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 5/6/26

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Chris Pomerleau named Area Asset Protection for Nordstrom Rack


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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


Store Workers Face Violence Surge
Illinois retail workers confront rising violence as organized crime surges

Top offenders responsible for most incidents; industry groups call for stronger coordination between law enforcement and retailers.

Illinois retail workers are facing increasing levels of in-store violence, driven in large part by repeat and organized offenders, according to new data from global retail crime intelligence company Auror.

The data shows that one in seven retail crime incidents in Illinois involve violence, weapons, or threatening behavior, while the top 10 percent of offenders accounted for more than 63 percent of reported incidents last year. Overall, violent events increased by seven percent compared with the previous year. Firearms were involved in nearly 40 percent of weapon-related incidents, followed by knives and other blades.

The findings, drawn from some of North America’s largest retailers using Auror’s crime reporting platform, highlight the growing risks despite investments in security and loss prevention. The platform allows retailers and law enforcement to identify repeat offenders and organized crime patterns across multiple jurisdictions, helping connect incidents that might otherwise appear isolated.

“Organized retail crime hurts Illinois communities on multiple levels,” said Anne Sagins, executive director of the Illinois Organized Retail Crime Association (ILORCA). “It puts workers in harm’s way and targets local businesses through coordinated operations by criminal groups. Addressing this threat requires strong coordination between retailers and law enforcement.”

The violence and theft are completely unacceptable,” said Raul Aguilar, head of law enforcement for Auror in the Americas. “Consistent reporting and shared intelligence are helping identify repeat offenders who operate across state lines. These are not isolated incidents—they are organized, multi-state operations.”

ILORCA, the nation’s first statewide intelligence-sharing network for organized retail crime, continues to coordinate efforts across the supply chain, including railroads, trucking companies, and distributors, to combat organized crime comprehensively.  chambanatoday.com


Self-Checkout Pullback Continues As Theft Surges & Satisfaction Falls
Hate Self-Checkout? Stores Are Finally Cutting Back

From rising theft to customer frustration, stores are rethinking self-checkout and bringing back more human cashiers.

Since a slew of major retail chains adopted self-checkouts, many customers have hated the move for a variety of reasons, including being upset about cashiers losing their jobs. For those who wish self-checkouts were a thing of the past, there is good news, as several of the biggest retail companies are starting to move away from them.

The New York Post has reported on a new trend in the retail space that is the opposite of what customers have been seeing over the last several years. After retail companies spent years investing a lot of money to replace traditional cashier lanes with self-checkouts, some chains are reversing the trend.

Most notably, the outlet reported that Walmart is actively eliminating self-checkouts in several of its locations. Citing a report from the Philadelphia Inquirer, The New York Post detailed a recent example of a location in South Philadelphia that had recently removed its self-checkouts. There has been some conjecture that chains may be making these shifts due to self-checkouts making theft easier. However, a Walmart spokesperson told the outlet that they have been bringing back traditional checkout lanes to make shopping better for the company’s customers.

The New York Post’s article went on to detail that Walmart isn’t the only chain that is moving away from self-checkout. It stated that in 2024, Dollar General removed them from 12,000 stores in America. In other cases, self-checkouts have been phased out without a full return to traditional cashier lanes.

When Sam’s Club began moving away from self-checkout, the company introduced AI-powered “scan and go” technology. Costco shoppers may already be aware of the tech. It involves a staff member scanning your cart in full as you wait in line, and everything loads onscreen once your card is scanned. It allows the checkout process to run smoothly, as all that is left to do is pay. mensjournal.com


Understaffed Self-Checkout Areas Driving Theft?
OPINION: The price of poor oversight: How retail loss drives up the cost of living
There is a narrative in retail right now – that the only way to stop theft is through policing. This is not the full picture.

By their own admission, retailers across New York lose more than $4 billion dollars of revenue annually through retail-theft.

