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GSS Announces David Cutherell as SVP, Sales & Business Development for the US &
Canada
DEERFIELD
BEACH, Fla. (December 1, 2025) –
Global Security Solutions (GSS) is pleased to announce that
David Cutherell has been appointed Sr. Vice President, Sales &
Business Development for the US & Canada.
David has decades of experience in the retail industry and has made a
meaningful impact during his tenure at GSS. Most recently, he served as
Senior Vice President, BPA, where he played a critical role in advancing
internal alignment, strengthening customer relationships, and supporting
strategic initiatives across the organization.
In
his new role, David will oversee all Sales and Business Development
efforts across the United States and Canada, including direct leadership
of the sales organization. This expanded leadership structure is
designed to enhance customer engagement, further align GSS’s sales
strategy, and support the company’s continued growth across North
America.
Read more here
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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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FaceFirst + ROC:
AI You Can Trust. Accuracy You Can Prove.
Gatekeeper Systems’ Strategic
Partnership with ROC Adds Top-Ranked Facial Recognition Algorithm to
Industry Leading FaceFirst Software
Foothill
Ranch CA, December 3, 2025 —
Gatekeeper
Systems, a pioneer in intelligent theft prevention solutions, today
announced a significant enhancement to its
FaceFirst
platform with the integration of technology from ROC. ROC is the #1
American provider of facial recognition and vision AI and trusted by the
U.S. Department of Defense, numerous law enforcement agencies, and
Fortune 500 companies.
FaceFirst’s ROC algorithm integration delivers a new level of accuracy,
fairness, and operational trust to enterprise loss prevention programs.
It helps retailers reduce false alerts, improve investigative
efficiency, and strengthen risk mitigation without requiring new
hardware or additional costs.
Read more in today's Vendor Spotlight column
below
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Ever-Changing ORC Groups
Retailers Reassess How They Track ORC
as Criminal Tactics Continue to Evolve
By
the D&D Daily staff
As organized retail crime (ORC) groups adapt to new loss-prevention
controls, retailers are rethinking how they measure, classify, and
respond to large-scale theft activity. Over the past year, several
major retailers have shifted from a purely incident-count approach to
broader behavioral analysis — a trend that is prompting a re-evaluation
of what “organized theft” actually looks like in today’s environment.
According to multiple LP teams, traditional indicators such as
booster bags, coordinated entry, and quick departure are still present,
but groups are increasingly blending into normal shopping patterns.
In many cases, ORC activity now involves smaller, more frequent thefts
spread across wider geographic regions, making it harder to identify
using legacy reporting models. The result is a growing need for data
models that detect patterns over time rather than relying solely on
individual event severity.
Teams also report that risk assessments now extend beyond in-store
behaviors. Online marketplaces, store-to-store returns, curbside
pickups, and ship-to-home fraud are being used to disguise the movement
of stolen goods. Retailers are responding by integrating e-commerce loss
trends with physical store intelligence to create a clearer picture of
organized activity. Several AP leaders note that this integration often
reveals connections that wouldn’t be visible within a single channel.
Partnerships with law enforcement remain crucial, but retailers are
increasingly focusing on internal alignment first — ensuring that
store teams, AP analysts, and e-commerce investigators are all using the
same definitions of ORC. Consistent terminology is helping to prevent
over-classification, which has been a challenge as teams strive to
distinguish between habitual shoplifters and coordinated groups.
Across the industry, there is also a renewed emphasis on accuracy in
ORC reporting. Some retailers are developing scorecards that weigh
multiple variables: item type, quantity, suspect behavior, geographic
patterning, and potential resale indicators. These structured profiles
allow investigators to prioritize the most sophisticated groups without
overstating isolated shoplifting incidents.
As ORC evolves, retailers are recognizing the need for more nuanced
visibility — not just more data. The organizations that build
integrated, cross-channel intelligence systems are positioning
themselves to respond more effectively as organized theft tactics
continue to shift.
Using AI to Fight ORC Groups
How AI Safeguards Retail Supply Chains from Organized Retail Crime
Online fraud and organized retail
crime will continue to evolve. But so will the technologies designed to
stop them.
