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 3/4/26

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Sekura Global Announces New Promotions



Jason Davies promoted to Vice President of Strategic Partnerships for Sekura Global



Roxanne Christenson promoted to Vice President of Client Relations for Sekura Global


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

 

 

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LPRC Study Reveals Dramatic Efficiency Gains with FaceFirst® Technology


Investigators using FaceFirst® solved cases faster, uncovered more value, and built stronger cases against organized retail crime.

A Loss Prevention Research Council (LPRC) case study has demonstrated the substantial impact of FaceFirst®’s facial recognition technology on organized retail crime investigations, revealing dramatic improvements over traditional CCTV methods.

The study compared two investigators with similar backgrounds working the same case: one using FaceFirst® and the other relying on traditional CCTV reviews. The results were striking.
 

Learn more
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Previewing the D&D Daily's 'Retail Violent Fatalities Report'
Retail Violence Trends: Will 2025 Reverse 2024’s Progress?


By the D&D Daily staff

Retail violence remains one of the most serious safety challenges facing the industry, and the key question for us was whether 2025 would be a continuation of the progress seen in 2024 — or if the trend moves back in the wrong direction again.

After several years of rising violent incidents tied to retail locations, our 2024 Retail Violent Fatalities Report saw a decline in retail-related fatalities. For many loss prevention and asset protection professionals, the shift offered cautious optimism that expanded safety training, improved awareness and stronger coordination with law enforcement might be helping stabilize a troubling trend.

But as 2025 unfolded, questions began to emerge about whether that decline would hold. Our Mid-Year 2025 Retail Violent Fatalities Report, for example, saw a 25% uptick in retail fatalities.

The upcoming D&D Daily Retail Violent Fatalities Report takes a closer look at fatal incidents connected to retail locations across the United States over the past year. The report examines where these incidents occurred, the types of retail environments involved and the broader patterns shaping retail violence.

One important takeaway is that these incidents extend far beyond employee safety alone. Retail stores function as public spaces where large numbers of people interact every day, meaning violent incidents can involve customers, suspects, associates or bystanders caught in dangerous situations.

The report also highlights how certain retail formats continue to face elevated risks due to operating hours, staffing levels or the nature of the goods sold. For loss prevention teams, these realities make situational awareness and violence prevention training increasingly critical parts of store operations.

Geography is another factor. Some cities and states appear more frequently in fatal incident reporting, reflecting broader crime trends that can influence risk levels for retailers operating in those markets.

For the retail industry, the data reinforces an important point: violence prevention has become just as important as traditional theft deterrence strategies.

The full D&D Daily Retail Violent Fatalities Report is set to release this month and will provide a deeper analysis of the incidents that shaped the past year and the patterns emerging across the retail landscape.

For many in the industry, the central question remains: after the decline seen in 2024, will 2025 continue that progress — or signal a troubling reversal for retail safety?


Retailers Adopting Bodycams
5 factors driving increased bodycam adoption in retail in 2026 and beyond

Body-worn cameras aren’t a cure-all, but they provide a powerful foundation for addressing pressures such as rising aggression, theft tactics and meeting heightened customer service expectations

Body-worn cameras are becoming a common retail tool to protect customers, associates and profits. Look no further than Walmart, Kroger, Target and other major national brands that have already tested or started to roll out the technology.

For decades, the retail industry has relied on the same toolkit to deter theft, diffuse conflict and document incidents. When it comes to collecting video evidence, CCTV has been the go-to. But the environment has changed. Customer interactions are increasingly unpredictable, theft patterns are more complex, and scrutiny over how retailers investigate and resolve claims is intensifying.

It's not just retailers feeling the shift. Shoppers, too, are navigating crowded stores, tighter staffing models and heightened tension. These pressures are prompting retailers to deploy tools that proactively shape safer, more transparent interactions.

