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Lucio Botello promoted
to National Security Manager for Brink's Inc.
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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Gatekeeper
Systems Launches FaceFirst Touch
Next-Generation Mobile
App for Enhanced Facial Recognition Management
Fully Redesigned Mobile Experience Delivers Advanced Features,
Streamlined Interface, and Mobile Access to Top NIST-Ranked Facial
Recognition Technology
Foothill
Ranch, CA – February 4, 2026 --
Gatekeeper Systems, a global leader in intelligent loss
prevention solutions, today announced the launch of FaceFirst Touch™, a
redesigned mobile application that transforms how security teams and
other users interact with the industry-leading
FaceFirst® facial recognition platform. Available now in the
Google Play Store for Android and Apple App Store for iOS devices,
FaceFirst Touch™ is compatible with FaceFirst v8.3 and above. It
introduces significant enhancements designed to streamline security
operations and boost team productivity.
Read more in today's Vendor Spotlight column
below
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Are Criminals Exploiting Store
Policies?
How Retail Policies Are Being Used — and Abused — to Drive Loss
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retail loss is often discussed in terms of theft events: items taken,
suspects identified and incidents recorded. But an increasing share of
retail loss is not tied to a single criminal act at all. Instead, it
stems from the exploitation of customer-facing policies that were
designed to reduce friction and build loyalty.
Return policies, price-match guarantees, loyalty programs and
customer service discretion have become essential competitive tools.
At the same time, they have created new opportunities for abuse that are
difficult to detect, document and address through traditional loss
prevention methods.
This type of loss often appears routine on the surface. A return
without a receipt. A price adjustment that falls within policy limits. A
refund approved to preserve customer satisfaction. Individually,
these transactions rarely raise concern. Collectively, they can
represent significant financial exposure.
Common patterns include excessive no-receipt returns, “wardrobing” of
apparel returned after use, manipulation of price-match rules using
temporary or online-only listings and coordinated loyalty point abuse
across multiple locations. In some cases, organized groups share
information about which policies are most easily leveraged and which
stores apply them most leniently.
Unlike traditional theft, policy exploitation typically involves no
confrontation, no force and no obvious violation of store rules.
That places frontline employees in a difficult position. Associates are
often encouraged to resolve issues quickly and positively, while lacking
visibility into a customer’s broader transaction history.
For loss prevention teams, the challenge is twofold. First, this type
of activity is harder to classify. It may not meet internal
definitions of theft or fraud, even when intent is clearly questionable.
Second, it requires data-driven detection rather than incident-based
response. Patterns emerge only when transactions are analyzed across
time, locations and channels.
Retailers are beginning to respond by refining policy language,
introducing limits based on transaction history and improving
cross-channel visibility. Some are also investing in analytics tools
that help identify abnormal behavior before losses escalate.
As retail environments continue to evolve, loss prevention strategies
must adapt with them. Not all loss comes from broken locks or stolen
merchandise. Increasingly, it comes from policies that are working
exactly as written — just not as intended.
ORCAs Making a Difference
Tennessee Organized Retail Crime Alliance
announces Executive Committee & Board of Directors
From TNORCA's
LinkedIn page
We are pleased to announce the Tennessee
Organized Retail Crime Alliance Executive Committee and Board
of Directors for the 2026–2028 term. The Board would like to extend its
sincere appreciation to the outgoing 2023–2025 Board of Directors for
their dedication and contributions to TNORCA.

We would also like to offer special recognition to outgoing Secretary
Tym Conklin, who worked tirelessly behind the scenes for several
years prior to TNORCA’s formation as a nonprofit organization and
played a critical role in launching the alliance.
For the 2026–2028 term, the Board will consist of seven members,
positioning TNORCA to effectively align with its mission and strategic
goals over the next two years. We also recognize Karli Province, PhD
and Vaughn Brown, who were elected to full terms after having served
partial terms during the previous session.
It is with great pleasure that we announce
Heather Rawlings, ORC Investigator with Metro One/Lululemon, has been
appointed to the Executive Committee and will serve as Secretary.
