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UF SaferPlaces Lab and LPRC Honored with Win Phillips Town Gown
Relations Award
The
University of Florida’s SaferPlaces Lab, in collaboration with the
Loss Prevention
Research Council (LPRC), has been selected to receive the Win
Phillips Town Gown Relations Award, recognizing exceptional
university-community collaboration to make Gainesville safer and more
resilient.
Nominated by Erik Sander, Executive Director of the UF Engineering
Innovation Institute, the SaferPlaces Lab and LPRC were honored for
their groundbreaking, evidence-based community program that brings
together UF researchers, city officials, and law enforcement to design,
test, and scale high-impact crime prevention tools and processes.
The
initiative’s mission—to better safeguard vulnerable people and assets
across Gainesville through research-driven innovation—epitomizes the
spirit of partnership that the Win Phillips Town Gown Relations Award
was established to celebrate.
“This recognition underscores the incredible value of collaboration
between academia and the community,” said Dr. Read Hayes, Director of
the LPRC and SaferPlaces Lab. “By working hand-in-hand with Gainesville
leaders and residents, we’re building safer environments informed by
real data and designed for real impact.”
Click here to read more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
'They'll Steal Anything That's Not
Tied Down'
Revenues from stolen retail goods can be
used for fentanyl, cocaine, and other narcotics, which come to the U.S.
via the same drug cartels that also run human smuggling.
From Store Shelves to Human Smuggling, USA-IT Summit Confronts New Face
of Organized Crime
National law enforcement and local retail groups want Americans to
understand that the problem of illicit trade — counterfeiting, organized
retail crime, and human trafficking — is bigger and more dangerous
than most people realize.
How big? Illegal trade is a $2.2 trillion criminal enterprise
that crosses every national boundary and reaches every shopper’s laptop.
How bad? In Florida, crooks have been stealing entire gas stations.
“In Hillsborough County, vans were coming into gas stations at night and
parking over the top of the fill tanks,” said Ned Bowman with the
Florida Petroleum Marketers Association. “They were dropping a pump
down into the tanks, pulling up the diesel fuel and gasoline.
“The point is that, in this era of organized
retail theft, they’ll steal anything that’s not tied down.”
That could have been the theme at this year’s United to Safeguard
America from Illegal Trade (USA-IT) 2025 National Summit in Washington,
D.C., earlier this month.
And whether it’s trafficked kids trapped in forced work or counterfeit
kids’ toys stuffed in a Christmas stocking, most of this illicit trade
is handled largely by the same criminal groups, said USA-IT spokesperson
Alysa Erichs.
“Criminal networks are quick to exploit weaknesses in our trade and
financial systems for profit, with zero concern for public safety. No
single agency can address this challenge alone.”
Erichs, the former acting executive associate director for Homeland
Security Investigations, said what makes the modern illegal-trade
economy so powerful — and dangerous — is convergence.
Cybercriminals move profits through the same channels as weapons
traffickers, or use counterfeit-goods sales to launder money through
retail theft. Revenues from stolen retail goods
can be used for fentanyl, cocaine, and other narcotics, which come to
the U.S. via the same drug cartels that also run human smuggling.
prescottenews.com
'Tis the Season for Retail Crime
Theft cases increase as the holiday season approaches
UC instructor explains why retailers
see more crime in December
University
of Cincinnati asset security expert Karl Langhorst told FOX
19 that theft typically increases during the holiday season as crowded
stores create more opportunities for criminals to go unnoticed.
In the segment, he tells how organized retail groups often scout
locations in advance and arrive with “shopping lists,” allowing them to
steal large amounts of merchandise within minutes and resell it
through fencing operations ranging from flea markets to online
platforms.
“The vast majority of it is for resale through a fencing operation,” he
said. “That could be as simple as a flea market or online or go to a
professional fence, and we’ve seen the product shipped across the
nation.”
