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Target names Grant McGee Executive VP & Chief Legal & Compliance Officer

Target Corp. has added another new face to its C-suite.

Grant McGee has been named as executive VP and chief legal and compliance officer of the discounter, effective May 31. In the role, he will lead Target’s legal, compliance & risk teams, as well as its government affairs function.

McGee arrives at Target with 20 years of legal expertise and experience in large, consumer-facing global companies. Most recently, he served as the general counsel for consumer goods and personal care giant Kimberly-Clark, leading all legal, public policy, government affairs, compliance, security and flight operations for the company. chainstoreage.com


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

 

 

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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


In Case You Missed It: How To Defeat ORC
After 25 years in Federal Law Enforcement, Here's What It Will Take to Beat Organized Retail Crime

By Raul Aguilar - Head of Law Enforcement Partnerships, Americas at
Auror


After almost three decades in federal law enforcement, and now leading the largest technology network in the US focused on combating retail crime, I’m often asked how we can better equip the men and women who protect our communities to keep up with the evolving tactics of organized retail crime groups. After all, these are enormous crime networks that operate not just interstate, but transnationally.

The reality is the top 10 percent of offenders are responsible for more than 65 percent of retail crime across the country, and through retailer reporting in Auror, we know those repeat offenders are up to three times more likely to be violent or use weapons in stores. Not to mention this is commonly the highest volume crime type.

There are three key opportunities in front of us to help make law enforcement more efficient in the great work they do to keep our communities safe.

First, break down the barriers that keep law enforcement working in isolation.

Early in my career in California, crimes were treated as isolated events. That model no longer works. ORC is driven by repeat offenders across multiple retail stores and jurisdictions, making up multi-billion-dollar enterprises that fuel other crimes like gun trafficking, counterfeiting, wildlife smuggling, and human trafficking. They are not brand loyal or city specific, they ‘steal-to-order.’ What once looked like petty theft is now a sophisticated financial engine for global crime.

Second, embracing secure technology is the key to surfacing these networks.

The only way to see the true scale of this widespread and volumetric offending is through digital collaboration. By giving police the tools to connect with retailers on this information, they can identify the patterns, the highest harm offenders and bridge the information gap to get on top of fast-moving organized crime.

When we enable this collaboration, the outcomes are huge. Just last year, a $1 billion multi-state ORC operation based out of Texas was dismantled thanks to intelligence sharing across retailers and law enforcement

Finally, our political leaders have a big role to play. The recent passing of the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA) by the U.S. House is welcome news. It demonstrates that retail crime is not simply about shoplifting or theft - it's violent, it's organized, it robs communities of their vibrancy, and is a city killer. This is the exact type of federal leadership needed to formalize cooperation and equip law enforcement with the tools they need to keep pace. We must maintain momentum.

Read the full piece here


Inside Hardware Retail Crime Risks
Retail Crime Challenges Facing Hardware and Home Improvement Retailers


By the D&D Daily staff

Hardware and home improvement retailers face several retail crime challenges tied directly to the types of products they sell and the environments in which they operate.

Many of the items commonly found in these stores have strong resale value and consistent demand among both consumers and contractors. Power tools, rechargeable batteries, copper wire, generators, pressure washers, and other equipment are frequently sought after because they can be used immediately or resold through a variety of channels. Stolen merchandise may appear on online marketplaces, at flea markets, or through informal person-to-person sales.

Store layout can also present challenges. Home improvement retailers often operate large facilities that include indoor sales floors, garden centers, lumber yards, outdoor storage areas, and contractor entrances. The size and complexity of these locations can make inventory monitoring more difficult than in smaller retail formats.

Building materials themselves can also be targets. Copper wire, electrical components, and certain construction supplies have experienced theft activity due to their value and demand. In some cases, offenders target bulk quantities rather than individual items, creating larger financial impacts from a single incident.

