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Nathan
Bandaries promoted to Director, Asset Protection Operations for
Dollar Tree Stores |
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Frank
Sorgie Jr. promoted to Director, Loss Prevention for Academy
Sports + Outdoors |
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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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Interface Systems Releases 2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report
Annual study of 1.6
million monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail locations shows
AI-powered technologies and interactive remote video monitoring deliver
measurable results for retail loss prevention teams
 St.
Louis, MO – April 14, 2026 –
Interface
Systems, a leading provider of AI-powered security and expert remote
video monitoring for restaurants, retailers, and commercial businesses,
today released its
2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report, an annual study
based on 1.6 million remote monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail
locations and 51 brands throughout 2025.
The report provides operational data at a scale to help retail loss
prevention leaders understand when risk peaks, which threats escalate
fastest, and which intervention strategies prove most effective across
thousands of monitored locations.
Read more in today's Vendor
Spotlight column below
In Case You Missed It

2025 Fatalities
by Location
57% Parking Lots -
41% In-Store/Mall - 2% Off Premises

Click here to read the full
report
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
The Statewide Battle Against Organized
Theft Continues
States Continue Advancing Organized Retail Theft Measures
By
the D&D Daily staff
State lawmakers continue to push new legislation aimed at organized
retail theft, with recent activity focusing on tougher criminal
penalties, broader definitions of organized theft and more coordinated
enforcement across jurisdictions. The current pipeline suggests
lawmakers are increasingly treating organized retail theft as a
multi-actor, multi-jurisdiction crime issue rather than a standalone
shoplifting problem.
In Ohio, House Bill 615 — the Retail Theft
Prevention Act — remains one of the clearer examples. The
bill would create a specific offense for groups acting together to
commit retail theft, with stronger penalties depending on how many
people are involved. An Ohio Legislative Service Commission bill
analysis issued on February 17, 2026 said the proposal would make group
retail theft involving one to three additional offenders a fifth-degree
felony, while cases involving four or more offenders could rise to a
third-degree felony with a presumption of prison time.
Connecticut is also moving legislation this session. House Bill
5563 would expand the organized retail theft statute by lengthening the
aggregation window from 180 days to 365 days and would add gift card
crime and fostering the sale of stolen property into the broader
retail-theft enforcement framework. As of April 7, 2026, the bill had
been referred to the Office of Legislative Research and Office of Fiscal
Analysis after earlier committee action.
In California, Senate Bill 1019 is scheduled for an April 21, 2026
Senate Public Safety Committee hearing. The bill would create a
California Cargo Theft Task Force
within the Attorney General’s office, reflecting growing concern around
theft that extends beyond store shelves into freight, warehouses and the
supply chain.
At the federal level, the Combating Organized
Retail Crime Act was advanced by the House Judiciary
Committee in January and placed on the Union Calendar on January 30,
2026. For retailers, the broader trend is clear: policymakers are
continuing to build more specialized legal tools aimed at coordinated
theft networks rather than relying solely on traditional theft statutes.
Florida Takes on
ORC
Locked shelves, higher prices: Inside Florida's crackdown on retail
theft rings
Florida law enforcement agencies
have launched a statewide partnership aimed at breaking down barriers to
investigating organized retail theft rings and improving coordination
across jurisdictions.
Retailers say the added security measures are a response to a
fast-growing problem: organized retail crime.
Investigators say this type of theft goes far beyond isolated
shoplifting incidents, describing them as coordinated theft rings
stealing thousands of dollars’ worth of merchandise at a time — all with
one goal: reselling the stolen goods for profit.
“This is a growing trend,” said a Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office
detective who has tracked organized retail theft rings for more than a
decade. He asked to be identified only as Mike, his first name, to
protect ongoing investigations.
Florida law enforcement agencies have launched a statewide
partnership aimed at breaking down barriers to investigating organized
retail theft rings and improving coordination across jurisdictions.
