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What’s Happening at OpenEye's Booth at ISC West?
OpenEye
will be at ISC West in Las Vegas from March 25-27
ISC West is the leading security and public safety event in the U.S.,
and one of the best ways to see
OpenEye’s
surveillance solutions up close.
Use code ISCW26CIP335
for a complimentary Exhibit Hall pass until March 12, or register
for a discounted pass of $100 from March 13-24.
See OpenEye's latest AI-powered search and alert features that will help
automate operations and security for businesses. Stop by for exciting
giveaways and more—there’s lots to be seen
at booth #14039.
Learn more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
ORC Is Getting More Organized
Inside the Specialized Roles Driving Today’s Organized Retail Crime
Rings
By
the D&D Daily staff
Organized retail crime (ORC) is increasingly defined not by chaos or
opportunism, but by structure. Across multiple retail sectors, loss
prevention teams are observing theft crews operating with clear role
separation — a shift that mirrors legitimate logistics and
supply-chain models.
Rather than relying on a single individual to handle every stage of a
theft, many ORC rings now divide responsibilities among specialized
participants. These roles often include in-store scouts who
assess staffing levels and security presence, lifters who remove
merchandise, drivers who manage quick exits and store rotation,
returners who convert stolen goods into refunds or store credit,
and resellers who move product through online marketplaces or
informal fencing channels.
This task specialization reduces risk for individual offenders. By
limiting each participant’s exposure, groups are able to operate
longer, avoid repeat identification, and complicate prosecution. In many
cases, individuals involved in returns or resale may never physically
steal merchandise, creating additional barriers for investigations that
focus narrowly on in-store incidents.
For retailers, this structure presents new detection challenges.
Traditional LP approaches often center on identifying theft behavior at
the point of removal. However, when theft is only one link in a broader
chain, isolating a single role may not disrupt the operation as a whole.
Loss prevention teams are increasingly responding by shifting focus
from isolated incidents to behavioral patterns across roles. This
includes monitoring return activity tied to high-theft SKUs, identifying
drivers or accomplices appearing across multiple locations, and
correlating in-store theft with downstream refund or resale behavior.
Cross-functional collaboration — particularly between LP, e-commerce,
fraud, and customer service teams — has become critical in building a
complete picture of these networks.
The rise of role-based ORC also highlights the importance of
enterprise-level data visibility. Groups that operate across
banners, districts, or regions often exploit fragmented systems that
prevent patterns from surfacing quickly.
As ORC continues to evolve, the trend toward specialization underscores
a key reality for retailers: modern retail crime is less about
impulsive theft and more about coordinated operations designed to
exploit operational gaps. Addressing it requires not only stronger
controls, but a broader, systems-level view of how organized groups
adapt to retail environments themselves.
Feds Target Big City EBT Fraud &
Skimming
U.S. Secret Service Kicks off 2026 EBT Fraud and ATM skimming Outreach
Operations with Multi-city Effort
In
late January, the U.S. Secret Service, alongside law enforcement and
government agency partners, conducted a multi-city Electronic Benefit
Transfer fraud and payment card skimming outreach operation in
Cleveland, Cincinnati, Seattle and Denver.
Teams also distributed educational materials about Electronic Benefit
Transfer fraud and skimming to businesses to help them better identify
the warning signs of illegal skimming devices.
“This operation was an interagency win. The U.S. Secret Service, and
our law enforcement and interagency partners, will not stand by idly
while fraudsters prey on vulnerable communities using illegal card
skimmers to commit EBT fraud,” U.S. Secret Service Deputy Director
Matthew Quinn said. “This effort demonstrates why a proactive approach
to cyber-enabled financial fraud is necessary. By educating businesses,
identifying skimming devices, and removing them before valuable data
falls into the hands of criminals, we deny their ability to steal
benefits from those that need it most.”
This is part of a series of Secret Service-led outreach operations that
have taken place across the country since April 2024. In 2025, law
enforcement personnel removed more than 400 illegal skimming devices
during these operations preventing an estimated potential fraud loss of
more than $428 million.
