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Mark
Mansfield named Regional Director of Loss Prevention Services
for AJ Squared Security
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
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Introducing Location Arming in OpenEye Web Services
OpenEye,
a global leader in video surveillance and cloud-managed security
solutions, is happy to announce Location Arming, an intelligent video
monitoring tool available in OpenEye Web Services (OWS).
Location Arming is designed to help businesses and organizations
everywhere reduce false alarms, saving time and money by leveraging the
armed state from connected sensors, third-party panels, or Virtual
Arm/Disarm in OWS. The OWS alerting engine uses the armed state of
locations to filter alerts and ensure you only get notified when it
matters most to your business.
Choose the Arming Setup That Works Best for You
Location Arming in OWS allows you to customize your security system to
best fit your business operations, thanks to the open platform. Whether
through third-party sensors, alarm panels, or OWS, you can use the armed
state of a location to align with your security operations, including
alert logic. Easily leverage the armed state of locations to streamline
workflows, strengthen security, and make smarter decisions, regardless
of your system architecture.
Only Get Notified When It Matters
Aligning your alert logic to the armed state of a location helps to
further filter out the noise, ensuring you only get alerted when it
truly matters.
In addition to reducing alerts to meaningful events, incorporating the
armed state into alert logic streamlines setup and management —no need
to edit alert days and times with each location schedule change. This
saves your team time, often in the moments when it’s most inconvenient,
such as after hours. If your business has a more complex workflow tied
to alerts, the benefits only increase through that process, especially
if costs may be incurred for false alerts.
Virtually Arm or Disarm Locations from Wherever
You Are
Virtual Arm/Disarm in OWS allows users to virtually arm or disarm
locations in the cloud video platform itself from any device or location
with just a click, streamlining security operations and saving your
business resources. Both the web browser and OpenEye mobile apps can
utilize this feature, enabling convenient arming of locations from
wherever you are.
Align security with your business hours by creating location schedules
in OWS that ensure locations are armed when needed without any manual
intervention, connecting alerts for further efficiencies. For businesses
with predictable hours and specific security requirements, location
schedules can significantly benefit operations.
The intuitive lock icon instantly shows whether a site is armed or
disarmed, giving you peace of mind wherever you are.
Learn More About Location Arming in OpenEye Web
Services
Location Arming in OpenEye Web Services helps manage your security
system, with intuitive controls and seamless integration into your daily
routine.
Ready to see this feature up close? Book an OpenEye demo now to see the
capabilities of OWS and how it can benefit your organization.
Book a Demo

The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Mass Casualty
Threats and the Retail Sector:
Preparing for the Unthinkable During Peak Season
By
the D&D Daily staff
Recent acts of violence in public spaces overseas and here in the U.S.
are a stark reminder that mass casualty events are not confined to any
one type of location. As the holiday season drives higher foot traffic,
longer store hours, and increased stress on frontline teams, retailers
face an elevated need to think proactively about prevention,
preparedness, and response.
Retail environments are inherently open and accessible by design — a
strength for customer experience, but also a vulnerability. While most
retailers will never experience a terrorist attack or mass shooting, the
potential impact of such an event makes prevention and readiness
essential components of modern loss prevention and safety strategies.
Identifying Risk Indicators Before an Incident
Many mass casualty events are preceded by observable warning signs.
These can include unusual loitering, fixation on store layouts or
entrances, heavy or inappropriate clothing for the weather, visible
agitation, or attempts to probe security measures. Training frontline
employees to recognize and report concerning behavior — without
profiling — can create early intervention opportunities.
Clear escalation protocols are critical. Employees should know exactly
when and how to alert management, security, or law enforcement if
something feels off.
Leveraging Technology and Design
Technology plays a growing role in threat mitigation. Video analytics,
real-time monitoring, panic buttons, and integrated communication
systems can help detect anomalies and speed response times. Lighting,
sightlines, and controlled access points also matter. Small design
choices — such as keeping entrances visible and minimizing blind spots —
can significantly improve situational awareness.
Importantly, these tools are most effective when paired with trained
personnel and clear operating procedures.
Training for Response, Not Just Prevention
Retailers increasingly recognize that prevention alone is not enough.
Active threat and mass casualty response training — including lockdown
procedures, evacuation routes, and coordination with first responders —
can reduce confusion and save lives if an incident occurs.
Regular drills and refreshers help ensure that seasonal staff and new
hires are not left unprepared during peak periods.