That partnership has been in place for several months, officials
say and is part of a broader push to curb retail crime throughout the
state. The Florida Retail Federation’s CEO Scott Shalley praised those
efforts.
“Retail theft at all levels is a direct attack on our businesses and
communities. Fortunately, we have strong leaders in Florida who have
taken a proactive approach to increase protections, strengthen
enforcement and promote accountability. Through the statewide task
force, key stakeholders join state level leaders and local law
enforcement officers to identify trends, develop strategies and increase
prevention. We’ve seen the true impact of this effort with the
dismantling of several organized retail crime rings in recent months,
resulting in safer communities for retail teams, consumers, residents
and visitors."
nbcmiami.com
Key Supply Chain Hub at Risk
Florida has a cargo theft problem. Congress must step in. | Opinion
Florida is a logistics powerhouse.
It should not become a safe haven for organized theft.
Florida is known for its beaches, ports and booming population. But, it
is also one of the most critical logistics states in the nation. From
the Ports of Miami, Tampa, and Jacksonville to the I‑4 and I‑95
corridors that move goods up and down the East Coast, Florida sits
at the center of America’s supply chain. In fact, Florida was expected
to move an estimated 11.27 billion tons of freight in 2025.
palmbeachpost.com
2026 Milwaukee crime data; homicides down 8% in 1st quarter of year
Sheridan, WY: March crime data report released, overall crime low
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Store Built & Run Entirely By AI
AI is the boss at this retail store. What could go wrong?
Andon Market, designed and managed
by an AI system but staffed by two human employees, opened Friday in San
Francisco.
There are no scanners, no self-checkout sirens triggered by a
prematurely bagged item and certainly no human cashiers.
Instead, a customer can pick up an old-school corded phone to talk with
the manager, Luna, an AI system. Luna asks what the customer is
purchasing and creates a corresponding transaction on a nearby iPad
equipped with a card payment system.
Andon Market, camouflaged among dozens of other polished small
businesses, is the Bay Area’s first AI-run retail store. With the
vibe of a modern boutique, it sells everything from granola and
artisanal chocolate bars to store-branded sweatshirts.
Though Luna is the official manager of the store, the business was
conceptualized and put into motion by the humans at Andon Labs, a
startup that seeks to raise awareness about the capabilities of leading
AI systems. The company is preparing for a future in which
organizations are run by autonomous AI systems, or agents, like Luna.
Documents from Andon Labs and interviews with the company's employees,
the store's human workers and Luna itself reveal the broad scope of
what AI can manage and where it falls short.
For example, Luna is responsible for negotiating with suppliers and
placing real orders by using a credit card. Luna led the entire process
of hiring human employees and now manages the two humans who take care
of the store’s daily business.
The store’s track lighting and off-white walls are framed by a large
company logo — designed by Luna — painted on the back wall. Outside, a
chalkboard sign declares, “First AI run store!!!”
nbcnews.com
$774M Opioid Settlement Hits
Albertsons
Albertsons swings to loss fueled by $774 million opioid settlement
Albertsons Companies reported a fourth-quarter loss on the heels of an
opioid settlement. It is one of the last major retail chains to reach
a deal.
The grocer said it reached a $774 million settlement to resolve
“substantially” all of the opioid-related claims brought against the
company by state, local and tribal government entities across the
nation. Albertsons noted that the settlement is not an admission of
wrongdoing or liability.
“This settlement framework marks a significant step toward resolving
opioid-related litigation, and Albertsons Cos. believes the
settlement framework is in the best interest of all parties,” the
company stated. “For years, Albertsons Cos. has invested in strong
pharmacy practices designed to promote the safe and appropriate use of
prescription medications.”
Albertsons’ settlement comes several years after other prominent
retailers, including Walmart, CVS Health Corp. and Walgreens, all
struck deals to settle opioid -related claims.
