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Ben Mills
promoted to Sr. Director, Global Security at Gap Inc. |
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Brady Sowell
promoted to Sr. Director, Stores Protection at Gap Inc. |
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Meghan Hoppes
promoted to Director, Digital Protection at Gap Inc. |
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Tito Nieves
promoted to Director, Digital Protection at Gap Inc. |
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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In Case You Missed It


Click here to read the full
report
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Retailers Blasts London Mayor on Lax
Crime Policies
M&S accuses Sadiq Khan of being soft on crime
Retailer urges Mayor to ‘prioritise
effective policing’ after teenagers cause chaos in Clapham store
Marks & Spencer has hit out at Sir Sadiq Khan for failing to get a
grip on crime, warning that lawlessness is putting the public at risk.
In its most significant intervention on the issue to date, the retailer
urged the Mayor of London to “prioritise effective policing” as “more
brazen, more organised and more aggressive” attacks ramp up across
Britain’s high streets every day.
Shopkeepers are bracing for what is feared will be a weekend of chaos.
Mobs of youths have run riot this week in London, including
invading a Marks & Spencer shop in Clapham. It has fuelled fears of
growing lawlessness and prompted a warning from the Metropolitan Police
to parents and teenagers before the bank holiday weekend.
Thinus Keeve, Marks & Spencer’s retail director, said staff had been
headbutted and taken to hospital following an ammonia attack in the
last week, as he urged Labour to do more to tackle shoplifting and
crime.
Marks & Spencer executives have written to both Sir Sadiq and Shabana
Mahmood, the Home Secretary, demanding they do more to address the
problem. Mr Keeve said attacks were becoming “more routine”. Despite
the disorder, Sir Sadiq dismissed claims of London being unsafe as
“lies” this week.
Marks & Spencer urged the Mayor and the Home Secretary to come clean
on “the true scale and impact” of shoplifting, calling for more
transparency around crime statistics.
Writing in The Telegraph, Mr Keeve said: “I keep hearing crime is
falling, especially in London – something none of us believes, and
very few people working in retail would see.
Shop bosses have consistently argued that more must be done to tackle
an epidemic of shoplifting, but have largely focused their attention
on the police.
telegraph.co.uk
Washington Governor Vetoes Funding to
Fight ORC
‘I had to veto those programs’: Gov. Ferguson cuts retail crime funding
as lawmaker says WA theft crisis grows
Washington Gov. Bob Ferguson is facing criticism after vetoing
$500,000 in funding aimed at combating organized retail crime, a
move that comes as the state continues to grapple with some of the
highest theft rates in the nation.
Ferguson issued the veto just before signing the state’s supplemental
operating budget, removing funding that lawmakers had proposed to
continue efforts targeting retail theft. He explained that state
agencies are already being asked to do more with less after taking
significant budget cuts last legislative session, and this year they are
facing another $1 billion in reductions.
Washington has ranked among the hardest-hit states for organized
retail crime, with Forbes naming it the worst in the nation in 2024.
The impact has been significant, with businesses, according to many
experts, losing more than $2.5 billion in revenue and the state missing
out on more than $600 million in state and local tax collections.
State Rep. Mari Leavitt, a Democrat from University Place, criticized
the decision and warned it could undermine recent progress.
Data from the first half of 2025 showed increased activity in King
County, where prosecutors filed 142 retail theft cases between
January and June — more than double the average over the previous
four years. Other counties, including Snohomish and Spokane, also used
the funding to strengthen coordination among law enforcement and expand
diversion programs.
According to the Washington Retail Association, the pilot program
generated hundreds of law enforcement responses and thousands of retail
crime reports in its early months, while identifying more than a
thousand individuals eligible for diversion programs.
mynorthwest.com
The Debate Over Anti-Shoplifting
Regulations
Costco & Walmart face self-checkout crackdown as new law targets
shoplifting
A
crackdown on self-checkout will soon hit major retailers including
Walmart, Target and Costco - with limits on how many items shoppers can
scan potentially next.