Langhorst noted that individual shoplifting also spikes this time of
year. He said retailers rely on increased security and surveillance,
but locking up merchandise remains the most effective — though sometimes
inconvenient — deterrent.
He also warned about porch piracy, recommending that consumers schedule
deliveries when they can be received in person or have packages sent to
a secure location. Shoppers should avoid leaving visible bags in their
vehicles, he added.
Langhorst teaches a course in loss prevention at UC's School of
Criminal Justice and works in asset protection for several large
corporations across the country.
uc.edu
Modern Retail Theft is Not the
Shoplifting of Yore
In Our View: Provide tools needed to fight shoplifting scourge
Shoplifting no longer is the purview of teen delinquents looking to
pilfer small items for personal use or to make a couple bucks. No, it
has morphed into organized retail crime — a multibillion-dollar industry
that poses economic and safety threats to retailers and customers as
criminals engage in large-scale thefts to market items online.
According to a 2024 Forbes Advisor survey, Washington is the state
most impacted by retail theft, and several retailers have listed
crime as a factor contributing to store closures. In October, for
example, Kroger shuttered six Fred Meyer stores in the Puget Sound area
and one in Northeast Portland.
With law enforcement facing staffing shortages and with
well-organized rings stealing billions of dollars in merchandise
each year, the problem continues to grow. That calls for concerted
efforts on the part of elected officials.
Key to those efforts will be increased prosecutorial power.
Leavitt last year introduced legislation calling for sentencing
enhancements related to organized retail theft, but the bill did not
advance. She plans to introduce a revamped version next year and said,
“You can create all the tools you want, but unless we have resources to
prosecute these cases, it makes it difficult.”
Critics argue that sentencing enhancements will not deter people from
committing crimes, but that is essentially admitting defeat. Indeed,
substance abuse, homelessness and economic struggles contribute to an
increase in retail theft, but large-scale operations call for a
large-scale response, not social work.
Modern retail theft is not the shoplifting of yore; lawmakers
should not treat it as such.
columbian.com
Retailers Fined for Not Reporting
Theft?
Douglas County businesses to pay fines for unreported thefts under
proposed ordinance
Douglas County commissioners on Tuesday advanced an ordinance aimed at
curbing retail theft by penalizing businesses that refuse to report
shoplifters to law enforcement. The proposal is notable in that it
shifts the onus of responsibility to businesses.
Officials said the ordinance is designed to encourage corporations to
adopt policies favoring the reporting of shoplifting — especially at big
box stores. “We’re not going to allow a culture where people walk
out of a store with a stack of drills and nobody says a word,” Douglas
County Commissioner Abe Laydon said. “That era is over in Douglas
County.”
Laydon said commissioners will vote on the measure after they hear
input from businesses and stakeholders. This ordinance only applies
to businesses located in unincorporated areas of the county, not in
municipalities like Parker, Castle Rock or Lone Tree, according to
county officials.
Under the proposed ordinance, a business would
violate the law when it doesn’t report theft on its property within 96
hours. Businesses must have “reasonable grounds” to believe a
theft has been committed before reporting, according to the ordinance.
The failure to report thefts within 96 hours of the crime is punishable
by fines. A business incurs a $50 fine for every 24 hours that pass
without reporting theft on its property. The maximum fine amount is
$1,000.
denvergazette.com
Ventura County Cracks Down on UPS Cargo Thefts with "Operation Return to
Sender"
Judge orders Trump to end California National Guard troop deployment in
LA
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LP Predictions for 2026
What’s Ahead for Retail Loss Prevention in 2026?
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retailers move into 2026, loss prevention leaders face a landscape
shaped by fast-moving technology, evolving theft patterns, and growing
regulatory pressure. Industry data and analyst reports point to several
clear trends that will define LP strategies in the year ahead.
