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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Facial Recognition: The Key to
Fighting Retail Theft?
FRT is 'absolutely necessary' to protect
retail staff
Why Australia is in the middle of a shoplifting crime wave
Greg Bearup and Carrie LaFrenz
discuss the rise in retail theft, why Victoria is ground zero, and
whether facial recognition technology is the answer.
This type of organised theft has started to hit the profits of some
of the biggest companies in the country and was the headline story
of this year’s reporting season. It has reached such a crisis point that
in the lead-up to Christmas, both the Victorian and West Australian
governments have introduced new laws.
New laws were passed in Victoria just last week
that aim to address this retail crime spike, and Western Australia is
also toughening its rules. What are the states doing?
So in Victoria, new laws are in place ahead of the busy Christmas
season, which is great news for retail. It will be an offence to
assault or threaten a retail worker, and those charged could face up to
five years in jail. A ram raid is where the criminal drives a vehicle
actually into the shop and steals goods. This will now be recognised as
an aggravated burglary, which carries a maximum penalty of 25 years
in jail.
All of these laws are welcome news, but they were really first promised
last year. So the government seems to be dragging its feet a little
bit.
The Victorian government does have plans to introduce new laws to
establish workplace protection orders against violent individuals, but
that’s not happening until next year. They’re currently only in place in
the ACT, but in Western Australia, the government is introducing similar
laws. And this will allow courts to ban violent or threatening
individuals for up to two years.
What about facial recognition technology? Why
is that controversial, and will it become more common?
LaFrenz: The Retailers Association says it’s vital that
regulators work with the retailers responsibly to deploy FRT to
protect the frontline worker, which is facing a higher rate of violent
crime. Bunnings and Kmart were sanctioned by the privacy
commissioner for illegally capturing this data on hundreds of thousands
of individuals in their stores. They are still
proponents of FRT and say that it’s absolutely necessary to protect
their staff.
Bunnings is now appealing against this finding, and every retailer is
really watching this case very closely to see whether it gives them the
green light to roll this out in their own stores.
afr.com
Cargo Theft Makes Up 58% of Retail
Theft Losses
Getting Organized Retail and Cargo Theft Right
Organized retail and cargo theft are public safety and consumer
protection problems driven by a relatively small number of
sophisticated criminal networks—not a general explosion in everyday
shoplifting. These criminals exploit gaps in law, data, and enforcement
coordination to move large volumes of goods and money across
jurisdictions, often to finance other serious crimes.
Recent freight-industry analyses show that
cargo theft accounts for approximately 58 percent of total retail-theft
losses. Its dependence on interstate highways and multistate
distribution networks underscores why federal attention is necessary.
Federal agencies define “organized retail theft” as large-scale theft
and fraud carried out by criminal enterprises that steal in bulk from
multiple stores and then resell or launder the proceeds through fencing
operations, online marketplaces, and cross-border channels. But
research reminds us that the story is more complicated than a simple
“crime wave” narrative. While shoplifting has risen in some places and
sectors, national trends and data quality are uneven, and not every
theft problem relates to organized crime.
Organized retail and cargo theft are real, serious problems that
affect workers, consumers, and communities. But if policymakers
treat every shoplifting incident as organized crime, we will misallocate
scarce resources, risk unnecessary confrontations, and miss the
relatively small share of theft that actually drives the greatest harm.
A coordinated, data-driven response grounded in accurate measurement,
targeted enforcement, and clear safeguards is the best way to protect
both public safety and the integrity of the retail and supply-chain
economy.
rstreet.org
Historic Homicide-Free Stretch for NYC
NYPD crime data: 12 consecutive days without an NYC homicide marks
longest stretch in city history
The streak, from Nov. 25 through
Dec. 7, tied a previous record set in 2015; citywide murders in November
dropped 46.6% compared with 2024
New York City went 12 consecutive days without a homicide,
matching the longest stretch without a murder in the city’s recorded
history, NYPD statistics show. But the streak ended Sunday night when a
38-year-old man was shot and killed in the Bronx.
The streak, from Nov. 25 through Dec. 7, equaled a previous record
set in 2015. It came during a year that saw significant decreases in
violent crime across the city.
November marked a particularly low point for murders, with 16
homicides recorded during the month, tying the record low previously set
in 2018. Queens and Staten Island reported zero murders in November, and
overall murders dropped 46.6% compared to November 2024.
