and executives he believes have crossed him. retailwire.com


Retail Giants & Other Businesses in the Crosshairs
Businesses face pressure to respond to immigration enforcement while also becoming a target of it

Businesses are coming into the crosshairs of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign, whether it’s public pressure for them to speak out against aggressive immigration enforcement or becoming the sites for arrests themselves

From family-run cafes to retail giants, businesses are increasingly coming into the crosshairs of President Donald Trump’s mass deportation campaign, whether it's public pressure for them to speak out against aggressive immigration enforcement or becoming the sites for such arrests themselves.

In Minneapolis, where the Department of Homeland Security says it’s carrying out its largest operation ever, hotels, restaurants and other businesses have temporarily closed their doors or stopped accepting reservations amid widespread protests.

On Sunday, after the U.S. Border Patrol shot and killed Alex Pretti in Minneapolis, more than 60 CEOs of Minnesota-based companies including Target, Best Buy and UnitedHealth signed an open letter calling for "an immediate deescalation of tensions and for state, local and federal officials to work together to find real solutions.”

Still, that letter didn’t name immigration enforcement directly, or point to recent arrests at businesses. Earlier this month, widely-circulated videos showed federal agents detaining two Target employees in Minnesota. U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement has rounded up day laborers in Home Depot parking lots and delivery workers on the street nationwide. And last year, federal agents detained 475 people during a raid at a Hyundai plant in Georgia. abcnews.go.com


In-Store Shopping Is Alive & Well
ICSC: Majority of shoppers visited physical retail for 2025 holiday shopping
Nearly half of 2025 holiday shoppers spent more than they did last year – and in-store visits remained central to their plans.

More than nine-in-10 holiday shoppers reported making purchases in physical stores, and about three-quarters of consumers shopped both in-store and online. Another three-quarters of shoppers visited a mall or shopping center, and while most went to shop, many also stayed to dine or take part in entertainment and seasonal activities. Among all holiday shoppers, more than eight-in-10 (82%) spent money on dining, while 52% spent on entertainment and 64% spent on personal care services.

Consumers leaned into holiday traditions once again, making a statement this season: they are willing to spend on moments that matter to them,” said Tom McGee, President and CEO of ICSC. “This year showed that spending held up across both goods and services, even as households faced higher costs and economic uncertainty. Consumers continue to spend, but are doing so with greater care and selectivity.” chainstoreage.com


Grim Consumer Outlook
Consumer confidence collapses to lowest level since 2014
America’s economic mood deteriorated in January to its lowest level in more than a decade as consumers fretted about geopolitical tensions, affordability and President Donald Trump’s unrelenting trade war.

The Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence Index for January, released Tuesday, declined 9.7 points to a reading of 84.5, the lowest since 2014, surpassing the lows of last year when Trump unveiled stiff tariffs and the depths of the pandemic recession in 2020.

January’s reading came in much lower than the 91.1 reading economists projected in a poll by data firm FactSet. cnn.com


Home Depot cuts 800 jobs
The roles within its Atlanta store support center are primarily concentrated in its tech organization and come as the retailer mandates a full-time return to office.

Allbirds to close all US stores, save 2 outlets
The one-time DTC darling operated more than 60 locations at its peak, but will have just four company-run stores globally by the end of February.

Smoothie King plots 90-plus new openings for 2026

Signet Jewelers’ Tech And Digital Chief Sets Course For Transformation

The government is barreling toward a partial shutdown over DHS funding

 



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Tesco trials new crime reporting platform to deter retail crime
and keep colleagues, customers and local communities safe



On January 26, Tesco began trialling a new crime reporting platform across 40 of its stores.

The 10-week trial will be conducted across Nottinghamshire and Leicestershire, with the aim of driving down retail crime, protecting colleagues and increasing collaboration with the police and the wider retail industry.

While even one incident is one too many, retail crime has continued to escalate sharply across the industry, with the latest BRC Crime Survey reporting that incidents of violence and abuse against retail workers now surpass 2,000 a day.

The Auror platform, which is already used by several retailers and UK police forces, will make it easier and quicker for colleagues to report security incidents. By bringing all the data and information into a single source, this simplifies the process for retailers and the police to build, manage, track, and resolve cases faster.


