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 4/23/26

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Protos Security Acquires AT-RISK International, Accelerating the Buildout of a Global, Intelligence-led Protective Services Platform

Acquisition strengthens Protos’ integrated protection solution with advanced intelligence, executive protection and consulting services

Norwalk, CT – April 20, 2026Protos Security, the leading software-enabled managed services provider delivering integrated protection solutions across North America, announced the acquisition of AT-RISK International, a globally-recognized provider of executive and general protective services, intelligence and risk consulting services.

This acquisition marks a significant milestone in Protos’ strategy to build a differentiated, software-enabled integrated protection platform with expanding global reach and a growing mix of high-value specialized services to serve clients’ complex and evolving security needs.

AT-RISK International brings deep domain expertise across risk consulting, investigations, threat assessments, global risk monitoring and protective services, including executive, residential, event and asset protection. These capabilities enhance Protos’ existing platform and position the company to meet rising demand for intelligence-led, end-to-end security solutions among enterprise and high-net-worth clients.

“This acquisition marks an important milestone in our growth strategy,” said Mark Hjelle, CEO of Protos Security. “AT-RISK International adds specialized capabilities that expand our platform into high-growth areas. Together, we are better equipped to serve clients with complex, evolving security needs while expanding our addressable market.”

Read more here
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Scaling Back Self-Checkout Isn't the Answer to Theft
Retail’s War on Self-Checkout Misses Where Theft Actually Happens
Retail’s retreat from self-checkout (SCO) is swift and highly visible as major chains are aggressively scaling back lanes. Even local governments are beginning to get involved, with proposed legislation in places like New York City aimed at restricting usage and increasing staffing requirements.

SCO feels like it’s assumed the most significant amount of blame for theft. However, that framing oversimplifies a much more complex problem and risks pushing the industry toward solutions that add friction without meaningfully addressing loss.

Oversimplifying the Issue of Shrink

Shrink remains one of retail’s most persistent challenges, with billions lost annually. In response, many retailers have concentrated loss prevention efforts on identifying theft at the point of payment, investing in technologies and labor designed to monitor scanning behavior and catch errors at checkout. This approach assumes that most theft happens at the register. In reality, it does not.

Retail analytics show that roughly 80 percent of commonly stolen items are concealed before a shopper ever reaches checkout. Items are hidden under clothing, slipped into bags, or nested inside other products, often directly at the shelf. In short, the majority of loss has already occurred by the time a transaction at the register begins.

When theft is relegated to a checkout issue, the solutions naturally focus there. But if the root of the problem lies earlier in the shopping journey, those solutions will always have limited impact.

Why Scaling Back SCO Isn’t the Answer

Reducing or restricting SCO may create a sense of control, but it does little to address where most theft actually occurs. It also introduces trade-offs that are detrimental to the shopping experience.

SCO has become a core part of the modern retail experience, offering speed, convenience and autonomy while providing staffing efficiencies as well. Rolling it back in a significant way will lead to longer lines, more labor strain, and worse customer experience without delivering meaningful improvements. Consider the New York City proposal mentioned above. Limiting items and assigning more oversight means forcibly removing resources from helping in other areas like finding products, restocking shelves, and more. mytotalretail.com


Theft Hotspot Is About to Get Even Hotter
Washington’s retail theft crisis is getting worse and the gov's veto won’t help
Washington is one of the highest states when it comes to retail crime, yet Governor Bob Ferguson just vetoed $500,000 from the state budget that would have extended a proven program to fight organized retail crime (ORC). This decision is not just a budget footnote, it is the latest example of a deliberate policy choice to de-emphasize criminal enforcement for theft.

The numbers are staggering. According to the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Washington retailers lost $2.7 billion in stolen goods in 2021 alone, generating $603 million in lost state and local tax revenue. That represents 3.46 percent of all U.S. retail theft. Forbes ranks Washington near the top nationally, with other industry groups estimating a nearly $3 billion annual economic hit that translates into higher prices for every consumer and lost jobs for workers.

A modest $1 million pilot program funded in 2024 showed what targeted enforcement can achieve. In King County, the extra prosecutor hired with those dollars filed 142 retail theft cases from January to June 2025, two-and-a-half times the four-year average. Statewide, the program generated 402 law enforcement responses, identified 1,194 potential diversion candidates, and produced thousands of ORC intelligence reports. A January 2025 Department of Commerce evaluation called the effort “highly effective.”