Looking ahead, we have several exciting initiatives underway, including
proposed amendments to TCA 39-14-113, the Tennessee Organized Retail
Crime Prevention Act, which are currently progressing through the
Tennessee General Assembly. Additionally, we are planning in-person
meetings, including one confirmed for June 4 in Nashville at ROCIC
(be on the lookout for registration in late April), as well as a meeting
in Memphis anticipated for late Q1 or early Q2. Further details will be
shared as they become available along with virtual meetings to grow
TNORCA engagement.
We look forward to working with our members as we strive to combat ORC
and make positive changes in the communities we serve. Thank you for
your continued support!
linkedin.com
More States Establish Task Forces to
Fight Retail Crime
State and city create task force to prosecute retail crime in Anchorage
Lawyers with the state’s Department of Law are working with prosecutors
at the Municipality of Anchorage to more aggressively go after
serious shoplifters. Retail theft is the focus of what leaders with
the city and state say is a partnership dedicated to “quality of
life” crimes in Anchorage.
A memorandum of understanding was signed by Attorney General Stephen Cox
and Municipal Attorney Eva Gardner on Jan. 8. It lays out an agreement
to improve public safety by establishing a joint task force focused on
crimes impacting residents’ quality of life.
Though shoplifting is the current focus, officials say it will be
a template applied in the future to other public safety issues. “Our new
partnership will focus our collective resources on specific public
safety priorities, including retail theft, drug interdiction, domestic
violence and sexual assault,” Mayor Suzanne LaFrance said in a written
statement emailed last week.
The Alaska Department of Law will supply two prosecutors along with a
supervisor, and two lawyers from the municipal prosecutor’s office
are attached. The lawyers are supposed to coordinate with one another on
serious retail theft cases, along with partners in law enforcement,
civil attorneys and other government entities, according to the terms of
the memorandum.
adn.com
Safest January in NYC History?
NYC Top Cop Says City Had Safest January on Record
NYC top cop says the city recorded its
safest January on record,
with sharp declines in shootings and homicides across all five boroughs,
according to new NYPD data released Monday.
Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said
homicides fell 60%
compared with January 2025, while
shooting incidents dropped 20%,
reaching the lowest levels ever recorded for the month. The city logged
40 shootings and 47 shooting victims, both new January lows, the
department said.
Manhattan and Staten Island went the entire month without a single
homicide, while murders declined in every borough citywide.
Overall major crime fell nearly 7%
compared with a year earlier, driven by significant drops in burglary,
robbery and retail theft, according to police statistics.
Burglaries declined nearly 30%, robberies fell about 10%, and retail
theft dropped 16%. Tisch
credited a more targeted enforcement strategy, particularly against
organized shoplifting rings,
saying the approach has increased arrests while keeping stores open and
accessible.
vinnews.com
Crime-Fighting Strategies Working in
Dallas
Dallas sees lowest violent crime numbers since 2015 as chief credits new
crime strategies
Not only are homicides down 23%, robberies are down 10%,
aggravated assaults are down 12% and sexual assaults are down 13%. That
results in a 12% overall drop in violent crime.
Another crime-fighting strategy that Comeaux credits for the drop in
crime has been identifying and sending more officers to patrol hot
spots for illegal activity.
That may have contributed to reductions in both auto thefts and
burglaries.
cbsnews.com
Seattle police chief addresses recent violence; shares year-end crime
data
Survey Finds Violence Widespread Across Texas, Often Missing From
Official Crime Data
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How Store Redesigns Affect LP
Store Layout Changes Are Creating New Blind Spots for Loss Prevention
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retailers are continuously adjusting store layouts to improve flow,
support omnichannel fulfillment and adapt to changing customer behavior.
But as sales floors evolve, many loss prevention teams are discovering
that even small layout changes can create unintended blind spots.
In recent years, retailers have added in-store pickup counters,
self-service kiosks, mobile POS stations and expanded fulfillment areas
to support buy-online-pickup-in-store and curbside programs. These
additions often happen quickly and are driven by operational or
merchandising priorities. Loss prevention involvement may come later —
or not at all.
The result is that camera coverage, sightlines and associate
visibility designed for previous layouts may no longer align with how
the store actually functions. Endcaps shift, fixtures move and
previously open areas become partially obstructed. In some cases,
high-value merchandise is relocated without corresponding adjustments to
surveillance or staffing models.