Under the proposal, stores would be allowed to operate no more than
eight self-checkout machines at a time. It would also require
stricter staffing rules - with workers overseeing no more than two
machines each, and at least one traditional staffed checkout lane open
for every two self-checkouts in use.
Supporters of the planned new rules in Connecticut say the move is
needed to curb theft and reduce the pressure on employees who are
often left monitoring large clusters of machines alone. Shoplifting
costs $47.8 billion a year.
The rules would apply to major retailers, including Walmart and
Costco, as well as smaller convenience stores and pharmacies.
But critics argue the bill risks going too far and could slow down
shopping for customers. ‘It’s an overreach for sure,’ said state
representative Steve Weir. ‘This seems like another punitive
regulation on business rather than a real solution.’
State data shows that in 2022 - the most recent year available -
retailers in Connecticut lost $895 million to shoplifting, while the
state lost $56.8 million in sales tax revenue. Supporters say the
measures could help curb theft, but critics warn they may lead to higher
prices and longer lines.
dailymail.co.uk
Retail Theft Units Having an Impact
‘Don’t steal, it’s as simple as that’: Bakersfield police crack down on
retail theft
It’s a small team with big results. The Bakersfield Police Department’s
retail theft unit is earning high praise after recovering thousands
of stolen items in a single year.
No more just going through self-checkout without scanning every item. No
more walking out of stores without paying. Within the last year,
hundreds of arrests have been made, and hundreds of thousands of dollars
worth of stolen merchandise have been returned to retailers.
Organized retail theft has been a long-standing problem in California.
But in Bakersfield, police are fighting back, saying theft hurts
everyone. BPD’s retail theft team is made up of only eight people
– one sergeant, six detectives, and one person in an administrative
role.
The latest report shows nearly 500 arrests and more than 6,000 items
recovered — worth about $137,000 — all in a single year and with its
partnership with retailers.
Garrett invites retail bosses to monthly meetings to work together in
fighting crime. “(When) this person goes and steals from Ross, they
don’t only go there. They go to HomeGoods. They go to Target. They go
to all these other stores,” Garrett said.
“Truly, politicians and law enforcement are starting to understand,”
said Vice President of Asset Protection at Home
Depot, Scott Glenn. “These aren’t insurance claims, these
aren’t covered, these aren’t things that businesses can absorb. This is
an impact on businesses in their communities that impacts their ability
to serve their constituents.”
kget.com
Thieves Struggle to Sell Stolen Luxury
Goods
They stole $10 million worth of artwork, but they may not make a dime.
Criminals are growing bolder, stealing priceless art, jewels and
truckloads of goods — but it's harder than it looks for them to cash
in on their heists.
Because massive heists immediately dominate global news cycles,
thieves quickly find themselves stuck with highly recognizable
merchandise that even underground buyers are too afraid to touch.
"The trend is typically going to be smash-and-grabs," Kelly adds.
"That's the easy part. Once you've stolen it, now you have to figure out
how to monetize it. And it's really impossible."
Aging building infrastructure and the speed of smash-and-grab thefts
make museum theft appear lucrative, Kelly says. Thieves often don't
know what they're stealing and struggle to resell perishable or
traceable goods like food, as many of the items have identification
labels.
Cargo heists — including recent thefts of $400,000 worth of KitKat
bars and, in a separate incident, lobsters — are often hit-or-miss
operations, former FBI special agent Robert Wittman tells Axios.
One major exception is jewelry theft, which
remains lucrative because the items are harder to trace and easier to
resell. Even though diamonds have identifiable "fingerprints"
and luxury watches carry unique serial numbers, thieves can still
profit, Scott Guginsky, executive vice president of the Jewelers'
Security Alliance and a retired NYPD detective, tells Axios.