Through the first 11 months of the year, the city recorded its lowest
number of shooting incidents and victims in recorded history,
according to statistics through Dec. 1. The city’s Fall Zones initiative
showed that shootings decreased 40% in designated neighborhoods when
officers were deployed since the program began.
police1.com
Hawaiʻi crime statistics dashboard offers more detailed public data
CMPD releases data from first weekend of Uptown crime crackdown
&uuid=(email))
AI's Retail Explosion
Is retail ready for the AI shopping shift?
As shoppers ask ChatGPT for
inspiration, brands scramble to ensure their products appeal to the bots
calling the shots
While traditional internet search, social media – especially TikTok and
Instagram – and simply wandering a local high street will still be the
main routes to presents for most this year, about a quarter of people
in the UK are already using AI to find the right products, according
to PricewaterhouseCoopers.
For brands appealing to younger people, the revolution is well under
way: the rival advisory firm KPMG says as many as 30% of shoppers
aged 25-34 are using AI to find products, compared with 1% of those
aged over 65.
Asking a large language model (LLM) such as ChatGPT or Gemini what you
should get your father-in-law – rather than typing “whisky” or “socks”
into Google or DuckDuckGo – may seem a small change in habits. However,
it marks a sea change for retailers
accustomed to paying search engines to promote their listings.
LLMs allow users to ask questions in conversational language, perhaps by
speaking into their computer or phone. Instead of just providing
a list of links, they offer specific suggestions with the potential for
big sales for items that are regularly recommended.
The chatbots produce their responses by scraping the internet and
inbuilt datasets for relevant information, with some sources given
more trusted status than others.
Companies large and small are scrambling to adapt to this new world
where the keywords and advertising deals previously central to web
marketing hold less importance than the reviewers’ opinions, accurate
availability information and product details read by LLMs such as
OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Google’s Gemini and Meta’s Llama.
The shake-up may create an opening for independent businesses to cut
through online, but some big brands are concerned they will be lost
in a wild west where it is unclear how to reach the consumer. Marketers
must now appeal not only to shoppers directly but also to their AI bots.
theguardian.com
Tariffs Impacting Small Businesses
Survey finds 54% of small business online retailers impacted by tariffs
Small business e-commerce owners are feeling the heat from tariffs — and
some are raising prices as a result.
More than half (54%) of online retailers had to make significant
changes because of tariffs, according to an Omnisend survey of 170
U.S.-based small business e-commerce business owners. Among all
respondents, 39% have raised retail prices, 29% have shifted suppliers
and 19% have cut the number of products they sell.
Among the retailers who have already increased prices:
-
27% raised
prices by up to 5%;
-
52% raised
prices by 5-10%; and
-
About 20% raised
prices by more than 10%.
With import costs rising, many e-commerce businesses clearly see no
room to absorb the extra cost, noted Omnisend, so they're
immediately adjusting pricing, suppliers or product offerings to manage
margins.
chainstoreage.com
Empowering Employers to Keep Workers
Safe
OSHA Issues Letters of Interpretation
The agency said the letters provide
"consistent and transparent application of federal workplace safety and
health standards."
On December 10, OSHA announced that it has issued seven letters of
interpretation to ensure the consistent and transparent application of
federal workplace safety and health standards.
OSHA’s letters of interpretation provide official explanations of the
agency’s requirements and how they apply to specific workplace
situations and hazardous conditions posed by employers, employees, or
other parties.
“From construction to engineering, OSHA is providing decisive guidance
after gathering feedback from employers, demonstrating our opinion
letter program has already been effective,” said Deputy Labor Secretary
Keith Sonderling, in a statement. “This effort is a key component of
the Trump Administration’s comprehensive strategy to educate the public
and empower employers to keep their workers safe.”
ehstoday.com
Stores Transition to Tech-Enabled Hubs
Store-level strategies for supply chain resilience
Today’s retail landscape continues to evolve.
It first shifted from traditional brick-and-mortar to e-commerce, and
now to an interconnected ecosystem where channels converge to meet
changing consumer behaviors and expectations. And according to
Deloitte, nearly 80% of shopping still occurs in physical stores,
underscoring their critical role in an omnichannel world.
To continue serving a crucial function in the marketplace,
physical retail stores are transitioning into
tech-enabled hubs that blend convenience and customer experience.
With the right strategies and collaborative mindset, store teams have
the opportunity to increase resiliency and agility while mitigating
disruption across the supply network.
