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Everon Launches Active Video Monitoring Services for Proactive Threat
Detection and Response
Industry-leading
integrator expands suite of remote video monitoring services to include
solution for faster, more effective response to help deter crime before
it escalates.
Irving,
TX. [January 29, 2026] –
Everon, LLC
(“Everon” or “the Company”), a leading security integrator and premier
provider of commercial security, video, fire and life safety solutions
ranked the
third-largest security company in the U.S. by SDM Magazine,
announced today the expansion of its remote video monitoring portfolio
with an enhanced active video monitoring service designed to deliver
proactive threat detection and response for commercial environments at
its UL-Listed redundant monitoring centers.
Leveraging existing camera systems and infrastructure, the solution
enables real-time intervention to help deter unauthorized activity
before incidents escalate. When suspicious behavior is detected, whether
indoors or outdoors at a protected facility, Everon monitoring agents
can activate lights and audio alerts, issue personalized voice warnings,
and, if necessary, dispatch authorities or guards – ultimately helping
prevent crime and ensuring a faster, more effective response across a
wide range of commercial applications.
Click here to read more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Seattle's War on Retail Theft
King County cracks down on repeat retail theft
Prosecutors are charging more retail theft cases as part of a push to
address persistent theft by repeat offenders targeting the same
stores across the Seattle area.
King County prosecutors charged 640 felony economic and property
crime cases in 2025, the highest total since 2019, according to the
King County Prosecuting Attorney's Office. That compares with 506 in
2024 and 367 cases in 2023.
Prosecutor spokesperson Casey McNerthney attributed the increased
charges to more cases being referred to prosecutors by police. "With
the decline in violent crime, officers have more time to follow through
and refer cases for prosecution," McNerthney told Axios.
Over the last two weeks, King County prosecutors have filed three felony
organized retail theft cases involving Ulta Beauty locations in North
Seattle, according to the prosecuting attorney's office. The cases
involve two defendants, including one suspected of 24 thefts over 55
days from North Seattle to Federal Way.
Charging documents describe repeated thefts of fragrances and other
beauty products, with investigators relying on store surveillance,
loss-prevention records and, in some cases, merchandise trackers to
link incidents across weeks or months.
"The King County Prosecutor's Office is sending the right message –
breaking up these retail theft operations is critical for the health of
our region's retailers," said Downtown Seattle Association President
& CEO Jon Scholes.
A Seattle-focused report from Challenge Seattle and the Washington
Retail Association describes organized retail theft as a
repeat-offender problem that often takes months of coordination among
retailers, police and prosecutors before cases can be aggregated for
felony charges.
axios.com
Repeat Offenders, High Dollar Thefts
Fueling Retail Crime?
UK: Force's focus on repeat shoplifters behind success
A police force with a top record for
tackling shoplifting said its success was down to focusing on prolific
offenders and shops with a high number of thefts.
Cleveland
Police said it solved 33% of reported shoplifting offences in the last
year, above the national rate of 23%, which made it "top of the country".
Supt Alan O'Donoghue said a "significant proportion" of offences
happened in a "small number of repeat locations", with about 40
offenders found responsible for about a sixth of all crimes.
The force said it received 8,876 reports of retail crime offences in
the last year. Over two days in December, officers charged two
people with 53 shoplifting offences. O'Donoghue, the force's strategic
lead for retail crime, said: "We'll continue to prioritise the
identification, arrest and prosecution of prolific, abusive and violent
retail offenders."
The force said it was working to identify root causes of shop thefts,
as well as helping with staff training and supporting witnesses and
victims. Shop workers often suffered the impacts of the crime, including
verbal and physical abuse, O'Donoghue said.
"They have to come into work worrying when the next offence will occur,
we absolutely take this seriously and understand the impact this has on
employees," he said. He added some shops were not reporting crimes
because they felt police would not take the matter seriously.
"That's absolutely not the case, we need retailers to report crime
that's occurring within their stores because then we can deploy to the
right areas."
bbc.com
Will Combating Organized Retail Crime
Act Pass This Year?
Congress moves closer to federal cargo theft enforcement mandate
The
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, which has heavy implications
for trucking and cargo theft, has made it out of committee and faces
a wider vote as Congress readies to pass major legislation.