Unlike with stolen paintings and sculptures, jewelry can be melted down
for its metals or broken down for gemstones, Guginsky says. "You put
it on your wrist... go through TSA, arrive in another country, ... and
you sell it. It's gone."
axios.com
‘Cereal’ offender busted for sneaky shoplifting trick at grocery store
checkout
Trump seeks $152 million to rebuild, reopen Alcatraz
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LP Retention Takes Priority
Why Retention Is Becoming a Core Loss Prevention Priority
By
the D&D Daily staff
As the retail industry continues to evolve, loss prevention leaders are
increasingly focused on a challenge that extends beyond shrink and
external threats: retaining experienced talent.
Loss prevention and asset protection teams operate in one of the most
demanding functions in retail. Roles often require long hours,
irregular schedules, incident response responsibilities, and
cross-functional coordination with store operations, HR, legal, and
safety teams. As these responsibilities expand, many organizations are
finding that retention has become a strategic priority.
High turnover within LP teams can create operational gaps that affect
store coverage, case continuity, training consistency, and investigative
effectiveness. When experienced team members leave, retailers often
lose valuable institutional knowledge, including familiarity with repeat
incidents, internal processes, and regional risk trends.
At the same time, the role itself is changing. Today’s LP
professionals are increasingly expected to work with analytics
platforms, video intelligence tools, access control systems, workplace
violence protocols, and operational audit programs. This broader
skill set makes recruiting and retaining qualified talent more
competitive.
Many retailers are responding by investing more heavily in career
development pathways, leadership training, and clearer advancement
opportunities within asset protection. Cross-training with safety,
compliance, and operational risk teams is also becoming more common,
helping employees build broader career tracks while strengthening
organizational resilience.
For retailers, retention is no longer simply an HR issue. Stable,
experienced LP teams can improve response times, strengthen store
partnerships, and support more consistent execution across the
enterprise.
As labor pressures continue across the industry, retention may become
one of the most important long-term performance indicators for loss
prevention departments.
Will Retail Boycotts Become More
Frequent?
Numerator: Nearly half of consumers willing to boycott for political,
social causes
While high prices are continuing to hit consumers, many are still
shopping with values in mind.
According to new data released from Numerator’s 2026 Visions Report,
nearly half (48%) of consumers said they would stop purchasing from a
company that takes a political or social stance misaligned with their
values, up two points compared to July 2025.
Nearly four-in-10 (38%) consumers said they participated in at least
one consumer boycott in the past year. After rolling back DEI
initiatives in early 2025, Numerator found that Target’s traffic
among African-American shoppers is down 10.9 million trips (-16%),
accounting for nearly 40% of the retailer’s total sales decline in the
fiscal quarter ending Oct. 31, 2025.
Numerator’s data also found that artificial intelligence is being
increasingly used by consumers for shopping purposes. Among all U.S.
consumers, 12% said they now use AI to help with shopping (up
four points vs. July 2025), while 23% of Gen Z consumers say the same
(up 14 points). Among AI users, consumers see value in AI’s ability to
find deals (32%), compare prices and features (30%) and provide
inspiration for meals and brand research (29%).
chainstoreage.com
Iran War's Economic Impact
Fewer Easter baskets, higher costs: Bay Area families feel ripple
effects of Iran war
Residents young and old dealing with
the shock of higher prices due to U.S. conflict in Middle East
Easter marks the first major holiday since the Trump administration
initiated its “Operation Epic Fury” and struck Iran on Feb. 28,
causing the virtual closure of the Strait of Hormuz, a key trade route
for approximately 20% of the world’s oil supply. Gas prices have
jumped more than a dollar per gallon across the Bay Area since then, a
more than 25% increase over the last month, exacerbating the cost of
living in one of the most expensive regions in the country.
Nationwide, meat prices jumped 8.6%, sweet and candy costs spiked 9%,
poultry prices increased 2.2%, and coffee soared 18.4% over the last 12
months ending in February, according to the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. However, residents got relief on egg prices, which plunged
42.1% over the same period of time.
mercurynews.com
Should Government Be in the Grocery
Business?