1. Centralized, Intelligence-Driven LP
Operations
Retailers continue shifting toward integrated command centers that unify
video analytics, EBR, IoT sensors, POS exceptions, and online fraud
indicators. These centralized environments help LP teams move from
reactive casework to predictive, risk-based prevention. In 2026, more
mid-sized retailers are expected to adopt scaled versions of this model
as tools become more affordable.
2. Acceleration of AI, Computer Vision &
Automation
AI-driven anomaly detection, computer vision, automated incident
reporting, and mobile-first communication tools are rapidly becoming
core to LP programs. As accuracy improves and responsible-use frameworks
mature, these technologies are transitioning from pilot projects to
essential operational tools. The industry-wide shift toward proactive
detection — not just incident review — is firmly underway.
3. Expanding Legislative & Regulatory Scrutiny
States are strengthening ORC statutes, enhancing aggregation rules, and
formalizing retailer–law enforcement partnerships. At the federal level,
recent actions such as INFORM have set expectations for marketplace
transparency, and additional ORC-focused proposals continue to
circulate. Privacy standards and biometric/data-use laws are also
tightening, requiring LP teams to balance compliance with operational
efficiency.
4. Labor Pressures & the Need for
Cross-Functional Training
Staffing challenges remain, pushing retailers to embed loss prevention
more deeply into overall store operations. Store associates are
receiving broader training in de-escalation, incident recognition, and
safety protocols. Panic buttons, standardized communication procedures,
and streamlined reporting workflows are becoming baseline expectations
for employee protection.
5. A Long-Term, Multilayered Approach to Shrink
Retailers are increasingly moving away from single-cause explanations
for shrink. Instead, 2026 strategies focus on layered solutions that
combine technology, operational discipline, policy refinement, and
community partnerships. Shrink is being treated as a persistent
operational risk — not a short-term issue with a single fix.
The takeaway: Retail loss prevention in 2026 is defined by
smarter tools, stronger collaboration, and a shift toward
intelligence-led, proactive strategies. Retailers that invest early and
strategically in scalable LP programs will be best positioned to reduce
shrink, enhance safety, and stay resilient in a fast-changing
environment.
Retail Workers Face Holiday 'Pressure
Cooker'
A guide to good manners at the retail counter this holiday season
As shoppers flood stores across the country during the year’s biggest
shopping season, retail workers are bracing for what many describe as
the most demanding — and often demoralizing — stretch of the job.
Whether it’s gridlocked parking lots or shelves picked clean, the
holiday retail environment can become a pressure cooker where
manners evaporate quickly.
November and December have long driven retail sales, prompting companies
to hire large numbers of seasonal workers to manage the surge. These
workers often absorb the brunt of shoppers’ frustration. Some
customers treat employees as extensions of a corporation rather than as
people.
This year, there might be even fewer employees to handle crowds of
holiday shoppers. Companies say they could cut back on seasonal
workers because of economic uncertainty, while at the same time,
shoppers are expected to spend more than they did last year.
“Yelling at a worker isn’t doing anything,” Leighton noted.
“Everyone else is busy, too.... Your shopping isn’t more important than
the next person’s.”
Here are some expert suggestions on how customers can be kinder, more
polite and more empathetic toward the people helping to execute all
those holiday lists:
apnews.com
Backlash to Walmart's Payment
Restriction
‘Scary’ truth behind Walmart’s payment method revealed as retail giant
still refuses to take Apple Pay
A shopper has claimed there’s a sneaky reason why Walmart does not
accept Apple Pay in stores or online. The retail giant is notorious
for not allowing the payment method, which has sparked some controversy
among consumers in the past.
Last year, Walmart CEO Doug McMillion confirmed while speaking on
Stratechery with Ben Thompson that the retailer doesn’t accept Apple Pay
because it would rather “have customers open our app in the store all
the time.”
Instead, shoppers are offered Walmart Pay through the retailer’s
mobile application, which effectively does many of the same things —
storing debit, credit, and gift card information for use on everyday
purchases.