The sector also faces risks beyond the sales floor. Tools, equipment, and building materials can be targeted while in transit or while stored in trailers, storage areas, or distribution facilities. These incidents highlight the importance of security throughout the supply chain, not just inside stores.

To address these challenges, many retailers employ a combination of surveillance technology, access controls, product protection measures, inventory management tools, and employee training. Collaboration with law enforcement and information-sharing among retailers also remains an important component of broader crime prevention efforts.

As retail crime continues to evolve, hardware and home improvement retailers remain focused on protecting high-demand merchandise while maintaining an accessible shopping environment for customers.


Amazon vs. Cargo Theft
How Amazon protects cargo from fraud and theft across its shipping network

Amazon evaluates carriers using rigorous security and safety standards, smart trailer technology, chain-of-custody controls, and law enforcement collaboration.

Every day, millions of packages move through Amazon's logistics network in trailers pulled by trucks operated by independent carriers. Keeping freight secure, and keeping dishonest operators out, requires a comprehensive defense system that addresses identity fraud, physical security, and cargo integrity across the supply chain.

How does Amazon screen and monitor carriers?

Before carriers can haul a single load for Amazon, they go through a comprehensive vetting process with preventive controls that exceed federal requirements. Our Relay program verifies each carrier’s operating authority, ownership, business affiliations, and safety record using multiple cutting-edge technologies. This sophisticated technology confirms their identities and also extends to the drivers employed by carriers, which confirms their identities through real-time photo checks and driver's license validation to ensure only authorized drivers transport cargo for Amazon. We continuously reevaluate these measures to raise our high bar.

One mechanism in our layered approach to identifying safe carriers is our Violation Rate Metrics (VRM) framework. These measures ensure an additional layer of standards, above and beyond standards set by the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration’s (FMCSA) Behavior Analysis and Safety Improvement Categories (BASIC) measurement system. BASIC organizes roadside inspection and crash data into seven categories (unsafe driving, crash indicator, hours-of-service compliance, vehicle maintenance, controlled substances/alcohol, hazardous materials compliance, and driver fitness) and ranks carriers by percentile against similarly sized peers.

To complement this operational safety layer, we have a layer of security-specific controls—including identity verification, real-time photo checks, business affiliation analysis, and continuous threat monitoring. These controls align with industry frameworks like Transported Asset Protection Association (TAPA) Trucking Security Requirements, which set the global benchmark for cargo protection during transit. Together, these procedural, technical, and physical controls filter risk before it reaches our network. aboutamazon.com


Local Prosecutors vs. Retail Theft
Placer County, CA's Retail Theft Initiative
The Placer County Board of Supervisors voted to accept a $2 million state grant for the Placer County District Attorney’s Office’s new Retail Theft Vertical Prosecution Program.

Administered by the California Board of State and Community Corrections (“BSCC”), this vertical prosecution program represents the State of California’s effort to address the growing issue of retail theft, which has negative impacts on tax revenue, community safety, and retailers across the state. placer.ca.gov


Why More Retail Stores Are Locking Up These 6 Everyday Items

Mayor pushes for release of DC police crime data report

 



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Beyond Shrink: Modern Asset Protection
Today’s retail risk demands a new kind of asset protection engagement

Enterprise security risk planning helps organizations minimize exposure, strengthen preparedness and reduce risk

Retail loss prevention and asset protection have traditionally been measured through a narrow lens, focused primarily on shrink, theft and recovery. But today’s risk environment no longer adheres to functional silos. Modern retail operates in a deeply interconnected ecosystem where security issues, employee safety and business loss extend far beyond inventory or store-level concerns.

Risks are now converging and compounding, with direct ties to operational resilience, geopolitical instability and broader business strategy.

Threats to employee safety

Consider employee safety and leadership protection. Political polarization, geopolitical tensions and activist movements can directly impact storefronts or threaten employee well-being through civil unrest. In some cases, individuals or organized groups may target brands or leadership, creating both physical and reputational risk — risk that can erode brand trust, weaken investor confidence and disrupt operations.