When it comes to how organized retail crime (ORC) groups attack
retailers, the battlefront has shifted online, where criminal
networks exploit digital technicalities, manipulate e-commerce systems,
and weaponize emerging technologies — often the same tech retailers use
to protect themselves.
According to the Federal Trade Commission, U.S. consumers lost more
than $12.5 billion to online fraud in 2024 — a 25% increase
year-over-year. The Pew Research Center further found that nearly
three-fourths of Americans have experienced an online scam. For retail
supply chain executives, these numbers aren’t just consumer problems;
they signal a widening threat to operational integrity, inventory
accuracy, and brand trust.
Fraudsters evolve retail crime
In what’s a troubling turn of events for how retailers fight modern
fraudsters, many online fraud rings now leverage AI to automate
deception at scale. ORC teams use AI tools and photo-manipulation
software to create fake receipts, false returns claims, and counterfeit
documentation. These fraudsters can develop materials with alarming
precision and within minutes with AI and other tools.
AI protects the retail supply chain
Where retailers can use AI to their advantage, loss prevention
specialists, retail associates, and supply chain managers can
leverage unified, advanced analytics of all transactions happening
across the organization. AI that’s embedded
into the retailers’ omnichannel systems can help identify anomalies
within the supply chain. With so much at stake, both online
and in-store systems need to be in sync so AI can accurately monitor
transactions and the supply chain.
For instance, AI-driven fraud prevention tools can scan billions of
data points in real time — transactions, device fingerprints,
behavioral patterns, and supply chain signals — to uncover unusual
behaviors that are invisible to human analysts. Similarly, AI can review
data provided by RFID tags on shipments and products to help track and
monitor goods that have gone missing.
sdcexec.com
Industry Support for Combating
Organized Retail Crime Act
WSC strongly support swift passage of U.S. organized cargo and retail
theft legislation
The World Shipping Council (WSC) has
joined a broad coalition of 90 industry partners calling for quick
passage of the bipartisan Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025.
A coalition letter of support outlining the need for and provisions
of the bill is available on the
WSC website.
Statement from Joe Kramek, President & CEO,
World Shipping Council:
“Organized cargo and retail theft is costing the U.S. economy
billions of dollars each year and undermining the security of the
American supply chain. These are not isolated incidents — they are
coordinated, cross-border operations that target every link in the
logistics network, from factory to port to rail.
The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025 provides the
comprehensive national response this problem demands. By creating an
Organized Retail and Supply Chain Crime Coordination Center, the bill
will connect federal, state and local law enforcement with
private-sector experts to share intelligence, coordinate investigations
and dismantle the networks driving this surge in theft.
We strongly support swift passage of this legislation and look
forward to working with our partners across government and industry
to strengthen cargo security and protect the flow of goods that keeps
America moving.”
worldshipping.org
Progressives Ditching LPRs?
Liberal towns backtrack on license plate trackers amid concerns about
privacy — and Trump
Some
officials argue the cameras themselves pose the bigger danger for their
cities.
A nationwide license plate recognition system tasked with reducing
crime is being ousted from communities across the country — forcing
local officials to reckon with mounting fears of federal surveillance
during President Donald Trump’s second term.
Public safety company Flock Safety has billed its surveillance systems
as a program to root out criminal activity on
local streets, with its cameras already installed in more than 6,000
municipalities nationally. But as Trump’s deportation
campaign brought an increased, forceful presence of federal agents to
states across the country, some local officials in predominantly
liberal cities and towns now argue the cameras themselves pose the
bigger danger for their cities, offering federal law enforcement a
back door for tracking residents’ movements.
More than a dozen local governments across the country in states like
Washington, Oregon, Arizona and Texas have suspended or paused their
Flock systems in the past year, citing concerns that the data
collected by the cameras could be shared with federal agencies — as
Flock says it did briefly during the summer through a since-terminated
pilot program with the Department of Homeland Security.
politico.com
House Hearing: "Main Street Under Attack: The Cost of Crime on Small
Businesses"
ICYMI: Heading into holidays, shoplifting on the rise in Colorado, study
says
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Automation Cut Workplace Injuries by
6%
Workplace Injuries Could be Avoided by Increased Automation
The predicted automation of 30% of
tasks by 2030 is expected to reduce U.S. workplace injuries by 5.9%,
says a report from Lamber Goodnow.