Criminals often steal EBT and other payment card numbers by
installing illegal skimming devices on ATMs, gas pumps and merchant
point-of-sale terminals. Scammers use skimming technology to capture
card information from EBT cards and encode that data onto another card
with a magnetic strip.
Law enforcement agencies have seen a nationwide increase in skimming
particularly targeting EBT cards. Each month, money is deposited
into government assistance accounts intended to help families pay for
food and other basic items. This enables criminals who steal card
information to time their fraudulent withdrawals and purchases around
the monthly deposits.
secretservice.gov
'Cargo At Rest is Cargo At Risk'
Intermodal Pushes Back On Cargo Theft
According to the latest analysis by CargoNet, reported cargo theft
incidents rose 27% between 2023 and 2024, across the U.S. and Canada.
Dollar value estimates of loss are wide-ranging, typically between $15
billion and $30 billion annually, and this likely understates the
problem. Under-reporting is common.
The
intermodal industry is particularly exposed due to its modal transfers
and handoffs. Cargo at rest is cargo at risk, and these risks include
financial, reputational, insurance and human safety. IANA recently
surveyed its membership and found that over 50% of respondents had
been impacted, and this was not limited to freight. Thieves have
also targeted chassis.
In response to theft, strategic fraud and double brokering, the
supplier community is embracing a range of visibility solutions.
Transportation management system-integrated tracking devices, an
AI-enabled scanning platform, and a roadside camera network are among
the products addressing the industry's vulnerabilities.
IANA’s Intermodal Safety and Security Committee recently established an
Intermodal Cargo Theft Working Group. The aim of this collaborative
effort is to break down silos and silence around cargo theft,
creating a space to develop and highlight preventative solutions.
This community understands that each mode in the supply chain has an
opportunity to assist, including improved training and strategic
planning. Federal intervention is also crucial. Cargo theft is an
interstate problem, yet prosecutorial responses vary by jurisdiction,
often relegating it to a property crime and an insurance claim. Our
members report a revolving door when enforcement does occur. Those bad
actors who are caught do not remain long in custody.
supplychainbrain.com
CORCA's Impact on Cargo Theft
NewsRoom Notes: Congress takes aim at organized cargo theft
Congressional action is advancing to tackle a sharp rise in organised
cargo and retail theft. The House Judiciary Committee has approved
H.R. 2853, the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act of 2025 (CORCA),
a bipartisan bill designed to modernise federal enforcement for
large‑scale theft operations that span jurisdictions and exploit both
physical and online resale channels.
CORCA would expand federal authority under Title 18 to aggregate
related theft cases, create a DHS‑led Crime Coordination Centre for
better intelligence sharing, raise penalties for
interstate/international cargo theft, and strengthen public–private
cooperation among agencies, law enforcement, retailers and transport
providers.
Cargo theft has evolved from opportunistic smash‑and‑grab incidents into
coordinated, multi‑jurisdictional enterprises that harm carriers,
retailers and consumers. With trucking moving about three‑quarters of
US freight, the trucking sector and railways report rising losses and
disruption. The legislation recognises theft as a national economic
and public safety problem and aims to close enforcement gaps that allow
organised rings to prosper.
For logistics and security teams, CORCA signals potential changes in
enforcement, reporting expectations and collaboration opportunities
with federal agencies — and could influence insurance, routing and
security investments if passed.
thegamingboardroom.com
See 2024 crime stats for police agencies across New York
Asheville violent crime dropped in 2025, fewest homicides since 2017
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AI's Impact on Brick & Mortar
Will AI Doom Physical Retail Or Save It?
For all the chatter in the past year or so about the role of AI in the
consumer economy, its potential impact on the brick-and-mortar shopping
experience is only just taking shape. Opinions, of course, are
divided.
Major chain retailers have been investing heavily and are just
beginning to roll out early iterations of in-store AI “shopping guides,”
digital tools and features focused principally on making the physical
experience as frictionless as e-commerce while retaining—and possibly
enhancing—the personal touch.
Some suggest that AI will be the “starting point” of all shopping
experiences…
Of course, experts have been predicting a twilight future for in-store
shopping for years and it still hasn’t happened. But, will AI be the
“tipping point”?
While the pandemic did provide e-commerce with a burst of rocket fuel,
most brick-and-mortar retailers have since figured out how to compete
(or partner) with Amazon online.