While the CEO noted the reasoning as merely a preference to have
customers stay within the Walmart ecosystem, some shoppers and
staffers have claimed that there’s more to it than that.
the-sun.com
AI's Grocery Price Impact?
Instacart's AI-enabled pricing may bump up your grocery costs by as much
as 23%, study says
Instacart customers may be surprised to discover they are unwittingly
paying more for the same items sold by some of America's major
retail chains than their fellow shoppers.
A months-long investigation by the nonprofit organizations Consumer
Reports and Groundwork Collaborative found that identical grocery
items on Instacart could differ in price by as much as 23% from one
customer to the next.
That's due to the platform's algorithmic pricing experiments,
which place different price tags on identical products without revealing
the discrepancies directly to shoppers, the report found. The AI model,
which Instacart started implementing in 2022, sets grocery prices at
some large retail chains that partner with the San Francisco-based
delivery company, the groups added.
cbsnews.com
Bankrupt parent company of Value City Furniture puts 23 leases on the
market
A&G Real Estate Partners is now accepting
offers for 23 store leases on behalf of American Signature, which filed
for bankruptcy in November.
Academy Sports reveals 2026 store opening plans; Q3 sales up 3%
Does Your Company Need an Internal Mental Health Advocate?
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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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Don't let the golden season
'deadlines' weigh you down.
It's never too late to tag, shield or detect your inventory.
The buzz has started, and no
doubt your stores are filled with eager customers ready to pile their trolleys
with presents and stock their fridges with enough food to last the family half a
year (even though it’ll really be devoured in two weeks). But with the influx of
honest customers comes an increased risk of shoplifting—Christmas has come early
for criminals.
We have loss prevention stock ready to ship today at a low tariff for those
last-minute replenishment needs. Protect your stores now before ORC takes
advantage of this joyful season.
What's New?
 |
Sekura’s RFID range is expanding, led by
retailer favorites
BoxGrip
One™ and
Mini
LynxLoc™, with more cutting-edge products in development.
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The
OneCan
launch continues to generate buzz, preventing can sweeping and improving
OSA. This innovative solution is perfect for your chilled drinks.
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Sekura continues to trump the Trump
tariff—our multi-region, multi-factory strategy is flourishing,
remaining unscathed by the imposed charges.
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In Case You Missed It
Biggest Holiday Cyber Threats Facing
Retailers
RH-ISAC Releases 2025 Holiday Season Cyber Threat Trends Report
Rising fraud and automated attacks
are set to challenge retailers, hotels, and travel companies during the
busiest shopping and travel weeks of the year.
The
Retail & Hospitality Information Sharing and Analysis Center (RH-ISAC)
today released its
2025 Holiday Season Cyber Threat Trends report, highlighting a
sharp rise in fraud and automated bot attacks expected to align with
peak seasonal shopping demand across the retail, hospitality, and travel
sectors.
The report analyzes threat data from the past two holiday periods
alongside current trends, showing that fraud has rapidly escalated to
become the most widespread threat facing consumer-facing organizations
during Q4. Areas of greatest concern include
receipt and return abuse, loyalty and points fraud, refund scams, and
bot-driven schemes that rapidly scoop up high-demand items
before real customers can buy them.
Information provided by participating RH-ISAC member organizations shows
rising concern about account takeover attempts, malicious look-alike
domains, and fraudulent ads targeting customers during peak shopping
days. Adversaries affiliated with groups such as ShinyHunters and
Scattered Spider are expected to intensify extortion operations and
exploit third-party vulnerabilities throughout the season.
According to the report, RH-ISAC member organizations are preparing with
company-wide awareness campaigns, incident-response exercises, and
expanded use of AI-driven tools to detect anomalous behavior during
major shopping milestones such as Black Friday and Cyber Monday.
The report notes that automated attacks during the 2025 season may surge
to unprecedented scale, with a predicted 520 percent increase in
genAI-driven traffic during the 10 days prior to Thanksgiving.