Albertsons reported a net loss of $480.8 million, or a loss of
$0.94 per share, for the quarter ended Feb. 28, compared to net income
of $171.8 million or $0.29 per share net of tax, or $1.18 per share, in
the year-ago quarter. The net loss included the $599.8 million
charge, net of tax, or $(1.18) per share, related to the company’s
opioid settlement.
chainstoreage.com
Retail Sales Up 7% YoY
NRF: Retail sales inch up for sixth consecutive month in March
Retail sales rose slightly in March despite inflation and high
gasoline prices as many consumers received higher-than-usual tax
refunds.
Core retail sales (excluding restaurants, auto dealers and gas
stations) were up 0.41% month over month in March and are up 7.05%
year over year, according to the CNBC/Retail Monitor released
Tuesday by the National Retail Federation. That compared with increases
of 0.27% month over month and 5.87% year over year in February.
Total retail sales (including restaurants but excluding
automobile dealers and gasoline stations) rose 0.4% month over month and
up 6.59% unadjusted year over year in March, according to the
Retail Monitor. That compared with increases of 0.28% month over month
and 6.24% year over year in February.
Core sales were up 6.14% during the first quarter. Total sales rose
6.18%.
chainstoreage.com
7-Eleven is closing hundreds of stores
List of doomed retail locations grows in
2026 as chain seeks to reduce costs
UK retail sales rise 3.6% in March as Easter boosts food spending
Are You Working at One of America's Safest Companies?
Will Dollar General’s AI-Enabled In-Store Audio Network Convince, or
Annoy, Shoppers?
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Interface Systems Releases 2026 Retail
Loss Prevention Benchmark Report
Annual study
of 1.6 million monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail locations
shows AI-powered technologies and interactive remote video monitoring
deliver measurable results for retail loss prevention teams

St. Louis, MO – April 14, 2026 –
Interface
Systems, a leading provider of AI-powered security and expert remote
video monitoring for restaurants, retailers, and commercial businesses,
today released its
2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report, an annual study
based on 1.6 million remote monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail
locations and 51 brands throughout 2025.
The report provides operational data at a scale to help retail loss
prevention leaders understand when risk peaks, which threats escalate
fastest, and which intervention strategies prove most effective across
thousands of monitored locations.
"Loss prevention teams are under more pressure than ever to protect
people, reduce shrink, and justify every dollar spent on security. This
report gives them the data and the confidence to make those decisions,"
said Brent Duncan, CEO of Interface Systems.
Key Data and Findings
Location Theft/Loss, Disturbances, and Loitering/Panhandling are the
top retail threats by volume. Other threats tracked included
criminal events, battery/assault, theft, property damage, robbery, and
medical emergencies.
Retail risk is predictable. Store opening times recorded a 363%
spike in security incidents and peak volume of incidents are recorded
between 6 and 8 PM. Sundays and Mondays combined account for 30% of
weekly incident volume, while Thursdays carry the highest police
dispatch rate of the week.
Interactive remote video monitoring reduces escalation. 62.4% of
high-priority security events were resolved without police dispatch when
interactive remote video monitoring was deployed. Voice-down
intervention, where a trained intervention specialist communicates in
real time through on-site speakers, resolved 99.7% of employee
assistance requests without law enforcement involvement.
Video verification eliminates false alarms. 95% of alarm events
were identified as false alarms through live video verification and
resolved without dispatch.
Employee vulnerability peaks at transitions, not peak hours. Of
the 1.1 million employee assistance requests logged in 2025, demand was
highest at 10 AM (97,432 requests) and peaked at 7 PM (146,672
requests), aligning with store opening and closing times.
Loitering and disturbances have higher rates of escalation.
Loitering and disturbances have a consistently high dispatch rate
ranging from 65-82%. Both categories peak daily between 6 and 8 PM, the
same window as overall incident volume.
The day before a holiday carries more risk than the actual holiday
itself. Pre-holiday days averaged 148 incidents versus 138 on actual
holidays, representing a 5.5% incident drop on holiday.