CORCA, as the bill is known, would establish an Organized Retail and
Supply Chain Crime Coordination Center within Homeland Security
Investigations (HSI) at the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
That federal body would enhance collaboration between federal, state
and local law enforcement agencies, along with retail crime
associations, to create a cohesive strategy to combat these crimes and
share valuable resources, bill's sponsors said when it was originally
introduced in April.
The bill would also amend Title 18 of the U.S. Code to allow criminal
forfeiture for convictions related to interstate shipments,
transportation of stolen goods, and sale or receipt of stolen goods.
This bill followed two different versions in both prior Congressional
terms that failed. Yet on Jan. 13, this version of CORCA passed the
House Judiciary Committee.
"It started off as organized retail crime bill," said Scott
Cornell, VP of Transportation Risk & Strategy and Crime & Theft
Specialist for Logistiq Insurance Solutions. "But different members
within law enforcement saw it and thought, 'the bones of this bill are
such that just some added basic language around cargo theft'" could give
trucking the resources it needs to fight back against the growing cargo
theft problem.
overdriveonline.com
Another City Sees Crime Fall -- But
Theft is Up
Los Alamos PD Releases 2025 Crime Statistics
Overall, crime reported to police in all categories fell 20%,
with Crimes Against Persons increasing from 47 to 56, Crimes Against
Property decreasing from 153 to 110, and Crimes Against Society
decreasing from 22 to 12.
Consistent with crime reported to police in 2024, larceny/theft and
fraud cases continue to drive higher crime rates within the
community.
losalamosreporter.com
Chattanooga police report overall decrease in crimes in 2025
New statistics show crime down in Yonkers
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The Key To Strong LP Teams
Building Loss Prevention Teams That Attract — and Keep — Top Talent
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retail risk grows more complex, the strength of a retailer’s loss
prevention team increasingly depends on its ability to attract and
retain skilled professionals. While technology and analytics
continue to evolve, retailers are finding that people remain the most
critical component of an effective LP strategy.
One of the foundational factors in retention is role clarity. Loss
prevention professionals are more likely to stay when responsibilities
are clearly defined and aligned with realistic expectations.
Positions that blend physical security, investigations, analytics and
customer interaction without proper support often lead to burnout.
Retailers that clearly separate duties — or provide adequate staffing to
manage hybrid roles — tend to see stronger engagement and longer tenure.
Training and career development are also key differentiators.
Competitive LP programs invest in structured onboarding, continuous
training and clear advancement pathways. When team members understand
how today’s role connects to future opportunities — whether within LP,
compliance or broader retail operations — they are more likely to view
the position as a long-term career rather than a stepping stone.
Compensation and benefits remain central, but retention is not
driven by pay alone. Scheduling stability, predictable workloads and
access to mental health resources all contribute to job satisfaction. LP
roles can involve high-stress situations, and organizations that
acknowledge this through supportive policies and realistic performance
metrics are better positioned to keep experienced staff.
Leadership culture plays an equally important role. Strong LP
leaders prioritize communication, transparency and trust. Teams perform
best when leaders provide clear guidance while empowering employees to
use judgment and experience in the field. Recognition for proactive work
— not just incident response — also reinforces a sense of value and
professional pride.
Finally, collaboration across departments can significantly impact
retention. LP teams that are integrated into store operations,
merchandising and corporate decision-making tend to feel less isolated
and more effective. When LP insights are respected and acted upon,
professionals see tangible results from their work, reinforcing
engagement.
In an increasingly competitive labor market, retailers that treat
loss prevention as a professional discipline — supported by training,
leadership and thoughtful workplace practices — are better
positioned to build resilient teams capable of adapting to evolving
risk.
Super Bowl's Massive Security Presence
Draws New Scrutiny
DHS confirms Super Bowl security role amid fears of ICE enforcement —
but details remain unclear
DHS has traditionally had a presence
at the Super Bowl in years past
With Super Bowl LX less than two weeks away, federal officials have
confirmed that the Department of Homeland Security will be involved in
security for the Bay Area’s biggest event in years — a routine role
the department plays at major sporting events — even as viral reports
and heightened national tensions have fueled fears that immigration
enforcement could be tied to the game.
