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 4/29/26

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Shane Hunter promoted to Enterprise Fraud Investigations - Senior Manager for Walmart


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Strengthen Retail Security & Enhance Workplace Safety with
Off-Duty Law Enforcement

Discover how off-duty law enforcement enhances safety and deters crime while protecting employees and assets.

Retailers are under more pressure than ever to prevent theft, ensure employee safety and maintain business continuity across stores. Criminal activities are on the rise, and they can severely disrupt operations, leading to financial losses and a tarnished reputation. Workplace security not only safeguards assets and sensitive information but also protects employees and visitors, fostering a safe and productive environment.

Hiring off-duty law enforcement is a proven way to level up your retail security strategy. Off-duty personnel are uniquely positioned to deter criminal activities, respond swiftly in emergencies and provide an added layer of protection. By integrating off-duty law enforcement into your security strategy, you can create a safer, more secure workplace environment.

Protos Security's workplace security blog explores ways that off-duty law enforcement can benefit retailers and increase workplace safety.

Read more here
 




 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Closing ORC Enforcement Gaps
Organized Retail Crime Task Forces Gain Momentum Across the U.S.


By the D&D Daily staff

As organized retail crime (ORC) continues to challenge retailers and law enforcement, multi-agency task forces and regional partnerships—often referred to as Organized Retail Crime Associations (ORCAs)—are playing an increasingly central role in addressing the issue. These collaborative efforts bring together retailers, local police departments, prosecutors, and sometimes federal agencies to share intelligence, coordinate investigations, and pursue repeat offenders more effectively.

One of the primary advantages of ORC task forces is improved information sharing. Retailers that may have previously handled incidents in isolation are now contributing to centralized databases that track theft patterns, suspect descriptions, and methods of operation. This broader visibility allows investigators to identify connections between incidents that span multiple jurisdictions—an increasingly common characteristic of organized retail crime.

Task forces also help streamline case building. Rather than pursuing isolated shoplifting charges, law enforcement can aggregate incidents into larger, more impactful cases that meet thresholds for felony prosecution. This approach not only increases the likelihood of successful prosecution but can also lead to the dismantling of larger theft rings and fencing operations.

In addition to enforcement, many ORCAs are focused on prevention and training. Retail partners often collaborate with law enforcement to educate store teams on identifying suspicious behaviors, preserving evidence, and reporting incidents in ways that support broader investigations. Some groups also engage with policymakers to advocate for legislative changes, such as enhanced penalties for organized theft or clearer definitions of ORC-related offenses.

Several states have formalized these efforts through dedicated ORC task forces, sometimes supported by state funding or coordinated through attorneys general offices. At the federal level, agencies such as Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) have also expanded their involvement, particularly in cases involving interstate or international theft networks.

While ORC remains a complex and evolving challenge, these collaborative models are widely viewed as a step toward a more coordinated and strategic response. By aligning resources and improving communication across sectors, ORCAs and task forces are helping to close enforcement gaps and provide retailers with a more unified approach to combating organized theft.


Grocery Store at Center of Mail Theft Operation
USPS warn of prison time and millions in fines over illegal grocery store request after American mail disappears

A massive mail scheme has led to prison time and costly fines for several USPS employees after thousands of people reported stolen envelopes.

It was revealed by the United States Postal Service in March that nearly 30 criminals had been convicted in the “largest criminal organization [of mail theft] ever identified.” The mail theft scheme began in 2017 when USPS investigators discovered members of a street gang in Chicago, Illinois, had targeted “young, vulnerable female postal workers.

The first target was approached by a member as she was shopping at a grocery store while wearing her USPS uniform, where she was told she could make extra money by stealing mail for the gang.

According to the USPS, the employee was told by the gang member to steal specific types of envelopes to give to him and his associates, which she did either after work or along her delivery route.

The envelopes typically carried business or US Treasury checks, credit and debit cards, gift cards, or just straight-up cash. She would sneak the desired envelopes out of the mail by hiding them in her uniform or her belongings.