Frontline staff members will face additional challenges in
distinguishing legitimate customer issues from fraudulent ones.
rhisac.org
Food and Agriculture Sectors Among
Those Targeted
Pro-Russia hacktivists launching attacks that could damage OT
The U.S. and its allies warned that
defenders should take the hackers seriously, despite the attackers’
pattern of exaggerating their actual impact.
Hacktivist groups supporting the Russian government are trying to
breach critical infrastructure using low-level tactics that could
nonetheless cause serious harm, the U.S. and its allies said on Tuesday.
Cyber Army of Russia Reborn, Sector16, NoName057(16) and Z-Pentest have
exploited poorly secured remote connections to industrial equipment to
hack organizations in the energy, food and agriculture and water
sectors, “resulting in varying degrees of impact, including physical
damage,” according to an advisory from 26 agencies representing the U.S.
and more than a dozen other countries.
“These groups have limited capabilities, frequently misunderstanding the
processes they aim to disrupt,” the advisory says. “Their apparent
low level of technical knowledge results in haphazard attacks where
actors intend to cause physical damage but cannot accurately anticipate
actual impact. Despite these limitations, the authoring
organizations have observed these groups willfully cause actual harm to
vulnerable critical infrastructure.”
cybersecuritydive.com
What is Influencing Cybersecurity
Practices?
The hidden dynamics shaping who produces influential cybersecurity
research
Cybersecurity leaders spend much of their time watching how threats and
tools change. A new study asks a different question, how has the
research community itself changed over the past two decades. Researchers
from the University of Southampton examined two long running conference
communities, SOUPS and Financial Cryptography and Data Security, to see
how teams form, who contributes, and which kinds of work gain
attention.
The result is a rare look at the structure behind the papers that
influence security practice. CISOs often rely on academic results
when setting policy or reviewing new approaches. The study used citation
counts as one way to measure which kinds of teams tended to have reach.
helpnetsecurity.com
React Server Components crisis escalates as security teams respond to
compromises
Warning: WinRAR Vulnerability Under Active Attack by Multiple Threat
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The War on Fake Reviews
How Amazon fights counterfeits and fake reviews
The retail giant is taking a
comprehensive approach, proactively removing suspect reviews and
bringing counterfeiters and fake review brokers to court.
Counterfeits and fake reviews may not seem like a customer
experience problem at first glance.
But letting fake products and bogus reviews run rampant across a site,
especially for a retailer like Amazon, is a recipe for a customer
experience disaster.
Amazon isn’t sitting on its haunches. It’s taking a four-pronged
approach to stopping bad actors from taking advantage of customers,
including proactive controls, empowering brands, taking the fight to
counterfeiters and fake review brokers via legal actions, and educating
consumers.
“At Amazon, we have a North Star mission of being the world’s most
customer-centric store,” Kebharu Smith, director of Amazon’s Counterfeit
Crimes Unit, told CX Dive. To stay true to that, customers need to be
confident in the authenticity of the products they purchase and know
that Amazon is doing all that it can to protect them from
counterfeits and fake reviews.
Counterfeit goods and fake reviews erode trust.
Trust can cement customer loyalty, while its absence can repel customers
and drive negative word-of-mouth, according to Jon Picoult, founder and
principal of Watermark Consulting. Counterfeits and fake reviews are
particularly noxious for Amazon because trust and reliability are
central to its brand promise.
“People flock to Amazon because they trust that they’re going to get the
best deal on an item, because they trust that when Amazon says it’ll
arrive at your doorstep tomorrow, it actually does,” Picoult said. “Counterfeit
goods and fake reviews chip away at that trust, and that can sow
doubt in the customer’s mind, impacting their future repurchase and
referral behavior.”
It’s up to retailers and marketplaces to protect customers,
according to Jon Copestake, global lead retail analyst at EY Insights.
customerexperiencedive.com
200+ Amazon Drivers Unionize
Drivers unionize at second Queens Amazon warehouse
More than 200 drivers at an Amazon warehouse in Queens announced
they were unionizing on Tuesday morning, the second set of drivers to do
so in the borough in the last year.