AI-Enabled Perimeter Protection Resolves 96.1%
of Perimeter Threats Without Human Intervention
The report also includes performance data from
Interface's Virtual Perimeter Guard, an AI-powered perimeter
security solution that combines autonomous detection with expert human
monitoring from Interface's Interactive Security Operations Centers (iSOCs).
Across 29 distributed locations, Virtual Perimeter Guard Units were
activated 23,810 times, resolved 96.1% of perimeter threats
automatically through a staged voice-down protocol, and escalated 4% of
the events to a live intervention specialist. Just one police dispatch
was recorded across all 23,810 activations. The full breakdown of the
activation stages and resolution rates is included in the report.
Download Full Report

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Retail Cybersecurity
What 2025 taught us about the importance of resilience in retail
What last year’s retail incidents
revealed about our cybersecurity
When it rains, it pours. That phrase defined retail cybersecurity in
2025. What began as isolated incidents quickly became prolonged,
intense disruptions, exposing just how interconnected — and fragile —
modern retail operations really are.
Over the year, high-profile retailers around the world were hit.
Luxury global brands like Gucci and Balenciaga suffered data breaches;
Victoria’s Secret was forced to temporarily shut down parts of its
digital operations. While Marks & Spencer, Co-Op and Harrods in the UK
all faced incidents, with disruption for M&S lasting for 15 weeks.
Different triggers, same outcome: major disruption and financial
loss.
But when disruption spreads this quickly and lingers this long, it stops
being about individual attacks and starts raising a more uncomfortable
question: why was retail such fertile ground for them in the first
place?
Why disruption spread so easily
While the volume of retailers hit in 2025 might have felt anomalous, it
makes sense when viewed through this lens: retail is one of the most
effective sectors for causing maximum disruption at scale. The
cyberattack on United Natural Foods, a key supplier to tens of thousands
of grocery stores across North America, showed how a single compromise
can ripple outward – emptying shelves, disrupting lives, and triggering
wider economic impact.
But it wasn’t simply a lack of security
investment that caught out countless retailers last year, it
was the sheer scale of cyber exposure retailers are now dealing with.
The most disruptive incidents of the year weren’t driven by
sophisticated zero-day exploits, but by attackers exploiting complexity
and that lack of contextual understanding around how systems, assets and
users interact.
Retailers operate sprawling digital ecosystems that combine ecommerce
platforms, cloud infrastructure, in-store operational technology,
identity systems, and third-party services. Each connection improves
efficiency and scale — but also introduces new exposure and risk. A
weakness in one area, whether a supplier, a trusted integration or an
unmanaged asset, can quickly cascade into widespread disruption.
techradar.com
Middle East-Origin Cyberattacks Rising
Brute-force cyberattacks originating in Middle East surge in Q1
Hackers have primarily targeted
SonicWall and Fortinet FortiGate devices, according to researchers.
A surge of brute force authentication attacks targeted network
devices during the first quarter of 2026, with the vast majority of
threat activity coming from the Middle East, according to a report
released Tuesday by Barracuda.
Almost 90% of the brute-force attacks originated from various Middle
East locations, and the leading targets were SonicWall and Fortinet
FortiGate devices, according to Barracuda researchers. These attacks
accounted for more than half of all of the threat activity tracked by
Barracuda between February and March.
Fusco noted that IP addresses alone are not considered a reliable
indicator, but said it was “safe to assume” that a combination of
state-linked and professional groups were involved. Attacks from
opportunistic groups were also likely involved.
Hackers have been aggressively scanning perimeter devices for weak or
exposed credentials, according to the blog post.
cybersecuritydive.com
Put Security at Center of Smart-Gadget
Purchases
FCC signals continued commitment to Cyber Trust Mark program
The government approved a new lead
overseer for its IoT device security labeling initiative.
The Federal Communications Commission on Monday picked a new
organization to oversee its cybersecurity labeling program for internet
of things devices, signaling that the Trump administration is still
keen to launch its predecessor’s effort to put
security at the center of smart-gadget purchases.