Earlier this year, Halos commissioned a national YouGov study to understand how Americans feel about body-worn cameras in everyday spaces — from stores to stadiums to public transit settings. The survey found 70% of Americans are comfortable with, or indifferent to, body-worn cameras. Further, 62% believe bodycams help deter aggression and theft, and 44% admitted they would think twice about their own behavior if they knew staff in a given setting were wearing them.

Public sentiment has fundamentally changed, and with it, the pace of adoption. Here are the key forces I believe will accelerate retail deployments of bodycams in 2026 and beyond: retailcustomerexperience.com


Booksellers Warn of Increased Violence
UK: BA warns of ‘increased’ risk to booksellers as violence towards UK shop workers ‘endemic'
The Booksellers Association (BA) has urged law enforcement and policy-makers to recognise the increased, unique challenges faced by booksellers following research from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) that found violence against shop workers is “endemic” in the UK.

According to the BRC’s Crime Report, there were 1,600 daily incidents of violence against retail workers in 2025, down from 2,000 per day in 2023/24 but still the second-highest on record and “far beyond” the 455 incidents per day pre-pandemic (2019/20).

Incidents involving physical violence remained largely unchanged from last year, at 118 per day, and there were on average 36 incidents per day involving a weapon.

Managing director of the BA, Meryl Halls, said the trade body welcomed the BRC’s work and advocacy on behalf of retailers in “highlighting the scale and seriousness of crime facing shops in the UK”.

Halls told The Bookseller their findings “reinforce what many booksellers have been experiencing: retail workers are increasingly exposed not only to theft and associated violence, but to a wider pattern of abuse that can make simply going to work a source of anxiety”, adding that: “We also welcome the government’s acknowledgement of this crisis through the protections for retail workers included in the Crime and Policing Bill. These measures are an important and long-overdue step forward.”

The bill will introduce a standalone offence for assaulting a retail worker, which will increase sentencing and provide a stronger deterrent as well as improve the visibility of violence against retail workers so that police can allocate necessary resources, the BRC says. It will also remove the £200 threshold for "low level" theft. thebookseller.com


ORC Blitzes & Prop 36 Helping Crack Down on Theft
BPD Organized Retail Theft year-end report highlights arrests, stolen property recovered
The Bakersfield Police Department’s Organized Retail Theft Unit has released its 2025 year-end report. It highlighted enforcement efforts to combat organized retail theft and protect the Bakersfield business community.

In a release, police said, “Notably, 78.7% of total arrests resulted from ORT Blitz operations, demonstrating the effectiveness of the Unit’s focused, high-visibility enforcement strategies.”

47.6% of arrests were Prop 36 eligible, reinforcing the Unit’s emphasis on holding repeat offenders accountable under enhanced sentencing guidelines, according to police.

Police said throughout 2025, the ORT Unit partnered closely with retailers, loss prevention teams, and allied law enforcement agencies to identify repeat offenders, dismantle organized theft groups, and disrupt criminal networks responsible for significant financial losses.

“BPD remains committed to safeguarding local businesses, strengthening partnerships, and utilizing data-driven enforcement strategies to address organized retail crime in the year ahead,” said in the release. bakersfieldnow.com


New crime dashboard gives Houston residents real-time access to local data

Crime Drops In Astoria During Early Months Of 2026, Data Shows

Sioux Falls’ crime rate continues trending down as population steadily grows
 



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Self-Checkout Changes LP Strategy
How Self-Checkout Is Reshaping Loss Prevention


By the D&D Daily staff

Self-checkout has become a permanent part of the modern retail experience, but its rapid expansion is continuing to reshape how loss prevention teams approach store security and shrink.

Originally introduced as a convenience tool designed to speed up checkout lines and reduce labor costs, self-checkout lanes are now present in thousands of retail locations across grocery, big-box and convenience formats. While customers have largely embraced the faster and more flexible experience, the technology has also created new operational challenges for retailers trying to balance convenience with shrink control.