A Shared Responsibility During the Holidays
As crowds grow and stress levels rise, the holiday season demands
heightened vigilance. Creating a culture where safety concerns are taken
seriously — and where employees feel empowered to speak up — is one of
the most effective defenses retailers have.
Mass casualty events are rare, but preparedness is not optional. For
today’s retail leaders, protecting people is inseparable from protecting
the business.
Can't Leave the Store Unless You Buy
Something?
New gates at one Safeway require receipt
scanning to exit
Opinion: Popular grocer adds ridiculous rule to prevent theft
New gates at one Safeway require
receipt scanning to exit, causing potential hassle for non-purchasers.
If it seems like supermarkets are going to pretty big extremes to
prevent theft, it’s understandable. Retailers reported an 18%
increase in the average number of shoplifting incidents in 2024
compared to 2023, according to the National Retail Federation.
And the Retail Industry Leaders Association says theft is routinely
underreported. In 2023, for example, 105,877 incidents of theft were
recorded, but only 11,547 actually made it into an official report that
law enforcement had to address.
One Safeway store, however, is now going to a pretty big extreme to
prevent theft. At the Safeway on San Francisco’s King Street, you
basically cannot leave the store unless you make a purchase.
The Mission Bay location has installed new gates that open automatically
when customers walk in but trigger an alarm if people attempt to back
out. This means that if you enter the store and change your mind about
making a purchase, or if the store doesn’t have the one item you came
in for, you’re stuck.
That’s because the exit gate only opens if you scan your receipt on the
way out.
Of course, if you end up in that situation, you’re technically not
trapped in the store or forced to spend money on something you don’t
need. You could always find a security guard and ask to be let out.
thestreet.com
States Ramp Up War on Retail Theft
Kentucky Attorney General pushes new plan as retail theft surges
With holiday shopping underway,
officials are outlining a new effort to confront a costly trend hurting
stores statewide.
Retailers in Kentucky lost an estimated $990 million to theft in
2022, and state officials say organized retail crime rose 30% last year.
The mounting losses have pushed Attorney General Russell Coleman to
sharpen the state’s approach.
In May, Coleman added a veteran law enforcement detective to the
Attorney General’s Department of Criminal Investigations, focusing
exclusively on organized retail theft.
Since then, investigators have secured multiple indictments,
including charges against two men from New York City accused of creating
fake coupon codes to buy high-value gift cards for only a few dollars,
according to the Attorney General’s office.
With holiday shopping in full swing, Coleman met Friday with law
enforcement, prosecutors, lawmakers and retail leaders at the Middletown
Walmart to highlight the growing threat and outline the next steps in
the state’s response.
Coleman said he plans to ask the General Assembly for more than $2
million over two years in the upcoming legislative session to expand the
Organized Retail Crime Unit. The proposal would add four detectives,
two criminal analysts and a prosecutor to strengthen the state’s ability
to investigate and prosecute organized theft operations.
His office said the expanded unit is intended to better protect
shoppers and businesses during one of the busiest shopping seasons
of the year.
whas11.com
RELATED: Kentucky AG asks for funding to
create Organized Retail Crime Unit
SF Residents Turn to Private Security
San Fransisco residents spent over $800K on private guards, blame city
for worsening conditions
A group of San Francisco residents is paying for private security
guards to keep their streets safe. They are citing a correlation
between worsening street conditions and a "concentration" of city
services in their district. For the last 12 months, residents in San
Francisco's South of Market neighborhood have had a direct line to a
team of private security guards.
"We do heavy patrols here every hour," said Jesus Jamaica, a
security guard with the CBD. The guards cover 109 blocks of this
neighborhood 24/7.
These guards are deployed out of the SoMa West Community Benefit
District. The private nonprofit is funded by local property owners. "We
have spent $820K in the last 12 months," said Alex Ludlum, Executive
Director for the SoMa West Community Benefit District.
The main job of the SoMa Benefit District is to keep the neighborhood
clean, not necessarily to hire private security, but residents felt
like they had no other choice.
privateofficerbreakingnews.blogspot.com
Video: Is shoplifting getting worse?
NYPD steps up security at synagogues as NYC is roiled by Bondi Beach
mass shooting
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Business Leaders In 'Short-Term
Survival Mode'
Tariffs Turn Up the Heat as Product Leaders Confront Peak Uncertainty
Goods firms are the hardest hit,
with 47% of their product leaders saying tariffs are mostly or
completely negative for their business finances.