Automation can be an important tool in reducing injuries, according to a
new report from Lamber Goodnow, a legal firm. The report examined
industries with the highest rates of workplace injuries and those that
could most benefit from increased automation, leading to reductions
in workplace injury rates.
Data came from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics workplace injury
data for 2020-2024, along with 2030 forecast data from the World
Economic Forum and sector-level automation levels as of 2025.
The report found that U.S. workplaces have recorded an average of 2.7
million injuries a year since 2020. The sector that has the highest
workplace injury rate is State-run healthcare. And the highest rate by
industry is spectator sports.
However, the predicted automation of 30% of tasks by 2030 is
expected to reduce U.S. workplace injuries by
5.9%. Looking at a couple of sectors, restaurants and local
government-run schools, automation is expected to reduce workplace
injuries by 10,000 per year by 2030.
ehstoday.com
Eliminate Safety Hazards at the
Source
The Three Layers of Effective Safety Training
Reactive safety measures focus on
treating injuries after they occur, but upstream strategies aim to
eliminate hazards at their source.
Reactive safety measures treat symptoms but fail to eliminate
systemic hazards, leading to recurring issues. The three layers of
safety training—task performance, hazard awareness, and engineering
solutions—are essential for comprehensive risk reduction.
Upstream safety strategies focus on redesigning systems and processes
to prevent accidents before they occur, rather than just responding
to incidents. Digital platforms enable seamless delivery of training,
hazard reporting, and continuous improvement, making safety efforts more
effective and measurable.
Organizations adopting upstream safety practices experience lower
injury rates, reduced costs, higher productivity, and a stronger
safety culture.
ehstoday.com
Retail AI Investments Continue to
Surge
Retailers turn to AI for marketing, merchandising
AI investments are widespread across
retail, but using the tech doesn’t automatically translate to business
impacts, per a report from Berkeley Research Group.
More than eight in 10 retailers have integrated artificial
intelligence into their operations to a moderate or large extent,
according to a Berkeley Research Group report released Nov. 12.
North American retailers are using AI currently for tasks such as
marketing (70%), IT and digital functions (62%), digital commerce
(56%), and merchandising strategy and pricing (54%). In the future,
they plan to deploy the technology toward planning and product flow
(40%), corporate operations (38%), supply chain and sourcing (36%), and
distribution and logistics (32%).
However, AI usage may not necessarily “translate into tangible
business impacts.” Though AI tools like ChatGPT and Copilot can
complete menial tasks such as writing product descriptions or marketing
copy, it remains unclear whether such capabilities are causing a
noticeable shift for retailers, the report noted.
retaildive.com
Black Friday Sales Data Continues to
Trickle In
Black Friday retail sales up 4.1%, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse
Chilly temperatures and seasonal deals encouraged spending on new
fashions as apparel turned in a robust Black Friday performance.
Apparel and jewelry were the top gifting sectors on Black Friday, with
apparel up 5.7% year over year (online up 6.1%, in-store up 5.4%) and
jewelry up 2.75% year over year, according to preliminary insights from
Mastercard SpendingPulse, which measures in-store and online retail
sales and represents all payment types. It is not adjusted for
inflation.
U.S. retail sales excluding autos increased 4.1% on Black Friday
compared to Black Friday 2024. Online grew 10.4% and in-store sales grew
1.7%.
chainstoreage.com
Record shoppers, online sales surge signal strong US holiday season
momentum
Belk debuts smaller-format Market stores
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FaceFirst + ROC:
AI You Can Trust. Accuracy You Can Prove.
Gatekeeper Systems’ Strategic Partnership with ROC
Adds Top-Ranked Facial Recognition Algorithm to Industry Leading
FaceFirst Software
Foothill
Ranch CA, December 3, 2025 —
Gatekeeper
Systems, a pioneer in intelligent theft prevention solutions, today
announced a significant enhancement to its
FaceFirst
platform with the integration of technology from ROC. ROC is the #1
American provider of facial recognition and vision AI and trusted by the
U.S. Department of Defense, numerous law enforcement agencies, and
Fortune 500 companies.
