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 6/12/26

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Steven Bova, CPP named Director Asset Protection & Safety for The Guitar Center Company


See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here  |  Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position

 

 

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LPRC Product Protection Summit Recognizes Innovation Award Winners

Annual awards highlight emerging technologies and product protection solutions showcased during NRF PROTECT

The Loss Prevention Research Council Product Protection Work Group (PPWG) announced the winners of its annual Product Protection Summit awards during events held in conjunction with NRF PROTECT 2026.

This year's award recipients included:

  • Integrated Solutions: Sekura Global – Sekura MoveAlert

  • EAS & RFID: CONTROLTEK – SAM2CAM™

  • Frictionless Solutions: siffron – EntryLink™

  • New Conceptual Solutions: Auror – Auror Subject Recognition - see the write-up below

The awards recognize innovation and collaboration in product protection, loss prevention and retail security technologies. The solutions were evaluated during the annual Product Protection Summit and C3! events, which bring together retailers, solution providers and industry partners to explore emerging approaches to reducing loss and improving operational effectiveness.

Separately, March Networks' EL5 ATM Covert Camera was recognized during the LPRC C3! Summit.

In related recognition announced during NRF PROTECT, Christian Latson, co-leader of the LPRC Product Protection Work Group, was named a 2026 LP Hall Rising Star Award recipient. The award recognizes emerging leaders who have demonstrated significant contributions to the loss prevention and asset protection profession.


Auror Subject Recognition recognized by leading retail industry
research group

GRAPEVINE, Texas – June 11, 2026 – Auror, the leading retail crime intelligence platform used by some of the largest retailers across the United States and around the world, was honored this week by the Loss Prevention Research Council (LPRC) for its responsible solution to help retailers manage facial recognition technology (FRT) in stores, strictly for crime prevention and safety purposes.

Auror Subject Recognition is an add-on module that wraps the data governance and safeguarded workflows around the FRT, allowing retailers to use their own existing information about serious offending to provide early notification to store teams. The system keeps a human in the loop on key decisions, provides full auditability, and scope is locked so it cannot be used for profiling or in-store tracking. Subject Recognition was awarded with this year’s LPRC Product Protection Summit Award, in the New Conceptual Solutions category, during the National Retail Federation’s NRF PROTECT 2026 event.

For more information about Auror Subject Recognition, click here.

Click here to read the full press release.

 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Following the ORC Money Trail
Organized Retail Theft Investigations Expand Beyond the Theft


Following Financial Networks Becomes an Increasing Focus for Investigators

By the D&D Daily staff


As organized retail crime (ORC) continues to challenge retailers across the country, many investigations are increasingly focused on more than the theft itself. Retailers, law enforcement agencies and prosecutors are devoting greater attention to understanding the networks that help move stolen merchandise from store shelves into the marketplace.

Unlike opportunistic shoplifting, organized retail theft often involves groups that target specific products with the intention of reselling them for profit. Health and beauty items, over-the-counter medications, apparel, electronics and other high-demand products frequently appear in ORC investigations because they can be resold through a variety of channels.

Industry experts note that the theft is often only one component of a larger operation. Stolen merchandise may pass through multiple individuals before eventually being sold online, at flea markets, through social media platforms or via other secondary markets.

As a result, investigators are increasingly examining the financial and logistical structures that support organized theft activity. In addition to reviewing surveillance footage and incident reports, investigations may include analysis of transaction records, return activity, gift card transactions, shipping information and other data that can help identify broader patterns.

Many retailers have also expanded intelligence-sharing efforts with law enforcement and industry partners. By comparing incidents across multiple locations, organizations can sometimes identify common suspects, recurring methods and connections between theft events that initially appeared unrelated.

Law enforcement agencies have similarly emphasized intelligence-led approaches designed to identify individuals responsible for coordinating theft crews, facilitating resale operations or managing distribution networks. In some cases, investigations may result in charges beyond theft offenses when evidence supports broader criminal activity.

The strategy reflects a growing recognition that organized retail crime often operates as a coordinated enterprise rather than a series of isolated incidents. While apprehending offenders and recovering merchandise remain important objectives, many investigators view disrupting the networks that profit from stolen goods as an important component of long-term ORC prevention efforts.


Partnerships Strengthen Theft Investigations
How Anchorage PD combined partnerships and technology to combat retail theft

A dedicated retail theft unit, stronger retailer collaboration and better intelligence sharing helped Anchorage Police improve investigations, increase prosecutions and maximize limited resources

Retail theft has grown into a persistent challenge, resulting in direct losses to retailers, higher prices for consumers and strains on public safety resources.