Uncertainty about the impact of tariffs on business operations and
consumer demand is hitting the middle-market goods segment particularly
hard. The newest reason: a spate of worrisome—and missing—economic
data. The federal government’s rare decision to cancel the advance
estimate of third-quarter GDP left firms in the dark about the economy’s
health. Meanwhile, the release of September retail sales data was
delayed by nearly a month. When it finally went public, it revealed a
deceleration, with spending rising just 0.2% month-on-month, down from
0.6% in August. For companies already swimming in uncertainty, the
moving targets are piling up.
Product leaders at middle-market goods firms have a front-row seat to
how levies on imports affect their company’s ability to design, produce,
sell, market, plan and invest. Compared to CFOs, they are likely to
report even steeper rises in tariff pressures. Nearly half describe the
financial impact of tariffs as mostly or completely negative. Many
expect shortages, delays and costly supply chain reconfiguration.
Product leaders at service firms are feeling the strain, too, just not
with the same intensity.
But beneath the headlines is a deeper shift in how companies manage
these pressures. Tariff-driven disruption is pushing many firms into
short-term survival mode, redirecting attention from growth and
innovation to immediate operational fixes. More than half of product
leaders say their companies have pivoted their focus from long-term
technology initiatives to cost-saving adjustments such as renegotiating
supplier terms, reshuffling workflows and tightening spending on
automation and artificial intelligence capabilities. These defensive
moves are far more common among goods firms and companies whose
performance has weakened this year, underscoring the uneven impact of
tariffs across the middle market.
pymnts.com
Is LA Running out of New Retail Space?
LA faces shortage of modern retail space as aging inventory dominates
the market
Retailers want new space. They might
not find it in Los Angeles.
Nearly 58% of retail inventory in Los Angeles was built before 1980,
meaning more than half of retail space is at least 45 years old.
Retail properties can have long lifespans, especially when landlords
invest in renovations to attract new tenants.
However, as demand in Los Angeles has dropped and many spaces remain
vacant, landlords have had little motivation to update their
buildings without prospective tenants. This is leading to a glut of old,
outdated retail space on the market. At the same time, retail
construction activity in Los Angeles has reached historic lows.
This year, new construction did not exceed 150,000 square feet, compared
to an annual average of 1.8 million square feet between 2015 and 2019.
Since interest rates started rising in 2022, the average yearly
construction starts have declined to 438,000 square feet — a 76%
reduction.
costar.com
'Illegal Barrier' for Employers?
California among 19 states suing over Trump’s $100,000 H-1B application
fee
The lawsuit, led by Attorney General
Rob Bonta, argues that the fee creates a costly and illegal barrier for
employers to use the popular visa program
A group of states announced they are suing the Trump administration to
block a $100,000 fee for any new applications for H-1B visas, which
allow employers in the US to hire skilled foreign workers.
The lawsuit, which was filed Friday, argues that the fee creates a
costly and illegal barrier for employers to use the popular visa
program, particularly in the public sector. They also contend that the
dollar figure was set arbitrarily and exceeds the fee-setting authority
afforded by Congress. The case is being led by California Attorney
General Rob Bonta and Massachusetts Attorney General Andrea Joy
Campbell.
The lawsuit would be at least the third challenging the fee increase,
which Trump announced in September, but the first complaint by US
states. The US Chamber of Commerce sued in October, as did a
global nurse-staffing agency and several unions. Both cases are ongoing.
mercurynews.com
Strong Retail Sales YoY
Core retail sales fall 0.4% in November; show strong year over year
growth
Core retail sales edged down in November amid a late Thanksgiving
that saw Cyber Monday fall in December.
Retail sales (excluding restaurants, auto dealers and gas stations) fell
0.04% month over month in November, but were up 4.66% year over year,
according to the CNBC/NRF Retail Monitor. That compared with increases
of 0.6% month over month and 4.89% year over year in October.
Total retail sales (Including restaurants but excluding
automobile dealers and gasoline stations) rose 0.12% month over month in
November and were and were up 4.53%. That compared with increases
of 0.6% month over month and 5% year over year in October.