Once the Covid crisis peaked, humans went back to doing what humans
do—driving to the store where they can touch the fabrics, read the
labels, and squeeze the fruit. People like to browse and discover things
they didn’t know they needed or wanted.
Meanwhile, far from trending toward retail domination, US e-commerce
growth is flattening. According to recent Commerce Department data,
the rate of increase in online retail sales was the slowest in almost
three years. The e-commerce share of all US retail sales was 16.4% in
the third quarter, an increase over three years of less than 2%.
AI may naturally lend itself to e-commerce, but AI also has enormous
potential, using chatbots and personalization, to make the in-store
experience better than it has ever been. By doing so, AI can
actually be a loyalty builder. The possibilities are only limited by the
imagination.
firstinsight.com
New CEOs Begin Tenure at Target &
Walmart
Target, Walmart usher in new CEOs
Michael Fiddelke reiterated his top
priorities after taking on the position at Target. Meanwhile, Walmart’s
John Furner paid tribute to his predecessor.
Walmart and Target — two of the most prominent retailers in the U.S.
— have new CEOs as of Sunday.
Target’s former COO Michael Fiddelke has
officially taken over the top spot from longtime CEO Brian
Cornell, all while the Minnesota-based retailer has faced pressure to
speak about U.S. government immigration activities in the state.
The chief executive reiterated some of the top priorities he outlined
when news of his appointment came out in August. Among them is
regaining merchandising authority, improving the customer experience
in stores and online, accelerating technology usage and investing in
employees.
The CEO change at Target follows a long period of poor quarterly
performance, declining store traffic and consumer backlash to
certain DEI-related decisions. A replacement to take on the chief
operating officer role from Fiddelke has not been named.
At Walmart Inc., former President and CEO of
Walmart’s U.S. business, John Furner, has taken the reins
from Doug McMillon. Furner said he was “committed to carrying forward
with the same purpose and responsibility to our associates, customers,
members and the communities we serve.”
retaildive.com
AI & Workplace Safety
How to Prevent Workplace Injuries with AI-Based Assessments
Workplace injuries from repetition cost businesses big time, around
$1.8 billion each year. That’s why AI for workplace safety is
becoming so important. These injuries, often from bad setups or safety
issues, take away from companies’ time, money, and how much they can get
done. Many times, the usual ways of checking for these problems just
don’t cut it. About 25% of workers feel injury symptoms, and the other
75% haven’t said anything yet. This means there’s a good chance problems
are being missed.
Existing tools for checking workplace injuries? They often don’t do
the job for safety experts. Many are too expensive, hard to get, and
need special training to use right. And when safety people spend so much
time writing things down, they have less time to actually make things
better.
AI injury-stopping systems and AI risk assessment tools are changing
how we handle workplace safety management. They check things
automatically and without bias. For example, there’s a system that looks
at how workers move in a video. It quickly figures out possible dangers
and suggests better workstation setups. These AI ergonomics tools can
check tasks for safety problems in just a few minutes. They find
problems using well-known systems. This means AI not only deals with
safety issues we know about but also finds risky movements before anyone
gets hurt.
retrocausal.ai
Exoskeletons Helping to Reduce Injuries
A recent survey from HeroWear found a 62%
reduction in injuries when workers wore an exosuit.
What to watch in retail in 2026
Most US Eddie Bauer stores likely to close as operator preps bankruptcy
3 strategies to outsmart US tariffs and win the supply chain power shift
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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Shopping Cart
Ordinances Are Escalating
—What Retailers Need to Know Now
Shopping cart management has historically been regulated at the municipal
level, with cities nationwide enforcing their own ordinances. California’s
decision to implement a statewide ordinance in 2026 amplified the issue,
reflecting a growing willingness by governments to shift responsibility and
cost back to retailers.
California Raises the Stakes with SB-753
Signed
into law in October 2025, California's
Senate Bill 753 updated how shopping carts found off retail property are
handled statewide. Under SB-753, local governments now have expanded
authority to retrieve and return abandoned carts and charge retailers fees
for that service. Municipalities may also issue fines for carts left
off-premises and impound or dispose of unclaimed carts after defined
timelines, provided proper notice and documentation requirements are met.