Considering total retail loss

The same shift applies when organizations take a more holistic view of loss — often referred to as total retail loss. Traditional shrink metrics only tell part of the story. When LP/AP teams focus predominately on store-level shrink, organizations may overlook opportunities to leverage their expertise across other forms of loss that stem from a broader range of sources including supply chain disruption, fraud and financial crime, operational inefficiencies, cybercriminal activity or reputation damage.

Expanding threats require a different approach

A modern approach to enterprise security risk begins with recognizing that not all threats are transactional — and not all losses appear clearly on a shrink line in a profit and loss statement. The scope of risk now extends far beyond domestic or location-specific operations.

Developing AP/LP leaders in enterprise security risk management

Recognizing this opportunity, the NRF Loss Prevention Advisory Council has prioritized educating LP/AP leaders on the value of integrating enterprise security risk management principles within their organizations. This approach encourages leaders to position themselves as strategic partners and trusted advisors within broader enterprise risk discussions.  nrf.com
 

Store Inefficiencies Drain Sales
Study: In-store tech inefficiencies cost retailers 6.4% of gross sales annually
In-store technology investments are becoming widespread — but that does not mean implementation always goes as intended.

Narly all (97%) of retail-based decision makers say they have deployed or plan to deploy store intelligence technology within the next year, according to Coresight Research's annual The State of In-Store Retailing 2026 study, sponsored by Simbe and Relex Solutions. Six-in-10 retailers have already scaled or are actively scaling store intelligence technologies, up 18% year over year.

Despite the increased investments, in-store inefficiencies cost retailers 6.4% of gross sales annually. This is an increase from 5.5% in 2025 and 4.5% in 2024, totaling $196.4 billion across key U.S. retail sectors.

Only 33% of retailers are investing in shelf digitization. Instead, many prioritize pricing and supplier systems over shelf digitization, despite those systems' reliance on shelf-level data to perform, according to Coresight.

Retailers with digitized shelves are seeing enterprise-wide gains. BJ's Wholesale Club accelerated online order fulfillment by approximately 40%. Schnucks Markets detects 14x more addressable out-of-stocks and has reduced out-of-stock items by 30%.

A strong majority (86%) of retailers report reduced time on manual tasks since introducing store intelligence technology, with an average 14% decrease reallocated toward higher-value work, such as merchandising and product expertise. Coresight says this translates to enhanced customer experience.
chainstoreage.com


Economic Headwinds Hitting Consumers
Consumer sentiment falls to new low; cost of living ‘first-order’ worry
Nearly three out of five consumers (57%) spontaneously said that high prices are eroding their finances, an increase of 7 percentage points from April, the university said. The plunge in sentiment among lower-income consumers and those without college degrees was especially severe, the university said.

“The cost of living continues to be a first-order concern,” Joanne Hsu, director of the university’s surveys of consumers, said in a statement. “Critically, consumers appear worried that inflation will increase and proliferate beyond fuel prices, even in the long run,” she said. retaildive.com


Dollar Tree CEO: ‘Our model is built for environments like this’
Customers are shopping the discount retailer with a focus on affordability, convenience and trip efficiency to stretch their budgets.

CVS Health embeds AI into pharmacy dispensing
CVS Health is leveraging artificial intelligence to help its pharmacists improve medication safety and patient care.

Costco sales up 11.6% amid ‘unprecedented’ demand for gas

Report: Signet Jewelers to buy natural diamond jewelry brand The Clear Cut


Last week's #1 article --

'Broken Windows' Policy to Fight Retail Crime?
KOOP: Time to tackle shoplifting, before it turns into worse crimes
Governments absolutely need to do far more to address grocery inflation, which is higher in Manitoba than anywhere else in the country. But that explanation only goes so far.