Why Toronto’s 4-Store public grocery test will not work: Bruce Winder
Last week Toronto City Council approved a motion to study and develop
a plan for a 4-store public grocery test. But should government
focus on food insecurity this way & will these stores work?
Last year, I completed an analysis that looked at the average net income
% for Canada’s big 3 grocers (Loblaw, Metro, Empire) over a 3-year
period and it was about 4%. This profit rate has remained fairly
constant pre and post pandemic. Compare this to global CPG companies who
have seen margins climb steadily over the last few years & according to
my analysis were about 14%.
This means that after the 3 grocers pay all of their bills, they make
$4 of profit on every $100 they sell. Therefore, the most that
government can save on prices by operating at break-even is 4%. Even
this outcome will be impossible for reasons I discuss below.
retail-insider.com
How Home Depot Is Harnessing Weather Data To Drive Local Retail Sales
Rather than let weather be an external force
driving sales up or down, Home Depot is moving aggressively to get ahead
of it. It has partnered with The Weather Company to use hyperlocal,
predictive weather intelligence to anticipate how conditions will affect
demand and adjust marketing and messaging accordingly.
Bed Bath & Beyond agrees to acquire The Container Store for $150M
Saks Global snags $500M in financing, expects to exit bankruptcy this
summer
5 ways Milwaukee can address grocery store closing crisis
Carrefour Israel to deploy 4,000 smart carts chainwide
American workers' wage gains lost momentum in March despite strong
hiring
Last week's #1 article --
Retail Violent Fatalities Surge Again in 2025, According to D&D Daily
Reporting
After a sharp decline in 2024,
retail fatalities and violent incidents rose in 2025, with c-stores
remaining the industry’s most dangerous environment.
CLEVELAND
— March 31, 2026 — The D&D Daily has released its industry-exclusive
2025 Retail Violent Fatalities Report, showing a troubling
resurgence in retail violence across the United States.
Based on publicly reported data, the new report found
590 retail fatalities in 2025, up 22% from 2024,
reversing last year’s decline and pushing fatality levels back onto an
upward trajectory. Fourth quarter fatalities also accelerated sharply,
with 139 deaths in Q4 2025, up 35% from Q4 2024.
The report found that innocent victims continue to make up the
overwhelming majority of fatalities, with 83% classified as victims
and 17% as suspects. Customers represented the
largest share of fatalities at 63%, while associates accounted for
19%.
One of the most notable long-term trends remains the concentration of
violence around convenience stores, which ranked as the most
dangerous retail environment for the ninth consecutive year, accounting
for 37% of all fatality incidents.
Geographically, Houston and Memphis emerged as the most targeted
cities in 2025, while Texas overtook
California as the most targeted state, though the two states
have remained the top two for nine straight years.
The report also found that 57% of fatalities occurred in parking
lots, compared with 41% inside stores or malls, highlighting the
continued vulnerability of exterior retail spaces.
Key Takeaways
-
590 Retail
Fatalities in 2025 — Up 22% from 2024
-
139 Q4 Fatalities —
Up 35% from Q4 2024
-
Customers Account
for 63% of Fatalities
-
C-Stores Remain #1
Most Dangerous Retailer
-
Houston and Memphis
Top Most Targeted Cities
-
Texas Overtakes
California as Most Targeted State
Read the full 2025 report here
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The Axis Advantage
There is a certain value that
you expect to gain when you use our cutting-edge
physical security solutions. But with Axis, there is so much more.

18 Unique
Benefits
Leverage a powerful collection of benefits that go beyond what you
know our products will deliver-this is known as the Axis
Advantage.
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AI Causes Retail CISOs to Rethink
Budgets
Retail and hospitality CISOs expect budget growth, new AI headaches and
opportunities
More than eight in 10 security
leaders in the sector say they’ve rolled out an AI governance framework
to some degree, a new survey found.