To turn that opportunity into action, retail supply chain leaders can
start by rethinking how their store networks are designed and
supported.
chainstoreage.com
5 store concepts that debuted in 2025
From shop-in-shops to formats targeting Gen
Z, retailers leaned into physical retail to win over consumers this
year.
Holiday shoppers are adapting to the economy - here's how
Lululemon CEO Calvin McDonald is leaving the activewear giant at the end
of January
Bain: How next-gen AI is disrupting the shopping journey
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Closing the Execution Gap
Retail Inventory Management Edition

Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility is a powerful, cutting-edge solution
designed to revolutionize inventory management for modern retailers. It is a
purpose-built solution to enable retailers to close the gap in inventory
management.
In a market where 70% of retailers are stuck in weekly struggles with inventory
accuracy, Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility empowers businesses to move
beyond reactive approaches and achieve operational excellence.
What Sets Winners Apart?
Retail success isn’t just about managing challenges- it’s about strategically
connecting the dots between omnichannel optimization, sourcing strategies,
and advanced technology adoption. The latest study by IHL Research
reveals key insights into what top-performing retailers are doing differently:
-
95% more likely to deploy AI solutions: Winners use
AI to predict demand, optimize inventory placement, and automate processes
for greater accuracy and efficiency.
-
76% more likely to leverage RFID technology: RFID
enables precise inventory tracking, reducing errors and improving stock
replenishment.
-
54% higher profits by 2025 through supply chain
diversification: Winners adopt agile strategies to navigate disruptions
and seize new opportunities.
Their Secret? Focusing on integrated systems that react to
problems by preventing them from happening. This proactive approach creates a
compounding effect: operational efficiency fuels innovation, which drives
sustained growth and profitability.
By combining advanced technology with strategic foresight, these retailers are
pulling ahead and creating a competitive edge that’s hard to match.
Download the full IHL Research report here to uncover the game-changing
insights. Learn how
Zebra Workcloud Inventory Visibility can help solve your real-time
inventory challenges. |
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A 'Strange' Year Ahead?
Cybersecurity Predictions for 2026
2026 is going to be a strange year in cybersecurity. Not only will it be
more of the same, but bigger and louder. It stands to bring about a
structural shift in who is attacking us, what we are defending,
exactly where we are defending, and hopefully, who will be held
accountable when things go wrong.
For context, I am framing these predictions based on the way I run
security and the way I find it effective to talk to board members. This
is through the lens of business impact, informed by things like the
adversarial mindset, identity risk, and threat intelligence.
Artificial adversaries move from
Proof-of-Concept (PoC) to daily reality
In 2026, most mature organizations will start treating artificial
adversaries as a normal part of their threat model. I use artificial
adversaries to mean two things:
-
Artificial Intelligence (AI)
enhanced human actors using agents, LLMs, world models, and spatial
intelligence to scale their campaigns while making them far more strategic
and surgically precise.
-
Autonomous nefarious AI that
can discover, plan, and execute parts of the intrusion loop with minimal
human steering. This is true end-to-end operationalized AI.
We will see the use of AI move from simply drafting great-sounding
phishing emails to running entire playbooks (e.g., reconnaissance,
targeting, initial access, lateral movement, exfiltration, and
extortion). Campaigns will use techniques like sentiment analysis to
dynamically adjust tactics and/or lures, elements such as infrastructure
to dynamically scale, and timing based on live target feedback, not
human shift schedules.
The practical reality for defenders is simple – assume continuous,
machine‑speed contact with the adversary. Controls, monitoring, and
incident response must be designed for a world where the attacker never
sleeps, constantly learns and adapts, gets smarter as things progress,
and never gets bored. When attackers move at machine speed, identity
becomes the most efficient blast radius to exploit.
Read more predictions:
securityboulevard.com
AI Skills are Critical
Cybersecurity skills matter more than headcount in an AI era: ISC2 study
The
latest ISC2 workforce study reveals that skills gaps are increasing as
cybersecurity professionals adopt AI tools and report critical staffing
needs across organizations.
Cybersecurity teams are navigating a shift as skills shortages
overtake headcount as the primary concern, according to ISC2’s 2025
Cybersecurity Workforce Study. The research, based on responses from
some 16,029 cybersecurity professionals globally, reveals that while
budget cuts and layoffs have leveled off after last year’s surge, the
pressure on security teams has intensified.