In Anchorage, Alaska, police officers and community members witnessed theft trends firsthand: brazen grab-and-go incidents, vehicles loaded with stolen goods and everyday items locked behind cases. Encounters sometimes escalated when offenders assumed store policies would prevent intervention, leading to confrontations that jeopardized safety.

The stakes and the opportunity

Experience shows retail theft rarely occurs in isolation. Individuals involved often intersect with other criminal activity, which compounds safety risks for neighborhoods. The “petty” label obscures the reality that community well-being is directly affected: Quality of life diminishes, businesses face higher operating costs and residents ultimately pay more. Recognizing the broader impact reframes theft as a public safety problem that warrants focused, data-driven attention.

At the same time, Anchorage Police confronted the practical constraints shared by many agencies: short staffing and the need to prioritize calls involving the greatest public harm.

A turning point: From observation to action

Anchorage’s pivot began when I attended Axon Week in 2025. As the department prepared for an Axon partnership to integrate technology initiatives throughout the organization, I happened to sit in on a session about retail theft. The presentation introduced Auror — pronounced “aura” — a retail crime intelligence platform already in use by many of Anchorage’s major retailers. What stood out was not just the software, but the connected ecosystem retailers had built around it. Loss prevention and asset protection teams were documenting incidents, evidence, trespass notices and itemized losses in the system. Auror created the Retail Crime Hub that law enforcement could access, search and act upon (with retailer permission).

For Anchorage, this was the bridge between limited resources and smarter enforcement. Auror centralizes incident data, makes repeat-offender patterns visible across locations and brings surveillance images, receipts and reports into a single, searchable interface for investigators. Instead of piecemeal file transfers, phone tag and long drives to collect thumb drives, officers can review digital case packets, communicate directly with store partners and move faster on warrants and prosecutions. police1.com


Cracking Down on Big City Crime
Braun: State Will Continue to Step In to Help Crime-Ridden Cities

Indiana Gov. Mike Braun spoke during a crime crackdown press conference on Wednesday with Indiana State Police.

Indiana Gov. Mike Braun said the state is not going to “watch blindly” if cities like Indianapolis can’t get crime under control.

During the Indiana State Police Crime Crackdown press conference on Wednesday, Gov. Braun appeared to call out prosecutors while discussing violent crime in Indy, saying they must be more aggressive when prosecuting violent offenders.

“Places urban in nature have got to get their crime under control,” Gov. Braun said. “Police are generally doing their job, and then it boils down to prosecutors.” The governor also warned that if Indianapolis and other major Indiana cities cannot get a better grasp on their violent crime issues, the state will continue stepping in.

The Indianapolis police department is going to get help from state police,” said Braun. “Southern Indiana is a place where the stuff we’re talking about here (Indianapolis), that kind of violent crime, generally, has been happening in urban areas, and hopefully what we’re doing across the state tamps it down in general.” wibc.com


Jersey City Failed to Properly Report Crime Data to Feds, According to Audit

South Bend Police to host monthly crime stat meeting
 



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Making the Business Case for LP Investment
Why Retail Security and Loss Prevention Budgets Remain Strategic Investments


By the D&D Daily staff

As retailers continue to navigate economic uncertainty, margin pressures and shifting consumer expectations, many departments are facing increased scrutiny over budgets and spending priorities. For loss prevention and asset protection leaders, that environment often creates a familiar challenge: demonstrating the business value of security-related investments.

While loss prevention programs have traditionally been viewed through the lens of shrink reduction, many retailers are increasingly recognizing that modern LP functions contribute to a much broader range of business objectives.

Security technologies, investigative tools, access control systems, video surveillance platforms and workforce safety initiatives can help protect inventory and assets, but they also support operational continuity, employee retention, customer experience and risk management efforts.

One of the ongoing challenges for LP leaders is that successful prevention is often difficult to quantify. Unlike sales growth or revenue generation, many LP successes involve incidents that never occur because of proactive measures already in place.

As a result, industry experts frequently encourage security leaders to focus on metrics that connect LP activities to broader business outcomes. These may include reductions in operational disruptions, improvements in employee safety, faster incident resolution times, lower insurance costs, reduced fraud losses and support for compliance requirements.

Cross-functional collaboration has also become increasingly important. Retailers often find that security investments generate value across multiple departments, including operations, human resources, legal, risk management and information technology teams. Demonstrating those shared benefits can strengthen support for future funding requests.