AI is forcing CISOs to think differently about budgets, staffing and
risk management, according to a new report from the Retail and
Hospitality Information Sharing and Analysis Center. Seventy percent of
CISOs saw AI added to their responsibilities last year, RH-ISAC’s annual
CISO Benchmark survey found.
The report also gauged CISOs’ sentiments about AI-related risks and
opportunities, with executives describing how they were already using
the technology for defense.
RH-ISAC’s report, based on a late-2025 survey of 193 ISAC members and
eight non-members, captures the evolving AI security dynamic as
businesses balance new efficiencies with new headaches.
On the one hand, AI represents CISOs’ biggest friction point, with
71% of respondents citing it, followed by supply-chain attacks (54%) and
vulnerability identification and remediation (41%). Ransomware and
phishing used to top the friction-points list, RH-ISAC noted, but now AI
has overtaken them — “not because ransomware and phishing have been
solved, but because AI has added an entirely new layer of uncertainty on
top of an already demanding threat landscape.”
On the other hand, CISOs and their staff have found AI tools to be
force multipliers in key aspects of their work. Security teams
mostly use AI for threat detection and analysis (63% of respondents
cited this use), generative AI production of threat analysis reports
(53%) and automated incident-response processes (44%).
Companies are also getting better at enacting policies to govern
their use of AI, with 81% of organizations reporting some degree of
implementation. Roughly a quarter of respondents said their policies
were fully in place, while 57% said they were partially in place.
Still, CISOs have concerns about AI-related security weaknesses in
their organizations. Roughly three-quarters say their biggest
concern is accidental data leakage through public tools, while 56% cite
shadow AI and employee misuse of tools as a fear.
cybersecuritydive.com
AI Threat Grows
Survey Surfaces Greater CISO Appreciation for Scope of AI Threat
A survey of 500 CISOs working for U.S. organizations with more than 500
employees finds 31% acknowledging they have already seen unauthorized
data exfiltration between software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications and
AI tools and platforms.
Conducted by the market research firm Censuswide on behalf of Vorlon, a
provider of a data security platform, the survey also finds 87% admit
they are unable to see what data AI tools are exchanging with SaaS
applications.
Nevertheless, well over three quarters (79%) claim to have a
comprehensive ability to map data flows across SaaS and AI tools and
platforms, with 77% also noting they have comprehensive behavioral
monitoring at the data-layer in place.
Vorlon CEO Amir Khayat said that suggests there is a significant gap
between the confidence CISOs have in their existing tools and what is
actually occurring in their IT environments. For example, a full 89%
claim to have strong or comprehensive OAuth token governance
capabilities. However, 27% of the breaches involving SaaS involved a
compromised OAuth token or application programming interface (API) key,
the survey finds.
Nearly all (99%) were breached despite having on average 13 dedicated
security tools, the survey finds.
Not surprisingly, 86% of respondents also noted their organization
plans to increase their SaaS security budget in 2026, while 84% plan to
increase their AI security budget.
securityboulevard.com
Iran Targeting Tech Companies?
Iran Calls U.S. Tech Companies ‘Legitimate Targets,’ Threatens to Attack
U.S.-based tech companies with operations in the Middle East could
come under attack as Iran continues to target U.S. allies and businesses
in the region, as its war with the United States and Israel
continues to rage.
At the same time, the related battle in cyberspace continues to expand,
with pro-Iranian groups expanding their targets, with Flashpoint
intelligence analysts writing that “cyber operations have shifted
toward high-stakes extortion and the public dissemination of sensitive
military coordinates, signaling a coordinated effort to enable future
kinetic strikes.”
Iranian systems also have become a target, and bad actors are creating
thousands of war-themed domains to run phishing campaigns, financial
fraud attacks, and other scams related to the conflict.