Yet Ferguson vetoed the $500,000 extension just two weeks after signing the supplemental budget. When pressed, the governor cited the need to “balance the budget.” Representative Mari Leavitt, a Democrat who championed the funding, was stunned: “This is a bipartisan concern across our state… It has nothing to do with politics but has everything to do with keeping our communities safe.”

The Washington Retail Association is equally blunt. Crystal Leatherman points out that repeat offenders are offered diversion programs with no enforcement mechanism: “They’re getting a free ride.” Seattle ranks among the top ten cities nationally for violence tied to retail theft, according to the National Retail Federation’s 2025 report. Employees and customers are threatened daily while organized crews treat stores as self-service warehouses. washingtonpolicy.org


New Legislation to Tackle Freight Crime
Bill would give FMCSA more power to fight freight fraudsters plaguing the trucking industry
Legislation introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives this week seeks to empower federal transportation authorities to fight back against bad actors in the trucking industry. On April 20, 2026, Rep. Brad Knott announced the introduction of H.R. 8267 the Securing American Freight, Enforcement, and Reliability in Transport Act or the SAFER in Transport Act.

The bill seeks to enhance communication between federal agencies and to empower the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) to enforce criminal penalties in order to fight freight fraud and secure the U.S. supply chain.

If passed, the bill would take the following actions:

  • Directs the U.S. Department of Transportation (USDOT) to establish a Freight Fraud and Theft Advisory Committee to identify vulnerabilities and recommend solutions

  • Requires a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) between the USDOT and the Department of Justice (DOJ) to formalize how agencies handle information related to freight fraud

  • Modernizes fraud detection systems and expands enforcement tools within the FMCSA, including the creation of criminal penalties for registration fraud tied to unlawful operations

  • Calls for an MOU between FMCSA and U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to improve enforcement of cabotage restrictions on foreign carriers cdllife.com


Crime & Drug Markets to Plague World Cup in Seattle?
Drug markets, crime will greet World Cup fans, Seattle police union chief warns
The World Cup kicks off at Lumen Field on June 15, and the Seattle Police Officers Guild (SPOG) president says the department has the mutual aid, the crowd management framework, and the staffing plan to handle a massive international event. What it doesn’t have is an answer for what fans from 180 countries are going to walk through to get there.

SPOG President Kent Loux has watched downtown Seattle lose business after business while the open-air drug market filled the vacuum. Seattle has spent months blaming Trump for its downgraded World Cup tourism projections rather than reckoning with the vacant storefronts, the broken jail pipeline, and a city attorney who melted down this week when someone asked her basic questions about enforcement.

“I don’t know how we’re going to necessarily move the open air drug markets and stuff,” Loux said on The Jason Rantz Show on Seattle Red 770 AM. “I mean, where a lot of this is congregating is where these businesses have gone. There’s vacant storefronts. There’s graffiti. You’ve seen it over the number of years, last several years. The graffiti has increased tremendously, and this is just adding to the blight of the city.” seattlered.com


Seattle City Attorney Erika Evans faces questions over crime data

Bloomington Police Department gets $556K to enhance crime tech

 



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Rethinking Retail LP Training:
From Policy to Performance


By the D&D Daily staff

For years, loss prevention training in retail followed a predictable model: onboarding modules, policy reviews, incident reporting procedures, and periodic compliance refreshers. It checked the box, but it didn’t always prepare teams for what actually happens on the floor.

That’s starting to change.

Retailers are shifting away from static, compliance-driven training toward more practical, performance-based development. The difference is simple: less focus on what the policy says, more focus on what the associate actually does in the moment.

One of the clearest shifts is toward scenario-based training. Instead of relying on slide decks, companies are putting associates and LP teams into realistic situations — handling a confrontation, identifying suspicious behavior, or responding to internal risk. These exercises build judgment and confidence in ways traditional training never could.

At the same time, the way training is delivered is evolving. Mobile-first platforms and short-form modules are replacing long classroom-style sessions, making it easier to reinforce concepts consistently — especially in high-turnover store environments. Training is becoming something that happens continuously, not just during onboarding.

There’s also a growing recognition that LP doesn’t operate in a vacuum. More organizations are training LP teams alongside store operations, HR, and supply chain partners to better understand how risk moves across the business. That broader view is helping LP teams contribute beyond incident response and into overall operational performance.