The growing convergence of physical security, cybersecurity and operational resilience has further elevated the strategic role of LP organizations. Investments that improve visibility, communication and incident response capabilities can help retailers prepare for a wide range of challenges, from workplace safety incidents and supply chain disruptions to technology outages and emergency situations.

As budget planning discussions continue across the retail industry, many organizations are viewing loss prevention not simply as a cost center, but as a business function that helps protect people, assets and operations. For LP leaders, clearly communicating that value remains one of the most important components of securing long-term investment and organizational support.


92% of Employees Feel Workplace Strain
Ways to Address Chronic Strain in the Workplace

Companies are using principles of resilience as way to combat the strain that 92% of employees feel.
Server Username


A recent survey, Workforce State of Mind, from Headspace, found a disconnect between what employers think they're providing and what employees actually experience.

This gap is important because 92% of workers report experiencing mental or cognitive strain at work. And 37% say that the strain has increased in the past 12 months.

Employees reported that the strain has had a negative impact on the following areas:

  • 76% said it affects their sleep

  • 73% said it affects their ability to focus

  • 70% said it affects their productivity

  • 44% said it affects their ability to apply good judgment when using AI and new technologies.

The survey found that several factors are driving this chronic stress:

  • Unclear priorities (41%)

  • Job insecurity (37%)

  • Pace of organizational change (29%)

  • Context-switching (26%)

  • Adoption of AI and new technologies (24%) ehstoday.com


How To Solve Stockout Complaints
Sephora, Trader Joe’s, and Target See High Stockout Complaints: What’s the Answer?
Out-of-stocks or stockouts are a persistent problem in retail, whether physical or digital, and new data provided by a recent DOSS report indicates that the issue isn’t a stagnant one.

Surveying 1,000 U.S. consumers and comprehensively analyzing stockout language found across social media platform Reddit, the report indicates that consumers have some tolerance for stockouts — but that patience isn’t exhaustive.

“Nearly three-quarters (74%) of consumers encountered an out-of-stock product they regularly buy in the past 12 months. On average, shoppers hit stockouts three times a year when shopping online. When a stockout happens, 45% buy from a different retailer and 32% switch to a competing brand temporarily,” the report authors wrote.

“About 62% of consumers said they have switched to a competing brand at least once because of a stockout, and 82% said they would try a competitor if their go-to is frequently out of stock. A quarter (25%) said stockouts specifically damaged their trust in a brand. More than 1 in 20 (6%) have gone further, leaving a negative review because of a stockout or fulfillment issue,” the research team added. retailwire.com


'Retail Crises'
Senate Examines Main Street Retail Crises
Small business retail is under pressure from tariffs, shifting consumer behavior, and generational spending changes. A Senate Small Business hearing scheduled for June 17 will examine 250 years of this type of commerce, with a particular focus on the retail sector at a moment when data suggests it is acting as a drag on the broader small business economy.

A Main Street Alliance survey of approximately 3,000 small business members found that 81.5 percent said they may raise prices to offset tariff costs, while 41.7 percent reported they would delay business investments. The National Retail Federation (NRF) has warned that import volume at major U.S. ports was expected to see a significant year-over-year decline in the first half of 2026 due to tariff impacts, a direct hit to small retailers, given that the NRF also reports that 97 percent of U.S. companies that import goods are small businesses. legis1.com


Spirit Halloween aims to hire 52,000 employees ahead of season

Casey’s to open ‘at least’ 120 stores

Wholesale Prices Increase More Than Expected in May

Something to Talk About: A Psychological Pandemic
 



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Massive Cyberattack Surface
FIFA World Cup expected to face extensive criminal, hacktivist cyber threats

Researchers warn that thousands of malicious domains are already in place, as fans and tournament organizers face potential attacks.

The 2026 FIFA World Cup, which officially kicks off today, is expected to face a wave of cyber threat activity from actors seeking credentials and financial gain, while state-linked adversaries will pose a serious risk to disrupt the tournament.

The 39-day tournament is considered the largest sporting event in history, with a record 48 teams playing in 104 matches in 16 cities across the U.S., Mexico and Canada, marking the first time the games are being jointly hosted by three countries. The tournament starts today in Mexico City and will conclude on July 19 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey.

FIFA expects more than 5 million fans to attend games, creating a massive attack surface for cyber threat activity or even violence. Researchers warn that financially motivated actors have already prepared to capitalize on the games.