What was once treated primarily as a local nuisance issue is now a formal
compliance matter with financial and operational implications. Each stray
cart can trigger retrieval fees, fines, and added administrative
burden—especially for retailers with large cart fleets.
Beyond California: Cities Continue to Act
California is not alone. Cities across the U.S. continue to strengthen local
enforcement, including Phoenix, which recently enacted a new shopping cart
ordinance aimed at reducing abandoned carts in public spaces. Phoenix's
ordinance places responsibility on retailers to prevent carts from leaving
store property and allows the city to recover costs associated with cart
retrieval and enforcement.
Phoenix's ordinance currently focuses on certification, cart containment
measures, and retailer accountability—underscoring a broader trend toward
prevention rather than reactive retrieval.
Why This Matters to Retailers
-
Regulatory complexity is increasing. Retailers must
navigate a growing patchwork of city and state requirements.
-
Costs add up quickly. Retrieval fees, fines, and labor
strain margins over time.
-
Manual recovery doesn’t scale. Reactive cart retrieval
becomes harder as enforcement expands.
-
Community relationships are impacted. Abandoned carts
remain a visible issue for municipalities and residents.
How Gatekeeper Systems Helps
Gatekeeper Systems' CartControl cart containment and management
solutions are designed to prevent carts from leaving store premises in the
first place. By stopping cart loss before it happens, retailers can reduce
exposure to fines and retrieval fees, simplify compliance across
jurisdictions, and maintain cleaner operations—helping them stay ahead as
shopping cart ordinances continue to evolve nationwide.
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AI's Central Role in Cybersecurity
Security work keeps expanding, even with AI in the mix
Board attention continues to rise, and security groups now operate
closer to executive decision making than in prior years, a pattern
reflected the Voice of Security 2026 report by Tines. Within that
environment, large numbers of teams already rely on AI, automation,
and workflow tools as part of routine operations, creating a
baseline expectation that AI plays a central role in security work.
Board-level engagement has grown over the past year, particularly in
larger enterprises. Security teams now participate more often in
discussions tied to resilience, risk tolerance, and operational
continuity. Alignment with broader business objectives still
requires sustained effort, especially when teams manage competing
priorities such as cloud security, privacy obligations, detection
coverage, and incident readiness.
Board visibility rises alongside operational
strain
Higher visibility has brought additional scrutiny of outcomes and
metrics. Leaders commonly track security spending, compliance
posture, training completion, and estimated incident costs.
Practitioners focus more on incident volume, vulnerability exposure, and
detection speed. This mix reflects expectations that security programs
deliver accountability to the business while maintaining technical
performance.
Workloads continue to expand. Manual and repetitive tasks still
consume a large share of daily time, often stretching across evidence
collection, ticket handling, and coordination between tools. This
pattern persists even in environments where AI is widely deployed,
contributing to fatigue and pressure across operational roles.
AI becomes embedded in everyday security tasks
AI already supports a broad range of security functions. Common
use cases include threat intelligence, detection, identity monitoring,
phishing analysis, ticket triage, reporting, and compliance
documentation. Many teams also rely on AI to assist with developer
support, log analysis, and security training activities.
AI-related risk now forms part of the core threat landscape. Data
leakage through AI copilots, unmanaged internal AI use, and prompt
manipulation rank among top concerns. Internal use cases generate
particular attention because they intersect with sensitive data,
workflows, and access controls. Third-party AI use and evolving
regulatory requirements add further layers of oversight responsibility.
helpnetsecurity.com
The Tools Are There, But the
Confidence Isn't
Security teams are carrying more tools with less confidence
Enterprise environments now span multiple clouds, on-premises
systems, and a steady flow of new applications. Hybrid and
multi-cloud setups are common across large organizations, and they bring
a constant stream of logs, alerts, and operational data. That
environment already exists across many enterprises, and it frames a
recent Sumo Logic study that examined how security leaders manage
tooling, staffing, and detection across these systems.