These changes don’t necessarily increase theft on their own, but they
can reduce situational awareness. Associates may have fewer clear
lines of sight. Cameras may capture less useful angles. LP teams
reviewing incidents may find that critical moments occur just outside
coverage zones that no longer match the floor plan.
Another challenge is that layout changes are not always consistently
executed across locations. A concept rollout may vary store to store
based on square footage or legacy fixtures. That inconsistency can make
it harder for LP teams to apply standardized strategies or interpret
activity across a chain.
Some retailers are responding by building loss prevention review into
store reset and remodel processes. Others are conducting post-reset
audits to assess camera coverage, lighting and traffic flow after
changes go live. Simple adjustments — repositioning fixtures, refining
camera angles or updating staffing patterns — can restore visibility
without major capital investment.
As stores continue to evolve, loss prevention cannot be treated as a
static layer applied once and forgotten. Layout decisions directly
affect how risk is observed and managed on the sales floor. Ensuring LP
has a seat at the table during in-store changes can help prevent blind
spots from forming — and keep evolving stores both efficient and secure.
Retail Security is Constantly Changing
Why Businesses Must Rethink Security in an Era of Constant Change
All retailers share a commitment to maintaining safe, secure spaces
for staff and customers, but retail security can be challenging at
the best of times. Store managers must contend with both external and
internal threats leveraged across physical and digital environments, all
while navigating common industry challenges such as training shortfalls
and labor shortages.
In recent years, the retail security landscape has become
increasingly complex, with various economic, technological and
demographic issues impacting security operations. From a rise in
post-pandemic guest violence to resource shortages worsened by
inflation, management teams across the retail industry are finding it
increasingly difficult and expensive to address security concerns.
In an era of constant change, retail leaders must pursue agile security
operations. However, they are in a difficult position, as combating
threats requires investment in skill development, yet high turnover
erodes that investment immediately. To break this cycle, retail
leaders must rely on technology to bridge the gap between expertise and
attrition.
Intelligent security technologies, particularly AI-powered solutions,
benefit retailers in addressing present security challenges. By
leveraging systems designed to automatically spot, organize and respond
to threats, teams can run effective, resource-efficient operations.
retailwire.com
Fewest Store Closures in 3 Year?
Here are the retailers with the most store openings and closures planned
for 2026
Store closures in the U.S. are
expected to fall to the lowest level in the past three years, as the
retail industry moves beyond a major wave of bankruptcies.
Store openings in the U.S. are expected to rise and store closures
fall this year compared to 2025, with value retailers leading the
growth as they continue to attract more of consumers’ dollars, according
to an analysis by Coresight Research.
Overall, Coresight projects that U.S. retailers will close about
7,900 stores in 2026, a 4.5% drop year over year. That would
represent the lowest number of store closures in the past three years.
The advisory group also expects retailers will open about 5,500 new
stores, a 4.4% increase year over year.
So far, Dollar General, Aldi and Tractor Supply top the list for
retailers with the most planned store openings this year, according
to Coresight. On the other hand, GameStop, Francesca’s and Walgreens
lead the way with the most planned closures in 2026.
cnbc.com
Target’s new CEO outlines four priorities as he takes reins
Peloton lays off 11% of workforce
Amazon’s luxury storefront will carry on with or without Saks
A New Approach to Reducing Serious Injuries and Fatalities [podcast]
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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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Gatekeeper
Systems Launches FaceFirst Touch
Next-Generation Mobile
App for Enhanced Facial Recognition Management
Fully Redesigned Mobile Experience Delivers Advanced Features,
Streamlined Interface, and Mobile Access to Top NIST-Ranked Facial
Recognition Technology

Foothill Ranch, CA – February 4, 2026 --
Gatekeeper Systems, a global leader in intelligent loss
prevention solutions, today announced the launch of FaceFirst
Touch™, a redesigned mobile application that transforms how security
teams and other users interact with the industry-leading
FaceFirst® facial recognition platform. Available now in the
Google Play Store for Android and Apple App Store for iOS devices,
FaceFirst Touch™ is compatible with FaceFirst v8.3 and above. It
introduces significant enhancements designed to streamline security
operations and boost team productivity.