Cybercriminal infrastructure

More than 10,000 World Cup-themed malicious domains have popped up since January, according to a report released Tuesday by Arctic Wolf. Social media posts are luring potential victims to sites on Discord, WhatsApp or Telegram, in order to spread malware or conduct other fraudulent activity.

Attackers are using the World Cup as cover to run high-volume phishing operations against both fans and the organizations supporting the event,” Ismael Valenzuela, vice president of threat intelligence research at Arctic Wolf, told Cybersecurity Dive.

Beyond phishing attempts targeting the fan base, researchers found infrastructure aimed at event organizers. Fake career sites have been set up to steal Google Workspace accounts and a weaponized “employee handbook” PDF document was used to target staff at one host city, according to Arctic Wolf.

The FBI in May warned that threat actors were conducting spoofing attacks against the FIFA website. The spoofed websites may be used to collect personal data, conduct monetary fraud or launch additional attacks. cybersecuritydive.com
 



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Hackers Finding Entry Points as Companies Struggle to Keep Up With AI
Companies are failing to keep up with AI’s identity sprawl, creating entry points for hackers

Three-quarters of organizations say they aren’t fully overseeing the activities of user accounts belonging to agents and other AI tools.

The rate of data breaches at companies that widely use AI tools is significantly higher than the rate at companies that don’t — 43% compared with 11% over the past 12 months — the identity security firm Netwrix said in a report published on Wednesday.

AI tools such as agents significantly increase organizations’ “identity footprint,” creating more gaps that hackers can exploit, Netwrix said. At the same time, Netwrix found, the companies using AI the most widely are also the ones taking identity management the most seriously.

Netwrix’s report highlights the security risks of the sprawling web of user accounts and other identities that companies must create to use agents, copilots and other AI tools.

AI agents are now acting on behalf of humans against sensitive data,” Netwrix researchers wrote. “Non-human identities need the same operational rigor long applied to privileged human access.”

And yet many companies aren’t taking identity management seriously, the report found. Roughly three-quarters lack “a single, unified view of sensitive data and which identities have access to it,” researchers said. More than half of organizations lack an up-to-date database of sensitive data, 71% can’t quickly determine which identities can access which data and 70% don’t have a security strategy linking data protection with identity governance.

Identity management is far from a new challenge for enterprises, but AI has magnified it, and companies are not always keeping pace. Three-quarters of organizations aren’t fully overseeing what AI identities are doing in their systems, even as 41% say they’re letting AI agents access sensitive data and perform vital tasks. cybersecuritydive.com


Online Fraud Becoming Easier With AI
9 out of 10 people can no longer distinguish real from AI-generated content
Online fraud is becoming harder to distinguish from legitimate activity as AI-generated messages, voices, photos, reviews, and identities become more convincing.

Nearly nine in ten adults say they can no longer tell what is real from AI-generated content, according to the latest Malwarebytes survey. The share increased from 66% in 2025 to 85% in 2026.

Half of respondents said they had encountered an AI-driven scam during the past year. Personalized scam messages, manipulated product reviews, AI-generated images, and voice impersonation were among the experiences reported.

Identity abuse was another recurring theme in the survey. Some people reported having their identities manipulated by AI, while others described receiving voice-cloned calls that appeared to come from someone they knew. Younger adults reported higher levels of exposure than older age groups.

One respondent described receiving an AI-generated call that mimicked the voice of someone familiar. “It was very frightening. Since then, I am much more cautious with unknown numbers and no longer immediately trust voice messages.”

Technology companies are introducing new safeguards to address the problem. Google recently expanded Android’s scam detection capabilities to help identify suspicious calls and protect users from impersonation scams. helpnetsecurity.com


FBI seizes 13 websites linked to alleged Chinese intelligence-gathering effort

CISA orders federal agencies to “patch smarter”


 




Returns Challenge Retailers
Returns Fraud Remains a Growing E-Commerce Challenge


Retailers Continue Refining Return Policies to Balance Convenience and Risk

By the D&D Daily staff


As e-commerce continues to play a significant role in retail sales, many retailers are placing renewed attention on an operational challenge that affects both profitability and customer experience: returns management.

Online shopping has made returns easier and more convenient for consumers, but it has also created new complexities for retailers. Industry estimates show that online purchases are returned at substantially higher rates than in-store purchases, creating additional costs related to shipping, processing, inspection and restocking merchandise.

Retailers face a balancing act. Consumers increasingly expect flexible return options, including free returns, extended return windows and convenient drop-off locations. At the same time, businesses must manage the financial impact of growing return volumes and address forms of abuse that can accompany those transactions.