ISC2, a nonprofit member organization for cybersecurity professionals,
found that cybersecurity workforce budget limitations remain a key
driver of staff shortages, with 33% of respondents stating that their
organizations do not have enough resources to “adequately” staff their
teams. Another 29% of respondents said they cannot afford to hire
staff with the skills they need to “adequately secure their
organizations,” this year’s study found. And nearly three-fourths (72%)
of respondents said that they believe reducing security personnel
“significantly increases the risk of a breach in their organizations,”
according to ISC2.
Economic conditions affecting cybersecurity budgets showed signs of
stabilizing in 2025, according to ISC2, with reports of budget cuts
dropping to 36% (down one percentage point from 2024) and layoffs
declining to 24% (also down one point). Still, underlying workforce
challenges remain.
“Based on what we’re seeing in the data and the sentiment of
cybersecurity professionals globally, there is no indication that
budget cuts or layoffs will accelerate significantly in 2026,” says
Casey Marks, Chief Operating Officer at ISC2. “Economic conditions will
always play an important role in workforce development and enablement.
However, the overall outlook does not suggest a worsening trend in
2026.”
networkworld.com
Hidden 'Cyber Tax'
Cyberattacks force small firms to raise prices: ITRC
The price hikes create a hidden
“cyber tax” that is helping to fuel inflation, according to the report.
The vast majority (81%) of U.S. small businesses suffered a
cybersecurity breach, a data breach or both in the past year, with
more than half of the victims reporting financial losses between
$250,000 and $1 million, the Identity Theft Resource Center said in a
report released Wednesday.
Nearly four in 10 victims said they were forced to raise prices to
address the financial impacts of an incident, the survey of 662 U.S.
small business executives found.
“In effect, the rising cost of cybersecurity and the financial damage
from data breaches are creating a hidden “cyber tax” that is being
passed directly to consumers — the very people who are also directly
impacted by the loss of their personal information (and financial
resources) to identity criminals,” ITRC, a nonprofit dedicated to
helping cybercrime victims, said in its report.
cybersecuritydive.com
Password habits are changing, and the data shows how far we’ve come
The Architects of AI Are TIME’s 2025 Person of the Year |
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Online Shopping Warning
FBI warns of holiday shopping scams targeting online shoppers
Federal agents urge caution as cyber
criminals use AI to create more convincing fraud schemes
The FBI is warning shoppers to stay vigilant against online fraud as
cyber criminals target holiday shoppers with increasingly sophisticated
scams. Federal agents say online fraud tactics have become more
advanced in recent years, with cyber criminals using artificial
intelligence to make their schemes more believable.
Assistant Special Agent Brian Ozden with the FBI Atlanta Division said
he has had to check twice on links before clicking on them. Ozden
recommends people avoid clicking on ads for deals, especially if the
deal seems too good to be true. Instead, shoppers should go directly to
official websites to check the validity of promotions and make purchases
there.
Agents also recommend inspecting sender details in emails and texts.
Fake communications often use misleading domains or foreign phone
numbers.
Phone users can filter unknown callers through their device settings to
help block suspicious calls.
“Yes, there are certain parts of the population that are more
vulnerable, and I encourage family members to talk to those folks, to
keep an eye on what they’re doing, but anybody can be a victim,” Ozden
said.
Agents recommend using password managers to protect your accounts.
Email managers, like Hide My Email or Shield Email adds extra
protection.
wtoc.com
Same-Day Delivery Expansion
Amazon expands same-day perishable grocery delivery
Customers in a wide range of communities across the U.S. can now
include perishable items in their same-day Amazon delivery orders.
The online giant is building on its August 2025 rollout of same-day
delivery of fresh perishable groceries to more than 1,000 cities and
towns by more than doubling the service’s reach to more than 2,300
cities and towns.
With the newest expansion, customers in areas of Boise, Idaho; Salt
Lake City; Fort Collins, Colo.; Omaha, Neb.; Sugar Land, Tex.; Des
Moines, Iowa; Kennesaw, Ga.; Gaithersburg, Md., and more can include
grocery items in their same-day Amazon delivery orders. (The summer
launch included areas of Seattle, Los Angeles, Dallas, Chicago, Miami,
and New York City.)
Amazon is on schedule with its original plans to expand the
initiative to more than 2,300 areas across the U.S. by the end of
2025. The company plans to continue growing the availability of same-day
grocery delivery next year.
chainstoreage.com
Online Grocery Sales Up 29%
Several factors drive surge to $12.3B in November online grocery sales
U.S. online grocery sales rose month over month and year over year
in November 2025.