The reality, as Winnipeg police have demonstrated repeatedly, is that much of this theft is perpetrated by organized criminals looking to turn a profit. In March, for example, police arrested someone who had been recruiting shoplifters to steal brand-name power tools from stores across the city, then reselling the goods for profit.

Shoplifting might seem small. But allowing it to happen day after day without consequence sends a message: crimes are tolerated here, and there is no reason to stop. That message has serious consequences for everyone who lives and works in these communities. Small crimes transform into big crimes, and neighbourhoods are wrecked as a result.

Nobody wants to take their kids to the store and watch someone walk out with stolen goods. It makes people feel unsafe in their own neighbourhoods.

It erodes the sense that a community is a place with shared rules and expectations.

So what’s the answer? Fix the broken window: target prevention and punishment for “small” crimes like shoplifting before they become big crimes. kenoraminerandnews.com
 



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"AI" is the most overused word in loss prevention right now. Here's a framework that cuts through it.

Many vendors are making claims about AI. Few agree on what it means, and fewer still can tell you where your own program actually stands. The Loss Prevention Maturity Model is a vendor-neutral framework that maps the evolution of LP technology across four stages (Devices, Analytics, AI, and Agentic AI), with clear criteria for each and an honest take on what's genuinely deployed today versus what's still marketing.

If you haven't yet, take the free self-assessment to benchmark your program against the model, or read the full whitepaper for the complete framework.

Take the assessment

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AI Security Clashes
Enterprise data is creeping its way into shadow AI tools

Executives and employees are clashing over usage policies as AI security concerns rise, an Okta report found.

Nearly all executives are confident their employees are using AI responsibly, but shadow AI is creeping its way into organizations, an Okta survey released Wednesday found. More than half of employees reported they’re using personal AI tools without approval, the security platform provider learned in surveying nearly 300 tech executives and 500 knowledge workers along with market research firm Apprize360.

Workers reported using unapproved AI tools for productivity reasons, saying they allow the tools access to internal messages, HR-related information and confidential company documents. The practice is heightening security risks, as 58% of executives said their organization had an AI-related security incident or a close call last year, according to the report.

Lack of clarity in AI usage policies or banning personal AI tools can actually increase shadow AI use, said Harish Peri, Okta’s SVP and GM for AI security, in an email. “By taking a more collaborative approach with employees, leaders can offer sanctioned, enterprise-grade alternatives to the unapproved tools that teams are using.”

Executives feel strongly that the AI usage policies they’ve set are clear and consistent. But the sentiment doesn’t resonate with employees, according to the Okta report. More than half of employees say their organization’s policies are unclear, difficult to find or non-existent.

American employees especially are turning to unsanctioned tools to fill in productivity gaps. Two-thirds of U.S.-based employees use unsanctioned AI, and nearly a quarter do so regularly, the report found.

Shadow AI use usually isn’t done maliciously, Peri said, but is a result of employees wanting to experiment with new tools and agents to meet deadlines or solve specific problems. Employees aren’t usually aware of what data an AI tool might access or for how long.  cybersecuritydive.com


Security Team Guidance
CISA urges security teams to check for software development compromises

The agency warned about a wave of attacks targeting credentials and other secrets across critical supply chains.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency on Thursday warned that hackers targeted software development pipelines in recent weeks and urged security teams to check for potential compromise of their environments.

CISA is urging security teams to monitor and conduct audits on their workflow files and activity from contributors. Attention should be paid to suspicious pull requests or direct commits, specifically any coming from an automated account.

Security teams should revert any unauthorized changes, CISA advised, and check for anything that came in after May 18.

If a compromise is found in connection with a previously compromised Nx Console or GitHub account, CISA suggests the following:

  • Undertake a forensics review of continuous integration/continuous delivery logs, impacted developer machines and cloud audit trails.