One area receiving increased attention is returns fraud. Industry experts have identified several tactics that can create losses for retailers, including returning stolen merchandise, using counterfeit receipts, wardrobing (purchasing items for temporary use before returning them), and claims involving products that were never received.

To address these challenges, many retailers are investing in technology and analytics designed to identify unusual return patterns while allowing legitimate customer returns to proceed with minimal friction. Data-driven tools can help retailers detect repeat abuse, flag suspicious transactions and support investigations when organized schemes are suspected.

Retailers are also evaluating return policies to ensure they remain competitive while reducing unnecessary risk. Some organizations have introduced more targeted return controls, while others have expanded options such as in-store returns for online purchases, which can lower shipping costs and create additional customer engagement opportunities.

Loss prevention, fraud prevention and e-commerce teams are increasingly collaborating on return-related strategies as the volume of online transactions continues to grow. Their efforts often focus on reducing fraud, improving operational efficiency and maintaining a positive customer experience.

As digital commerce continues to evolve, returns management is expected to remain a key area of focus for retailers seeking to balance customer convenience with effective risk management and operational performance.


Data Center Backlash
Americans wary of AI-driven data center boom, Reuters/Ipsos poll shows

Majority of Americans oppose local data center construction, Reuters/Ipsos poll finds

Just one-in-three Americans approve of the fast pace of ​data-center construction that supports artificial intelligence and most would oppose building one in their own community, according to a new ‌Reuters/Ipsos poll.

The poll results reflect widespread public unease over the data center boom in the United States, an issue high on the minds of voters and political campaigns ahead of the November 3 midterm elections.

U.S. President Donald Trump's administration has prioritized rapid AI development, citing China as a competitive rival, and has directed federal agencies to accelerate ​permitting for infrastructure tied to the sector.

The six-day poll, which surveyed 4,531 people across the country and closed on Monday, showed just ​33% of Americans agreed with a statement that it was mainly a good thing to build data centers at ⁠a rapid pace. Some 64% disagreed. cnbc.com

 
Amazon's data centers are 7x more water-efficient than the industry average

Targeting Amazon Prime Day, Walmart Deals event moves to June


 


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Texas Man Learns Fate for Stealing Over 200 LEGO Sets in Weekslong Spree
Winston Love, 28, was sentenced to 45 years in prison and fined $10,000 after his conviction for organized retail theft with a deadly weapon Police said investigators linked him to more than 200 stolen LEGO sets and over $300,000 in merchandise taken during a 50-day spree. Authorities said the case was the first trial under Texas’ updated organized retail theft statute, which took effect in September 2025. Winston Love, 28, was convicted June 4 of organized retail theft with a deadly weapon and later sentenced to 45 years in prison, according to a June 10 news release from the Watauga Police Department and trial results posted by the Tarrant County Criminal District Attorney’s Office. The jury also assessed a $10,000 fine, according to trial results posted by the district attorney’s office.  people.com


Parkland, FL: Broward BJ’s employee had illegal side hustle, cops say: Shipping stolen store goods across US
A BJ’s Wholesale Club employee is facing charges after Broward Sheriff’s Office deputies said the company’s home office caught on to his illegal side hustle: Stealing and selling store items. Deputies took John Stevens, 52, of Boca Raton, into custody on Monday. According to investigators, an anonymous tip alerted BJ’s management to a scheme in which Stevens was stealing company merchandise and selling it for profit, even shipping the goods directly from the store to the people he was selling it to. Authorities said the thefts occurred between March and June at the store at 5901 W. Hillsboro Blvd. in Parkland. Stevens was seen on surveillance camera taking merchandise from the sales floor, bringing it to a shipping room and using the store’s UPS shipping computer to send the goods to locations across the United States, including his own home, according to an arrest form. Authorities said he was advertising and selling the products on eBay and Facebook. Deputies said Stevens shipped stolen property on 27 separate occasions and cost the company around $10,000 in financial loss. He is facing charges of grand theft of more than $10,000 but less than $20,000, organized dealing in stolen property and 25 separate charges of dealing in stolen property.  local10.com


Philadelphia, PA: Man breaks into Northeast Philly shop, steals boxes of shoes
Law enforcement officials have released surveillance video in the hopes of identifying a man who, officials said, stole hundreds of dollars worth of sneakers during a break in at a shoe store in Northeast Philly on June 6, 2026. Police shared video from the incident on social media on Thursday.  nbcphiladelphia.com