The various moving parts illustrate what has become modern warfare and
should no longer surprise anyone, Morey Haber, chief security advisor at
BeyondTrust, told Security Boulevard.
securityboulevard.com
Cyber at the Top: Shadow AI: The Hidden Threat Inside Your Organization
Your Next Employee Might Not Exist: LexisNexis Report Exposes the
Synthetic Identity Explosion
Trump’s FY2027 budget again targets CISA |
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AI Shopping Agent Ban
Perplexity Battles Amazon Over Shopping Agent Ban
Perplexity late Wednesday asked a federal appellate court to vacate an
injunction that would ban the artificial intelligence company's
shopping agent, Comet, from Amazon.
The ban, handed down by U.S. District Court Judge Maxine Chesney in
the Northern District of California, was temporarily stayed late
last month.
Perplexity's move comes in a dispute dating to November, when Amazon
claimed the artificial intelligence company was violating a 40-year-old
anti-hacking law, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, by "trespassing"
into Amazon's server.
The retailer alleged that Perplexity's Comet browser shopped for
users and made purchases on their behalf, even after Amazon
attempted to implement technological blocks and sent Perplexity a
cease-and-desist letter.
Chesney said in a March 9 ruling that Amazon was likely to prevail
with its legal claim and issued an order prohibiting Comet from
continuing to access the retail site.
Perplexity, which is appealing that order, disputes that it violated the
anti-hacking law. That statute broadly prohibits anyone from accessing a
computer server without authorization.
"Amazon's theory ... represents an alarming expansion of the CFAA and
corresponding state law," Perplexity argues, using an acronym for
the anti-hacking law.
"Deploying that theory against Perplexity in this suit threatens
competition and consumer choice during a critical moment in the
development of AI," Perplexity adds.
mediapost.com
Iran War Causing Price Hikes
Amazon to apply 3.5% fuel and logistics surcharge on fulfillment
The increase, averaging 17 cents per
unit for U.S. Fulfillment by Amazon services, comes as supply chains
grapple with fuel costs tied to the Iran war.
Amazon will soon levy a 3.5% fuel and logistics-related surcharge on
fulfillment services for third-party sellers as the e-commerce giant
battles elevated operating costs, according to an announcement
Thursday.
Starting April 17, the surcharge will be applied to fulfillment fees
for the company’s Fulfillment by Amazon service in the U.S. and Canada,
in addition to Remote Fulfillment with FBA shipping from the U.S. to
Canada, Mexico and Brazil. On May 2, the surcharge will also begin
applying to Buy with Prime in the U.S. and Multi-Channel Fulfillment
services in the U.S. and Canada.
The surcharge, which Amazon did not provide an end date for, is
calculated based on seller fulfillment fees rather than the sale price
of the items, according to Amazon. The 3.5% levy equates to an
additional 17 cents per unit for U.S. Fulfillment by Amazon services,
although it varies based on item size and dimensions.
Amazon is joining the list of major logistics providers that are
hitting shippers with price hikes and elevated surcharges as fuel costs
rise amid the war in Iran. UPS and FedEx’s fuel surcharge rates continue
to climb, and the U.S. Postal Service plans to launch an 8%
temporary price hike on package shipping services April 26.
retaildive.com
Amazon job text scam warning signs
Investors press Amazon, Microsoft and Google on water, power use in US
data centers |
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Nassau County, NY: Cops Collar Brooklyn Woman in Alleged $50K Nassau Shoplifting
Spree
A Brooklyn woman is facing a felony charge after what Nassau County detectives
describe as a months-long retail theft investigation stretching across Elmont
and nearby Nassau County communities. Investigators say they linked more than 27
retail store entries to the same suspect and tallied over $50,000 in allegedly
stolen merchandise before tracking her down and arresting her without incident.
Detectives arrested 41-year-old Magdalena Samsin of Brooklyn and charged her
with second-degree grand larceny, according to Daily Voice. Investigators say
that between August and April, Samsin entered more than 27 retail stores,
removed merchandise valued at more than $50,000, and walked out with the goods.