DHS said this week it will be involved in Super Bowl security but
declined to detail what personnel or operations that presence will
include. The lack of specificity has led to questions locally about
whether immigration enforcement could be part of the federal role,
despite the department’s long-standing involvement in large-scale event
security.
DHS — which includes agencies such as Customs and Border Protection and
Immigration and Customs Enforcement — routinely has a presence at major
events like the Super Bowl. Under the Biden Administration, the
department sent 600 personnel, including ICE and Customs and Border
Protection agents, to Arizona in 2023 to assist with security for the
game.
The Super Bowl would typically not be the setting for sweeping
immigration raids, Kayyem said. At most, ICE involvement would
likely be limited to targeted enforcement tied to existing
investigations. But heightened political tensions have blurred those
distinctions.
mercurynews.com
New Opportunities to Boost Workplace
Safety
4 Shifts That Will Redefine EHS in 2026
It’s a new year, and that means
resolving to focus on new opportunities to improve workplace safety.
For many safety professionals, technology has been regarded as a
nice-to-have, not a must-have. That’s changing in 2026. Those who
are harnessing technology’s breadth of possibilities today are poised to
become leaders of tomorrow.
There are so many things safety professionals don’t have complete
control over, but leveraging artificial intelligence and technology?
That’s firmly in your grasp. The more difficult question becomes how
to leverage all the tools in your toolbox to reduce injuries and boost
buy-in.
EHS leaders are entering 2026 managing environments where the pace of
work has outgrown the systems designed to support it. And the results
from a 2025 Benchmark Gensuite survey show it: Injury frequency and
severity have remained flat or worsened for more than half of EHS
leaders in the past year, a clear sign that traditional tools aren’t
keeping up with operational reality. Organizations have begun
modernizing, but the gap between intent and impact is still widening.
ehstoday.com
Economic Blackout TODAY
Nationwide economic shutdown set for Friday in protest of ICE policies
Hundreds of organizations from across the country are staging a
nationwide economic shutdown on Friday to protest the Trump
administration’s immigration enforcement policies and demand an end to
ICE operations.
Activists are calling for a day of “no work, no school [and] no
shopping” in response to the fatal shootings of at least four people by
federal immigration officials in the past two months — including the
high-profile shootings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti in Minneapolis this
month.
“The people of the Twin Cities have shown the way for the whole
country,” organizers of the ICE Out Nationwide Shutdown said in a press
release. “To stop ICE’s reign of terror, we need to SHUT IT DOWN.”
Participants in at least 46 states are expected to take part in the
general strike — a “blackout day” modeled after last week’s “ICE
Out” protest in Minneapolis, when hundreds of businesses closed their
doors in a statewide general strike, which was followed by a protest
march and rally despite a wind chill of 30 below zero.
nydailynews.com
Is Amazon’s Exit From Fresh and Go Banners, Pivoting to Whole Foods
Market and New Formats, Common Sense?
In-N-Out Burger, H-E-B, Wegmans among Glassdoor’s ‘Best Places to Work’
Survey: Super Bowl viewers expected to spend $129 on average
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
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If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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Closing the Execution Gap
Retail Inventory Management Edition

Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility is a powerful, cutting-edge solution
designed to revolutionize inventory management for modern retailers. It is a
purpose-built solution to enable retailers to close the gap in inventory
management.
In a market where 70% of retailers are stuck in weekly struggles with inventory
accuracy, Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility empowers businesses to move
beyond reactive approaches and achieve operational excellence.
What Sets Winners Apart?
Retail success isn’t just about managing challenges- it’s about strategically
connecting the dots between omnichannel optimization, sourcing strategies,
and advanced technology adoption. The latest study by IHL Research
reveals key insights into what top-performing retailers are doing differently:
-
95% more likely to deploy AI solutions: Winners use
AI to predict demand, optimize inventory placement, and automate processes
for greater accuracy and efficiency.
-
76% more likely to leverage RFID technology: RFID
enables precise inventory tracking, reducing errors and improving stock
replenishment.