FaceFirst’s ROC algorithm integration delivers a new level of accuracy,
fairness, and operational trust to enterprise loss prevention programs.
It helps retailers reduce false alerts, improve investigative
efficiency, and strengthen risk mitigation without requiring new
hardware or additional costs.
Platform Engineered for Confidence and
Compliance
The FaceFirst + ROC integration provides dual-algorithm verification for
every probable match event, improving system accuracy in diverse and
complex environments while maintaining the speed retailers rely on for
life safety and security. Both platforms are developed in the United
States and adhere to high standards of privacy, fairness, and
responsible AI governance.
Setting a Higher Standard for Responsible
Retail AI
“Facial recognition in retail must be fast, accurate, and accountable,”
said Robert Harling, CEO of Gatekeeper Systems. “By embedding ROC’s
NIST-verified algorithm directly into FaceFirst, we’re giving retailers
a system that performs in real time and stands up to public,
operational, and legal scrutiny. It’s AI you can trust—and accuracy you
can prove.”
Verified Performance, Measurable Results
ROC’s algorithm has been independently validated by the U.S. National
Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) through its Face
Recognition Technology Evaluation (FRTE), the global benchmark for
facial recognition algorithm performance. According to the most recent
results, ROC ranked as the #1 American vendor and among the top global
performers, achieving exceptional accuracy, speed, and fairness across
all major test categories. Highlights include:
-
#1 U.S. vendor overall for
accuracy.
-
#1 western vendor for 1:1
Visa-Border & Border-Border Verification, ranked #3 globally by False
Non-Match Rate (FNMR).

See the latest results at
https://face.nist.gov/frte/reportcards/11/roc_019.html.
Gatekeeper Systems’ strategic partnership with ROC reinforces our
commitment to continuous improvement of cutting-edge solutions that
address the evolving challenges of retail safety and theft.
For further information and detailed insights into our enhanced
product line, please visit our website at
GatekeeperSystems.com. Media inquiries should be directed to
PR@GatekeeperSystems.com. |
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Retail's Golden Quarter Faces More
Cybersecurity Threats
Is your Retail Cybersecurity Ready for the Season's Surge?
Cyberattacks and identity blind
spots turn the Golden Quarter into a high‑stakes test of resilience,
where one compromised login can derail peak‑season
The festive trading window brings Black Friday promotions and Christmas
shopping rushes, yet retail and supply chain operators face mounting
pressures that extend far beyond seasonal demand.
In a year marked by high-profile cyber attacks against major
retailers and manufacturers, companies including M&S, JLR and
Balenciaga continue recovery efforts while navigating one of the most
operationally demanding periods in the commercial calendar.
This convergence creates operational risk. Seasonal workforce
expansion, escalating ecommerce volumes and an increasingly active
threat landscape intersect during the final quarter, elevating
identity management to a mission-critical security control.
Cyber risk during peak trading
The final quarter has traditionally represented the period when
retailers generate a disproportionate share of annual turnover. Today,
however, the cyber risk profile during these months carries equal
strategic weight.
Recent attacks on global retail brands have demonstrated how
ransomware incidents and data breaches can rapidly paralyse warehouse
operations and disrupt logistics networks. Black Friday promotions
and pre-Christmas campaigns drive unprecedented traffic through digital
channels and payment infrastructure.
Any compromise or outage during this window becomes immediately
visible to customers, amplifying both reputational damage and
financial consequences.
According to Rex Booth, CISO at SailPoint, businesses could be "betting
on the Golden Quarter and Black Friday to rebuild customer
confidence and boost sales following the slew of cyberattacks this
year".
Booth warns that heightened traffic and transaction volumes
during this period attract malicious actors who exploit the operational
pressure.
supplychaindigital.com
Security Teams Try to Keep Up With AI
Attackers keep finding new ways to fool AI
AI development keeps accelerating while the safeguards around it move
on uneven ground, according to The International AI Safety Report.
Security leaders are being asked to judge exposure without dependable
benchmarks.