Unlike traditional staffed registers, self-checkout places much of the transaction process directly in the hands of the customer. That shift has required retailers to rethink how oversight, training and technology work together to maintain accurate transactions.

Loss prevention teams are increasingly focused on what industry professionals often call “operational shrink” in self-checkout environments. Many losses stem not from intentional theft, but from scanning errors, missed items or incorrect produce codes. These types of mistakes can accumulate quickly across hundreds or thousands of transactions each day.

To address these challenges, retailers have begun expanding the role of front-end associates overseeing self-checkout areas. These employees often serve as both customer support and a first line of observation, helping shoppers correct mistakes while also monitoring unusual behavior at registers.

Technology is also playing a larger role. Some retailers are implementing systems that compare scanned items with weight sensors or camera-based recognition to detect potential mismatches. These tools can alert staff when an item may not have been properly scanned, allowing employees to intervene before a transaction is completed.

Store design is another factor receiving increased attention. Many retailers are experimenting with different layouts for self-checkout zones, including centralized monitoring areas that allow associates to observe multiple registers more easily.

For loss prevention teams, the goal is not to eliminate self-checkout but to manage it effectively as part of a broader store operations strategy.

As retailers continue refining the technology and processes behind self-checkout, the front end of the store is likely to remain one of the most important areas where operational efficiency, customer experience and loss prevention must work closely together.


Where Do Things Stand for Retailers After Tariff Ruling?
Supreme Court rules on tariffs: What retailers should do now
With the new tariff policies even after the Supreme Court’s ruling, and continued tariff uncertainty expected through 2026, prices will likely continue to rise.

After all, retailers have already captured most available supply chain efficiencies, and sourcing from a new country can’t happen quickly — these shifts require fresh supplier relationships, vetting, product testing/quality control processes, and, consequently, long lead times (often 12 to 18 months).

That won’t necessarily mean retailers will stop trying. Yet constant switches in sourcing create new risks: namely, that decades of supply chain efficiency built via strategic partnerships will become more transactional in nature, which can reduce those efficiencies and further raise costs.

Another undesired outcome of increased cost pressure — particularly for highly price-sensitive products — may be the degradation of product quality as companies try to slash costs by engineering products with cheaper materials and lower specs. That may not be good news for the consumer, as they receive less value on their purchases.

Given the above, many retailers are exploring private label opportunities to control product specs and pricing and offer value options for price-sensitive shoppers. But seizing these opportunities isn’t so simple: private labels require more sophisticated inventory management, they need to earn customer trust, and must be able to compete with major national brands.

What Retailers Should Do Now -- Four Tips: chainstoreage.com


Walgreens Closures & Layoffs
Walgreens to Lay Off Workers as Store Closures Loom
According to a report by Healthcare Finance News, Walgreens plans to eliminate 159 jobs in the Houston area beginning June 1, based on a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification (WARN) notice filed with the state of Texas.

The layoffs are tied to the closure of a distribution center that supplies Walgreens stores in the region. In addition to this, 469 positions are being cut in Illinois, the company’s home state, bringing the total number of layoffs to more than 600.

These workforce reductions follow Walgreens’ August 2025 acquisition by Sycamore Partners, a private equity firm that took the company private after years of financial pressure. newsweek.com


Papa Johns announces 300 store closures and 7% corporate layoffs

Ikea redoubles DEI efforts, will open 10 US stores this year

Podcast: A Fresh Approach to Tackling Workplace Safety Problems
 



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Cybersecurity Rising Retail Priority
Retailers Strengthen Cyber Defenses as Digital Risks Grow


By the D&D Daily staff

As retailers continue expanding e-commerce platforms, mobile apps and digital payment systems, cybersecurity is becoming an increasingly critical part of retail risk management.

While cybersecurity has long been a concern for major retailers, the growing number of digital touchpoints in the shopping experience is creating new challenges for companies of all sizes. From online orders and loyalty programs to connected inventory systems and vendor platforms, retailers now manage vast amounts of customer and operational data.