A growing share of this loss is happening at self-checkout – where inadequate staffing turns customers into free labor for the store. Companies have tried to maximize profit by minimizing employees, but what they have created instead is a losing self-checkout model that ultimately is paid for by the everyday customer – New Yorkers.

For the State this means losing $176 million in sales tax revenue. For New York City, the loss is tens of millions of dollars. At a time when our city budget is struggling to keep up with its full obligations, addressing this understaffing is purely common sense.

Affordability is directly connected to revenue loss – when companies lose money, they raise prices to balance it out, driving up the cost of food and essential goods across New York City. That means our neighbors are paying more – not just because of inflation, but because stores are losing money and trying to make up for it at the register.

But, we found a great starting point in our communities to help begin to solve this problem and that is why we introduced Int. No. 729.

Int. No. 729 is a common-sense correction. It requires adequate staffing in self-checkout areas and establishes a 15-item limit so these systems are used as they were originally intended – quick, manageable, and supervised. amny.com


ATA Presses DOJ to Crack Down on Cargo Theft
The American Trucking Associations joined a broad coalition to pressure the U.S. Department of Justice to implement congressionally mandated measures to counter a sharp rise in cargo theft and organized retail crime.

Chicago homicides in 2026: 130 people slain. How it compares with previous years.

Multiple D.C. police leaders face firing, some tied to crime stats probe

 



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AI and Robotics in LP
Robotics and AI Expand the Retail Loss Prevention Toolkit

By the D&D Daily staff

As retailers continue to explore new ways to reduce shrink and improve operational efficiency, robotics and artificial intelligence are increasingly becoming part of the loss prevention conversation.

Autonomous robots—once viewed primarily as tools for floor cleaning or inventory scanning—are now being evaluated for their potential role in enhancing in-store visibility and supporting LP teams. Equipped with cameras, sensors and AI-driven analytics, these machines can patrol aisles, identify anomalies and flag potential issues in near real time.

For example, some robotic platforms can detect out-of-place items, empty shelves or suspicious movement patterns that may indicate concealment or organized retail activity. When integrated with existing video surveillance systems, these tools can provide an additional layer of insight by correlating in-store behavior with known risk indicators. Rather than replacing human oversight, the goal is to supplement it—allowing LP teams to prioritize attention where it may be needed most.

AI also plays a growing role beyond robotics. Machine learning models can analyze transaction data, returns patterns and point-of-sale activity to surface irregularities that may otherwise go unnoticed. In e-commerce environments, similar tools are being used to identify fraudulent orders, account takeovers and policy abuse.

While the technology continues to evolve, implementation considerations remain important. Retailers must evaluate cost, store layout compatibility and employee training requirements, as well as address customer perception and privacy concerns. Transparency around how these tools are used—and ensuring compliance with applicable regulations—continues to be a key part of deployment strategies.

As adoption grows, robotics and AI are shaping a more data-driven approach to loss prevention. For many retailers, the focus is not just on stopping incidents, but on identifying patterns, improving response times and creating a safer, more efficient store environment.


Weather's Impact on Workplace Safety
Podcast: Weathering the Storm (or Hurricane, or Tornado or Heat Wave)

Planning for all seasons, and all possible weather-related disasters, requires educating, practicing and updating contingencies in order to keep employees safe, no matter the weather.

Whatever the weather, employers have a duty to keep workers safe. That obligation is becoming more of a challenge as changing weather conditions, and a changing climate, expose more people to more weather-related risks and disruptions.

Weather affects every worker, whether they work indoors or outdoors, says Jason Moreland, director of meteorology at AlertMedia.

"Not every major storm or wildfire can be blamed solely on climate change," he says. "But at the same time, we're seeing clear trends in certain types of extreme weather."

"Extreme weather is something organizations should expect and plan for. It shouldn't be anything that should catch us by surprise."