Attackers expand their playbook faster than
defenders
Adversarial activity continues to rise. Researchers have recorded
a broad set of prompt injection techniques that bypass safeguards. When
attackers receive ten attempts, the success rate reaches about 50%.
There is also a cost imbalance. Adding a few hundred malicious documents
to training data can create backdoors. Defending against such poisoning
requires far more work.
Fine tuning introduces further complications. A model trained to give
insecure coding advice later produced unsafe instructions in unrelated
areas. Shifts like this make it difficult for security teams to
anticipate behavior outside narrow test scenarios.
helpnetsecurity.com
'Vital' Cybersecurity Program
Senators push to renew cyber grant program for state, local governments
Security experts and local officials
say the program is vital to protecting the country.
A bipartisan pair of senators introduced a bill on Monday to reauthorize
a federal cybersecurity grant program for state and local
governments.
The State and Local Cybersecurity Grant Program Reauthorization Act,
from Sens. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H., and John Cornyn, R-Texas, would
reauthorize the program of the same name, which expired on Oct. 1 and
was then temporarily renewed through Jan. 30 in the latest government
funding bill.
State and local officials have called the grant program vital to
their cybersecurity efforts. Local governments are on the front
lines of protecting U.S. water supplies and other critical
infrastructure, but many of them lack the resources to hire dedicated
security personnel or pay for expensive monitoring and response
services.
cybersecuritydive.com
Creative cybersecurity strategies for resource-constrained institutions
How a noisy ransomware intrusion exposed a long-term espionage foothold |
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AI Playing Bigger Role in Online
Shopping
ChatGPT launches shopping research feature
OpenAI aims to streamline the
comparison shopping process as it transforms ChatGPT into an e-commerce
destination.
OpenAI last week released a new shopping research feature in ChatGPT to
help shoppers find the right products based on their search prompts.
The tool is designed for in-depth product searches and comparisons,
and is available to users of ChatGPT’s free version, as well as its Go,
Plus and Pro subscribers, according to a company press release.
ChatGPT users can give the AI chatbot a variety of tasks,
including comparing models of a given product, recommending gifts for a
specific family member or finding lookalike products for cheaper. The
platform may ask follow-up questions about budget, item recipients or
other key criteria, and will then find products that meet those
standards.
Shoppers will receive a buyer’s guide with multiple product matches,
along with information on their differences, trade-offs and “up-to-date
information from reliable retailers.” For now, shoppers can purchase
the recommended products via a retailer’s website. But in the future,
ChatGPT will allow shoppers to buy items directly within the platform
through sellers that are a part of its Instant Checkout feature.
retaildive.com
Online Shopping Platform Disrupted on
Cyber Monday
Shopify outage disrupts some merchants on Cyber Monday
Shopify services were temporarily interrupted as an outage at the
e-commerce platform disrupted retailers on Cyber Monday, one of the
busiest online shopping days of the entire year.
Thousands of Shopify users reported problems with the platform,
hindering their ability to do business. Outage reports peaked at 11
a.m. EDT at around 4,000 before tapering off, according to
Downdector, a website that tracks online outages.
Shopify said on its status page that users may experience issues
logging in or accessing point-of-sale systems, the equipment used to
process in-person transactions.
The company said Monday evening it was dealing with a "system
degradation" that had been "mitigated" and that it would continue to
monitor the system's recovery.
cbsnews.com
BNPL drives over $1B in online spend on Cyber Monday
Overall spending on the digital shopping day
topped $14 billion in the U.S., per Adobe Analytics. Shopify also touted
record sales despite technical difficulties.
Video Amazon tests 30-minute delivery program |
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Palm Beach County, FL: Attorney general announces arrest of Palm Beach
County couple in organized retail theft scheme
A Palm Beach County couple is accused of stealing approximately $31,000
worth of merchandise in the span of two months. On Tuesday, Attorney
General James Uthmeier announced the arrest of Caleb Rashaun Frederick,
29, and Ne’osha Lasha Taylor, 29, in connection with 40 documented
thefts across Palm Beach and Broward counties, after an investigation by
the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office. Uthmeier says between Sept. 3
and Nov. 14, the couple targeted chains like Publix, Walgreens, Dollar
General, Winn-Dixie, Walmart, Target, Macy’s, BJ’s Wholesale and
JCPenney, and allegedly took mostly household appliances and laundry
products, which they would then sell on Facebook Marketplace. He says
they coordinated the thefts together, with one allegedly acting as a
lookout and one stealing merchandise. Frederick is being charged with
one count of organized retail theft, five counts of dealing in stolen
property and one county of false verification of ownership. Taylor is
charged with one count of organized retail theft and four counts of
dealing in stolen property.