“At first, he rewarded her with large sums of money and expensive gifts. But that soon changed – the gifts stopped and the money dwindled,” the Inspector General said.

The gang recruited several other USPS employees into their scheme with similar promises of quick money. Surveillance cameras captured mail carriers stealing “handfuls of mail at a time,” while “brazen” mail handlers were seen stealing bags full of envelopes.

Once they received the stolen mail, gang members would get others on the street to cash the checks and buy items using the stolen credit cards. “The gang also recruited random bank customers to cash checks for a small price,” according to the USPS.

Partnering with Homeland Security Investigations and local police, USPS investigators “uncovered the largest mail theft conspiracy involving the highest number of collusive postal employees.” the-sun.com


Crime Fuels Apple Store Closure?
Apple to close first unionized U.S. Retail Store in Towson, citing crime and mall decline; union cries ‘union-busting’
Apple will permanently close its Towson Town Center store in June, marking the shutdown of the first Apple retail location in the United States to successfully unionize.

The company cited “declining conditions” at Towson Town Center — including the departure of multiple major retailers, reduced foot traffic, and persistent public safety issues in the mall and surrounding areas. Reports of shoplifting, organized retail theft, assaults, robberies, and other crimes have plagued the location for years, contributing to an environment that has driven away shoppers and businesses.

In a statement, Apple said the safety of customers and employees remains its top priority. While employees at the other two closing stores (Apple Trumbull in Connecticut and Apple North County in California) are being offered transfers to nearby locations, Towson workers — represented by the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAM) — must apply for open positions elsewhere under the terms of their collective bargaining agreement.

The union immediately condemned the move as retaliation. In a strongly worded statement, IAM called the closure “a cynical attempt to bust the union” and filed unfair labor practice charges with the National Labor Relations Board. The union claims Apple is discriminating against its members by denying them the same transfer rights offered to non-unionized stores. macdailynews.com


New ORC Law Making an Impact
Cookeville Police Battling Sophisticated Retail Crime
Putnam County Law enforcement utilizing the Tennessee Organized Retail Crime Prevention Act to target traveling criminal groups that steal thousands of dollars in merchandise from high-end merchants.

Cookeville Police Department Sgt. Charlotte Austin said the legislation addresses sophisticated criminal enterprises instead of shoplifting. Austin said one detective in Cookeville has already taken out approximately 12 warrants under this specific charge representing a total loss of about $160,000.

“These people that are doing this, they are stealing thousands and thousands of dollars worth of merchandise at a time and then their goal is to either make money off of that or resell it or, um, you know, to make money by some other means,” Austin said. “And so it’s just like an enterprise for them versus somebody that goes into a store and steals a shirt because they want a shirt.”

Austin said the criminal groups often travel the Interstate 40 corridor between North Carolina and Texas to target merchants in towns with easy highway access. Austin said the suspects frequently work in pairs or groups to remove anti-theft devices, use fraudulent discount codes from the dark web, or return stolen items for gift cards.

Austin said the law allows local law enforcement to look beyond state lines when investigating suspects who do not live in the immediate area. Austin said the high dollar amount of the losses is a primary reason these cases are gaining significant attention from the public and police. theucnow.com


Canada: Businesses brainstorming retail theft solutions

Pensacola police chief plans for new 'public safety dashboard' to track crime data

Police data shows mixed crime trends across Asheville area
 



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How Safety Culture Deteriorates Over Time
Small Cultural Tears: The Drift Before the Event

Organizations often lose their safety culture gradually through unnoticed deviations that become normalized over time.

Small deviations in behavior can accumulate over time, leading to a significant drift from the intended safety culture. Subcultures often develop their own norms, which may conflict with the organization's core values, creating invisible gaps.

Unaddressed small cultural tears send signals that standards are negotiable, encouraging further deviations. Leadership must respond consistently to minor deviations to reinforce that standards and values are operational and non-negotiable.

Detecting and repairing small cultural tears early is essential to prevent larger organizational failures and maintain a strong safety culture.