Perhaps the biggest shift is in what retailers expect from their LP teams. The role is expanding beyond detection and deterrence into analysis, communication, and decision support. As a result, training is starting to incorporate leadership skills, data literacy, and business acumen — areas that historically sat outside traditional LP programs.

The challenge, of course, is execution. High turnover, limited time, and competing store priorities make it difficult to deliver consistent, high-impact training. And while most organizations can track completion rates, far fewer can measure whether training is actually changing behavior.

Still, the direction is clear. Retail LP training is moving away from policy memorization and toward real-world performance.

The organizations that get this right won’t just reduce shrink — they’ll build teams that are faster, more confident, and better equipped to manage risk across the entire operation.

 
Safety Tech Improves Job Satisfaction
What do Frontline Workers Think About Safety Technology?

In a survey from MSD Solutions Lab, which is part of NSC, over 70% of respondents felt that the technologies improve job satisfaction.

Looking at the impact of MSD injuries, 70% of those surveyed have experienced either symptoms or signs of MSD, and this has caused 64% to miss work.

The survey looked at MSD prevention technologies, including wearable sensors, computer vision, exoskeletons, robots and collaborative robots (cobots), extended reality, and digital twins.

The majority, over 90%, felt that MSD prevention technologies made them more aware of ergonomic risk factors such as forceful repetition and awkward postures. ehstoday.com


Can Traditional (and Discount) Grocery Stores Survive an Ongoing Squeeze?
While persistent news headlines since the dawn of the COVID-19 era have been touting the grocery business, as essential as it is, as being resistant to consumer spending pullbacks, it appears that winners and losers — both in terms of individual retailers and in terms of overall categories — are emerging in the aftermath.

The major claim made by Consumer Edge via its latest U.S. Grocery Outlook 2026 report is that specialty grocers — Trader Joe’s most notably, as well as Whole Foods and Wegmans — are outperforming traditional grocers such as Publix and Safeway, who are experiencing a decline in consumer appeal. A secondary point, that discount grocers who experienced significant growth of the past few years (including Aldi, Lidl, Food 4 Less, and Grocery Outlet) were actually seeing their growth pattern disrupted in 2025 and beyond after years of consecutive improvement, was also made. retailwire.com


Study: Most grocery shoppers purchased both online and in-store in 2025
The omnichannel experience has become integral to consumers’ grocery shopping habits, but online remains the driver of total grocery growth.

Party City launches inside 700 Staples stores

Best Buy CEO Corie Barry to step down as sales stagnate

Trump compliments outgoing Apple CEO Tim Cook, but adds vulgar insult

UK inflation rises to 3.3% amid ongoing Middle East conflict
 



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AI Is a Big Boost for Hackers
Phishing — sometimes with AI’s help — topped initial-access methods in Q1

Hackers can now spin up fake login pages without writing a single line of code.

Phishing was the most common way hackers breached their targets in the first quarter of 2026, after nearly a year out of the top spot, Cisco’s Talos threat intelligence team said in a report published on Wednesday.

Nearly 20% of Cisco’s incident-response engagements involved the preliminary stages of a ransomware attack, according to the report — significantly lower than in the first two quarters of 2025, when it was 50%.

Cisco also said it saw hackers using AI to improve phishing attacks.

Cisco described a credential-harvesting scheme in which attackers used the Softr AI platform to build a website that mimicked the Outlook Web Access login page. Cisco said this was “the first time we have documented the use of a specific AI tool by an adversary in a phishing campaign.” The company said it was fairly confident that attackers have been using Softr for credential-harvesting websites since May 2023 “and have done so with increasing frequency to date.”

The hackers could even have connected their fake login page to a third-party service like Google Sheets for automatic collection of stolen credentials, complete with notifications every time someone tried to log in — all without writing a single line of code.

This incident demonstrates how AI tools can lower the barrier to entry for less sophisticated actors and/or accelerate the speed of phishing and credential-harvesting campaigns,” Cisco researchers wrote. cybersecuritydive.com


“AI is Our Friend, OK?”
Big banks seek to ease security worries as AI push accelerates

“AI is our friend, OK?” said Morgan Stanley CEO Ted Pick during the bank’s earnings call as the industry grapples with its disruptive potential.

Banking giants aren’t slowing their AI investments as they pursue efficiency and productivity gains from the technology’s implementation. However, the latest frontier model developments are causing a cybersecurity stir among financial institutions.