wflx.com
Sarasota County, FL: Holiday Retail Theft Operation Yields Arrests
The Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office Tactical Unit, Intelligence Unit,
Criminal Investigations Section, and Patrol Bureau conducted a holiday
retail theft operation at the University Town Center (UTC) mall in
Sarasota, November 18-20, 2025. Statistics show that retail thefts at
UTC traditionally increase during the holiday shopping season. The
mission of the operation was to identify, disrupt, and prevent retail
theft, and arrest individuals engaging in retail theft occurring prior
to the start of holiday shopping. During this three-day operation,
eleven subjects were arrested. In total they were charged with seven
misdemeanors and eight felonies. Of those arrested, three had no
prior criminal history, while the other eight collectively accounted for
111 prior felony charges and 117 prior misdemeanor charges.
sarasotasheriff.org
Kitsap County, WA: Woman suspected of repeatedly stealing $1400 of items
from Silverdale Target
Berkeley, CA: Undercover Berkeley cop nabs $900 Lululemon retail theft
suspects
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Shootings & Deaths
Tempe, AZ: Update: Two dead, one arrested in strip mall shooting in Arizona
Two people shot at a strip mall in Arizona have died from their injuries, and
one person is in custody. Footage captured by a news outlet in the Phoenix area
shows police at the East Valley Strip Mall in Tempe Monday morning. When
officers arrived, they found two people with gunshot wounds. Both were rushed to
the hospital in critical condition, but they did not survive. Police said
the suspect stayed on the scene, was detained by officers and later arrested.
Investigators are working to learn more about what led up to the shooting.
kyma.com
Loganville, GA: Update: Secret Service joins investigation into CVS deadly
shooting
Loganville Police Chief M.D. Morris released a statement saying officials are
intentionally withholding details to protect the integrity of the investigation.
"Due to the sensitive nature of this case, and in an effort to fully protect the
integrity of our investigative efforts, release of information has been very
limited. That is by design, and that decision rests solely on me," Morris said.
"Our detectives are working tirelessly to bring this case to a successful
resolution, and deliver justice for the family of the victim." In addition to
the Secret Service, the Monroe Police Department, Walton County Sheriff’s
Office, and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation are all assisting local officers
and detectives. Chief Morris also addressed questions about a previously
detained person of interest. He said that individual was released early in the
investigation because there was not enough evidence to charge them. The
victim, 62-year-old Kimberly Whaley, a CVS pharmacy employee, was shot and
killed in the store’s parking lot last month. Investigators have not
released details about the person of interest or revealed what may have led to
the shooting. No charges have been announced.
fox5atlanta.com
Marion County, MS: Bond denied for 2 charged in fatal C-store shooting
Bond was denied for the two suspects charged in connection to a fatal shooting
at a Marion County convenience store. Authorities said bond was denied for
Verkese Dezmond Conerly, 19, of Tylertown, on the charge of murder, and bond was
denied for Coreyon Lamark Brister, 17, of Hattiesburg, on the charge of
manslaughter. They received a $50,000 bond each for their additional aggravated
assault charges. The shooting occurred at Reagans Corner Convenience Store on
Highway 98 West in Kokomo around 1:00 p.m. on November 26, 2025. Marion County
Chief Deputy Jamie Singley said deputies discovered Conerly suffering from a
gunshot wound. He was treated at the scene and transported to a local hospital.