Most organizations do not lose their safety culture in a dramatic moment. They lose it gradually. Quietly. Through a series of small, unremarkable deviations that never triggered an alarm because none of them, individually, were alarming. That’s what makes them dangerous.

These are small cultural tears,
the minor gaps between what a culture is meant to be and what it actually becomes. They aren’t incidents or policy violations; they are the quiet drift that comes before both. ehstoday.com


AI Leading to Job Losses
Bed Bath & Beyond CEO: AI will lead to ‘significant reduction in headcount’

Areas impacted at the retailer could include supply chain, IT, accounting, marketing and merchandising, Marcus Lemonis told analysts Monday.

As Bed Bath & Beyond works to
turn itself into an “AI-centric business,” CEO Marcus Lemonis warned that the growth in AI, both within its own business and more broadly, will result in job cuts.

“I have to be, unfortunately, brutally clear and honest with everybody, both internally and externally. With the formation of AI outside of our business and now being deeply integrated in our business, and us only wanting to take on capabilities that we think add value,
we’re going to experience significant reduction in headcount,” Lemonis said on a call with analysts Monday.

Areas impacted could
include supply chain, IT, accounting, marketing and merchandising. In some cases, those jobs will be redeployed elsewhere within the business, including by increasing customer service and store staff.

The
company has undergone several rounds of layoffs in recent years as it works to turn around the business and cut costs. While Lemonis said “those decisions were not always immediately visible in the numbers,” the company is now starting to see the financial impacts. retaildive.com


In-Store AI Expansion
Ace Hardware provides AI assistance to store employees
The world's largest hardware cooperative is
equipping store associates with a new artificial intelligence-based tool.

Ace Hardware has launched
an AI assistant called “Hey ARMA” that is designed to provide real-time support and guidance to employees in stores nationwide. Operated through a handheld device, Hey ARMA was developed to provides associates with quick access to product knowledge, project advice and recommendations.

The
solution is designed to supports associates with in-store scenarios such as product comparisons and project questions, as well as helping customers with items they may have purchased elsewhere. It is currently active in more than 2,300 Ace Hardware stores, with continued expansion planned as part of Ace's long-term strategy to enhance the in-store experience through technology.

Other examples of this strategy include
utilizing the Workday Paradox Candidate Experience and Paradox Conversational Applicant Tracking Software (ATS) solutions to streamline associate hiring tasks, from screening through onboarding, with a faster, text-based hiring experience. chainstoreage.com


Continued Shift to In-Person Work
Target requires 150 remote merchandising employees to relocate

Impacted employees can move to the retailer’s Minneapolis HQ or leave the company. Target hopes that in-person collaboration will help it regain merchandising authority.

Target has asked
150 remote workers across two teams within its merchandising organization to relocate to the Twin Cities area of Minnesota, where the retailer is headquartered.

The
move is not a companywide mandate and Target will provide relocation assistance to those who choose to relocate or severance for those who do not, the company confirmed to Retail Dive.

“As we enter a new chapter for Target,
increased in-person collaboration across a core part of our merchandising team will help us reinforce our merchandising authority, unlocking greater creativity and enabling us to move faster to deliver on our strategy,” a company spokesperson said. “We’re committed to supporting the team through this transition and are providing resources and support to help them navigate what’s ahead.”  retaildive.com


Claire's closes 154 standalone stores in Ireland, UK

N.C.-based Legacy Markets acquires 10-store convenience chain

 



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Visible security and proactive prevention hit the shopper experience differently. Retailers have spent years leaning on entrance gates and security guards to fight pushout theft. It works for a while, that visible presence makes offenders think twice. Then the offenders adapt. They find workarounds, and losses keep climbing, and the honest shoppers are the ones most impacted.

In 2025, a national grocer in a global market put it to the test. They invested in gates, guards, and Gatekeeper's Purchek® technology, then measured what actually worked. The results were telling.