Total sales rose 5.06% year over year for the first 11 months of the
year and core sales were up 5.22%.
chainstoreage.com
Lululemon founder decries brand ‘erosion’ as CEO prepares to exit
This holiday season isn’t very merry for consumers, an AP-NORC poll
finds
Last week's #1 article --
27% of Self-Checkout Shoppers Have
Intentionally Stolen
More than 1 in 4 self-checkout shoppers admit they’ve stolen: Survey
LendingTree: 27% of self-checkout
users say they've stolen intentionally
Self-checkout
may save time at the store, but a growing number of shoppers admit
they’ve also used it to steal. Among Americans who’ve used
self-checkout, 27% say they’ve intentionally taken an item without
scanning it — up from 15% in 2023, according to a recent LendingTree
survey.
Millennials (41%) and Gen Z adults (37%) were the most likely to
admit to stealing at self-checkout, while only 2% of Baby Boomers
said the same. Men (38%) were more than twice as likely as women (16%)
to say they’ve done it.
When asked why they stole, 47% said the current financial climate has
made it difficult to afford essentials. Nearly as many (46%) cited
higher prices — including increases they attributed to tariffs — and
many (39%) said today’s prices “feel unfair” or “too high in general.”
About a third of those who’ve stolen said they don’t feel remorseful,
and a similar share (35%) see self-checkout as “unpaid work,” so taking
small items “feels like compensation.”
Interestingly, those with household incomes of $100,000 or more were
the most likely (40%) to say they’ve intentionally taken an item
without scanning it. Just 17% of those making less than $30,000 said the
same.
Self-checkouts have become more common in recent years, but major
retailers have started to pull back.
Aldi shoppers in the Chicago area
recently noticed that some stores had removed their self-checkout
stations, prompting several frustrated customers to post about it on
social media. Dollar General said
last year it had removed self-checkout from 12,000 stores, citing the
“ongoing challenge from shrink,” the industry term for inventory lost to
theft and other non-sales factors.
Target rolled out express
self-checkout in March 2024 at most of its stores, but limits the option
to 10 items or fewer. Meanwhile, Amazon
has largely removed its cashierless Just Walk Out technology from Amazon
Fresh stores.
ktla.com
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California's New Threat Accountability Law:
Turning Legislation into Real-World Safety

By Frederic Moll, Operations Lead Counsel – West Coast,
ALTO
A Broader Approach to Safety
California's new Senate Bill 19 (SB 19) closes a critical
loophole in state law by allowing prosecutors to pursue cases involving
threats of violence against schools, workplaces, houses of worship, and
medical facilities.
The measure reflects a growing recognition that prevention and
accountability are inseparable. By criminalizing credible threats
communicated verbally, in writing, or online, the law gives prosecutors
and law-enforcement agencies clearer authority to act before
intimidation or harassment escalates into physical harm.
"The new law gives prosecutors the
tools to act before a threat becomes an act," notes Frederic Moll,
ALTO’s Operations Lead Counsel. "Accountability doesn’t begin after an
incident, it begins the moment someone tries to create fear or disruption."
Prevention Through Accountability
SB 19 amends California Penal Code Section 422 to include a wider range
of locations: schools, universities, day-care centers, workplaces,
houses of worship, and medical facilities. In doing so, it broadens the
state’s definition of what it means to “protect.”
Rather than responding to violence after it occurs, the legislation
emphasizes early intervention and deterrence. It also clarifies that
digital threats, such as social-media posts designed to instill
fear—fall within the same prosecutorial scope as direct verbal or
written threats.
Implications for
Employers and Retail Leaders
Expanding workplace protections
By explicitly including workplaces, the law now covers retail stores,
offices, and distribution centers, environments where employees and
customers have increasingly faced threats or harassment. The change
gives businesses and local prosecutors a firmer legal basis to
investigate and act on those incidents.
Documentation as defense
For any organization, the ability to substantiate a threat will
determine whether law enforcement can proceed. Detailed reports,
time-stamped communications, and witness statements remain essential.
Consistent documentation protocols, already standard in asset-protection
work, become even more critical under SB 19.
Collaboration as prevention
The legislation reinforces the need for coordination between employers,
law enforcement, and prosecutors. That collaboration—not technology
alone—is what converts information into prevention.
Building
Accountability Infrastructure
Across California, law-enforcement agencies and private-sector partners
have been developing frameworks to ensure that incidents don’t end at
reporting. These models focus on evidence integrity, case
follow-through, and communication among stakeholders—all of which
mirror the intent of SB 19.
Early accountability is also an employee-relations issue: workers who
see credible threats addressed swiftly are more likely to feel safe,
engaged, and supported. In industries with high customer interaction,
that sense of safety can directly influence retention and performance.