Drivers at the DBK1 facility in Woodside announced they would be
joining the Teamsters on Tuesday, following in the footsteps of the
DBK4 warehouse in Maspeth, which unionized last year.
The workers are all drivers for third-party “Delivery Service Partners,”
who deliver packages from Amazon’s facilities, wear Amazon uniforms and
often drive trucks with the company’s logo, but are not given many of
the same benefits and protections as full-time Amazon workers.
The arrangement, drivers say, allows Amazon to distance itself from the
workers, and often makes it harder for them to report bad working
conditions.
Newly unionized drivers say they are fighting for better pay and
increased safety standards, including more manageable routes and
package quotas, which Amazon controls through the DSPs.
queenseagle.com
Amazon announces $35 billion investment in India by 2030 to advance AI
innovation, create jobs |
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Washington County, OR: District Attorney's Office receives over $1.5M
grant to combat retail theft
The state has awarded the Washington County District Attorney's Office
an over $1 million grant to combat organized retail theft and
shoplifting across the county. The Washington County District Attorney's
Office was awarded the funding for the second consecutive year. This
year, the grant totals $1,535,173 and is the largest state grant award
for the Organized Retail Theft Grant Program. The funding will be used
to boost efforts in preventing, investigating and prosecuting
shoplifters and organized retail theft rings within the county, the
office said. Those efforts include organizing more joint retail theft
missions between law enforcement and prosecutors, focusing more
resources on fencing operations, and providing free shoplifting and
theft warning signs to local businesses. Eligible small- and
medium-sized businesses will also receive grant funding to upgrade
security cameras. The funding is anticipated to be available in the
first quarter of 2026.
kgw.com
Orange County, FL: Counterfeit merchandise seized en masse at West Oaks
Mall
Hundreds of items were seized from an Ocoee mall as part of an ongoing
investigation into counterfeit merchandise, the police department
announced on Tuesday. In a release, police said they executed the search
warrant at two businesses located in the West Oaks Mall along West
Colonial Drive. hose two stores were identified as: Trenditions and
World Tech Store of Orlando . According to detectives, the investigation
first kicked off after several undercover visits revealed people buying
designer trademarked items like Louis Vuitton and Chanel, which brand
representatives later confirmed to be fake. “Additional merchandise
believed to be counterfeit was also found openly displayed for sale,”
the release reads. “Today’s operation focused on safely securing and
seizing evidence related to the suspected trafficking of counterfeit
goods.” Police said that the items seized from those two stores included
counterfeit merchandise, business records, digital devices, and other
materials involved in the sale of counterfeit products.
clickorlando.com
Cass County, MO: Harrisonville police arrest two in $58K multistate
Walmart theft
Two suspects accused of running a months-long retail theft operation
targeting Walmart stores across several states were arrested Monday
after officers tracked their vehicle to the Harrisonville Walmart.
Prosecutors charged Christopher Loepke and Angel Jones with felony
receiving stolen property after Harrisonville police located a Kia
Sportage that had been linked to alleged thefts at Walmart locations in
Nevada, Butler and other cities. Police said Jones had multiple Walmart
return receipts for calculators on her when she was searched for an
unrelated warrant. Walmart security officials and staff told police they
had been tracking the pair since June and had documented more than
$58,000 in thefts linked to their activity. Court records allege the
suspects stole $1,300 in Texas Instruments calculators from the Butler
Walmart earlier that afternoon by placing the calculators inside a
cardboard box, scanning only the box, paying for it and leaving with the
unpaid merchandise.
kmbc.com
Albuquerque, NM: Retail theft leader sentenced to nine years
A man accused of running the largest retail crime operation in the
Albuquerque Metro has been sentenced. Raul Garcia, of Albuquerque, was
sentenced to nine years in prison after pleading no contest in July.