Gatekeeper Systems' research from that study shows 49% of pushout attempts bypassed entrance gates entirely. Another 27% went through self-checkout, with nearly a third of those involving offenders tailgating behind paying customers after AI-enabled gates opened. The remaining 24% went through manned or unmanned registers. Gates give you visibility, but they still need good timing, an attentive employee, and an offender who doesn't know how to undermine it. That's a lot of things to go right.

Guards faced their own challenges. Coverage depended on schedules, attention shifted with service demands, and policies limited what they could do in the moment. Pushouts happen in seconds. By the time a guard assesses intent and weighs safety, the cart is already moving toward the door.

Meanwhile, paying customers feel the weight of all that security. Gate-and-guard setups slow the exit for everyone, and that friction wears on the shopping experience over time.

Gatekeeper's Purchek® technology takes a different angle. Instead of relying on compliance at a gate or a guard's judgment call, the system acts on the cart itself. When a cart with unpaid merchandise hits a defined boundary, the wheels lock. The event ends quietly, no chase, no confrontation. Nearby shoppers often don't notice anything has happened. It runs the same way every time, applying little to no friction to paying customers and direct control where it counts.

The financial case backs it up. One $500 pushout requires over $16,000 in sales to break even at a 3% operating margin. Multiply that across hundreds of incidents a year and the margin damage stacks fast. Every stopped cart reduces the volume of sales needed to stay whole.

The takeaway from this retailer's 2025 data was straightforward. Gates didn't prevent pushout theft. Guards didn't stop it. Purchek® did. Getting ahead of the problem protects shrink, preserves margins, and keeps store teams out of harm's way.


Read the Full White Paper Here


 

 

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Which Cybersecurity Metrics Are Most Useful?
The metrics killing your SOC, and what to use instead
Security operations centres risk being rendered entirely ineffective if organizations measure them using the wrong performance indicators, according to Dave Chismon, CTO for Architecture at UK’s National Cyber Security Centre.

Evaluating ones’ SOC using the same ticket-based metrics applied to IT service desks can actively work against its core purpose: detecting and responding to real attacks.

The problem, Chismon explains, is one of perverse incentives:

When SOC analysts are measured on how quickly they close tickets, they are pushed to dismiss alerts as false positives rather than investigate them properly. Measuring the number of detection rules written tends to lead to a proliferation of low-quality rules.

Relying on log volume instead of log quality can create a false sense of coverage and may reduce the retention period for useful data.

The only metric that demonstrates a SOC is working, he argues, is whether it detects and responds to attacks in a timely manner, which is typically expressed as “time to detect” (TTD) or “time to respond” (TTR).

“However, this can be tricky to measure as an organization’s defence in depth means it should be a very rare event for an attack to make it into the organization’s environment,” he pointed out.

Thurefore, he recommends supplementing this with red teaming and purple teaming exercises to simulate realistic threats and test detection capability.

The covert nature of red teaming can more accurately mimic a real attack, but purple teaming can often provide better value to a SOC (as the time saved through ‘not being covert’ can be put into greater coverage of attack paths,” he added. helpnetsecurity.com


'Simple Security Mistake' Causing Quarter of All Financial Losses
‘Fundamental tension’ undermines manufacturers’ cybersecurity

A simple security mistake caused roughly one-quarter of all financial losses in the sector in 2025, cybersecurity insurer Resilience said.

The manufacturing sector is woefully unprepared to defend against cyberattacks, even as it was the most targeted community in 2025, accounting for one in four attacks, cybersecurity insurance firm Resilience said in a report published on Tuesday.

Several factors make it difficult for manufacturers to upgrade their cybersecurity defenses, including the cost of downtime, according to the report.