Tooling designed for changing application
environments
Security leaders generally describe their current tooling as
adequate, yet confidence drops when asked about how well those tools
support application environments. Only a minority strongly agree
that their security tooling aligns with microservices, containers, and
cloud-native architectures. Many teams rely on hybrid SIEM deployments
that combine on-premises components with cloud-based analytics,
reflecting a gradual shift.
Cloud adoption remains the strongest driver behind changes in
security tooling. Application complexity, DevOps acceleration, and
governance requirements also influence tooling decisions. These
pressures arrive at the same time that application changes accelerate,
with most organizations reporting moderate to high rates of change
across their environments.
Confidence gaps in SIEM performance
Security leaders express mixed views about the performance of their
SIEM platforms. Most say their SIEM contributes to faster detection
and response, yet only half describe that contribution as strong.
Confidence in long-term scalability follows a similar pattern, with many
teams expressing partial confidence as data volumes and monitoring
demands continue to grow.
Satisfaction with log management and security analytics tools mirrors
this split. Teams that express higher satisfaction also report stronger
alignment between their tooling and application environments. These
teams tend to rate detection and response capabilities more
favorably, suggesting a link between log visibility and operational
confidence.
helpnetsecurity.com
Telecom Ransomware Attacks Surge
FCC urges telecoms to boost cybersecurity amid growing ransomware threat
The commission said it was aware of
ransomware disruptions at a growing number of small and medium-sized
telecoms.
The Federal Communications Commission is warning telecommunications
companies to regularly patch their systems, enable multifactor
authentication and segment their networks to avoid falling victim to
ransomware attacks.
“Recent events show that some U.S. communications networks are
vulnerable to cyber exploits that may pose significant risks to national
security, public safety, and business operations,” the FCC’s Public
Safety and Homeland Security Bureau said in a Jan. 29 alert.
The alert said the FCC “has become aware” over the past year “of
ransomware incidents involving small-to-medium sized communications
companies that disrupted service, exposed information, and locked
providers out of critical files.”
The commission also cited recent data showing that the number of
ransomware attacks on telecom firms globally increased fourfold
between 2022 and 2025.
cybersecuritydive.com
What boards need to hear about cyber risk, and what they don’t
Where NSA zero trust guidance aligns with enterprise reality |
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Making Sense of Amazon's Massive
Layoffs
Did AI really cause job losses at Amazon? It's hard to tell, economist
says
Amazon says it is laying off 16,000
because of 'efficiency gains' from AI, but an economist says it will
take time for firms that are adopting AI to see how their work flows
change.
Amazon laid off 16,000 people last week because of what CEO Andy Jassy
said were "efficiency gains" from artificial intelligence (AI),
but economists say it's hard to know whether the technology is the real
reason for job losses.
“We just don't know,” said Karan Girotra, a professor of
management at Cornell University's business school, when asked if
people are really losing their jobs to AI.
American investment firm Goldman Sachs said in its monthly AI adoption
tracker that, since December 2025, "very few
employees were affected by corporate layoffs attributed to AI."
The report was published in mid-January, before subsequent AI-related
layoffs at Amazon, travel giant Expedia and social media platform
Pinterest were announced.
The Goldman Sachs report found that AI's overall impact on the labour
market remains limited, though some effects might be felt in fields
where AI can do many of the main work tasks, such as writing emails,
marketing pitches, producing synthetic images, answering questions, and
helping write code.
Still, Girotra said it takes time to adjust a company's management
structure in a way that would enable a smaller workforce when it is
integrating AI.
“It requires a lot of adjustment and most of the gains accrue to
individual employees rather than to the organisation," he added,
noting that most employees save time and get their work done earlier
when using AI.
euronews.com
End of Saks-Amazon Partnership
Saks Ends E-Commerce Partnership With Amazon
The end of the luxury retailer’s
partnership with Amazon arrives two years after the e-commerce giant
made a $475 million investment in Saks, Reuters reported.
Bankrupt retailer Saks Global is ending its “Saks on Amazon”
partnership with e-commerce giant Amazon.com, a source with direct
knowledge of the decision said on Friday.
The partnership was already in dire straits when Saks filed for
bankruptcy in February, but the retailer had yet to say outright that
it was exercising its right under Chapter 11 bankruptcy to reject
the contract.