-
54% higher profits by 2025 through supply chain
diversification: Winners adopt agile strategies to navigate disruptions
and seize new opportunities.
Their Secret? Focusing on integrated systems that react to
problems by preventing them from happening. This proactive approach creates a
compounding effect: operational efficiency fuels innovation, which drives
sustained growth and profitability.
By combining advanced technology with strategic foresight, these retailers are
pulling ahead and creating a competitive edge that’s hard to match.
Download the full IHL Research report here to uncover the game-changing
insights. Learn how
Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility can help solve your real-time
inventory challenges. |
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Retail Cybersecurity Should be Top
Priority
Consumers Reluctant to Shop at Stores That Don't Take Cybersecurity
Seriously
The retail sector must adapt as
consumers become more cybersecurity-conscious. Increased attack
transparency is a good place to start.
While it's nearly impossible for retail organizations to avoid
cybersecurity incidents these days,
implementing effective security protocols should be a top priority
as consumers become more security-savvy.
Threat actors target the retail sector because shops hold highly
coveted information, like financial and purchasing history, that can
be abused in fraud scams. And unlike more regulated sectors, such as
energy or financial services, that information may not be as tightly
protected, especially among mom-and-pop shops with fewer resources.
Ransomware activity ramped up against United Kingdom retailers last
year, and threats to customer data continue across stores worldwide.
Athletic footwear and apparel giant Nike may be the latest victim.
But as attacks escalate and threat actors become more sophisticated,
so do consumers. Eighty-eight percent of consumers "think twice
before shopping at retailers that have experienced a cyberattack,"
according to a new SOTI report. Twenty-two percent would avoid a
retailer altogether after a breach; the rest would take precautions,
such as avoiding the merchant's website or social media channels or
withholding personal information when shopping.
Researchers emphasized that "security breaches erode trust, causing
many [consumers] to avoid affected retailers." High-profile
cyberattacks that regularly emerge "have heightened consumer concerns
about data security."
Companies commonly state in regulatory disclosure filings that they are
bolstering security protocols after an attack. But people are left
wondering: Why weren't those implemented sooner?
Growing security vigilance requires a new approach. Employing
effective strategies from the start, paired with increased transparency
following an incident, may help reclaim some of that trust.
darkreading.com
The Push & Pull of Software Security
Requirements
Federal pivot on software security oversight could complicate vendor
strategies
Software companies cheered the
elimination of a government-wide attestation mandate. What comes next
could be messy.
The Trump administration’s elimination of a security attestation
requirement for federal software vendors could change how those
companies demonstrate their products’ security to customers in the
government and beyond.
On Jan. 23, the White House’s Office of Management and Budget
rescinded a Biden administration directive that told agencies to
require their software providers to fill out a security attestation form
developed by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency. The
memo said the attestation requirement “imposed unproven and burdensome
software accounting processes that prioritized compliance over genuine
security investments.”
OMB’s move to scrap the attestation requirement leaves agencies to
decide for themselves how much information to require from vendors about
their products’ security. The decision immediately prompted sharply
divided reactions from the cybersecurity community, with some experts
warning that the move would undermine efforts to push companies toward
better security practices.
cybersecuritydive.com
Hundreds of Threat Groups Disrupted
Google disrupts proxy network used by 550+ threat groups
“In a single seven day period in January 2026, GTIG observed over 550
individual threat groups that we track utilizing IP addresses
tracked as Ipidea exit nodes to obfuscate their activities, including
groups from China, DPRK, Iran and Russia. The activities included access
to victim SaaS environments, on-premises infrastructure, and password
spray attacks,” Google Threat Intelligence Group said on Thursday.
helpnetsecurity.com
Google To Pay Android Users $135M To End Data Use Suit
CISA, security researchers warn FortiCloud SSO flaw is under attack |
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Using AI to Determine Who's Getting
Laid Off?
An Amazon worker used an AI tool to flag which roles were on the
chopping block
Amazon on Wednesday said it plans to
lay off 16,000 corporate employees.
An Amazon employee used an AI tool to analyze internal conversations
and compile a list of potential teams and organizations affected by
layoffs, according to messages viewed by Business Insider.