Expanding upon the proven FaceFirst platform that’s now enhanced
with ROC's top NIST-ranked facial recognition technology, the new
FaceFirst Touch app delivers enhanced accuracy and performance
through an intuitive mobile interface. The app addresses the most
requested features from users and provides a modern experience that
simplifies critical security workflows. Key capabilities include:
-
Mobile Approval of Pending Enrollments: Supervisors and
administrators can now review and approve enrollments directly from their
mobile devices, enabling faster response times and improved operational
efficiency
-
Enhanced Visual Verification: Larger face images help users
verify matches more quickly and accurately in the field
-
Advanced Filtering and Sorting: Users can filter enrollments
to view pending, enabled, disabled, or rejected entries, and sort by
enrollment group, date range, or location for better visibility
-
Simplified Setup: Streamlined configuration reduces the
number of settings required, with core server setup available via internal
QR code from the web app About screen
-
Modern Interface: Redesigned user experience with fewer
buttons and fewer taps to complete common tasks
"FaceFirst Touch represents the evolution of mobile loss
prevention," said Michael Wiley, VP of Product Management at
Gatekeeper Systems. "We've taken an industry leading product and
made it more accessible and efficient for loss prevention teams.
This mobile experience empowers responders with faster verification,
streamlined approvals, and the confidence that comes from
NIST-ranked technology, all from the palm of their hand."
FaceFirst Touch is available for download by searching "FaceFirst
Touch" in the
Google Play Store or
Apple App Store. The application is compatible with FaceFirst
version 8.3 and above.
###
About Gatekeeper Systems
Gatekeeper Systems is a global leader in intelligent loss prevention
solutions that protect people, products, and profits. Its patented
intelligent cart systems and FaceFirst facial recognition platform
combine to deliver fast, accurate, and scalable technology
engineered for safety, privacy, and accountability. With more than
10 million connected carts worldwide, Gatekeeper helps retailers
detect, deter, and defend against theft and violence. For more
information, please visit
gatekeepersystems.com.
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Cloud Resilience & Ransomware
The cost of poor cloud resilience is often paid in ransom, Rubrik warns
The latest wave of ransomware attacks is exposing a deeper flaw in
enterprise strategy: cloud resilience not being treated as a first-class
business priority. But in those environments where recovery plans
rely on assumptions instead of clean architecture, outages can quickly
escalate into existential threats.
That urgency is driving enterprise teams to imagine increasingly
detailed scenarios to test assumptions before attackers do. Rubrik
Inc.’s immersive tabletop exercise — “Zero Hour Horizon Retail: When
Cloud Fails” — offered a dramatized but plausible simulation of how
security tradeoffs accumulate. The hypothetical followed a steady
unraveling, from initial compromise through failed recovery attempts and
breach confirmation, to a boardroom debate over whether to pay. In the
end, “Horizon” did — not because it was the best option, but because it
was the only one left, according to Matt Castriotta (pictured), field
chief technology officer for cloud at Rubrik.
“Today’s breach was yesterday’s budget cut,” Castriotta said.
“[Horizon] made this conscious decision to deprioritize quality of life
and secure their environment … over new future development. It’s a
trade-off that organizations have to make every day.”
Rubrik, which specializes in data security and recovery for cloud
workloads, used the exercise to draw attention to enterprise weak
points that often go unnoticed. In the scenario, attackers
exfiltrated sensitive data and re-encrypted live S3 buckets using
customer-provided keys. The internal team couldn’t recover quickly — not
because they lacked backups, but because those backups had also been
compromised, Castriotta explained.
“At the end of the day, cloud attacks are business attacks,” he
said. “We know our customer’s environments run in the cloud.”
This operational dependency is exactly what attackers exploit. As
the fictional Horizon scrambled, participants watched a cascade of
failures, each rooted in earlier decisions. For example, a seemingly
minor identity and access management misconfiguration unlocked full
cloud access. Recovery efforts failed when dormant malware was
unknowingly reactivated from inside a snapshot, according to Castriotta.
siliconangle.com
Cybersecurity 2026:
AI, CISA, manufacturing sector all in the hot seat
A look at the most important trends
and issues in cyber this year.
New year, new and more complex challenges for cybersecurity leaders,
starting on the technology front: AI tools are revolutionizing ways of
working for security operations teams while unfortunately also
empowering cyber threat actors to amplify their attacks.