Even so, the threat picture is dire: Ransomware attacks on manufacturers increased significantly more in 2025 than the average growth rate across all sectors. cybersecuritydive.com


One year on from M&S attack – has retail cyber security improved?
In this week’s Computer Weekly, it’s been a year since the ransomware attack that brought down Marks & Spencer – but has the retail sector learned from the experience? Connected vehicles are entering the AI era – we look at the latest automotive developments. And a quantum algorithm scientist explains what’s happening in this important emerging field. computerweekly.com


US, UK authorities warn that Firestarter backdoor malware survives patching

North Korea-linked actor targets Web3 execs in social-engineering campaign

 


 

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New Era of E-Commerce Fraud
AI-Powered Fraud Now Hides Inside Legitimate Transactions
E-commerce is entering a new phase of fraud, where transactions that appear legitimate — valid accounts, correct details, even routine behavior — can mask coordinated attacks powered by synthetic identities and AI.

From account takeovers (ATOs) to loyalty abuse, fraud now targets identity rather than the point of sale, warned Dany Naigeboren, senior director of risk at fraud prevention company Forter.

Fraud is no longer breaking into systems — it’s operating inside them.

These attacks are becoming easier to execute, allowing smaller actors to operate with capabilities once limited to organized fraud rings.

“It’s a huge game changer. Until now, online fraud has mostly involved sophisticated fraud syndicates with vast engineering resources,” Naigeboren told the E-Commerce Times.

To counter that threat, Forter uses AI to detect and prevent “invisible” fraud across the full customer journey, not just at checkout.

Its global merchant network draws on data from over $1 trillion in transactions to improve detection accuracy, reflecting a broader need for AI-driven systems to track and stop increasingly difficult-to-detect attacks.

AI is lowering the barrier to entry for e-commerce fraud, allowing individuals with limited technical skills to execute attacks once limited to organized teams.

With two to three hours of work, anyone can become proficient in conducting fraud online. And this manifests itself in numerous ways,” Naigeboren said.

In many cases, the fraud no longer looks like an obvious attack. Compromised accounts, valid credentials, and routine purchasing behavior allow transactions to move through ordering and payment systems without triggering traditional defenses. ecommercetimes.com


AI Shopping Crossroads
AI shopping splits into 2 paths
It is still early days for buying products through platforms like ChatGPT or Gemini—only 7.2% of US digital shoppers say they regularly use AI shopping tools, per a March Bizrate Insights/EMARKETER survey—but genAI platforms are actively testing which experiences resonate with shoppers.

The latest example: Anthropic’s Claude AI recently expanded connectors—its app-like functionality—beyond business tools to consumer services including Instacart, StubHub, and Uber Eats. At the same time, Anthropic changed how those connectors appear.

Rather than requiring users to reference an app directly in their prompts, Claude automatically pulls in relevant integrations when they can help answer a query. When multiple connectors apply, Claude surfaces several options and lets users choose. For example, it might present the Uber Eats connector for a user seeking nearby healthy lunch options or surface TripAdvisor for a hotel within a set budget.

Anthropic is committed to keeping Claude ad-free, meaning users won’t see paid placements or sponsored results. If multiple connectors are relevant, they are ranked based on utility rather than monetization.

The contrast: This approach differs from other platforms such as OpenAI’s ChatGPT, which has taken a more commercially driven path. It initially rolled out in-app checkout functionality that failed to gain traction, then pivoted to a model where consumers complete purchases via third-party apps that plug into the chatbot.

By experimenting with more commercial integrations and monetization pathways, platforms like OpenAI increase the likelihood that ranking and visibility could be shaped by paid placement rather than pure user value, which could potentially dampen trust and demand over time.

OpenAI is flat out sprinting in the direction of revenues, while Anthropic seems to understand this is a marathon,” said Nate Elliott, EMARKETER principal analyst. content-naf.emarketer.com


E-commerce platforms are building growth with brick-and-mortar offline expansions


 


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Woman Arrested After Pepper Spraying Employees During Armed Robbery of Beauty Supply Store in Waldorf
According to charging documents, deputies with the Charles County Sheriff’s Office responded to Super Beauty in the Waldorf Marketplace for a reported theft. Investigators allege Shepard selected hair extensions valued at $398.95 and attempted to leave the store without paying. When confronted by store employees near the exit, Shepard allegedly “attempted to push through the employees… with force” before spraying two adult female victims with pepper spray and fleeing the store. The victims were reported to have “visible redness to their eyes and faces.”  smnewsnet.com