Firms including JPMorgan Chase, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs, BNY and others reported earnings results for the first quarter of 2026 this week. While executives focused on AI wins and the technology’s potential in the industry, several fielded concerns about frontier AI models and their implications for cybersecurity.

Anthropic earlier this month said its Claude Mythos Preview frontier model could reshape cybersecurity as it surpasses human capabilities of finding and exploiting software vulnerabilities. The model provider claims Mythos Preview has already discovered thousands of serious vulnerabilities across major web browsers and operating systems. Anthropic formed Project Glasswing with partners, including JPMorgan Chase, as a result. Launch partners will be using Mythos Preview in their defensive cybersecurity work, according to Anthropic.

JPMorgan is very well protected,” CEO Jamie Dimon said during the company’s Q1 2026 earnings call Tuesday. “We spend a lot of money, we’ve got top experts, we’re in constant contact with the government. We’re constantly updating things, but AI has made it worse, it’s made it harder. Of course, we read about Mythos, which we’re testing now and looking at it and it does create additional vulnerabilities.” cybersecuritydive.com


What threat do Claude Mythos and ‘hacktivist attacks at scale’ pose to retail?
Claude developer Anthropic claimed earlier this month that it had developed a new AI model capable of finding hidden vulnerabilities in every major operating system and browser. With retail already a particularly vulnerable target, how much of a threat is this new tech?

CISA urges security teams to view environments following axios compromise

Microsoft SharePoint vulnerability widely exposed across multiple countries

 


 

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Amazon vs. California AG
Emails show Amazon colluding with other firms to raise prices, authorities allege

The previously redacted messages were unveiled as part of an antitrust battle with California’s attorney general

Emails released on Monday by California’s attorney general show Amazon allegedly colluding with other companies to raise the prices of pet treats, khaki pants, eyedrops and other products sold online.

According to a newly unsealed court filing released by the California attorney general, Rob Bonta, Amazon employees have repeatedly worked with vendors using its platform to push retail vendors including Walmart and Chewy to set higher prices collectively.

In one case, according to Bonta’s office, Amazon raised prices on a set of dog treats and worked with a pet treat manufacturer to convince Chewy, the pet supplies retailer, to follow its increases, effectively protecting its market share while sticking consumers with higher prices.

Amazon emailed the manufacturer a list of products with price increases, instructing the vendor: “As you noted, Chewy should be aware of this update and follow suit accordingly.”

Two days later, in an internal message, the manufacturer confirmed that the price raise had gone up on both sites, Bonta’s office alleges. The prices “that went up on Amazon immediately went up on Chewy :)”, an employee of the manufacturer wrote, according to a court exhibit.

In another case, Amazon sent links to Levi’s, the apparel giant, showing Dockers khaki pants being sold by Walmart, describing them as “styles of concern”. The big box chain was selling them for less, according to Bonta’s office.

The next day, state officials allege, Levi’s reported to Amazon that it talked to Walmart and that the big box chain had “partnered with us” to raise the khakis’ price up to “$29.99 immediately”. theguardian.com


New AI Capabilities for Shoppers
Dick’s Sporting Goods partners with Adobe to provide AI 'digital coaches'
The nation’s largest sporting goods retailer is collaborating with a major technology provider on new artificial intelligence capabilities for shoppers.

Dick’s Sporting Goods is partnering with Adobe to provide customers with personalized agentic AI assistance. Leveraging the Adobe Brand Concierge solution, the retailer will deliver immersive conversational experiences to customers via its mobile app. AI agents acting as digital coaches will provide personalized product recommendations and tailored training tips based on timely and relevant data to help ensure every agent interaction is customized and reacts to changing customer preferences.

Dick’s is also using Adobe Experience Platform to combine data signals across customer interactions to more deeply understand individual needs and preferences and Adobe Journey Optimizer to orchestrate cross-channel experiences. Other Adobe solutions the retailer is deploying include generative AI technology to help personalize digital content at both the personalized and customer cohort levels. chainstoreage.com


Amazon to invest up to another $25 billion in Anthropic as part of AI infrastructure deal


 


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Monroe County, NY: MCSO disrupts attempted theft at Home Depot, recovers U-Haul of electronics
The Monroe County Sheriff’s Office recovered a U-Haul full of electronics suspected to be stolen during a response to a theft at a local store. According to MCSO, authorities were called to Home Depot in the Town of Penfield the evening of April 17 for a report from the Asset Protection team of a larceny in progress. Deputies were provided information about two suspects who were allegedly seen in the store attempting to steal. A search of the U-Haul yielded an unspecified “large quantity” of electronic merchandise, including multiple thermostats, switches, valve replacements, Ring chime cameras, a printer toner cartridge, and other items. The items were reportedly found hidden within bags and did not have any receipts. Bender and Godwin have both been charged with petit larceny and possession of burglar tools in connection with the incident.   aol.com