Click here to learn more


 

 

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Retail Data Breaches:
The Quiet Risk Lurking Behind Daily Operations


By the D&D Daily staff

Retailers are facing no shortage of visible challenges — theft, staffing pressures, supply chain volatility — but one of the most disruptive threats often unfolds quietly, behind the scenes: data breaches.

While major breaches tend to grab headlines when millions of customer records are exposed, the reality is that most retail data incidents are smaller, incremental, and operationally disruptive long before they ever become public. From compromised point-of-sale systems to vendor-related intrusions, breaches increasingly target the connective tissue of retail operations rather than a single dramatic failure point.

Retail environments are uniquely vulnerable because of how much sensitive information flows through them every day. Payment data, loyalty accounts, employee credentials, vendor portals, and IoT-connected systems all coexist on complex networks designed for speed and convenience. That complexity can create blind spots — especially when systems are added over time rather than built with unified security architecture from the start.

Third-party exposure remains one of the most common breach vectors. Retailers rely heavily on external vendors for payment processing, inventory management, analytics, and customer engagement tools. Each integration expands the attack surface, and a weakness anywhere in that ecosystem can ripple outward quickly. In many cases, retailers only discover an issue after abnormal network behavior, system slowdowns, or failed transactions begin affecting daily operations.

The impact of a breach extends far beyond regulatory fines or notification costs. Even limited incidents can disrupt checkout flows, delay fulfillment, force temporary system shutdowns, and divert internal teams away from core business priorities. For frontline staff and asset protection teams, these disruptions often translate into increased friction at the store level, where associates are left managing customer frustration with limited information.

As a result, retailers are increasingly shifting from breach prevention alone to breach resilience — suggesting a focus on detection, segmentation, and response speed rather than the unrealistic goal of perfect security. Monitoring unusual behavior, limiting system access by role, and stress-testing incident response plans are becoming just as critical as firewalls and encryption.

In today’s retail landscape, data security is no longer an IT-only concern. It’s an operational risk that touches loss prevention, customer trust, and business continuity — often in ways that don’t become visible until the damage is already underway.


AI Governance Needed
AI tools break quickly, underscoring need for governance

In a new report, the security firm Zscaler said it identified severe vulnerabilities in every enterprise tool it tested — sometimes on its first prompt.

Companies’ AI tools remain highly vulnerable to cyberattacks, even as enterprises race to use them in more ways, the security firm Zscaler said in a threat report published on Tuesday.

Enterprises are also feeding AI tools vastly more data, the report found, “which paints an expanding target on AI platforms for cybercriminals across the globe.” Zscaler recommended organizations focus on visibility, real-time defense and consistent governance controls.

One of the most striking findings in Zscaler’s report concerns how brittle many AI systems are. “They break almost immediately,” researchers wrote. “When full adversarial scans are run, critical vulnerabilities surface within minutes — and sometimes faster.” During Zscaler’s red-teaming exercises in 25 corporate environments, it took a median of 16 minutes for an AI system to experience its first major failure, and by 90 minutes, 90% of systems had failed. In one case, it took only a single second for a system to fail.

Researchers observed failures in categories including biased and off-topic responses, failed URL verifications and privacy violations. “Models can still be coerced into exposing sensitive data or participating in harmful workflows,” the report warned.

In 72% of corporate environments, Zscaler’s first test of an AI system uncovered a critical vulnerability. cybersecuritydive.com


Efficiency > Security?
Corporate workers lean on shadow AI to enhance speed

A report shows senior corporate executives are willing to allow unsanctioned AI use, which could place company data at risk.

About six of every 10 corporate employees are willing to use shadow AI tools if it helps them meet work deadlines, according to a report from security firm BlackFog.

The report shows that 86% of workers are using AI tools at least once a week to accomplish certain tasks and more than one-third are using free versions of tools approved by their employers.

In addition, seven of every 10 C-level executives are willing to let faster production outweigh the need for increased security, according to the report.

“The consistent story we have heard is that CEOs have mandated the adoption and use of AI and have allocated a significant amount of funds to do this, and this is taking precedence over the security concerns,” said Darren Williams, founder and CEO of BlackFog. “The efficiency gains are too large to ignore. cybersecuritydive.com


Trump’s acting cyber chief uploaded sensitive files into a public version of ChatGPT
The interim director of the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency triggered an internal cybersecurity warning with the uploads — and a DHS-level damage assessment.