Those charges were to organized retail crime and racketeering charges.
Those charges came after a monthslong investigation by the Bernalillo
County Sheriff's Office's organized retail crime unit. Detectives found
the operation stole thousands of dollars from numerous chain retail
stores.
koat.com
Lakewood, CO: Lakewood police try to identify 2 suspects wanted in a
$10,000 theft from a jewelry store
Las Vegas, NV: More than $5k in merchandise recovered in Henderson
police Black Friday initiative
Sacramento, CA: New South Sacramento beauty store warns others after
attempted wig theft
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Shootings & Deaths
Elberton, GA: McDonald’s employee shot, killed inside Georgia restaurant
A McDonald’s employee has died after police say someone shot him inside the
restaurant. The Elberton Police Department responded to the McDonald’s inside
city limits about 10:19 p.m. Tuesday. Police found an employee lying on the
floor with multiple gunshot wounds. Investigators said it appears he was shot
after an argument with the suspect in the lobby. Officers and paramedics tried
lifesaving measures on the employee before he was taken to the hospital. He
later died at Elbert Memorial Hospital. The suspected shooter had already left
the restaurant when officers arrived. Police say the 15-year-old suspect later
turned himself in at the police department.
wsbtv.com
Baltimore, MD: Police investigate fatal shooting at gas station across street
from Horseshoe Casino
Baltimore police are investigating a double shooting Wednesday morning that left
a 26-year-old man dead at a Royal Farms parking lot and another man injured.
According to police, around 1:30 a.m. officers were in the 700 block of
Washington Boulevard when they heard gunshots. Then, a ShotSpotter alert came
from the area of the 800 block of Cross Street.
wbaltv.com
Portland, OR: Convenience store employee shot and killed in Southeast Portland
Portland police are investigating after a man was shot to death in Southeast
Portland's Hazelwood neighborhood Tuesday evening. Police confirmed Wednesday
afternoon that the shooting happened inside 3D's Market, and an employee was
killed. Officers from the East Precinct responded just after 5:20 p.m. to
Southeast 139th Avenue, just north of Mill Street. At the scene, they found a
man suffering from an apparent gunshot wound.
kgw.com
Gastonia, NC: Shooting suspects carried gun into Gaston County mall, video shows
Newly released video showed the moments that led up to shots being fired at
Eastridge Mall in Gastonia. The video from Sunday, Dec. 4, showed two males --
both dressed in dark clothing and masked -- walk to the entrance of Hibbett
Sports. One of them had a long gun, and they walked away before one briefly
returned and walked just inside the store. About 45 seconds after the suspect
returned, a female employee escorted him out. Gastonia police said that when the
two suspects were being escorted out of the mall, two shots were fired before
they ran off. Police said the bullets nearly hit a person. The video did not
show the shots being fired; however, the employee was seen running back into the
store, presumably after the gunfire. A witness told police the suspects ran to a
“Gamecock red” midsize, four-door SUV with a phone mount in the front. After the
shooting, City View Commercial -- which owns Eastridge Mall -- said in a
statement that it was “fully cooperating” with police during the investigation,
and said it was “committed to maintaining a secure environment.” The suspects
were still wanted by the Gastonia Police Department on the morning of Dec. 10.
wbtv.com
Valdosta, GA: Three shootings in 8 days at Valdosta restaurant; two people hurt
Three shootings occurred at Fin and Feathers in the span of just over a week,
resulting in two injuries and multiple instances of panic around the Valdosta
Mall. The first injury happened early Saturday morning, when the Valdosta Police
got a 911 call reporting gunshots in the area. A short time later, a 21-year-old
enter the hospital with a gunshot wound in his leg. He said he believed he had
been hit with a stray bullet, which he was treated for and released shortly
after. Officers found evidence of a shooting in the parking lot to confirm the
incident. The second injury happened the next day, Sunday, Dec. 7. Multiple 911
calls reported a larger fight at the same restaurant, with someone getting shot
in the parking lot. Officers found the 28-year-old victim had already left the
scene when they arrived, heading to the hospital. Several days before those
incidents — on Nov. 29 — another incident involving a gun took place, but no one
was hurt.