Practical Steps
for Safety, Risk, and Legal Teams
-
Review and update
threat-response protocols
Map how a threat moves from initial report to law-enforcement contact.
Clarify roles, documentation standards, and escalation triggers.
-
Integrate measurable
accountability indicators
Track time from incident to referral, follow-up rates, and outcomes. Treat
accountability as a performance metric, not an afterthought.
-
Strengthen local
partnerships
Establish relationships with prosecutors’ offices and law-enforcement
liaisons before incidents occur. Shared understanding accelerates response
when it matters most.
-
Train and empower teams
Frontline employees should recognize what constitutes a credible threat,
understand how to report it, and know that those reports will be taken
seriously.
The Larger
Picture
SB 19 represents a shift in how California defines public safety. It
acknowledges that threats—verbal, digital, or symbolic—can destabilize
workplaces and communities long before any physical act occurs.
By prioritizing documentation, collaboration, and follow-through,
organizations can align with the spirit of the law: preventing harm
by addressing warning signs early.
"Whether it’s a retail store, a
school, or a hospital, the principle is the same," Moll says. "When we
connect incidents to outcomes, we prevent the next one."
About the
Author
Frederic Moll is the Operations Lead Counsel for the West Coast
at ALTO. Based in
Seattle, he is a graduate of Syracuse University College of Law and
spent more than 15 years as a Public Defender in Snohomish County,
specializing in therapeutic courts. Before joining ALTO, he served as a
Judge Pro Tempore in King County District Court, presiding over a range
of civil and criminal matters. |
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'Threats & Protection'
15+ Retail Cybersecurity Statistics for 2026
Explore the latest retail
cybersecurity statistics for 2026. Learn about the top threats facing
retailers and the best practices to protect your customer data.
Retailers face
escalating cyber risk, and the newest retail cybersecurity
statistics confirm what many store owners already suspect: the threat
landscape continues to fundamentally shift. Independent retailers
now manage more cloud tools, payment options, and digital touchpoints
than ever before, and every new integration expands the attack surface
that criminals can exploit.
Each new year seems to bring a new inflection point. Sophisticated
phishing campaigns, ransomware operations, and third-party platform
vulnerabilities that once targeted only big tech and major banks are now
hitting retailers of all sizes.
This article examines the concrete data that shows how significant the
risk has become—and offers practical next steps small and midsize (SMB)
retailers can implement without enterprise-level budgets.
Key retail cybersecurity statistics for 2026
Data breaches have become dramatically more expensive, and US retailers
face the highest costs on earth. Globally, the average data breach costs
$4.44 million, while
breaches affecting US organizations averaged $10.22 million each in
2025—an all-time high. For the 15th consecutive year, the US has
led the world in average costs for data breaches. Even when a retailer’s
incident is far smaller than an enterprise-scale event, the per-record
costs, legal exposure, and remediation expenses can be punishing.
Total cybercrime losses are accelerating rapidly. The FBI’s Internet
Crime Complaint Center reported $16 billion in losses for 2024, a 33%
increase from the $12.5 billion reported in 2023. This
year-over-year surge signals that 2025 has not been business as usual:
criminal operations are scaling faster than defenses.
For retailers, one of the most troubling patterns involves what
attackers actually steal. Nearly half of all breaches (46%) involved
customers’ personally identifiable information (PII), including names,
email addresses, payment details, and purchase histories. This is
data that independent retailers collect every day through their
ecommerce platforms, point-of-sale (POS) systems, and loyalty programs.
Breaches don’t just hit abstract corporate databases—they expose the
customers who trusted you with their information. Strong fraud
prevention strategies have become essential for protecting customer
data, customer relationships, and revenue.
These numbers raise the question: why has retail become such a
frequent target? The answer lies in the industry’s unique
vulnerabilities.
shopify.com
Ransomware Shifts Into New Territory
Ransomware keeps widening its reach
Ransomware keeps shifting into new territory, pulling in victims from
sectors and regions that once saw fewer attacks. The latest Global
Threat Briefing for H2 2025 from CyberCube shows incidents spreading
in ways that make it harder for security leaders to predict where
threats will rise next.
Researchers evaluated incident patterns, sector level exposure and
signals drawn from threat actor behavior. Their aim was to map where
ransomware is spreading, which organizations sit in higher risk clusters
and how security posture shapes exposure.