All the components of forecasting—the technology, weather data collection, modeling and artificial intelligence—are getting better every single year. That means more lives can be saved—should people and organizations choose to heed warnings and proactively prepare for extreme weather events. ehstoday.com


Restocking Robots
How CVS Uses Robots to Keep Your Deodorant in Stock

The pharmacy chain’s first highly automated warehouse uses robots to handle millions of items a week with a fraction of the usual staff

HAINESPORT, N.J.—One of the dozens of warehouses in this town just off the New Jersey Turnpike near Philadelphia is notable for what you don’t see when you walk inside. There are no swarms of workers picking goods off shelves and packing orders, nor towering storage shelves filled with brown cardboard boxes.

Instead, the warehouse floor is dominated by plain red-and-gray walls standing 28 feet high. All the action is happening above and behind those walls, where hundreds of robots ferry products around to replenish CVS Health stores across the Northeast and mid-Atlantic U.S. wsj.com


REI Boycott
REI reports flat sales, narrower losses as store workers call for a boycott

The REI Union said a boycott of the retailer’s anniversary sale is the only way to be heard, as contract talks ended last week without an agreement.

The REI Union is calling for a boycott of the retailer’s anniversary sale, which takes place May 15 through May 25.

The decision came after contract negotiations ended “without a fair contract offer,” the union said in an emailed press release Friday.

In a statement released Saturday, REI called it a “disappointing move” and accused the union of focusing on “on harming the financial wellbeing of the business, instead of advancing negotiations.” On Monday, the retailer reported flat sales and narrower losses for 2025. retaildive.com


US Summer Shoppers Seem Optimistic Over Spending
U.S. summer shoppers appear poised to spend as things heat up, with more than half (52%) planning to increase their spend this summer, and a further 31% saying they will be spending the same. Only 17% of respondents to an Optimove survey signaled that they were trimming their spend in summer 2026.

Mattel CEO: ‘Consumers are buying toys’

Does GameStop’s Attempt To Buy eBay Make Sense?

Survey: Consumers to cut back on restaurant spending — even QSRs
 



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In Case You Missed It

Is AI The Top Retail Cybersecurity Threat?
Expert says AI is the top cybersecurity issue faced by retailers

Robust cyber hygiene is essential to protect devices, networks and critical systems

When cybersecurity expert Jeff Greene was asked at NRF’s recent Retail Law Summit what should be at the top of the checklist for in-house attorneys in charge of cyber compliance this year, his answer was clear.

“It’s AI,” he said without hesitation. “It’s the No. 1 issue that companies face.”

AI has fixed the poor grammar that was once the hallmark of a phishing email trying to trick the recipient into clicking on a malicious link, Green said. It has also led to “spear phishing,” which weaves in subjects like hobbies or favorite sports to make a phishing email look like it’s coming from someone the recipient knows. And it filters out people with the same name to be sure the message is reaching the right target.

On the other hand, the scale and speed that make it easy for AI to run a “brute force” attack to discover passwords also make it easy to use AI to block such attacks, he said. And with large companies facing more cyberattacks than any security center can handle, artificial intelligence is a “classic force multiplier” that can block millions of low-level attacks while identifying the handful of top-level incidents that need human attention.

Some things, however, stay the same.

The basics we had to do before AI are still the basics we have to do now,” Greene said, ranging from employee training to multifactor authentication to firewalls and more. “AI is going to make that easier, but you still need to be involved.”

Martz said retail companies don’t hold data on critical infrastructure that might be sought by large-scale, nation-state attackers like China or Russia, but that they do hold sensitive customer data, intellectual property and competitive data. Greene said that means it is still important for retailers to use robust “cyber hygiene” to protect “insecure edge” devices and technology such as cell phones, routers and firewalls, along with other steps.

Greene said he is supportive of employee training on cybersecurity whether AI is involved in threats or not. Despite some studies that say training is only 10% effective, “that’s still a fairly significant dent,” especially considering that training requires a “fairly limited” investment of time and money, he said.  nrf.com


54+ Companies Targeted By Ransomware Gang
Conti ransomware gang member sentenced to 102 months in prison
A Latvian national who was part of a major Russian ransomware organization that stole from and extorted more than 54 companies has been sentenced to 102 months in prison.