Amazon announced layoffs on Wednesday, saying it would cut 16,000
corporate employees. The company hasn't publicly revealed where it
plans to make cuts. The employee's list is AI-generated and appears to
be based on internal Slack conversations, so it may contain
inaccuracies. Amazon did not respond to a request to verify the list.
Business Insider edited the list for length and clarity. The employee
used an AI tool called Pippin to make the list, which Amazon
employees have been using increasingly for writing and reviewing
documents.
"Used Pippin to help me parse conversations from today," the employee
wrote on the company's Slack. "Please note that this info may not be
100% accurate. Take care, everyone!"
Business Insider independently reviewed internal messages related to
Amazon layoffs within the AI cloud service Bedrock, the cloud data
warehouse service Redshift, the ProServe consulting team, the Prime
subscription service, and the last-mile Delivery Experience team.
Wednesday's round of layoffs marks the latest mass job cut since
October, when Amazon shed 14,000 roles. Amazon employs more than 1.5
million people globally, though its corporate workforce represents a
relatively small share of that total, at roughly 350,000 employees.
businessinsider.com
The Rise of Online Grocery Shopping
Grocery e-commerce is soaring, but regional grocers remain in a tough
spot
While average order frequency grew
in 2025, the likes of Walmart and Amazon created a tricky digital
competitive environment for traditional chains.
Grocery e-commerce in 2025 hit a slew of monthly record-highs,
cementing the shopping method as “no longer an alternative channel” but
as a “dominant habit,” according to Brick Meets Click.
Nearly every month in 2025 saw year-over-year growth in e-grocery
sales, and December was no exception, with sales surging to a record
$12.7 billion, up 32% year-over-year. The final month of 2025 also saw
the online share of total grocery spending reach 19%, up 430 basis
points year-over-year, as order frequency rates increased, per Brick
Meets Click’s most recent monthly findings.
While December’s results emphasize grocery e-commerce’s banner year,
regional grocers remain in a tough spot.
grocerydive.com
Officials approve tax break for proposed $500M Amazon warehouse in South
Fulton
Nvidia, Microsoft, Amazon in talks to invest up to $60 billion in OpenAI |
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$10M ORC Enterprise
Attorney General Mayes Announces Sentencing in $10 Million Organized
Retail Theft and Trafficking Enterprise
Attorney General Kris Mayes today announced the sentencing of Adam
Polansky after his participation in a larger organized retail theft
enterprise responsible for approximately $10 million in stolen
merchandise. Polansky was sentenced to 6 years in the Arizona
Department of Corrections and ordered to pay $18,598.38 in restitution
for his role in an enterprise victimizing local retail establishments.
"With organized retail crime still on the rise, I want criminals to be
on notice: if you are victimizing an Arizona retailer, my office will
find you and hold you accountable," said Attorney General Kris
Mayes. "Organized retail crime impacts Arizona retailers, consumers, and
community members who simply want their local neighborhood shops to feel
safe again. Rest assured, it's a top priority at the Attorney General's
office."
The Arizona Attorney General’s Office Special Agents worked with
local retail loss prevention partners to identify Polansky as a booster
in an organized retail theft enterprise that victimized retail locations
across Maricopa County from January 1, 2018 through December 31, 2024.
They determined Polansky received $4,357.12 in payments from a fencing
location. The retail loss prevention investigation identified over
$18,000.00 in known thefts associated to Polansky.
On November 21, 2025, Polansky pled guilty to one count of Organized
Retail Theft, One Count of Trafficking in Stolen Property in the Second
Degree, and one count of Illegally Conducting an Enterprise. On January
5, 2026, Defendant was sentenced to 6 years in the Arizona Department
of Corrections and ordered to pay $18,598.38 in restitution to the
victim.
azag.gov
$4.4M Organized Jewelry Theft Ring
New York Man Admits Fencing Jewelry Stolen from Mall Stores and Kiosks
Across the US
On Wednesday a Brooklyn, NY man pleaded guilty in Bridgeport to an
offense related to his buying and selling jewelry stolen from mall-based
stores and kiosks across the country. Salim Sakal, 55, waived his right
to be indicted and pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Kari A.