Growth trends show ransomware moving into new
regions
The report finds that ransomware has become a global issue with
incidents growing in markets that historically saw lower volumes.
Compound monthly growth rates highlight the fastest growing regions,
although specific percentages are not provided for all areas. Threat
groups continue to move toward regions with less mature defensive
baselines or slower adoption of strong controls.
Some of this rise follows expansion by established groups. LockBit in
particular remains active across many countries. The study links LockBit
activity to elevated risk among public sector organizations in multiple
regions, which becomes more evident in later sections of the report.
Sector comparison shows wide variation in
defensive strength
Researchers compared industries by looking at how often negative cyber
signals appear and how strong their observable security hygiene is.
Some industries show stronger baselines and fewer concerning signals.
Others show weaker controls and more signs of exposure.
The study notes that organizations in the same industry can perform very
differently. Security posture varies widely, which means sector
classification alone does not predict resilience. Negative cyber
indicators such as open ports, outdated software and exposed remote
services appear more often in some industries, and this trend aligns
with higher ransomware activity.
helpnetsecurity.com
Updated List of CISA Goals
CISA updates cybersecurity benchmarks for critical infrastructure
organizations
The agency streamlines and
supplements goals it first issued in 2022.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has updated a
list of goals that it hopes water treatment facilities, hospitals
and other critical infrastructure operators will use to protect their
systems from hackers.
Version 2.0 of CISA’s Cross-Sector Cybersecurity Performance Goals (CPGs),
which the agency released on Thursday, “incorporates three years of
operational insights, and address emerging threats through data-driven,
actionable guidance,” CISA said in a statement. “These enhancements
are designed to promote accountability, improve risk management, and
support strategic cybersecurity governance across sectors.
The changes include the addition of a new “Govern” category of goals,
meant to reinforce the importance of business leaders’ involvement in
overseeing cybersecurity; the consolidation of information
technology and operational technology goals; new goals focused on
supply-chain risks, zero-trust architecture and incident-response
communications; and clearer language about how organizations can
implement the CPGs.
CISA made the changes based on feedback from “hundreds of
stakeholders” in government and industry, Madhu Gottumukkala, the
agency’s acting director, said in a statement. “Version 2.0 demonstrates
our commitment to listening to and incorporating partner feedback to
deliver practical, outcome-driven guidance that organizations can act
on.”
cybersecuritydive.com
What 35 years of privacy law say about the state of data protection
React issues new patches after security researchers flag additional
flaws |
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Fraud Prevention is Key
EXCLUSIVE: Why chargeback rates are soaring
Two key factors drove sharp growth in chargebacks throughout 2025.
Chargeback rates climbed steadily throughout 2025, reaching 0.26% in
the third quarter, a 53% increase from the first quarter of 2025.
Retail e-commerce chargeback grew explosively
by 233% between the first and third quarters of the year, the
highest increase of any merchant category.
The Sift “Q4 2025 Digital Trust Index,” exclusively released to Chain
Store Age, indicates that 10% of surveyed consumers admitted they
tried fraudulent tactics featured in “refund hack” tutorials on
social media, such as returning worn clothing or filing chargebacks for
purchases they received and were satisfied with.
Almost one-in-five (18%) respondents justified false claims because
their order didn't arrive on time, while 17% felt that a retailer
"behaved unethically" and a chargeback was justified. Twelve percent
simply wanted their money back and knew their credit card company would
cover the cost.
In addition, one-in-five respondents said they would be more likely
to return worn clothing or file chargebacks for what were actually
legitimate purchases during times of financial hardship.
The report also cites the expansion of card not present transactions,
driven by continuing growth in digital commerce, as creating more
opportunities for both legitimate and fraudulent chargebacks.
"As disputes and chargebacks continue to rise, and first-party fraud
becomes an increasingly significant part of overall dispute volume,
businesses face growing operational and financial pressures," said
Alexander Hall, Trust and Safety Architect at Sift. "Leveraging
proactive fraud prevention and streamlined dispute management helps
companies reduce losses, protect revenue, and maintain long-term
customer trust."
chainstoreage.com
Amazon Helps Flood Relief Efforts
How Amazon is supporting flood-impacted communities in Washington state
Amazon is working with local first
responders and front-line nonprofits to help communities that have been
impacted by flooding in our hometown state.