valdostadailytimes.com
Aurora, CO: Woman critically injured Tuesday in Aurora strip mall shooting
An unidentified woman at a central Aurora strip mall was critically injured
after being shot by a man on bicycle, police said. Police were called to the
large strip mall center at 1205 S. Havana St at about 6 p.m. to respond to
reports of a shooting there. “When they arrived, they found a woman with
life-threatening injuries who was taken to the hospital,” Aurora police
spokesperson Agent Matthew Wells-Longshore said in a statement. “The suspect was
described as a man wearing red sweatpants and a black jacket who was riding a
bicycle.”
sentinelcolorado.com
Decatur, GA: Victim dies after overnight gunfire at DeKalb County gas station
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Mendota, CA: Arrest after machete robbery at Mendota’s Latino Market
A man armed with a machete in an early morning Mendota robbery has been arrested
less than 48 hours after the crime took place, the city’s police department
announced Wednesday. According to the Mendota Police Department, 19-year-old
Nelson Alfaro was arrested following the robbery at the Latino Market. On
Saturday, at around 5:50 a.m., police say Alarfo brandished a large machete and
threatened the store clerk while demanding cash. He was later booked into jail
on felony charges related to the armed robbery.
yourcentralvalley.com
San Antonio, TX: San Antonio Police seek suspects in aggravated robbery at North
Star Mall's Saks Fifth Avenue
San Antonio Police are asking for your help in identifying the suspects involved
in an aggravated robbery at Saks Fifth Avenue in North Star Mall earlier in
December. On Dec. 6, around 12:45pm, a man and woman were seen walking out of
the store located on San Pedro Ave. with some concealed items, according to SAPD.
The pair was approached by store security and the woman toss her bag at the man
and took off. Police say the man pulled out a weapon and pointed at security
then fled from the location.
kens5.com
Las cruces, NM: Police arrest 2 more teens for Las Cruces gun store burglary
Manchester, NH: Nashua man arrested for alleged role in $150,000 theft at local
jewelry store
East Dallas, TX: Police investigate string of break-ins targeting East Dallas
small shops
Vineland, NJ: Man sentenced to nearly 3 decades in prison for armed robbery of
N.J. liquor store
Longview, WA: : Armed Robbery reported at Carnival Market in Beacon Hill
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•
Beauty - Sacramento,
CA - Robbery
•
Beauty – San Diego, CA
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store - Decatur, GA
– Armed Robbery / 1 killed
•
C-Store – Atlanta, GA
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Portland, OR
– Armed Robbery / Emp killed
•
C-Store – Athens, GA -
Burglary
•
Department - San
Antonio, TX - Robbery
•
Dollar – Lake City, FL
– Armed Robbery
•
Dollar – Richmond
County, GA – Armed Robbery
•
Grocery – East
Brewton, AL – Burglary
•
Grocery – Longview, WA
– Armed Robbery
•
Grocery – Mendota, CA
– Armed Robbery
•
Guns - Las Cruces, NM
- Burglary
• Jewelry – Las Vegas, NV – Robbery
• Jewelry - San Antonio, TX – Robbery
• Jewelry – Santa Rosa, CA – Robbery
•
Kohl’s – Exton, PA –
Robbery
•
Liquor – Edinburg, TX
– Armed Robbery
•
Liquor – Los Angeles,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Grants
Pass, OR – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Adelanto,
CA – Burglary
•
Skate – East Dallas,
TX- Burglary
•
Walmart – Cass County,
NV - Robbery
•
Tobacco – New
Hartford, NY – Burglary
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Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 2 shootings
• 2 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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