Dooley. The plea was announced by David Sullivan, US Attorney for the
District of Connecticut and PJ O’Brien, Special Agent in Charge of the
new Haven Division of the FBI. According to court documents and
statements made in court, between May 2023 and April 2024, an
organized jewelry theft ring of Colombian nationals burglarized jewelry
stores and kiosks in malls in Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, New
Jersey, Ohio, and Virginia. The total losses from the burglaries exceed
$4.4 million. Members of the conspiracy also cased additional
jewelry stores and kiosks in Iowa, Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois, and
Delaware. Sakal pleaded guilty to conspiracy to sell and receive stolen
goods, an offense that carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five
years. He has agreed to pay restitution of $2,471,457, jointly and
severally with others convicted in this case. Sakal is released on a
$1,000,000 bond pending sentencing, which is scheduled for April 17.
greenwichfreepress.com
Dallas, TX: Highland Park jewelry store hit by $500,000 burglary just
before winter storm
A Highland Park jewelry store is working to recover after thieves stole
nearly half a million dollars in merchandise in a burglary that took
less than four minutes, just hours before a winter storm moved into
North Texas. Surveillance video shows three men breaking into YLANG 23
shortly after midnight on Thursday. Police say the suspects used a
sledgehammer to smash their way inside, shattering glass cases and
taking nearly every piece of jewelry before fleeing the scene. Police
estimate the total loss—including stolen jewelry, property damage and
equipment—exceeds $500,000. "Between the jewelry, the damage to the
store and everything else, it's a staggering amount," Alysa Teichman
said. As investigators continue working to identify the suspects, the
Teichmans say they are leaning on community support as they face what
they describe as a different kind of storm.
cbsnews.com
Hudson, NH: NYC man accused of stealing hundreds of OTC medications in
NH
A Staten Island man is being held without bail after police said he
carried out a coordinated retail theft operation, stealing 455
containers of over-the-counter medications from Walmart and several
Hannaford grocery stores before fleeing from officers. As police moved
to arrest him, Shearin allegedly resisted and ran from the store.
Officers chased him across the parking lot and apprehended him by the
nearby McDonald’s. Police said Shearin tried to get into a black 2025
Nissan SUV with New York plates during the chase. The vehicle was
seized, and a search warrant allegedly uncovered 455 items of
over-the-counter medications — Tylenol, Zyrtec, Nexium, Nicorette,
Motrin, Dulcolax, Nexium, Pepcid, Breathe Right nasal strips and more —
packed into bags. Police said the store’s asset protection employee also
alleged Shearin had “numerous open cases around the area regarding past
thefts with Walmart.” The affidavit states GPS data obtained from the
vehicle showed it had stopped at several Walmart and Hannaford
supermarkets in New Hampshire, including locations in Salem, Bedford,
Seabrook, Manchester, Derry, Londonderry and Hudson.
bostonherald.com
Miami, FL: Smoke Shops Targeted in Series of Burglaries, Over $10,000 in
Merchandise Stolen
Houston, TX: Man wanted after allegedly sprinting out of outlet store
with over $1,500 worth of stolen sunglasses
Chicago, IL: Three people arrested after $4K Lululemon heist in West
Loop
Jacksonville, FL: Florida doctor accused of stealing nearly $3K worth of
merchandise at Target
Iowa City, IA: Man accused of stealing $2,100 in comic books from Iowa
City store
Apple Valley, CA: Three Arrested for $800 Theft and Conspiracy to Commit
Burglary in Apple Valley Target
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Shootings & Deaths
Mishawaka, IN: Man dies from accidental gunshot to head at Discount Tire store
Authorities in Indiana say a man died this week in an accidental shooting at a
Mishawaka-area tire shop. According to Mishawaka police, 29-year-old Curtiss
Walker died of an accidental gunshot wound to the head inside an office in a
Discount Tire store Wednesday evening. The St. Joseph County coroner’s office
ruled Walker’s death an accident. Police said a nearby shots-fired call that
occurred shortly before the investigation into the man’s death began appears to
be unrelated.