Deniss Zolotarjovs, 35, of Moscow, Russia, was part of a group linked to former members of the Conti ransomware group. Prosecutors said the group used several names in its ransom notes, including Conti, Karakurt, Royal, TommyLeaks, SchoolBoys Ransomware, and Akira.

The activity took place between June 2021 and August 2023. During that time, the group stole data from more than 54 organizations, including companies in the United States.

For 13 companies, reported losses exceeded $56 million, including about $2.8 million in ransom payments. Another 41 victims paid about $13 million in ransom, though detailed loss figures are not available. Investigators believe total losses likely reach hundreds of millions of dollars.

According to court documents, Zolotarjovs was responsible for increasing pressure on victims who did not pay quickly. He reviewed stolen data, researched victim companies, and used access to sensitive personal information to push for payment. helpnetsecurity.com


Keeping Systems Running During a Cyberattack
CISA urges critical infrastructure firms to ‘fortify’ before it’s too late

As concerns mount about potential cyber sabotage by the Chinese government, the U.S. is warning operators to practice maintaining services in a degraded state.

The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) wants to help critical infrastructure operators keep their systems running during a major cyberattack or other serious incident.

CISA on Tuesday released guidance as part of an international “CI Fortify” initiative focused on activities that infrastructure operators can take to isolate the effects of a cyber intrusion and recover from them.

“In a geopolitical crisis, the critical infrastructure organizations Americans rely on must be able to continue delivering—at a minimum—crucial services,” acting CISA Director Nick Andersen said in a statement. “They must be able to isolate vital systems from harm, continue operating in that isolated state, and quickly recover any systems that an adversary may successfully compromise.” cybersecuritydive.com


Spotting third-party cyber risk before attackers do

Oracle rolls out monthly security patch updates

 


 

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AI Shopping Conversion Rates Are Low
Are Retail Apps Within ChatGPT and Claude in Trouble, Or Is it Too Early To Tell?
With OpenAI having discontinued (or scaled back, depending upon who you ask) its much-vaunted Instant Checkout feature in March — in favor of moving the purchase journey through retailer-specific app, instead of the general ChatGPT platform itself, the future of agentic AI experiences tied to consumer buys appears to remain in flux.

The new paradigm? ChatGPT apps and Claude “connectors,” which are essentially the same thing under a different name. Retailers can, and are, creating their own apps for shopper use, leaving discovery up to the AI platform and handling checkout through their own connected app. As Modern Retail’s Mitchell Parton pointed out, even though a full 10% of all apps on ChatGPT are shopping-oriented, including those from Target and Walmart, conversion rates may not be as rosy.

Parton quoted Alpic chief of staff Dimitri Ewald on that subject. Ewald’s company, which builds and distributes apps for both of the aforementioned AI platforms, says conversations with clients have been revealing.

“For the moment, to be honest, adoption and conversion are pretty low. People don’t even know that there are apps in the ChatGPT store,” Ewald said.

And the low conversion rates may not be news to those following the previous Instant Checkout functionality, either.

“Several people involved with Instant Checkout told Modern Retail and other outlets that the program didn’t drive sales and that some merchants didn’t want OpenAI overseeing the checkout process,” Parton wrote. retailwire.com


$265M Supply Chain Facility
Target launches new kind of supply chain facility

The Houston Receive Center gives the retailer more inventory-holding capacity before sending products to downstream locations.

Target has opened a $265 million supply chain facility in Houston that provides more inventory holding capacity and flexibility within its network, the company announced in a news release Wednesday.

The new location, called a Receive Center, is the first of its kind for the retailer and will serve six of Target’s regional distribution centers in addition to a flow center. The Houston facility, which employs 185 people, receives and holds products from Target’s vendors until inventory replenishment is needed for the downstream facilities.