Cambria County, PA: Nanty Glo man accused of stealing thousands of tools, reselling them online

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Kansas City, MO: One dead after altercation inside convenience store leads to shooting, KCPD says
A dispute inside a Kansas City convenience store turned deadly Wednesday afternoon. The shooting was reported shortly after 4:15 p.m. in the 4300 block of Paseo. Police officers found an adult man wounded inside the business. He later died at the hospital from his injuries. Police believe several people were involved in a verbal confrontation inside the store before gunfire erupted. The victim was struck during the shooting. Two persons of interest are in custody.  kmbc.com


Houston, TX: Man sentenced to 50 years for shooting, killing his girlfriend at Houston liquor store
A man who shot his girlfriend nine times after he claimed she disrespected him has been sentenced to 50 years in prison. Michael Wilkerson was originally charged with capital murder, but accepted a murder plea deal for the November 2024 killing of 29-year-old Darrell Lynn Tikisha King. The shooting happened at the liquor store King had worked at. Family members told KHOU 11 she had been trying to leave the relationship.  khou.com


North Myrtle Beach, SC: Shots fired at North Myrtle Beach Verizon store, no injuries reported
Police are investigating a shooting at a North Myrtle Beach Verizon store on Thursday morning. The North Myrtle Beach Police Department responded to a shots-fired report at the Verizon Wireless store along Highway 17 North near Gator Hole Plaza. Police discovered that rounds were fired at the store during the hours it was closed. According to NMBPD, no one was injured.  wmbfnews.com


Tulsa, OK: Tulsa PD investigates clerk shooting machete-wielding suspect
On Thursday, the Tulsa Police Department says an investigation is ongoing after a clerk shoots a suspect armed with a machete. According to police, on June 11, 2026, around 8:17 a.m., officers responded to a shooting call. Officers arrived at Naifeh’s Food Mart in the area of 200 North Mohawk Boulevard and located 61-year-old Donald Lockridge with a gunshot wound sitting on the ground outside the store.  kfor.com


Philadelphia, PA: Update: Man wanted for deadly grocery store shooting in Philadelphia's University City section

Sacramento County, CA: Sheriff's detectives arrest homicide suspect in liquor store shooting

Escambia County, FL: 1 dead, another injured in shooting at Pensacola hotel

Columbia, SC: Woman injured in shooting at Midlands restaurant
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Boston, MA: Boston Police investigate armed robbery of children's lemonade stand by suspects as young as 11
Boston police are investigating the armed robbery of a children's lemonade stand operated by a pair of siblings. The Boston Police Department responded at 4:45 p.m. Wednesday to South Boston, where they were met by the children and their father. The kids told officers that two suspects had made several passes by their lemonade stand before approaching and asking if they took Apple Pay, a police report provided to Fox News Digital states. Before the young entrepreneurs could answer, one suspect grabbed a box containing $50 in cash. One of the suspects displayed a black firearm in his waistband before the pair ran off, police said.  aol.com


Lake Worth Beach, FL: Update: Former jewelry store employee held on $216K bond in alleged Lake Worth theft scheme
A former Lake Worth jewelry store employee accused of stealing high-end jewelry from her employer and pawning it across South Florida appeared before a judge Thursday for the first time. During the hearing, a judge described the allegations against 34-year-old Zabrina Herrera Acosta as a “very serious situation” and ordered her to be held on a bond totaling $216,000. According to investigators, Acosta spent months stealing jewelry while working at YR Jewelry in Lake Worth. Detectives say she exploited a blind spot in the store’s security camera system to avoid detection while taking merchandise. The store owner reportedly became suspicious after noticing jewelry was missing and contacted authorities. Investigators allege Acosta pawned 126 pieces of jewelry at businesses in Palm Beach and Broward counties, receiving more than $86,000.  wpbf.com


Secaucus, NJ: Employee at Secaucus UPS store charged with theft


 


 

Auto – Countryside, IL – Burglary
Auto – Mobile, AL – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Cincinnati, OH – Armed Robbery
C-Store -Lexington, KY – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Moncks Corner, SC – Armed Robbery
Dollar – Madison County, AL - Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Columbus, OH – Robbery
Restaurant – Rock County, WI – Robbery
Restaurant – Miami Gardens, FL – Robbery
Restaurant – Torrington, CT – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Norfolk, VA – Burglary
Shoes - Philadelphia, PA – Burglary
Warehouse – San Bernardino County, CA – Burglary
Walmart – Warrington, DE – Robbery
Walmart – Jonesboro, AR – Robbery                            
 

Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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