In response to catastrophic flooding across the Pacific Northwest and
Washington, Amazon is supporting emergency relief efforts in our home
state with a multi-pronged effort, which includes a $3 million
donation, the delivery of more than 50,000 supplies to front-line
nonprofits, and the launch of comprehensive employee support services.
Our $3 million donation will support the WA State Emergency Fund,
American Red Cross Northwest Region, and United Ways of the Pacific
Northwest.
And our Employee Relief Fund is also available to flood-affected
Amazon employees seeking financial support, along with free mental
health resources. Amazonians across Washington are also stepping up to
volunteer, with efforts underway to help neighbors clean up, pack
hygiene kits, and donate blood.
aboutamazon.com
Amazon Announces Major Delivery Change Affecting 2,300 Cities
Walmart launches drone delivery in metro Atlanta |
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Santa Rose, CA: 17 Arrested In Organized Retail Theft Operation Ahead Of
Holidays
Seventeen people were arrested during a large-scale organized retail
theft operation conducted Thursday by the Santa Rosa Police Department
in partnership with the Sonoma County District Attorney's Office and
several local law enforcement agencies. The enforcement effort took
place between noon and 9 p.m. in and around the Santa Rosa Marketplace
and businesses along the 2600 to 2800 blocks of South Santa Rosa Avenue,
according to police. Police said arrests included felony organized
retail theft, commercial burglary, theft with priors and drug-related
offenses. Officers recovered stolen merchandise such as electronics,
clothing, sporting goods and toys, which were returned to retailers,
when possible, Santa Rosa police said.
sfgate.com
Hartford, WI: Accused shoplifter arrested after walking into Walmart
during 'Shop with a Cop' event
A woman accused of stealing hundreds of dollars from a Walmart was
arrested after she returned to the store during a “Shop with a Cop”
event. According to WITI, 24-year-old Sophia Malak was placed under
arrest after she entered the Walmart in Hartford, Wisconsin during the
event. A post from the Hartford Police Department states that the event,
held on Saturday, December 6, had “the kind of holiday energy that could
make even the Grinch crack a smile.” At some point during the
festivities, however, authorities said an “unexpected plot twist”
occurred when a woman who had allegedly committed a felony-level retail
theft just a few days earlier entered the store again. WITI’s report
states that Malak had allegedly stolen more than $600 worth of
merchandise from the Walmart in question.
abc3340.com
Polk County, FL: Sisters Arrested for Grand Theft at Central Florida
Target
Upon arrival, deputies spoke with a Target loss prevention associate who
stated he observed two female suspects enter the store at 7:29pm.
Surveillance footage showed both women retrieving shopping carts and
then making rapid selections throughout the store including bedding,
decorations, clothing, and makeup. The associate reported that the
suspects attempted to conceal the merchandise by placing Target shopping
bags over the items in their carts before heading toward the exit. They
were detained in the loss prevention office until deputies arrived. The
total value of the merchandise stolen was $2,487.70.
westorlandonews.com
Kansas City, MO: KCPD makes multiple arrests of holiday shoplifters
Sydney, Australia: City-wide retail crime operation results in 50
arrests over two days during festive season in Sydney
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Shootings & Deaths
Lewiston, ID: One killed after U-Haul truck explodes in Idaho shopping center
parking lot
One person is dead after a U-Haul truck explosion early Saturday morning,
authorities said. The blast happened around 7:15 a.m. in the parking lot of an
Old Navy store in Lewiston, Idaho, just across the border from Washington state.
Douglas Petersen, 61, was killed in the blast, according to the Nez Perce County
Coroner’s Office. Preliminary findings suggest it was accidental.
Investigators say the truck appeared to be carrying stored materials, including
gasoline and propane tanks, according to a joint statement from the Lewiston
Police Department and Lewiston Fire Department.
livenowfox.com
Traver, CA: C-Store clerk shot during armed robbery
A store clerk is recovering after being shot Friday night during the commission
of an armed robbery, the Tulare County Sheriff’s Office said. Deputies were
called to the Traver Market at 3892 Merritt Drive around 9 p.m. for a report of
a store clerk being robbed at gunpoint. When they arrived, they learned that two
masked men had entered the market and brandished firearms. Investigators said
that as the suspects left the store, gunfire was exchanged, and the clerk
suffered a gunshot wound to the arm.