Meanwhile, the unprecedented wave of debilitating targeted cyberattacks
that hit the manufacturing sector and disrupted operations at some of
the biggest companies in the world over the past year serves as a
stark wake-up call for critical infrastructure and other organizations
to prioritize operational resilience.
At the same time, the very foundation of financial protection in the
face of a cyberattack — cyber insurance coverage — has reached a tipping
point. Insurers are now more closely scrutinizing policyholders’
security postures, pressuring CISOs and executives to invest more in
defense tools and potentially face higher premiums.
All eyes will be on the U.S. federal government agency tasked with
protecting critical infrastructure and leading cybersecurity policy: the
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency, which is reeling
after a year of massive workforce cuts and weakened private-industry
partnerships. CISA’s ability to adapt and lead will be critical to
safeguarding national security and critical infrastructure.
cybersecuritydive.com
Long Way To Go for AI Implementation
Survey: Expertise tops concerns for HR teams implementing AI
While HR teams are interested in
adopting AI tools to boost productivity, there is still a long way to
go.
Nearly all talent acquisition organizations surveyed are embracing AI,
with 88% expecting to increase their investment, according to
AI-powered platform for strategic recruiting and talent management
Avature’s AI Impact Report 2026. Despite this, more than half (51%) of
organizations are still in the exploratory or piloting phase.
Only 9% of respondents note they have strong, organization-wide AI
expertise, while 70% say they are still building AI capabilities or
have only isolated pockets of talent, Avature found that AI-related
skills shortages are the top-cited HR challenge, ahead of technology or
software limitations.
More than a quarter (28%) of HR leaders cite legacy software
limitations as a top barrier, while only 11% have integrated AI into
core HR processes. Just 5% are using AI as a “strategic advantage,”
according to the survey.
The survey also found that only 11% of HR leaders feel "very
confident" predicting skills needs 12 months out, with confidence
falling further over a two-to-five year horizon, according to the
survey.
chainstoreage.com
Dealerships will find AI embedded in cybersecurity tools at NADA Show
Dealerships seeking new cybersecurity tools
at the 2026 NADA Show should be ready for one inescapable trend:
Artificial intelligence is increasingly part of the equation.
Firefox to let users manage and block AI features
Russian hackers are exploiting recently patched Microsoft Office
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90% of Consumers Now Grocery Shop
Online & In-Store
FAQ on digital grocery: How AI, retail media, and omnichannel
fulfillment are reshaping 2026
Digital grocery has evolved from a pandemic-era convenience to a core
retail channel. More than 90% of US consumers now shop for groceries
both online and in-store, according to
FMI and NielsenIQ. As the channel matures, the competitive
battleground shifts from basic fulfillment to AI-powered
personalization, retail media monetization, and seamless omnichannel
experiences. This FAQ addresses the trends, players, and strategies
shaping digital grocery in 2026.
What is digital grocery?
Digital grocery encompasses all online platforms consumers use to
purchase groceries, including retailer websites, mobile apps, and
third-party delivery services. The category operates through two primary
models: delivery, where orders arrive at consumers' homes, and
click-and-collect, where consumers buy online and pick up at a store (BOPIS),
curbside, or locker.
Major retailers like Walmart, Amazon, Kroger, and Target offer
first-party platforms with proprietary delivery and pickup services.
Third-party intermediaries like Instacart, DoorDash, and Uber Eats
partner with grocers who lack the infrastructure for their own
fulfillment. Digital grocery now represents a necessity for consumer
packaged goods (CPG) brands and retailers seeking to reach customers
where they increasingly shop.
Who are the leading players in US digital
grocery?
Walmart dominates US digital grocery, capturing 30.9% of grocery
ecommerce sales in 2025, according to EMARKETER's forecast. Amazon holds
second position at 23.6%, followed by Kroger at 9.1%.
Walmart's lead stems from three advantages:
-
Physical footprint:
90% of the US population lives within 10 miles of a Walmart store,
enabling same-day fulfillment to 93% of households.
-
First-party data:
Ownership of purchase data across channels supports precise
targeting for retail media.
-
Pickup
infrastructure: Walmart pioneered curbside grocery and continues
expanding in-store pickup capacity.