On Friday, a source said Saks will wind down its Saks on Amazon
storefront so it can focus on parts of its business it sees as spurring
more growth.
businessoffashion.com
Amazon driver goes on expletive-filled rant for delivering multiple
packages to customers
E-commerce sites, forgeries shake up future of Native American art
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Anaheim Hills, CA: 7 L.A. men charged in violent jewelry heist and
botched getaway
Seven Los Angeles County men, including second-striker who was wearing a
GPS ankle monitor, have been charged with multiple felonies in
connection with a violent smash-and-grab robbery at an Anaheim Hills
jewelry store Friday afternoon using a stolen car to ram the store’s
entrance and hammers and crowbars to smash the store’s display cases and
steal hundreds of thousands of dollars in jewelry. The seven men and one
juvenile were arrested after the thieves escaped in two stolen Dodge
Chargers and then crashed in two separate multi-vehicle collisions in
Fullerton, injuring several innocent bystanders, before being arrested.
The damage and stolen jewelry are estimated to be worth approximately
$800,000. The adult suspects are currently facing maximum sentences
between 13 years and four months to life in prison.
newsantaana.com
Seattle, WA: Burglars steal $50K worth of Seahawks merch from Seattle
store ahead of Super Bowl
Three people were caught on surveillance video breaking into the Pro
Image Sports store near Lumen Field around 4 a.m. Sunday and stealing
about $50,000 worth of Seahawks merchandise. Store owners said the
suspects used bolt cutters and a crowbar, targeted popular throwback
jerseys and jackets, and fled within two to three minutes before police
arrived. (Editor’s Note: This never happens here in Cleveland -- ha
ha).
fox13seattle.com
Baton Rouge, LA: BRPD investigating attempted break-in at Lululemon
The Baton Rouge Police Department is investigating after an attempted
break-in at a Lululemon store early Sunday morning. BRPD said officers
received a call about the incident around 4 a.m. on Feb. 1 and responded
to the business at 3535 Perkins Road in the Acadian Village Shopping
Center. Video from the scene appears to show glass from the store’s
front door shattered.
yahoo.com
Charlotte, NC: TJ Maxx, Burlington blitz operation leads to arrests, gun
seizures
A blitz operation involving TJ Maxx and Burlington led to multiple
arrests and the seizure of firearms in Charlotte last month, according
to police. The operation, aimed at supporting loss prevention personnel,
took place in the Westover Division. No specific store locations were
disclosed. Police said that during the operation, officers watched
people leaving a store with stolen merchandise. The suspects were
stopped, the items were recovered, and two firearms and marijuana were
found inside their vehicle. Two additional suspects inside the car were
also charged.
wbtv.com
Buckinghamshire, England: Two Romanian migrants who became professional
shoplifters two months after entering Britain illegally are jailed for
stealing £10,000 of women's clothing in just one day
Two Romanian migrants who became professional shoplifters just two
months after illegally arriving in the UK have been jailed for a one-day
£10,000 crime spree. Nicolae-Marius Negoita and Maria-Lacramioara Anescu
stole more than £10,000-worth of women's clothing from John Lewis and
Next last November 1. The pair, caught by police at a Milton Keynes
shopping centre, were being paid a daily wage of £200 by organised
criminals to steal expensive goods, a court heard. The sentences come
amid warnings about Romanian gang-related shoplifting.
dailymail.co.uk
Milton, ON, Canada: Two suspects wanted after stealing $1200 in items
from local Canadian Tire store
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Shootings & Deaths
Houston, TX: Police release new details after six people were shot in parking
lot of Houston strip center
Houston police have released new details about a shooting that left six people
wounded — one of them fatally — Saturday night at a strip center in northeast
Houston. The shooting happened around 10:15 p.m. Saturday at 11330 Homestead
Road, south of East Little York, according to the Houston Police Department.
Police said officers with the Northeast Patrol Division were initially called to
the area for a traffic hazard, after several vehicles blocked surrounding
roadways during a large trail-ride gathering. As officers worked to clear the
roadway, gunshots were heard in a nearby parking lot behind the strip center.