That growing digital footprint has made the retail sector an attractive target for cybercriminals seeking financial information, login credentials or access to company networks.

Industry analysts note that cyber threats facing retailers have evolved significantly in recent years. In addition to traditional data breaches targeting payment card information, retailers are now confronting ransomware attacks, credential theft and phishing campaigns aimed at employees and vendors.

In many cases, attackers attempt to gain access through third-party vendors or compromised employee accounts rather than directly targeting a retailer’s primary systems. Once inside a network, cybercriminals may attempt to access sensitive customer data, disrupt operations or deploy ransomware that can halt business systems.

For retailers, the operational impact of these incidents can be significant. Beyond potential financial losses, cyberattacks can interrupt supply chains, disrupt point-of-sale systems and damage customer trust.

As a result, many retailers are strengthening cybersecurity efforts across multiple areas of their operations. This includes increased monitoring of network activity, stronger authentication requirements for employee accounts and expanded cybersecurity training programs designed to help staff recognize phishing attempts or suspicious activity.

Retailers are also working more closely with cybersecurity specialists and technology vendors to identify vulnerabilities before they can be exploited. Regular system updates, security audits and data protection strategies have become standard practices for many companies seeking to reduce risk.

For loss prevention and asset protection teams, cybersecurity is becoming an important part of the broader security landscape. Digital threats may not occur on the sales floor, but they can have far-reaching consequences for retail operations.

As retail technology continues to evolve, protecting both physical and digital assets is likely to remain a central focus for retailers navigating an increasingly connected marketplace.


Stolen Passwords Surge
Ransomware is now less about malware and more about impersonation

Stolen passwords have replaced infectious code as the most common tactic in major breaches, Cloudflare said.

Identity has replaced malware as the biggest threat vector opening the door for ransomware attacks, Cloudflare said in an annual threat report published on Tuesday.

Hackers’ increasing use of legitimate credentials, rather than malicious code, is making it harder for defenders to detect and contain their attacks.

Cloudflare’s new report also discussed nation-state threat actors’ behavior and how artificial intelligence is changing attacks.

Ransomware began as a malware crisis, but, in recent years, attackers see greater opportunities in phishing attacks and the continuing prevalence of weak passwords. Ransomware attacks are now more likely than ever before to rely on stolen account credentials, which help hackers blend into legitimate traffic until they are ready to begin the extortion phase of their operation.

“The modern extortion landscape has shifted from a purely technical encryption challenge into a high-fidelity identity and access crisis,” Cloudflare researchers wrote in the report. “The weaponization of authorized credentials and internal collaborators has become the primary path for high-impact breaches, signaling a move beyond traditional malware toward the exploitation of legitimate access.” cybersecuritydive.com


Pro-Russia actors team with Iran-linked hackers in attacks

New Defender deployment tool streamlines Windows device onboarding

 


 

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AI's Ongoing Impact on E-Commerce
AI Product Descriptions Raise Accuracy, Compliance Questions


By the D&D Daily staff

Retailers are increasingly turning to generative artificial intelligence to produce product descriptions, marketing copy and search-optimized content across e-commerce platforms. While the technology promises speed and cost efficiency, it is also introducing new operational and compliance considerations for retail teams.

Large and mid-sized retailers are using AI tools to draft product descriptions at scale, particularly for private-label items and long-tail SKUs that historically received minimal merchandising attention. The technology can quickly generate copy tailored for different channels, including marketplace listings, brand websites and mobile apps. Retailers report improvements in time-to-list and reductions in manual content creation costs.

However, accuracy remains a key concern. AI-generated descriptions can inadvertently introduce incorrect specifications, exaggerated claims or unverified product benefits. For regulated categories such as health, beauty, supplements and electronics, inaccurate claims may create exposure under Federal Trade Commission advertising standards or state consumer protection laws. Retailers must ensure that AI outputs are reviewed against verified product data and supplier documentation before publication.