The FCC picked the nonprofit ioXt Alliance to be the new lead
administrator of the U.S. Cyber Trust Mark Program, in which
government-approved testing labs will review voluntarily submitted
IoT products and certify that they meet the necessary standards to carry
a security seal of approval. The program is aimed at consumers but
will also likely influence businesses’ purchasing decisions. Officials
hope that more widespread use of secure IoT devices will make it harder
for hackers to commandeer the devices for cyberattacks, as they have
repeatedly done over the years.
cybersecuritydive.com
Google to penalize sites that hijack the back button
Cybersecurity Leaders to Watch in Illinois’ Retail Industry |
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Amazon Warehouse Death
Amazon workers forced to work around dead coworker and told to ‘turn
around and not look’
Some of the Amazon workers allegedly
tried to step in and help give the man CPR, but were told to get back to
work
A highly disturbing incident is alleged to have occurred at an Amazon
warehouse last week. A new report says that an Amazon worker lay dead
in the facility in Oregon for over an hour, while his colleagues
were told to get back to work and to "not look".
While the workers were instructed to continue working, the man lay
lifeless on the ground, and people were allegedly discouraged from
helping him. One worker said that a manager told them to "Just turn
around and not look. Let's get back to work," according to The
Western Edge, which broke the story.
The investigation by the outlet alleged that Amazon tried to keep the
death of a worker, who passed away on April 6, at its distribution
center in Troutdale, Oregon, from being publicized. Western Edge
later learned of the incident and reported it one week later.
An employee, pseudonym Sam, revealed that despite seeing a "body form
laying lifeless" at his place of work, his supervisor told him and his
coworkers to "please get back to work."
Witnesses say a woman ran over to the individual, upset, and began
performing chest compressions on him. At that point, Sam, who is
trained in CPR, said that they should help the woman. He added that his
supervisor, who had tears in his eyes, told him, "It has to be
management or safety team," and to "just turn around and not look. Let's
get back to work."
First responders later attended the scene, and the area was eventually
closed off. The incident sent shockwaves through employees at the
facility, and some blamed middle management for responding coldly to
the situation.
The report highlights growing concerns over the treatment of workers
at large retail companies. Amazon, in particular, has had to fight
off accusations of being responsible for a series of deaths at its
distribution centers across the U.S. When these lawsuits have gone to
court, they have so far overwhelmingly landed in Amazon's favor.
themirror.com
AI Shopping & Trust
75% of Americans say they would lose trust in AI shopping if results
were sponsored
Consumers increasingly tap agentic
AI to shop, but brand trust remains strongest in physical stores.
“The New Rules of Retail Trust in the Age of AI” survey, a
continuation of the 2025 “Return of Touch” report, indicates that
price-conscious consumers are using AI for convenience and to reduce
uncertainty in a rapidly changing shopping landscape but still have
concerns about trust and data transparency. According to the
research, shoppers continue to have high confidence in in-store
experiences, especially regarding item quality and pricing.
“Consumers are scrutinizing value more closely and questioning who,
or what, is shaping their purchase decisions,” said Heidi Waldusky,
Quad’s Vice President of Brand and Integrated Marketing. “AI offers real
promise for efficiency and personalized service to make life easier, but
any hint that AI shopping is quietly steering users toward paid
influence could confirm a fear that the system isn’t on our side.”
quad.com
US' The Children's Place FY25 sales fall amid e-commerce woes |
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Hialeah, FL: Video shows off-duty cop stopping armed Advil, Tylenol thief in
Hialeah
Newly-released surveillance and body camera video shows an off-duty state
wildlife officer confronting an armed shoplifter at a Hialeah supermarket ― and
the suspect’s subsequent arrest, authorities say. Police said it happened in
September at the Publix at 1585 W. 49th St., next to the Westland Mall.