Sacramento County, CA: Deputies bust organized retail theft scheme
A four-month organized retail theft pawn shop scheme was busted by the Sacramento County Sheriff’s Office. SCSO said a suspect targeted Home Depot and Lowe’s stores in the Sacramento region between December 2025 and April 2026. Around 50 thefts, with losses over $20,000, were linked to the same suspect. The investigation determined that the suspect was stealing high-value power tools and then selling them to local pawn shops, including North City Pawn, Action Loan & Pawn and Gold-n-Pawn. With the use of surveillance and search warrants, the suspect was identified as 35-year-old Anthony Vargas, deputies said. It was determined that Vargas stole in the morning, then rotated pawn shops, selling brand-new items in the box. Search warrants were served at pawn shops, where over $10,000 in stolen merchandise was recovered. According to SCSO, it was indicated that the scope of thefts may be greater than initially thought.  aol.com


Tampa, FL: Teen arrested in burglary of Tampa smoke shop after $5,000 theft

Seattle, WA: Westside Man Given 17 Months In Jail For Ellensburg Computer Thefts

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Rome, GA: Update: Rome Police search for murder suspect in Family Dollar shooting
Police in Rome are looking for a man accused of shooting another man at a Family Dollar on Sunday. Chancelor Crawford, 25, is charged with felony murder in the death of 22-year-old Chancellore Donaldson. Police said the shooting happened at the discount store on North Broad Street. Officers believe Crawford could be in metro Atlanta or northwest Georgia.  atlantanewsfirst.com


Jackson, MS: Capitol Police investigate fatal shooting at Liquor store in North Jackson
Authorities said one person is dead after a shooting occurred Wednesday afternoon, April 22, at a business in Jackson. Bailey Martin, spokesperson for the Mississippi Department of Public Safety, stated in a press release Capitol Police officers responded at approximately 12:23 p.m. Wednesday to reports of a shooting at Liquor Wine & Spirits on East Northside Drive. Martin said upon arrival, officers found one person dead at the scene. The identity of the deceased individual was not immediately provided. One arrest has been made, Martin said. The suspect has not been identified.  clarionledger.com


Memphis, TN: Police searching for suspects in fatal C-Store employee shooting
Sources within the Yemeni community reported that a Yemeni expatriate holding American citizenship was killed on Tuesday after being shot during an armed robbery targeting the store where he worked in Memphis, Tennessee. The sources explained that the victim, identified as Abdullah Sadiq Abdu al-Tareb, originally from Ibb Governorate, passed away from his injuries after gunmen opened fire on him inside his workplace during the robbery.  yemenmonitor.com


Laurens County, SC: Clinton police searching for suspect involved in robbery, shooting at gas station
A store clerk was shot during a robbery in Clinton on Tuesday night, according to the Clinton Police Dept. Clinton Police responded to a robbery and shooting at the Marathon Gas Station, located at 410 West Main Street, at approximately 9:54 p.m. Officers located a store clerk with a gunshot wound. The victim was alert and speaking with officers on scene before being airlifted to Greenville Memorial Hospital for treatment.  golaurens.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


New Salem Borough, PA : Sledgehammer-wielding man breaks into York County trading card shop


 


 

C-Store – Laurens County, SC - Armed Robbery/ Clerk wounded
C-Store – Selma, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Memphis, TN – Armed Robbery/ Emp killed
Electronics – Seattle, WA – Robbery
Jewelry - Henderson, NV – Robbery
Jewelry - Langhorn, PA – Burglary
Liquor – Dekalb, GA - Armed Robbery
Liquor – Jackson, MS – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Sacramento, CA – Burglary
Restaurant – Paramus, NJ – Burglary
Target – Waldorf, MD – Robbery
Tobacco – Tampa, FL – Burglary
Tobacco – Fort Myers, FL – Burglary
Tobacco – Fairfax County, VA – Burglary
Walmart – Luray, VA – Robbery                  
 

Daily Totals:
• 9 robberies
• 6 burglaries
• 2 shootings
• 1 killed



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