  • Rotate or revoke secrets, including credentials, tokens and secrets related to CI/CD pipelines. cybersecuritydive.com


Phishing Campaign Targets LinkedIn Professionals
LinkedIn-themed phishing abuses Adobe’s A/B testing platform
A newly documented phishing campaign is targeting professionals with fake LinkedIn business emails and abusing a trusted service operated by Adobe.

The attack starts with an email that looks, at first glance, like a routine business inquiry: someone wants to do business with you through LinkedIn and has attached a signed contract for your review.

The message is short and professional and the sender company and name exist (though, if the potential victim checks, they will see that the sender does not appear to be working at that particular company).

Those who open the attachment will be faced with a familiar-looking LinkedIn login page, with their email address already filled in.

If they type their password and hit submit, they will be redirected to the real LinkedIn. In the background, the login credentials are sent to a server operated by the attackers. helpnetsecurity.com


Websites can spy on user activity by analyzing SSD behavior

IBM’s new $5B initiative will help enterprises rapidly patch open-source vulnerabilities

Dutch police disrupts botnet composed of 17 million devices


 




'Illegal & Dangerous Products'
EU fines Temu for failing to stop sale of illegal and dangerous products

European Commission finds shoppers on Chinese website very likely to find unsafe items and imposes €200m penalty

EU regulators have fined the Chinese shopping website Temu €200m (£173m) for failing to stop the sale of illegal and dangerous products.

The European Commission imposed the penalty after a 19-month investigation that found consumers were very likely to encounter illegal or unsafe products including baby toys and electronics on the firm’s website.

An unpublished mystery shopping exercise carried out for the commission found a “high percentage” of unsafe baby products and a “very high percentage” of dangerous chargers for sale on the platform, as well as unsafe clothes and jewellery.

Consumer groups across Europe have previously reported baby toys with loose parts presenting choking hazards, dummy chains long enough that they could strangle a child, jewellery laced with dangerous metals including lead, clothes made with banned chemicals and chargers that posed risks of burns, electric shocks or fire.

The commission also criticised Temu over inadequate controls on the design of its website. Recommender systems and promotions by influencers “could amplify dissemination risks of illegal products” it said.

The €200m fine is the second and highest-ever imposed under the EU’s Digital Services Act (DSA), which has applied to the world’s biggest tech companies since February 2024. It follows a €120m penalty issued to Elon Musk’s X last December for “deceptive” verification badges and lack of transparency over advertising.

A senior EU official said the commission had found a particularly serious breach of the act related to an inadequate risk assessment on unsafe products that Temu carried out in 2024.

The fine represents only a fraction of Temu’s fast-growing revenues. Its parent company, PDD Holdings, reported global revenues of $54bn (£40bn) in 2024, although this included income from another popular Chinese e-commerce site, Pinduoduo. Under the DSA a company can be fined up to 6% of global turnover. theguardian.com
 

Changing AI Message
Amazon joins Microsoft in sending shocking message to employees
For the past two years, the message from Big Tech to its employees was simple: use more AI. The companies that used it most would win. The numbers would follow.

The numbers have not followed. And now the message is changing.

Amazon (AMZN) shut down an internal AI leaderboard called KiroRank on May 29, which had been tracking AI token usage among employees on the company's internal Kiro developer platform, according to Business Insider, which confirmed the shutdown with an Amazon spokesperson.

Dave Treadwell, Amazon's senior vice president of engineering, addressed the issue directly. "Please don't use AI just for the sake of using AI," he told staff. "Use AI to help you solve customer problems, to help you solve business problems, to innovate."