“Positioned between our Import Warehouses in Georgia and Washington, it complements those coastal facilities by adding regionally based capacity — helping us get products to the right place faster and at a lower cost thanks to shorter distances traveled,” Target said in the release. retaildive.com


Exclusive: US and others propose e-commerce pact as WTO deadlock deepens

E-Commerce Market Expands Rapidly with AI-Powered Retail Transformation and Forecast to 2033


 


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White Plains, NY: Employee Steals $243K In Fragrances, Beauty Products From Nordstrom In White Plains
Dominic Bascoe, 24, was taken into custody following an investigation by the White Plains Police Department and Nordstrom’s Asset Protection team, which uncovered more than $243,000 in stolen merchandise at the Nordstrom at The Westchester, White Plains Police announced on Tuesday, May 5. The investigation began on March 18, after Nordstrom reported suspected internal theft at its White Plains location. Surveillance footage allegedly showed Bascoe, an employee, hiding high-end fragrances and beauty products in clear bags and placing them outside a loading dock on Paulding Street before later retrieving them in his personal vehicle without paying, authorities said. Detectives, working alongside Nordstrom investigators, conducted a deeper review of store records and surveillance footage. Authorities said they identified a pattern of theft dating back to Dec. 5, 2025. Over around four months, Bascoe is accused of carrying out 32 separate thefts, taking about 82 boxes of merchandise, including Dior fragrances and other luxury beauty items.   dailyvoice.com


West Palm Beach, FL: Delray Beach man sentenced after pleading guilty in retail theft scheme; over $10,000 in restitution
A man accused of participating in an organized theft scheme entered a plea in a Palm Beach County courtroom. Eddy J. Etienne, 35, of Delray Beach, pleaded guilty on April 23 to conspiracy to commit racketeering. Etienne was initially charged with conspiracy to commit racketeering, organized retail fraud, grand theft and unlawful use of a two-way communication device, but only pleaded guilty to the racketeering charge. Etienne was sentenced to 24 months in state prison, credited with 85 days of time served in county jail, and he was ordered to pay court costs and restitution. Victims named to receive restitution are Walgreens ($3,222.12), Publix ($991), and Bloomingdale's ($6,130) wpbf.com


New Orleans, LA: Suspect accused of three thefts from Central City Ulta store

Chatham County, NC: Two arrested in Chatham County, charged with stealing from farm supply store

Oak Lawn, IL: Man with six retail theft arrests charged in Walgreens shoplifting

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Carrollton, TX: 2 dead, 3 injured in Carrollton shooting; suspect arrested
Two people were killed, and three others were injured during a shooting at Carrollton's Ktowne Plaza. Police have identified a suspect, officials said. Officers responded on Tuesday afternoon in the 4000 block of State Highway 121, an area primarily populated by Korean businesses, known as Ktowne Plaza, the Carrollton Police Department said at a press conference. When officers arrived on the scene, they found that five people were shot, and two of those victims were killed, officials said. The suspect, who was identified as 69-year-old Sung Ho Han, was later arrested after a short foot chase at the H Mart in Carrollton, located on Old Denton Road. Investigators found that the suspect and victims were meeting up for "business purposes," Carrollton Police Chief Roberto Arredondo said in the press conference. Texas DPS confirmed to WFAA that they were on the scene assisting the Carrollton Police Department with its investigation. The Federal Bureau of Investigation and several other federal law enforcement agencies were also on the scene.  wfaa.com


Baton Rouge, LA: 1 dead in shooting near convenience store in Baton Rouge
The East Baton Rouge Coroner’s Office was called to a deadly shooting in Baton Rouge on Tuesday, May 5. The coroner’s office confirmed their personnel responded to a shooting incident in the 3400 block of Perkins Road near a convenience store at 2:10 a.m., where one person was found dead at the scene. The coroner is withholding the name of the victim until the next of kin have been notified. A Baton Rouge Fire Department truck, multiple Baton Rouge Police Department vehicles, officers, police tape, and an ambulance were observed at the scene.  louisianafirstnews.com