Singley said a second individual, Zamarkus Kentrell Brister, 22, of Foxworth,
was also shot. He was transported to a local hospital where he was later
pronounced deceased. According to investigators, preliminary information
indicated that the shooting stemmed from an altercation between the individuals,
which escalated inside the store.
wjtv.com
Gwinnett County, GA: Man shot at young shopper outside Lowe’s
He thought he should be rewarded, witness says. A Loganville man faces criminal
charges after police say he fired three shots at a shopper he suspected of
stealing at a Lowe’s Saturday afternoon. “I saw a white male shooting at another
person, a Black male,” said Michael Starks, who was in the parking lot when the
shooting happened. “He could have hit him in the back, could have killed him,
could have had a stray bullet that struck someone else.” Police say 64-year-old
Steven Douglas Wagner pulled a pistol and fired near the garden center around 3
p.m. at the store on Atlanta Highway. The arrest warrant states Wagner targeted
someone “he believed to be shoplifting.” Another warrant describes the person he
shot at as “another person that was shopping at the store.” The arrest warrant
states Wagner targeted someone “he believed to be shoplifting.” Another warrant
describes the person he shot at as “another person that was shopping at the
store.” “This guy is fleeing, he’s running basically for his life away from this
guy and he’s still shooting,” Starks told Channel 2 Gwinnett County Bureau Chief
Matt Johnson. Starks called 911 and followed Wagner back into the store and
snapped a photo that helped police make an arrest within minutes. He said
Wagner’s demeanor was concerning. “He honestly thought he did nothing wrong and
should have been rewarded for his actions,” Starks said. Wagner’s wife came
outside and defended her husband, according to witnesses, telling officers he
was just trying to stop a thief. “The police officer told the wife he should
have just called the police instead of involving himself in that incident,”
Starks said. Wagner now faces felony aggravated assault and reckless conduct
charges and remains in jail without bond. As of Saturday, police have not
located the young man who ran because he left before officers arrived.
wsbtv.com
Gaffney, SC: Shooting at McDonald's in Gaffney leaves 3 seriously injured
Three people were seriously injured in a shooting at a McDonald's in Gaffney,
South Carolina. At 4:03 p.m. Monday, officers with the Gaffney Police Department
and deputies with the Cherokee County Sheriff’s Office responded to a reported
shooting with injuries at the McDonald’s on E. Frederick Street. Authorities
said a third victim later arrived at Cherokee Medical Center seeking treatment.
All three victims are reported to have serious injuries.
wyff4.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Saugus, MA: Police identify 2 suspects wanted in attack at Square One Mall
Police on Tuesday identified two suspects wanted in connection with the assault
of a woman and children at a mall on the North Shore last week. The Saugus
Police Department says two juveniles have been identified as suspects in an
incident in the parking lot at the Square One Mall in Saugus on the evening of
Monday, Nov. 24. Officers responding to the parking lot of the mall spoke with a
woman who reported that she and the three kids she was with had been assaulted
after shopping inside the mall, according to the Saugus Police Department.
boston25news.com
Memphis, TN: Police Utilize High-Tech Surveillance to Nab Suspects in Furniture
Store Burglary
Christiana, DE: Police investigating after man robbed store at Christiana Mall
Tupelo, MS: Man Charged in Alleged Armed Robbery at Mall at Barnes Crossing
Auckland, New Zealand: Man charged with theft after allegedly swallowing $35,000
Fabergé pendant in jewellery store
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Beauty – Irvine, CA –
Robbery
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C-Store – Brunswick,
NY - Armed Robbery
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C-Store- Latta, SC –
Armed Robbery
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C-Store –
Philadelphia, PA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store- Hampton
County, SC – Armed Robbery
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C-Store- Houston, TX –
Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Hall County,
GA – Burglary
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Candy - Gainesville,
TX- Burglary
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Cellphone – Seattle,
WA – Burglary
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Clothing – Christiana,
DE - Robbery
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Clothing – Tupelo, MS
– Armed Robbery
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Grocery – Del Mar, CA
– Robbery
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Hardware – Roseburg,
OR – Robbery
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Hardware – Buna, TX –
Burglary
• Jewelry – Westminster, CO – Robbery
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Pharmacy – Round Rock,
TX – Burglary
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Restaurant – San
Rafael, CA – Burglary
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Restaurant – San
Rafael, CA – Burglary
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Restaurant – San
Rafael, CA – Burglary
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Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 8 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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