An Amazon spokesperson confirmed the leaderboard had been "deprecated" and said the dashboard was an informal tracker created by a group of employees and "was never intended to promote the use of AI for usage's sake," Business Insider confirmed. au.finance.yahoo.com


Sam’s Club leans on Amazon playbook to challenge Costco


 


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Las Vegas, NV: Update: Las Vegas man gets 3 years in prison, order to pay $276K in restitution in coin shop burglary
A Las Vegas man was sentenced on Thursday to 27 months in prison by a federal judge in Montana. He was also ordered to pay $276,153.08 in restitution, according to a news release from the U.S. Attorney’s Office. Bishop Lott, 47, pleaded guilty in January to one count of interstate transportation of stolen property. U.S. District Judge Brian M. Morris also sentenced Lott to three years of supervised release when he completes his prison term. In a case investigated by Helena police and the FBI, court documents showed that Lott and another man, Ricky Rynell Rose, broke into a Helena coin store in 2024 and stole $58,629 worth of coins and precious metals. They took the items they stole to Nevada. Rose pleaded guilty in 2025 and was sentenced to 39 months in prison.  aol.com


St Louis, MO: Woman accused of stealing $172k in retail products in multiple states
A woman has been charged with stealing approximately $172,000 worth of retail products in multiple states. Court records state Ionela Chiciu-Nistor is being charged with one count of organized retail theft of more than $10,000. Chesterfield Police stated in court records that they received a Flock hit on a car involved in a retail theft from Kansas City, KS, on Wednesday. The car was at the Chesterfield Outlet Mall on the 18500 block of Outlet Boulevard. Officers were made aware that there had been a theft of $1,200 worth of products from The Cosmetic Company in the mall.  firstalert4.com


Berlin, CT: Three wanted in organized retail theft case in Berlin
Police are seeking three suspects in connection with an organized retail theft operation targeting a Harbor Freight store. Lukasz Rejch, 36, Barbara Tattersall, 62, and Paul J. Demanuele, 36, of Connecticut, are wanted on felony arrest warrants charging them with larceny third degree and organized retail theft. The charges stem from an investigation into thefts of welders from the Harbor Freight store in Berlin. Hugo Mariera Esquilin was previously arrested by Berlin police for a theft on Nov. 20 and for an active arrest warrant involving 14 prior thefts at the store. Esquilin was charged with larceny second degree and organized retail theft. Police identified Rejch, Tattersall and Demanuele as accomplices during the ongoing investigation. Rejch and Tattersall each have court-set bonds of $50,000, while Demanuele has a $25,000 bond.  newportdispatch.com


Fort Lauderdale designer says thieves stole thousands in merchandise
Fort Lauderdale swimwear designer is hoping someone recognizes two thieves caught on surveillance video stealing thousands of dollars worth of merchandise from her front porch. Exclusive surveillance footage shows two people pulling up to a home, loading a large package into the trunk of a gray Ford F-150 and driving away.  local10.com

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Seguin, TX: 1 dead, another injured in shooting at Walmart in Seguin
One woman is dead, and another person was critically injured after a suspect opened fire outside a Walmart store in Seguin. According to the City of Seguin, a female victim, later identified as 35-year-old Katrina Wheeler of Seguin, was located with multiple gunshot wounds and pronounced deceased at the scene. A second victim, a 37-year-old male, was also found suffering from gunshot injuries. He was treated on scene by Seguin EMS before being airlifted to a San Antonio-area hospital for further medical treatment. At approximately 5:19 p.m., the suspect vehicle was located outside the City of Seguin by the New Berlin Marshal’s Office. Guadalupe County Sheriff’s Deputies, the Texas Department of Public Safety, New Berlin deputies, and Seguin Police CASE officers assisted in a low-speed pursuit. The pursuit ended in the 3000 block of FM 775, where the suspect was taken into custody. The suspect was identified as 42-year-old John Wheeler of Seguin. According to the Guadalupe County Jail Records, John Wheeler has a long criminal history dating back to 2003. Some of those charges include aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and illegal discharge of a firearm and several drug charges.  news4sanantonio.com