yourcentralvalley.com
Brown County, IN: 2 injured, 2 suspects in custody after shooting at Dollar
General
Two people were injured in a shooting at a Brown County Dollar General Saturday
afternoon. The Brown County Sheriff's Office said officers and emergency
personnel responded to a report of a shooting at the Dollar General, located in
the 5000 block of North State Road, in Beanblossom on Dec. 13. When officers
arrived on scene, they said they found two people shot. They were both taken to
area hospitals. Police said two suspects are currently in custody.
wthr.com
Brooklyn, NY: Cypress Hills mass shooting that left 6 teens injured caught on
camera
A group of six teenagers were injured during a shooting early Sunday morning in
Cypress Hills, according to police. Authorities say it happened just after 1
a.m. outside 2929 Atlantic Ave. The group of two teenage girls and four teenage
boys were hospitalized in stable condition. Police say two male suspects wearing
black clothing and face masks are wanted in connection with the shooting.
brooklyn.news12.com
Stroudsburg, PA: Shots fired at Stroudsburg shopping mall
Shots were fired at a shopping mall in Monroe County on Saturday night,
according to county dispatchers. Monroe County dispatchers say that a call came
in around 8:30 p.m. reporting a shooting at the Stroud Mall in Stroudsburg.
Officials say that nobody was injured and nobody was taken into custody from the
incident.
wfmz.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
San Antonio, TX: Trio of Thieves Hits La Cantera Louis Vuitton, Security Guard
Hurt
Three men are on the run after allegedly robbing the Louis Vuitton store at The
Shops at La Cantera Saturday night, injuring a security guard and prompting an
aerial search over the upscale San Antonio shopping center. The robbery occurred
around 7:30 p.m. yesterday at the open-air Shops at La Cantera on La Cantera
Parkway. San Antonio police reported that three men entered the Louis Vuitton
store, took merchandise, and injured a security guard during the incident. A
helicopter was deployed to search the surrounding area, but the suspects
escaped. Police have not released descriptions of the suspects or the value of
the stolen merchandise, according to News 4 San Antonio.
hoodline.com
Rogers, AR: Suspect in custody after attempted robbery at retail store
Rogers police say a man is in custody after an attempted robbery at the Ross
Dress for Less store on Pleasant Crossing Thursday evening. According to the
Rogers Police Department, the suspect brandished what appeared to be a handgun.
Officers later determined the weapon was actually a paintball gun. Before police
arrived, several customers intervened and restrained the suspect until officers
took him into custody. No injuries were reported.
4029tv.com
Polk County, FL: Central Florida Man Arrested for Walmart Retail Theft,
Violently Resisting Deputy
A Polk County Sheriff’s Office deputy was recently dispatched to the Mulberry
Walmart regarding an in-progress retail theft. Store security witnessed the
suspect concealing merchandise under his shirt, then watched as he pushed his
cart full of items out of the store without paying for any of it. Security
attempted to stop the suspect, but he refused. The deputy quickly arrived, and
located the suspect, 58-year-old Homero Saenz, of Valrico in Hillsborough County
near Tampa. Saenz was ordered by the deputy to stop, but Saenz refused to do so,
according to local law enforcement. The deputy moved to arrest Saenz, but Saenz
physically resisted. A Taser was used to subdue Saenz, but it had no effect.
Saenz then grabbed the Taser and attempted to take it from the deputy, but the
deputy managed to retain the device and successfully discharged an
incapacitating shock to Saenz, which enabled the deputy to get Saenz secured in
handcuffs. The deputy recovered store merchandise from the cart, and from under
a girdle-like band that Saenz wore above the waist, covered by his shirt. The
value of the stolen merchandise was $237.39.
westorlandonews.com
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•
Beauty – Concord, NC –
Robbery
•
C-Store – San Pablo,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – San Pablo,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Killingly,
CT – Burglary
•
C-Store – Wheelock, VT
– Burglary
•
C-Store – Tulare
County, CA – Armed Robbery / Emp wounded
•
Dollar – Williamson,
NY – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Sacramento,
CA – Burglary
• Jewelry - Woodburn, OR - Robbery
• Jewelry - Kahului, HI – Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Arden-Arcade, CA – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Saratoga
County, NY – Burglary
•
Ross – Rogers, AR –
Armed Robbery
•
Vuitton – San Antonio,
TX – Robbery
•
Walmart – The
Villages, FL – Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 10 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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FLPM’s support the Field and are relied on as a subject matter expert in
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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...
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Director, Safety
San Francisco, CA
The Director of Safety is responsible for developing, implementing, and
overseeing comprehensive safety programs across all retail locations, corporate
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