Her preliminary arraignment took place at First District Court in Hempstead on
Saturday, April 4.
hoodline.com
Washington County, OR: Armed robbery at Washington Square Mall triggers
multi-agency chase into Washington state; no arrests
Two suspects robbed a jewelry store at Washington Square Mall Saturday evening
using a sledgehammer and took off in a car, sparking a multi-agency pursuit that
crossed into Washington state, according to the Tigard Police Department and the
Washington County Sheriff's Office. Tigard police responded to the armed robbery
just after 6 p.m. Saturday, April 4, after the suspects smashed glass display
cases at a jewelry store inside the mall, the department said in a post on X at
7:30 p.m.
kgw.com
Savannah, GA: Woman accused in Best Buy theft ring arrested at Savannah Target
A woman already accused of being part of a major theft ring at a Best Buy in
Savannah is now accused of trying to steal from another store. Savannah Police
arrested Leslie Bostic at the Target on Victory Drive last week. Employees told
police she walked out of the store with $1,200 worth of merchandise on
Wednesday, making no effort to pay. Police say she refused to speak with them
and they took her to jail. She’s being held on no bond. Her charges in the Best
Buy case, where police say $40,000 in merchandise was stolen by six different
suspects in January, is still pending. Bostic is now banned from Target.
wtoc.com
Miami Beach, FL: Man can’t stop stealing sunglasses from South Beach store ―
even while out on bond
According to Miami Beach police, officers arrested Juan Carlos Manzaneraz-Juarez
on March 8 for walking into an open sunglasses store on Lincoln Road and making
off with two pairs of shades. He would later be released from jail on a $2,500
bond for a grand theft charge. Investigators said the one-man crime wave
centered on Solstice Sunglasses at 805 Lincoln Road. Rather than walk into the
store during business hours and steal two pairs of shades, Manzaneraz-Juarez
went to the store at around 2:30 a.m. on March 26, shattered the glass window
with a metal pipe, crawled under the door frame and “selected” about 20 pairs of
sunglasses from the display before leaving, according to a report from the Miami
Beach Police Department. Cops said the heist totaled in upwards of $12,000 worth
of shades. But they said he wasn’t finished.
local10.com
Charlotte, NC: 4 arrested, $2K+ in stolen merchandise recovered after retail
sting at Charlotte’s SouthPark Mall
Grand Island, NE: Shoplifters steal over $1,800 in items from Grand Island
Menards location
Sparks, NV: 3 arrested in anti-retail theft operation in Sparks
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Shootings & Deaths
New York, NY: Man with 13-inch knife shot by NYPD after wreaking havoc at
Manhattan store
Police officers shot a man with a 13-inch kitchen knife who confronted them
after allegedly causing a raucous at a grocery store in Manhattan on Monday,
according to officials. Surveillance video from inside the store shows a man in
a blue sweatshirt banging on the window from outside, with a large knife in his
hand. Store employees say they locked the door from the inside and called 911.
Officers arrived within minutes, police said at an early-morning press
conference. The knife-wielding man allegedly confronted them. Police officials
say multiple verbal commands to drop the knife went ignored, and at one point,
the man allegedly quickly advanced toward the officers with the knife extended
outward. He got close to them, police officials say. One of the officers fired a
gun. The man in the blue sweatshirt was hit. The 53-year-old was taken to a
hospital, where he was undergoing surgery on Monday. He is expected to survive.
nbcnewyork.com
Gadsden, AL: 16-Year-Old Charged Following Saturday Shooting Incident at East
Gadsden Walmart
Authorities have released additional details following a shooting incident
Saturday afternoon in the parking lot of the East Gadsden Walmart that resulted
in the arrest of a 16-year-old suspect. According to the Gadsden Police
Department, officers responded to the store at approximately 12:30 p.m. after
receiving reports of gunfire in the parking lot. Investigators determined that a
dispute between two individuals began inside the store and continued outside
into the parking lot. During the altercation, the 16-year-old suspect reportedly
produced a firearm, ran, and attempted to shoot the other individual involved in
the dispute. Police said the intended target was not struck, but two occupied
vehicles in the parking lot were hit by gunfire during the incident.