Among third-party players, Instacart leads delivery aggregators,
though DoorDash and Uber continue expanding grocery partnerships and
diversifying into non-food categories.
content-naf.emarketer.com
Tech Company Boycotts
Why this ICE boycott wants consumers to resist Amazon and Google
In the latest grassroots uprising against the Trump administration's
immigration enforcement tactics, a consumer boycott is urging
consumers to resist top technology companies.
Launched by New York University marketing professor Scott Galloway,
"Resist and Unsubscribe" calls on consumers to boycott 10 companies −
Amazon, Apple, Google, Facebook owner Meta, Microsoft, OpenAI, Netflix,
Paramount+, Uber, and X − during February.
"The Trump administration doesn’t respond to outrage," Galloway, a
frequent critic of Big Tech, said in a video promoting the boycott. "It
responds to economic signals."
He called on consumers "to carry out an economic strike the tech CEOs
can’t ignore" by unsubscribing from services offered by these
companies, such as Amazon Prime and YouTube, deleting accounts on
platforms like Facebook and WhatsApp, and not buying Apple products
during February.
usatoday.com
PayPal appoints new CEO
The digital payments company tapped former
HP CEO Enrique Lores as its new chief executive Tuesday, pushing aside
Alex Chriss.
FAO Publishes Recommendations for Food E-Commerce Regulations |
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Whitfield County, GA: Deputies bust multi-state shoplifting ring after
Walmart theft in north Georgia
Whitfield County deputies say they have disrupted a suspected
multi-state shoplifting ring after a routine theft investigation at a
Walmart led to a major arrest. According to the Whitfield County
Sheriff’s Office, the case unfolded Monday at the Walmart on East Walnut
Avenue in Dalton. Store loss prevention employees alerted deputies to a
suspected theft in progress. Investigators say the information provided
by Walmart staff allowed deputies to quickly identify a vehicle believed
to be connected to the incident. Within minutes, a member of the
sheriff’s office Crime Suppression Unit located the vehicle and
conducted a traffic stop. During the stop, deputies discovered more
than $4,000 worth of stolen merchandise inside the vehicle.
Authorities say further investigation revealed the items had been taken
from Walmart locations in multiple states, leading investigators to
believe the suspects were part of a larger, organized retail theft ring
operating across state lines.
wsbtv.com
West Palm Beach, FL: Chainsaw Heist at Dawn: Deputies Hunt Thieves Who
Cleared Shelves at West Palm Lowe’s
Detectives are asking for the public’s help after two men were caught
stealing multiple chainsaws from a West Palm Beach home improvement
store in a brazen early-morning theft, authorities said. According to
the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, the incident occurred at
approximately 7:52 a.m. on December 21, 2025, at the Lowe’s located in
the 4700 block of Okeechobee Boulevard. Surveillance footage shows two
unidentified males entering the store, selecting several chainsaws, and
leaving without paying. Investigators say the suspects fled the area in
an older-model Lexus SUV, disappearing before store employees could
intervene. No injuries were reported, but the theft resulted in a
significant loss for the business.
bocaratontribune.com
Bowling Green, KY: La Grange man charged in string of area thefts
Authorities arrested a La Grange man in Bowling Green Monday after a
theft was reported at a store along American Avenue. According to a news
release, Logan MJ Otter, 27, was reportedly seen loading tools into a
large tote and going through a self-checkout area, only paying for the
tote. Officers eventually stopped Otter and allegedly located more
than $3,300 worth of merchandise from three area stores. Police did
not identify the stores. Otter was arrested and charged with two counts
of theft by unlawful taking (shoplifting over $1,000), receiving stolen
property (over $1,000), and theft by unlawful taking (shoplifting under
$1,000).
wbko.com
Montgomery Township, PA: Woman with 11 theft convictions heads to county
court in Target shoplifting case
Folsom, CA: Organized retail theft blitz leads to three arrests in
Folsom
Mississauga, ON, Canada: Peel Regional Police arrest 95 in retail crime
crackdown at major malls in Mississauga and Brampton
Calgary, AB, Canada: Masked thieves smash into Calgary jewelry store,
flee with $200K in gold
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Shootings & Deaths
Miami, FL: 18-Year-Old Arrested After Woman Was Fatally Shot Outside of Little
Havana C-Store
An 18-year-old male was arrested for his alleged involvement in a shooting that
took place outside of a convenience store in Little Havana, which left one
bystander dead. Miami Police officials confirmed that 39-year-old Desiree
Gonzalez died in the shooting that took place at Habibi Mini Market on Southwest
Third Street in December 2025, according to NBC Miami.