French government abandons Zoom and Microsoft Teams over security concerns

WhatsApp rolls out new security feature to protect users from sophisticated attacks

 


 

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Amazon's Job Cuts
Amazon laying off about 16,000 corporate workers in latest anti-bureaucracy push

Amazon is laying off about 16,000 corporate workers in its latest push to reduce bureaucracy.

Amazon said Wednesday it plans to eliminate about 16,000 corporate jobs, marking its second round of mass job cuts since last October.

In a blog post, the company wrote that the layoffs were part of an ongoing effort to “strengthen our organization by reducing layers, increasing ownership, and removing bureaucracy.” That coincides with a push to invest heavily in artificial intelligence.

The job reductions come just a few months after October’s layoffs, when 14,000 employees were let go across Amazon’s corporate workforce. At the time, the company indicated the cuts would continue in 2026 as it found “additional places we can remove layers.”

Beth Galetti, Amazon’s senior vice president of people experience and technology, didn’t rule out more job cuts in the future, but said the company isn’t trying to create “a new rhythm” of broad layoffs every few months.

That’s not our plan,” Galetti wrote in the blog post. “But just as we always have, every team will continue to evaluate the ownership, speed, and capacity to invent for customers, and make adjustments as appropriate.”

On Tuesday, some employees in Amazon’s cloud unit received an email sent in an apparent error acknowledging “organizational changes” at the company. The note referenced a post from Galetti and said Amazon notified “impacted colleagues in our organization. cnbc.com

 
Can AI Solve Workforces Shortages?
Retail, QSR leaders turn to AI agents & unified commerce to solve workforce shortages
Retail and QSR leaders are grappling with workforce shortages, changing customer behavior, and new cybersecurity challenges. This report explores how they're overcoming those obstacles through connected technology, leveraging agentic AI, unified commerce, edge-powered stores, IoT, and advanced cybersecurity. We'll delve into the innovative technologies that are poised to define the next wave of retail, addressing the challenges of integration and the opportunities for differentiation in an increasingly competitive market.

This report explores how:

  • AI agents are becoming more embedded, as consumers use them to make purchases independently on their behalf, while retailers can use them to monitor and optimize inventory and operations.

  • Retail success hinges on unified commerce—better experiences, better views of the customer, and a direct line between the front of the house and operations.

  • Retailers and QSR leaders are exploring how workloads like AI, IoT, and computer vision can be optimized through in-store servers and edge compute.

  • IoT at scale feeds the loop, as smart shelves, and sensors can unlock real-time insights.

  • With more endpoints and machine identities, layered defenses, zero-trust, and controls become non-negotiable.  bizjournals.com


UPS to cut additional 30,000 jobs in Amazon unwind, turnaround plan

Dollar General expands reach of rural same-day delivery service


 


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Placer County, CA: Update: Beauty store bandit sentenced to almost 10 years in state prison
On Jan. 22, 2026, the Honorable Judge Gazzaniga sentenced 23-year-old Andrew Morando to nine years and eight months in the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation for felony grand theft, burglary and more. In March 2025, the defendant burglarized a local Lincoln beauty store, stealing more than 130 high-end fragrances valued at over $24,000 and causing more than $10,000 in damage. The defendant was later arrested by the California Highway Patrol following a high-speed vehicle pursuit ending in a crash, where stolen merchandise and a crowbar were recovered from the vehicle. Through the Placer County District Attorney’s Retail Theft Program, the defendant was also linked to an organized retail theft scheme, spanning across seven counties, resulting in approximately $290,000 in stolen merchandise and property damage. The defendant primarily targeted beauty stores but also burglarized other brand retail locations. In each incident, the defendant would wear a Joker mask that would place an extra level of fear in the employees of the businesses. He and his associates operated after hours using a distinct crowbar, mask, plastic totes, and consistent clothing, smashing display cases and causing thousands of dollars in damage in addition to the thefts. The stolen merchandise was then resold primarily through social media platforms.   placer.ca.gov


Savannah, GA: Best Buy employee arrested in $40,000 theft scheme says he was blackmailed, reports show
Police have arrested a Best Buy employee who allegedly allowed customers to steal more than $40,000 worth of electronics from the Abercorn Street store over a two-week period in December. Dorian Allen, 20, was taken into custody December 26 after Best Buy management discovered he had been letting customers leave with merchandise without paying from December 8 through December 22. According to a Savannah Police Department report, Allen told investigators he was being blackmailed by a “hacker group” who threatened to release nude photos he had posted on Instagram. He claimed the hackers sent him emails with descriptions of people he should allow to steal merchandise. The police report shows Allen allegedly helped customers steal 143 products worth $40,734.19, including multiple PlayStation 5 consoles, Xbox gaming systems, Meta Quest VR headsets, AirPods, Beats headphones, and other electronics.  wtoc.com