Total online grocery sales dramatically rose 29% to $12.3 billion
in November 2025 from $9.6 billion in November 2024. That figure also
represented a 6% increase from $11.6 billion in October 2025.
The monthly Brick Meets Click Grocery Shopper Survey, sponsored by
Mercatus, indicates that online grocery’s generally strong performance
in November 2025 was driven mainly by higher order frequency, increased
use of multiple receiving methods, and higher spending rates.
chainstoreage.com
Amazon Reportedly Plans New One-Hour Pickup Service in Stores |
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New York, NY: NYC crew ripped off $2.2M worth of merch from Home Depot
in ‘full time’ Ocean’s 11-style heists
A well-organized Queens retail crew ripped off Home Depot outlets in
nine states for $2.2 million in merchandise, then sold the goods to
“fences” who peddled them on the black market, authorities said. The
sticky-fingered gang, taken down in a 780-count indictment, ran the
scheme for 13 months, and was so well run that they held regular early
morning planning meetings before the heists and kept meticulous lists of
the items they wanted, the Queens District Attorney’s Office announced
Thursday. “By all accounts, this was a full time job for these
defendants,” Queens DA Melinda Katz told reporters. “They took lunch,
they took nap breaks, they took shifts. They picked a particular store,
took a full inventory of the products. They showed up that day. After
the products were stolen, the theft crew needed to get rid of them as a
way to feed the theft crews’ salaries.” “They stole from New York, New
Jersey, Connecticut, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New
Hampshire, Delaware and Maryland,” Katz said. “They stole from Home
Depots from across those states. They typically parked close to the exit
of the store, possibly to allow them to quickly remove their stolen
merchandise into the van.” In all, 13 members of the crew were named in
the indictment, including alleged ringleader Armando Diaz, 52, who ran
5:30 a.m. planning meetings nearly every day in East Elmhurst to plot
out the day’s jobs.
nypost.com
Los Angeles, CA: Thieves tunnel into Woodland Hills sports memorabilia
shop, steal nearly $30,000 of merchandise
Nearly $30,000 of merchandise was stolen from a Woodland Hills sports
memorabilia shop early Thursday morning after thieves tunneled their way
in after breaking into a neighboring Mendocino Farms restaurant.
According to the Los Angeles Police Department, three to four suspects
smashed the front glass door of the restaurant in the 23300 block of
Mulholland Drive. They then tunneled through the wall to gain access to
the Cards & Coffee trading cards shop.
cbsnews.com
Jacksonville, NC: Man charged after $3,000 theft spree at Best Buy and
Walmart stores
A Jacksonville man is facing a series of charges after investigators say
he repeatedly stole electronics and other merchandise from local
retailers. Police arrested 28-year-old Voici Siance in connection with
multiple thefts from Best Buy and Walmart dating back to September.
Court documents accuse Siance of taking a variety of items, including a
FitBit smartwatch, multiple pairs of headphones, a Motorola cellphone, a
gaming controller, and a Ring camera. Investigators estimate the total
value of the stolen merchandise to be more than $3,000. He is also
accused of stealing a portable power station from a Walmart store.
wcti12.com
Venice, FL: Man charged in organized retail theft scheme involving
nearly $3,000 in stolen tools
Laredo, TX: Man arrested for stealing multiple inflatables at Lowe’s
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Shootings & Deaths
Jacksonville, FL: 1 dead in double shooting outside Jacksonville shopping center
A double shooting near an ATM outside a Jacksonville shopping center left one
man dead and several people questioned. It happened about 8 p.m. Dec. 10 in the
parking lot at 750 Edgewood Ave. N. near Beaver Street where two male victims
were located with gunshot wounds. One was pronounced deceased at a hospital
while the other was in stable condition, according to the Sheriff's Office.
jacksonville.com
Las Vegas, NV: Shooting outside east Las Vegas marijuana shop ends in arrest,
attempted murder charge
A 33-year-old man faces charges including attempted murder in a Nov. 26 shooting
outside of a marijuana dispensary in east Las Vegas. Christian Mahoney was
arrested Dec. 4 at a Henderson home. According to a Las Vegas Metropolitan
Police Department arrest report, Mahoney told officers he was defending himself.