usmagazine.com
Jacksonville, FL: Update: Employee speaks after coworker shot trying to stop
theft in Lakeshore
A Saturday afternoon shooting at a Lakeshore shopping plaza has left two people
seriously injured and shaken a community that thought the area was safe.
According to the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office, a smoke shop clerk in his early
20s confronted someone suspected of stealing in the parking lot outside the
store on Shirley Avenue. Police said that’s when a second man pulled a gun and
opened fire. Police said there was an exchange of gunfire, and the smoke shop
clerk was shot in the chest and taken to a local hospital with life-threatening
injuries. Authorities said another man, also in his early 20s, was shot in the
abdomen and remains in critical condition. Roni Masabani, a coworker of the
injured clerk, said the two were close and that the shooting left him worried.
“I just hope he, like, makes it through because he’s in a life-threatening
situation, my boy Matt,” Masabani said.
firstcoastnews.com
Philadelphia, PA: Manager of Philly storage facility shot inside office during
robbery
An alleged robber shot the manager of a storage facility in Northeast
Philadelphia before getting away with cash from the register on Monday evening,
according to the police department. The shooting happened just after 7 p.m.
inside the Good Deal Self Storage on the 5400 block of Eadom Street, police
said. The manager, 57, was inside the office of the facility with a customer
when another man walked in through the front door, according to Philadelphia
Police Chief Inspector Scott Small. Inspector Small explained that in an
incident caught on surveillance cameras, the man forced the manager and customer
behind the counter and made them get onto their knees.
nbcphiladelphia.com
Sarasota, FL: Lowe’s parking lot shooting injures 1 in Sarasota
According to the Sarasota County Sheriff’s Office, the shooting took place in
the parking lot of the store located at 4020 Central Sarasota Parkway in
Sarasota. Deputies stated that the suspect left the area but was later located
and taken into custody. The victim was taken to Sarasota Memorial Hospital and
is being treated for injuries. Investigators said the shooting was an isolated
domestic incident.
fox13news.com
Lakeland, TN: Man shot, killed during robbery at Lakeland gas station
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
San Antonio, TX: Employee hit by car as suspects steal Twisted Tea from East
Side store
Muncie, IN: Man accused of attempted Taco Bell robbery with pruning shears, meth
Centennial, CO: Man sentenced to prison for viral puppy theft, assault caught on
camera at Centennial pet store
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C-Store – Memphis, TN
– Armed Robbery / shots fired
•
C-Store – Shreveport,
LA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Meriden, CT
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Petersburg,
WV – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Los Angeles,
CA – Armed Robbery / Emp wounded
•
C-Store – Los Angeles,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store –St Cloud, MN
– Robbery
•
C-Store - San Antonio,
TX – Robbery / Emp injured
•
C-Store – Red Bluff,
CA – Armed Robbery / shots fired
•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Odessa, TX
– Burglary
•
Clothing – Lawrence,
NY – Robbery
•
Clothing – Dallas, TX
– Burglary
•
Collectables –
Jefferson City, TN – Burglary
•
Dollar – Claymont, DE
– Robbery
•
Hardware – West Palm
Beach, FL - Robbery
•
Hardware – Bowling
Green, KY – Robbery
•
Hobby – Beavercreek,
OH – Robbery
• Jewelry - Chandler, AZ – Robbery
• Jewelry – Houston, TX – Robbery
•
Liquor – Ledyard, RI –
Burglary
•
Restaurant – Muncie,
IN – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Lee
County, FL – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Sacramento County, CA – Armed Robbery
•
Storage –
Philadelphia, PA – Armed Robbery / Mgr. wounded
•
Thrift – Butler, PA –
Burglary
•
Tobacco – Cincinnati,
OH – Armed Robbery
•
Vape – Nashville, TN –
Armed Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 22 robberies
• 6 burglaries
• 3 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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