Westminster, CO: Thief who returned stolen mandolins to N.J. music store arrested again, this time in Colorado
A Serbian national who is charged with stealing two mandolins from a vintage guitar store in Teaneck and a luxury pocketbook from a high-end consignment shop in Englewood was arrested for shoplifting in Colorado two weeks ago and is now free on bail, authorities said. Stevan Milovanovic, 35, was arrested on Jan. 14 at the Walmart in Westminster, Colorado, after security stopped him leaving the store with nearly $1,000 worth of music, sunglasses and electronics tucked inside his puffer jacket, police said.  nj.com


Langley Township, B.C. Canada: Langley RCMP seek rightful owner of trailer full of merchandise
Police in Langley made an unusual seizure last week and are now looking to return a “large quantity of new sinks” to their rightful owner. Officers “recovered” a 53-foot trailer containing the sinks on Jan. 23, Langley RCMP said in a news release Wednesday. They did not say where they made the seizure. Police did not specify the exact number of sinks they recovered, but more than 50 boxes are visible in the photo they shared with their release. “Investigators have since spoken with the registered owner of the trailer, who confirmed the sinks do not belong to them,” the release reads, adding that police believe the sinks “may be unreported stolen goods.”  ctvnews.ca
 



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Shootings & Deaths


Surrey, B.C. Canada: Police investigating early morning shooting at Grocery store in Newton
The Surrey Police Service (SPS) says it is investigating after reports of shots fired at a business in the Newton neighborhood early Monday morning. Officers were called out to the Big Bazaar Produce and Grocery store, located on 120 Street near 81 Avenue, shortly before 4 a.m. “The business was unoccupied at the time, and fortunately, nobody was injured as a result of the incident,” Sgt. Tige Pollock told 1130 NewsRadio. Pollock says it appears the incident is related to extortion. He says police don’t believe the building has been targeted before.  vancouver.citynews.ca


Orange County, FL: Police investigating a shooting of a man outside 7 Eleven

 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Williamsburg, VA: Person stabbed inside of Ross department store
Someone was stabbed inside a Ross Dress for Less in Williamsburg on Wednesday, according to a store employee. Deputies confirmed they are looking into reports of a shooting and a stabbing near the Ross and Home Depot on Mooretown Road in Williamsburg, the York Poquoson Sheriff's Office tells News 3. The YPSO could not confirm the number of victims or the severity of the injury, but a Ross employee told News 3 someone was stabbed in the store.  wtkr.com


Dover, DE: Men armed with hatchets wanted after allegedly robbing Del. smoke shop

Myrtle Beach, SC: Man gets 10 years in prison for $63 robbery attempt with a BB gun at Myrtle Beach convenience store

Ocala, FL: 3 Armed Robberies in 2 days in Marion County


 


 

Antiques – Clovis, CA – Burglary
C-Store – El Paso, TX – Robbery
C-Store – Garner, NC – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Marion County, FL – Armed Robbery
Grocery – Muncie, IN – Robbery
Jewelry – Fayetteville, NC - Robbery
Jewelry – Las Vegas, NV - Burglary
Jewelry – Albuquerque, NM – Robbery
Liquor – San Antonio, TX – Robbery
Pharmacy – Morgantown, WV – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Henry County, GA – Burglary
Restaurant – Charlotte, NC – Burglary
Restaurant – Springfield Township, PA – Burglary
Restaurant – Tucker, GA – Burglary
Restaurant – Milwaukee, WI – Burglary
Tobacco - Dover, DE – Armed Robbery
Tobacco – Johnston County, TN – Armed Robbery
Tobacco – Miami, FL – Burglary                   

 

Daily Totals:
• 10 robberies
• 8 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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District Asset Protection Manager
Cincinnati, OH
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...




 


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...

 



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A Bad Process Beats a Good Person Every Time.


You can hire the best talent — but if your systems are broken, their work will be too. Process is the invisible architecture of success. Good systems make average people great; bad ones burn out rockstars.


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