Another emerging issue is intellectual property risk. Generative models trained on broad datasets may produce language that resembles competitor copy or protected brand messaging. Legal teams are increasingly advising retailers to implement review workflows and maintain documentation of how AI-generated content is validated and edited prior to release.

Operationally, retailers are also evaluating how AI-generated content affects search performance and customer trust. While keyword-optimized descriptions can improve discoverability, overly generic or repetitive copy may reduce conversion rates or increase return activity if product expectations are not aligned with reality.

To address these risks, many retailers are adopting a “human-in-the-loop” model. AI tools generate initial drafts, while merchandising, compliance and legal teams conduct structured reviews before content goes live. Some organizations are also integrating product information management systems directly with AI platforms to limit outputs to verified product attributes.

As AI adoption accelerates in e-commerce, retailers are balancing efficiency gains with governance controls. The technology offers significant potential to streamline digital operations, but oversight frameworks will likely determine how effectively retailers manage risk while scaling AI-driven content strategies.


More Amazon Drones Take Flight
Amazon to launch drone delivery in Chicago's south suburbs

Amazon will soon offer drone delivery to customers across Chicago's southern suburbs.

In the South Suburbs, the future of delivery is taking flight. Some residents will soon have the option to receive their Amazon packages by air as the company prepares to launch its drone service from Markham and Matteson.

On Monday, Amazon gave community members a first look at its delivery drone. The aircraft weighs about 80 pounds and can deliver packages of up to 5 pounds — bringing on-demand delivery to the skies.

"We are able to operate in cold temperatures, in light precipitation, even light rain. Our wind limits are pretty robust," said Josh Brundage, senior manager of commercial operations, Amazon Prime Air. fox32chicago.com


Amazon says drone strikes damaged 3 facilities in UAE and Bahrain

Amazon plans $40 billion investment in Spain data centers


 


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Fresno, CA: Fresno Police Organized Retail Theft Tac Team targets organized retail theft
A specialized team, created to target organized retail theft, is driving down property crime and helping businesses recover stolen merchandise in the city of Fresno. The Fresno Police Department’s Organized Retail Theft Tac Team was formed after Proposition 36, also known as “The Homelessness, Drug Addiction, and Theft Reduction Act," passed in 2024. The measure changed how some retail theft cases can be charged, allowing repeated thefts that once resulted only in misdemeanor charges to be combined and filed as a felony. The department received a grant to dedicate resources to combating organized retail theft, following the passing of the measure. and police say the city is seeing results. Lieutenant Bowlan said the team wrote more than 200 search warrants connected to retail theft in 2025. This year, the team has conducted five “blitz operations,” which were described as operations where officers were able to surround theft suspects in a parking lot.  kmph.com


Two Los Angeles Men Arrested in Connection With $2,000 Retail Theft at Barstow Nike Outlet
Two Los Angeles men were arrested Sunday in connection with a $2,000 retail theft at the Nike Outlet in Barstow, police said. On Saturday, February 28, 2026, at approximately 4:10 p.m., the Barstow Police Department Dispatch Center received a call regarding a retail theft in the 2700 block of Tanger Way. Officers responded to the Nike Outlet, where store employees reported that three Hispanic male adults entered the business and immediately proceeded to the women’s apparel section. The suspects removed a bag from beneath their shirts, selected miscellaneous clothing items, and exited the store without paying for the merchandise. The total estimated loss was over $2,000.  vvng.com


Covington, KY: Shots Fired gun store 'hit hard' in burglary
Shots Fired, a gun store on Washington Street in Covington, was burglarized early Monday morning. Approximately 20-30 guns were taken from the store, which was “hit hard” according to Covington Police Capt. Ken Malcom. Malcom said four black males, possibly in a silver Honda, rammed the side door. "They got the door opened, and four men ran inside and started grabbing guns," Covington Police Capt. Craig Treadwell said. "They broke a couple of counters open and took mostly hand guns and definitely a couple of long guns." According to Treadwell, the suspects where in the store and gun range for 2 minutes, 40 seconds. Police who were nearby, arrived 20 seconds after dispatch, which recieved a call from Shots Fired's alarm company, placed the call.  covnews.com
 