Bakersfield, CA: Kern County jury convicts man of first-degree murder in deadly Oildale tobacco store robbery
A Kern County jury convicted Cesar Vasquez of first-degree murder for shooting and killing a security guard during a robbery at an Oildale tobacco store in 2022. Prosecutors say Vasquez shot and killed security guard Odulio Rodriguez during the robbery. The district attorney says the store hired Rodriguez after Vasquez robbed the same business weeks earlier. A customer testified Rodriguez saved her life by intervening during the second robbery. Vasquez faces life in prison without parole. A judge will sentence him on June 2 turnto23.com


Richardson, TX: Police investigate officer-involved shooting after aggravated robbery at AT&T store
A suspect was shot by police following an aggravated robbery at an AT&T store, according to the Richardson Police Department. The incident occurred on May 4, 2026, around 4:00 p.m. in the 1400 block of East Belt Line Road. The suspect, identified as 38-year-old Jarvis Martel Hamlin, entered the store, displayed a handgun, and robbed multiple employees before fleeing eastbound. A store employee provided a description of Hamlin and confirmed he was armed. Officers quickly responded and located Hamlin on East Belt Line Road. When officers issued verbal commands, Hamlin turned, raised a handgun, and fired at an officer. The officer returned fire, striking Hamlin multiple times. Hamlin was taken into custody and received medical aid before being transported to a local hospital, where he remains in stable condition. The firearm was recovered at the scene.  kdhnews.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Pleasanton, CA: Jewelry store smash-and-grab robbery shocks shoppers at Pleasanton mall
Thieves smashed glass display cases and ransacked a jewelry store inside an East Bay mall Monday morning, prompting nearby workers and shoppers to run for safety. Cellphone video obtained by ABC7 Eyewitness News shows suspects using hammers to break into Zales Jewelers at Stoneridge Shopping Center in Pleasanton. The robbery happened around 11:30 a.m., according to police radio traffic.  abc7news.com


Santa Rosa, CA: Retail theft suspects arrested after deputy chase, crash
The incident began at around 3 p.m. at a Home Depot in Windsor. The Sonoma County Sheriff's Office said in a press release that a deputy received a report that a number of tools had just been stolen from the store, and the suspect vehicle was a white Ford F-150. The deputy spotted the truck exiting Highway 12 onto Dut ton Avenue in Santa Rosa and attempted a traffic stop, the Sheriff's Office said, but the driver did not stop and the deputy began a pursuit. The vehicle then drove westbound on Highway 12 and swerved off the road into a creek bed behind Caltrans offices on Occidental Road and Fulton Road. There were four people inside the pickup truck, and additional deputies and officers from the Santa Rosa Police Department arrived at the crash scene. The driver, identified as 45-year-old Kalial Abbushi of San Leandro, was arrested for felony organized retail theft and evading a peace officer.  cbsnews.com


Los Angeles, CA: 4 businesses in Fairfax District hit by burglars, leaving owners frustrated

Cleveland, OH: Serial robber gets 29 years for 10 Cleveland-area stick-ups


 


 

Beauty - Los Angeles, CA – Burglary
C-Store – Honolulu, HI - Armed Robbery
C-Store – Beaumont, TX – Robbery
C-Store – Tacoma, WA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – West Seattle, WA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Milwaukee, WI – Robbery
Cellphone – Richardson, TX – Armed Robbery / Susp wounded
Dollar – Omaha, NE – Robbery
Gaming - Chicago, IL – Burglary
Grocery – Tannersville, PA – Robbery
Hardware - Santa Rosa, CA – Robbery
Hardware – Chatham County, NC - Robbery
Jewelry - Pleasanton, CA - Robbery
Jewelry - Leominster, MA – Robbery
Jewelry - Wichita, KS – Robbery
Jewelry - Newark, DE – Robbery
Liquor – Watervliet, NY – Burglary
Liquor – North Charleston, SC – Robbery
Mall - Baltimore County, MD – Armed Robbery
Pharmacy – Chicago, IL – Robbery
Restaurant – Richardson, TX – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Los Angeles, CA – Burglary
Restaurant – Los Angeles, CA – Burglary                        
 

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



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