He admitted having a gun, but told police he wouldn’t say any more until he
spoke to a lawyer. Mahoney faces the attempted murder charge, as well as battery
with a deadly weapon and three counts of firing a gun inside a vehicle. He is
scheduled to appear in court on Monday, Dec. 15.
8newsnow.com
Brooklyn Center, MN: Brooklyn Park woman charged in Burlington Coat Factory
shooting
A Brooklyn Park woman has been charged with second-degree assault for a Dec. 6
shooting outside of Burlington Coat Factory in Brooklyn Center. According to a
criminal complaint, 25-year-old Roxanna Denise Hill allegedly bumped her
shopping cart into one of the victim’s children shortly before the shooting.
After confronting Hill and leaving the store, the victim and his wife decided to
approach Hill outside. The victim acknowledged he pushed Hill before she reached
into her left pocket — which was followed by a “loud pop.” The victim and his
wife reportedly ran back to their car and they drove away, at which point they
realized he had been shot.
hometownsource.com
Lake County, IL: Update: Man Convicted Of Fatally Shooting Dollar General
Employee in 2022
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Franklin, OH: Police search for Dollar Store Armed Robbery suspect
Police are searching for a robbery suspect after an armed man entered a Dollar
Store Monday night and took money from a register. The employee told
dispatchers: “I wasn’t paying attention, was taking my deposit, was about to
take my deposit to the back and they brandished a knife in front of the
counter.” “He made a statement, and the clerk leaned his head and said, ‘Excuse
me,’ and he pulled up, the suspect pulled his shirt up partway and the clerk saw
what appeared to be the handle of a knife,” Pacifico said. The clerk handed
money over to the masked suspect, police said. The suspect did not run while
leaving the store. The suspect entered the store about an hour before closing
and flashed a weapon at an employee, according to Franklin police.
fox19.com
Winnipeg, Canada: Man accused in fires at Winnipeg restaurants, constituency
offices faces new arson charges
A man who was arrested last month after a string of arsons and break-ins at
locations across Winnipeg — including the constituency offices of two Manitoba
cabinet ministers and multiple restaurants — is facing several new arson
charges. Jesse Wheatland, 35, is believed to be connected with three more
suspicious fires between August and November, police said in a Thursday news
release.
uk.news.yahoo.com
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•
C-Store – Hampton
County, SC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Gulfport, MS
- Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Meridian, MS
- Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Staten
Island, NY – Robbery
•
C-Store – Albany, NY –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Monroe, GA –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Hicksville,
NY – Robbery
•
C-Store – Hicksville,
NY – Robbery
•
Collectables - Los
Angeles, CA – Burglary
•
Dollar – Franklin, OH
– Armed Robbery
•
Electronics –
Jacksonville, NC – Robbery
•
Grocery – Harwood
Heights, IL – Burglary
•
Hardware – Laredo, TX
– Robbery
•
Hardware - Venice, FL
- Robbery
• Jewelry – Houston, TX – Burglary
• Jewelry - Omaha, NE – Robbery
•
Liquor – Randolph, NJ
– Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant -
Tuscaloosa, AL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Ponte
Vedra Beach, FL – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Los
Angeles, CA – Burglary
•
Restaurant - Los
Angeles, CA – Burglary
•
Tobacco - Tuscaloosa,
AL – Burglary
•
Vape – Miles City, MT
– Armed Robbery / shots fired
•
Walmart – Fallston, MD
– Robbery
•
Walmart -
Jacksonville, NC – Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 18 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
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Cincinnati, OH
As a District Asset Protection Manager, you will develop, teach, and
lead the implementation of the company’s asset protection, shortage control and
safety programs for all stores in your district. You will train, mentor, and
collaborate with store management and shortage control associates to ensure the
effective execution and proper implementation of company policies, while driving
improvements in inventory management and loss prevention...
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Director, Safety
San Francisco, CA
The Director of Safety is responsible for developing, implementing, and
overseeing comprehensive safety programs across all retail locations, corporate
offices, and some distribution operations. This leadership role ensures
compliance with federal, state, and local safety regulations while fostering a
culture of safety excellence that protects employees, customers, and company
assets...
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If You Didn’t Measure It, You Just Hoped Really Hard.
Hope is not a strategy — and it’s
definitely not a KPI. If you want to improve shrink, safety, or service,
you have to define what success looks like and track against it.
Feelings are great for birthdays and puppies; business needs
measurement. Good news: once you know your baseline, even small
improvements look like progress.
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