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Shootings & Deaths


Oxford, AL: Update: Two arrested in connection with shooting during sneaker release at Oxford mall
Two Anniston men have been arrested in connection with a shooting that left one injured at Quintard Mall in Oxford. Lecroy Derron Wallace Jr., 20, is charged with attempted murder, while 19-year-old Malachi Zymere Taylor was arrested on a bond revocation and charged with reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct, according to the Oxford Police Department. Bonds are expected to be set soon. The shooting occurred during a sneaker release on Saturday. Police say two men at the event got into an argument and both pulled out guns. Only one shot was fired, hitting one of the men in the arm.  wvtm13.com


Woodbridge, VA: Update: Two men charged in deadly Potomac Mills Mall parking lot shooting
Two men are facing charges in connection with a deadly shooting that broke out in the parking lot of the Potomac Mills Mall in Woodbridge last month. The Prince William County police announced Tuesday that Clifton Joseph Douglas, 25, of Chesterfield, and Beau Wade Bishop, 28, of Woodbridge, were both taken into custody. Douglas was charged with murder and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. Bishop was charged with accessory after the fact and concealing or compounding offenses.  dcnewsnow.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Victorville, CA: Robbery Suspect Hits Employee, Drives Vehicle Toward Victim Outside O’Reilly
A routine Sunday night turned violent when a suspected shoplifter allegedly struck a store employee and then drove a vehicle toward the victim during a robbery in Victorville. The incident occurred on Sunday, March 1, 2026, at about 9:48 p.m., in the 15300 block of Bear Valley Road. According to Socorro Cuevas, public information officer for the Victorville Police Department, a white female adult entered O’Reilly Auto Parts and “moments later walked out of the store with unpaid merchandise.” An employee followed the suspect outside after an item reportedly fell to the ground. As the employee attempted to recover the merchandise, the situation escalated. The suspect struck the victim on the shoulder, authorities said. Cuevas stated the suspect then entered her vehicle and drove toward the employee before fleeing the scene. The suspect left prior to deputies arriving.  vvng.com


Beloit, WI: Woman pleads not guilty to staging robbery, stealing over $10,000 from restaurant

Waterloo, ON, Canada: Police investigate 2 jewelry store robberies in 3 days in Kitchener and Waterloo


 


 

Auto – Victorville, CA – Robbery
C-Store – Altoona, PA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Fairfield, CT – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Sonora, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Ellenberg, WA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Waterford, CT – Robbery
C-Store – Monticello, NY - Robbery
Clothing – Los Angeles, CA – Robbery
Clothing – Kitsap County, WA – Robbery
Collectables – Sacramento, CA – Robbery
Electronic– Kitsap County, WA – Robbery
Gaming – San Antonio, TX – Robbery
Guns – Covington, KY – Burglary
Jewelry - Vacaville, CA - Robbery
Jewelry - Woodburn, OR - Robbery
Jewelry - Dearborn MI - Robbery
Liquor - Londonderry, NH – Robbery
Restaurant – Aurora, CO – Armed Robbery / shot fired
Restaurant – Ambridge, PA - Burglary
Restaurant – Yonkers, NY – Burglary
Tobacco – Kings Mountain, NC – Burglary
Vape – Valdosta, GA – Burglary         

 

Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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The Group Director, Asset Protection – Fulfillment Centers is responsible for leading the operations and strategy of the Asset Protection department across Walmart’s Fulfillment Centers. This role ensures the safety, security, and profitability of fulfillment operations by overseeing risk management, crisis response, financial performance, and team leadership...

 



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