Fortunately, no injuries were reported.
weisradio.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Myrtle Beach, SC: Police investigate juvenile fight at Coastal Grand Mall
Police in Myrtle Beach are investigating a fight involving juveniles at Coastal
Grand Mall after video and social media posts circulated online. The Myrtle
Beach Police Department said it is aware of the video and related posts
involving juveniles at the mall on April 4. Based on preliminary information,
police said, the incident began as a verbal interaction and escalated into a
physical altercation.
wpde.com
Newark, DE: Delaware State Police arrest second teen tied to Christiana Mall
armed robbery
Delaware State Police announced the arrest of a 17-year-old Wilmington male in
connection with the March 21 armed robbery at Christiana Mall, where two victims
were targeted near the JCPenney entrance during the evening rush. The arrest
comes after investigators linked the teen to the robbery while he was already in
custody on a separate case. Troopers initially responded to the mall around 6:45
p.m. and quickly located a suspect matching descriptions provided at the scene.
“The teen ran away, and troopers chased him across multiple lanes of Route 1
before taking him into custody,” according to Delaware State Police. A loaded
handgun was recovered from the suspect’s waistband at the time of his arrest.
shorenewsnetwork.com
Calera, AL: Theft suspects flee with children in car, leave 2 children at
Walmart on Easter
Suspects are in custody after a police chase with children in the car on Easter.
According to Calera police, officers were notified of a reported theft at a
Walmart Sunday afternoon. After responding, the suspects fled the scene with two
children in the car. They left two other children at the Walmart, according to
police. The suspects were speeding and driving recklessly, leading police on a
chase. When authorities learned there were children in the car, they backed off
the suspects’ vehicle, but the suspects continued speeding and driving
recklessly. The vehicle’s tires were later spiked by the Alabama Law Enforcement
Agency after the suspects started to drive the wrong way on I-65. The suspects
then got out of the car and ran before being caught.
witn.com
Brisbane, Australia: Designer shop ram-raided with stolen Mercedes in Brisbane
for handbags worth thousands
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•
C-Store –
Philadelphia, PA – Robbery
•
C-Store – Rockford, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Tracy, CA –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – San Antonio,
TX – Robbery
•
C-Store – Groton, CT –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Merced
County, CA – Robbery
•
Cellphone – Odenton,
MD – Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Mobile, AL
– Burglary
•
Collectables –
Stockton, CA – Burglary
•
Dollar – Talmo, GA –
Armed Robbery
•
Gaming – Chicago –
Burglary
•
Gas Station –
Kirkland, WA – Burglary
•
Gas Station – Chicago,
IL – Robbery
•
Gas Station –
Burlington, VT – Armed Robbery
•
Gas Station – Smith’s
Station, AL – Armed Robbery
•
Hardware – Grand
Island, NE - Robbery
•
Jewelry – Corpus
Christi, TX – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Washington
County, OR – Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry – Albuquerque, NM – Robbery
•
Jewelry - Williamsburg, VA - Burglary
•
Jewelry - Newport News VA - Robbery
•
Jewelry - Corpus Christi, TX - Robbery
•
Jewelry - Lynnwood WA - Robbery
•
Jewelry - Palmdale, CA - Robbery
•
Jewelry - Boca Raton, FL – Robbery
•
Liquor – Hartford, CT
– Armed Robbery
•
Liquor – Houston, TX –
Burglary
•
Pharmacy – Mobile, AL
– Burglary
•
Restaurant – Groton,
CT - Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant - St Lucie,
FL - Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 22 robberies
• 8 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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