kwqc.com
Edmonton, AB, Canada: West Edmonton Mall locked down for 2nd time in a week
after gun fired, weapon spotted
West Edmonton Mall was put on lockdown over the lunch hour on Thursday after a
gun was fired, forcing shoppers and staff to take shelter at the back of stores
and restaurants. Just before 12:30 p.m., police said two males were reportedly
walking near the BRBN St. area of the mall when one of them discharged what
appeared to be a gun at the other. Several reports from people inside the mall
indicated at least one gun shot could be heard near that area of the mall. EPS
officers responded to the weapons complaints, which put the mall on lockdown for
about an hour before it was lifted and police said there was no further danger
to the public. After it was lifted, police were seen investigating in an area in
front of the Boston Pizza on BRBN St., which is home to many restaurants and
bars. A bullet hole was spotted on a stair and a casing on the floor in the area
blocked off by police tape No injuries were reported, police said in a later
update Thursday afternoon. There’s been no word on any arrests.
globalnews.ca
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Palos Hills, IL: Trio Robs Cell Phone Store, Pistol Whips Owner, 1 In Custody, 2
At Large
Three masked men robbed a cell phone store at gunpoint, pistol-whipping the
store owner and making off with thousands of dollars in cash and merchandise,
Palos Hills police reports said. Around 8 p.m. Sunday, the owner told police
that three men came to his store in the 9800 block of Roberts Road and started
pistol whipping him. Police said the three proceeded to rip out the security
cameras and began filling bags with cell phones, tablets, and other cellular
products. An estimated $18,000 in cash was also reported stolen. When
police arrived on the scene, two of the suspects fled on foot. A third man,
Kevin Dugar, 48, walked with the owner down the street when officers took Dugar
into custody, police said. The Cook County State’s Attorney approved felony
charges of armed robbery, aggravated kidnapping, aggravated battery, aggravated
kidnapping, and possession of a firearm by a felon.
patch.com
Norwalk, CA: Suspect arrested after hours long standoff at sporting goods store
A man who barricaded himself inside a sporting goods store in Norwalk early
Thursday was taken into custody after a standoff that lasted several hours. The
incident began around 3:07 a.m. at Turner’s Outdoorsman on the 11300 block of
Firestone Boulevard, according to the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.
Deputies said the suspect entered the business through the roof, climbing in
through an air conditioning unit before making his way inside. Because of
the type of merchandise stored in the business, the department’s Special
Enforcement Bureau was called to the scene, along with crisis negotiators who
worked to communicate with the barricaded suspect. After roughly seven hours,
the suspect was taken into custody without further incident, according to Sky5
reporter Rich Pickett.
ktla.com
Gwinnett County, GA: Police trying to track down serial burglar following latest
break-in at Gwinnett jewelry shop
Des Moines, IA: Third suspect in string of central Iowa convenience store
burglaries arrested
Milwaukee, WI: Man faces nine burglary charges across Milwaukee area
Chicago, IL: Chicago Police warn of armed robbery spree of businesses in South
Loop, Pilsen
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C-Store - Des Moines,
IA – Burglary
•
C-Store – Lee County,
MS – Burglary
•
C-Store – Bellmead, TX
– Burglary
•
C-Store – Orondo, WA –
Burglary
•
Cellphone - Palos
Hills, IL – Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Miami, Fl –
Robbery
•
Collectables – Edmond,
OK – Burglary
•
Collectables – Iowa
City, IA – Burglary
•
Dollar – Ocala, FL –
Armed Robbery
•
Dollar- Eutaw, AL –
Armed Robbery
•
Eyewear - Houston, TX
- Robbery
•
Gaming – Chicago, IL –
Burglary
•
Guns – Norwalk, CA –
Burglary
•
Jewelry – Gwinnett
County, GA - Burglary
• Jewelry – Staten Island, NY – Robbery
• Jewelry – Fayetteville, NC – Robbery
•
Liquor – Blair County,
PA – Burglary
•
Liquor – Chicago, IL –
Burglary
•
Restaurant – Chicago,
IL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Simi
Valley, CA – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Beloit,
WI – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Seattle,
WA – Burglary
•
Target - Apple Valley,
CA - Robbery
•
Vape – Taylorsville,
IL – Burglary
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Daily Totals:
• 10 robberies
• 14 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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