Investigators said multiple people began shooting during an altercation as a
large crowd dispersed and fled the area.
khou.com
Fremont, IA: Iowa man charged with murder after telling authorities he shot
someone after fight in Casey's parking lot
Authorities say a fight preceded a deadly shooting Sunday evening outside a
Casey's convenience store in a small Iowa town. According to court documents,
Michael Joseph Lee and David Michael Dyke had a verbal altercation inside the
store, located at 203 Main Street E. in Fremont, around 5:20 p.m. Sunday. "Dyke
exited the store and sat in his vehicle, which was parked in front of the
store," according to a criminal complaint against Lee, who has been charged with
first-degree murder. "A short time later, Lee exited the store and reengaged
Dyke, who was still sitting in his car. Dyke exited his vehicle and a verbal and
physical altercation occurred between the two. Lee fired several shots during
the altercation, striking Dyke at least once, causing his death." Lee, 45, of
Fremont, called 911, "stating he shot someone," court documents say. Responding
deputies with the Mahaska County Sheriff's Office found Dyke, 45, of Rose Hill,
dead on the scene.
kcci.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Woodstock, GA: Man accused of armed robbery at Woodstock jewelry store
Woodstock police arrested a man on Sunday, accused of robbing a Kay Jewelers on
Ridgewalk Parkway. Police responded to the jewelry store in the 900 block of
Ridgewalk Parkway just after 4:30 p.m. after receiving a 911 call. Staff told
officers that a man had come into the store armed and had stolen jewelry.
Investigators determined the suspect was 26-year-old John Mendoza of Lithia
Springs. Police found Mendoza less than two miles from the store near Towne Lake
Parkway and I-575. Mendoza was pulled over and arrested without incident.
Officers allegedly found the stolen jewelry and weapon used in the robbery.
fox5atlanta.com
Stafford County, FL: Armed robbery at Publix, 2 men charged
A robbery involving a firearm at a Publix grocery store ended with two men in
custody after a brief foot chase behind nearby businesses. Deputies were called
to the Publix at 1640 Publix Way around 9 p.m. on January 27 after reports that
two men pushed a cart full of groceries past all points of sale and
threatened an employee with a gun when confronted. The suspects ran on foot
toward the Five Guys restaurant, abandoning the groceries after the encounter.
Police later located two adult men running behind Five Guys and took them into
custody without incident.
potomaclocal.com
Yakima, WA: Three Fiesta Foods Employees charged with $72,000 theft
Yakima Police say three employees of Fiesta Foods are facing charges for
allegedly stealing $72,000 from the local business over the last year. Officers
were called to the store, at 1008 E Nob Hill Blvd. last Friday after the Loss
Prevention Officer called police to report the three had been involved in coupon
scam from January of 2025 until January of 2026. According to a court affidavit
from the Yakima County Prosecutor's Office the employees would enter a
transaction "such as 100 coupons for a $5 amount on a single transaction and
then pocket the money from the till."
newstalkkit.com
Austin, TX: DOJ: Honduran national sentenced to over 31 years for multiple
Central Texas armed robberies
Michigan cannabis shops tighten security amid surge in break-ins
San Francisco, CA: San Francisco uncovers secret casinos, sleazy drug dens in 9
convenience stores
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•
Beauty – Colma, CA –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Whitehaven,
TN – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Glynn
County, GA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Sioux Falls,
SD – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Houston, TX
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – San Antonio,
TX – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Havelock, NC
– Burglary
•
Clothing – Baton
Rouge, LA – Burglary
•
Collectables – St
Augustine, FL – Burglary
•
Collectables –
Jackson, MS – Burglary
•
Grocery - Stafford
County, FL – Armed Robbery
•
Hardware – Waterford,
MI – Robbery
•
Hardware – New
Hartford, NY – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Woodstock,
GA – Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry – The
Villages, FL – Robbery
• Jewelry - Independence, MO - Burglary
• Jewelry - Valley Stream, NY - Robbery
• Jewelry - Temple TX - Robbery
• Jewelry - Valley Stream, NY – Robbery
• Jewelry - Los Angeles, CA – Robbery
•
Restaurant – San
Diego, CA – Burglary
•
Tobacco – Craven
County, NC – Burglary
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Daily Totals:
• 15 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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