Clarion, PA: State Police Seek Suspect in Walmart Hard Drive Theft Scheme
The Pennsylvania State Police are seeking information about a retail theft at the Clarion Walmart that investigators say is part of a series of crimes occurring across the state. According to a report from Clarion-based State Police, a suspect targeted the Walmart on Perkins Road on April 11. Police said that the individual purchased two Seagate eight terabyte external hard drives and one Seagate six terabyte external hard drive at approximately 3:02 p.m. State police said the hard drives have a total value of $483. According to investigators, the suspect removed the new hard drives from the packages and replaced the internal components with old parts. The suspect then repackaged the items and returned them to the store at approximately 5:42 p.m. the same day, according to police. Through the investigation, troopers determined that this same transaction has been completed at multiple locations throughout Pennsylvania.  exploreclarion.com


Portland, OR: Portland Police bust 11 in Jantzen Beach retail theft crackdown

 



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Shootings & Deaths


(Update) Strongsville, OH: Costco employee shot, killed after confronting shopper carrying gun with drum magazine
A Costco employee in Ohio was shot and killed after refusing entry to a shopper who attempted to enter the store while carrying a weapon equipped with a drum magazine. Police in Strongsville, Ohio, responded to reports of gunfire outside the Costco on Royalton Road around 5:45 p.m. on April 25 and found 61-year-old Randolph E. Corrigan with multiple gunshot wounds. Officers began first aid before he was transported to a hospital, where he died from his injuries. Witnesses told police the suspect, 22-year-old Christian M. Bryant of Fort Worth, Texas, was seen walking toward the store entrance with "a drum magazine protruding from one of his pockets," according to authorities. Corrigan approached Bryant and told him he could not enter the store with the weapon, according to police.  foxnews.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Sacramento County, CA: Walgreens struck by vehicle in attempted burglary
An Antelope area Walgreens store had a vehicle crash through its front door in an attempted burglary, authorities say. The Sacramento County Sheriff's Office says the incident happened just after 3 a.m. Tuesday at the Antelope Road, near Walerga Road, Walgreens location. It appears the vehicle managed to break the door, but it's unclear if the store was breached. Deputies say the vehicle got away before they arrived. It's unclear if anything was stolen and if the store's operations will be affected by the incident.  cbsnews.com


Polk County, FL: Hardware store manager accused of stealing over $7K in fake return scheme
Polk County Sheriff’s Office (PCSO) said it has arrested Justin Johnson, 22, for a return fraud scheme at a hardware store. The store owner of an Ace Hardware at 1218 Finley Avenue contacted deputies on April 27 about unusually high refund amounts over the past several weeks. Investigators reviewed surveillance video and found that Johnson, the store's assistant manager, was conducting the fraudulent returns, PCSO said. Johnson is accused of making a fake sale, processing returns at his register, and using his phone to deposit the refunded money into his personal account. The total fraudulent charges were around $7800, PCSO said. Johnson quit his job at the hardware store on April 26. PCSO arrested Johnson and charged him with several felonies, including grand theft of more than $5k less than $10k.  tampabay28.com


Oakwood, GA: Woman accused of shoplifting from same Walmart in 16 times

Chicago, IL: Burglars strike 2 businesses in Chicago's Lincoln Park community


 


 

C-Store – Dekalb County, GA – Robbery
C-Store – Suffolk, VA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – St Louis, MO – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Los Angeles, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Tukwila, WA - Burglary
C-Store – Greece, NY- Robbery
Electronics – Tupelo, MS – Robbery
Jewelry - North Dartmouth, MA - Robbery
Jewelry - Colorado Springs, CO – Robbery
Restaurant – Lake County, IL – Burglary
Restaurant – Covina, CA – Burglary
Restaurant – Covina, CA – Burglary
Target – Irvine, CA – Robbery
Tobacco – Kansas City, MO – Armed Robbery
Tobacco – Chicago, IL – Burglary                    
 

Daily Totals:
• 10 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



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