Corpus Christi, TX: Man charged after Police Officer shot during struggle outside AutoZone
Corpus Christi Police are providing an update on yesterday's officer-involved shooting incident that occurred on May 29, 2026, at approximately 3:38 p.m. in the 2100 block of Airline Road. Officers initially responded to a threat-in-progress call involving a customer who was reportedly threatening other individuals inside a store. When police arrived and attempted to make contact with the suspect, the individual fled the scene, leading to a struggle in the parking lot as officers worked to detain him. During the altercation, a firearm concealed by the suspect discharged, striking one officer. The wounded officer was immediately transported to a local hospital and treated for non-life-threatening injuries. The officer's condition remains stable. The suspect, identified as 26-year-old Adan Martinez, was taken into custody at the scene and subsequently transported to the City Detention Center. Martinez faces charges of aggravated assault against a peace officer and resisting arrest with a deadly weapon.  kristv.com


Monroe, County, PA: State police investigating shooting outside Wawa
Pennsylvania State Police are investigating a shooting that occurred Friday night outside a Wawa convenience store in Monroe County. According to state police, troopers were dispatched around 9:53 p.m. to the Wawa located along Route 209 in Chestnuthill Township after receiving reports of a shooting. Investigators determined that several individuals became involved in a verbal dispute that escalated into a physical altercation. During the confrontation, police said one of the people involved fired a single round from a firearm. The victim was struck and transported to a local hospital with injuries that police described as non-life-threatening.  fox56.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Atlanta, GA: Thief steals hundreds from Plato’s Closet employees during business hours
Employees at a popular Plato’s Closet in Duluth are out of cash after they say a customer stole from them during store hours. A bold thief was caught on camera making his way into the employees-only section of the store, getting away with hundreds of dollars and several other items. The store was in the middle of a shift change, leaving the opportunity for the thief to make his move. Video shows the suspect taking his time in the back, rummaging through whatever he could get his hands on. “I could have caught him if I was a millisecond faster and just looked right through that door,” McDade added. It turns out employees know exactly who the suspect is, since he sold clothes to the store just a few minutes earlier. “Once I saw who it was, I was like, oh my god. I was preparing to leave — I’m washing the windows. I opened the door for this guy on his way out,” McDade recalled. “I just hope we catch him.”  atlantanewsfirst.com


Cincinnati, OH: Cincinnati man arrested after months-long theft spree that left thousands in damages
A Cincinnati man was arrested after an alleged 3-month-long theft spree that caused thousands of dollars worth of damages to multiple businesses. According to court documents from the Hamilton County Municipal Court, Shannon Gibson was charged with five counts of breaking and entering and one count of criminal damaging or endangering. The first of the six incidents listed in the court documents occurred on October 3, 2025 at a Family Dollar. Gibson allegedly threw a large rock through the front window of the store, causing approximately $3,000 in damages. Gibson entered the store and stole $25 worth of merchandise before leaving, the documents read. Just days later on October 9, Gibson allegedly threw a rock into the glass entrance doors of a Target store, causing another $3,000 worth of damages. He tried to open a register at the front of the store but failed, according to the court documents. He then reportedly went to the electronics section of the store and tried to break open a display case that held PlayStation 5 consoles with a rock, but again failed.  thenationaldesk.com


Palm Springs, FL: Man arrested after swinging machete, making threats behind Palm Springs gas station

Puget Sound, WA: DOJ: ‘Robbery as a team sport’: Kent man convicted of 17 felonies in armed crime spree across Puget Sound

Shreveport, LA: Banned shopper tased and arrested after disturbance at Shreveport Walmart


 


 

Auto – Stockton, CA – Robbery
C-Store – Memphis, TN – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Laredo, TX – Robbery
Grocery – Calvert County, MD - Robbery
Hardware - Berlin, CT - Robbery
Jewelry – Alquerque, NM – Robbery
Pharmacy – Bath, NY – Burglary
Restaurant – Washington, DC – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Jacksonville, FL – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Chicago, IL – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Fresno, CA- Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Stuart, IA – Robbery
Vape – Nashville, TN – Burglary
Walmart – Arnold, MO - Burglary                           
 

Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 3 burglaries
• 0 shooting
• 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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