According to police, the off-duty Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission law enforcement officer saw Edwin Soto, 43, stuffing items into a
book bag. Authorities said he had stolen “six bottles of Advil and three bottles
of Tylenol” worth a little less than $190. Video shows the FWC officer showing
his badge to the suspected crook, wearing a backpack. Police said Soto stormed
out of the store while looking over his shoulder. Just after the officer returns
with the bag, so did the suspected shoplifter, who police said threatened to
kill the officer while armed with a knife. He then rode off on his bike.
Authorities said they later caught up to Soto. In body camera footage, a Hialeah
police officer is heard telling Soto, “An officer approached you and showed you
a badge and you pulled out a knife and you said ‘I’m going to kill you,
motherf---er.’” “Oh, he beat me up,” Soto claimed in response. But Soto was the
one arrested on charges of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer and
petit theft. Soto, who has a lengthy criminal history, remained on house arrest
as of Tuesday.
local10.com
St Albert, AB, Canada: Lululemon bandits: Alberta retail crime blitz leads to 65
arrests and $40K-plus in recovered goods
London, England: More than 1,000 phones seized in raid on London shop in theft
crackdown
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Shootings & Deaths
Omaha, NE: Police shoot & kill woman after alleged Walmart kidnapping attempt
Officers from the Omaha Police Department (OPD) shot and killed a woman in the
parking lot of an Omaha, Nebraska Walmart after she cut a 3-year-old boy with a
knife on Tuesday, police told Fox News Digital. "When officers arrived, they
encountered a woman who cut an approximately 3-year-old boy with large knife.
Officers shot the woman, who died at the scene. The boy was taken to the
hospital," the OPD said in a statement on X. Police stressed that it was an
isolated incident and that there was no threat to the public at the time.
foxnews.com
Atlanta, GA: 17-year-old picking up food delivery orders killed in gas station
shooting
A 17-year-old was shot and killed inside a gas station store on Tuesday morning.
Police said the teen was working as a food delivery driver. Atlanta police
responded to a shooting at a BP gas station on Metropolitan Pkwy around 2:30
a.m. When they arrived, officers found a teen shot in the chest.
wsbtv.com
Syracuse, NY: 15-year-old faces charges after deadly Destiny USA mall shooting
A 15-year-old male suspect is now facing several charges following the death of
21-year-old Lamar Sparks amid a shooting outside the Destiny USA mall. Below is
a timeline of events surrounding the Destiny USA parking lot shooting. According
to a statement from the Syracuse Police Department, officers came out to 4
Destiny USA Drive due to reports of a disturbance. Syracuse Police said a
victim, identified as Lamar Sparks, was taken to Upstate University Hospital
shortly after. Sparks later died due to his injuries, police mentioned. After
several city-wide interviews and search warrants, investigators concluded that
the suspect was a 15-year-old male. The teen suspect was arrested and taken into
custody by police in Syracuse, accompanied by a lawyer. Police said that
following the suspect’s initial court appearance, he was ordered to be held back
at the Hillbrook Detention Center. The suspect, police said, is charged with
first-degree robbery, first-degree criminal use of a firearm, and second-degree
criminal possession of a weapon. An investigation remains ongoing.
localsyr.com
Raleigh, NC: Shootout reported in Food Lion parking lot on Millbrook Road in
Raleigh, at least one injured
A heavy police presence has taken over a busy intersection Tuesday morning due
to a shooting and crash in north Raleigh. According to the Raleigh Police
Department, officers responded to reports of a shooting around 10:30 a.m. at the
intersection of Creedmoor Road and West Millbrook Road. Officers said one victim
walked into a local hospital with injuries from the shooting. All who were
involved in the shooting fled the scene, according to the police. “Occupants of
both vehicles got into a verbal altercation with one another,” said Chief Boyce.
“During that verbal altercation, members of both parties began to shoot at one
another.”
cbs17.com
Update: Omaha family says boy slashed during attempted kidnapping at Walmart
expected to survive his injuries
Visalia, CA: Jury upholds gang enhancement in Visalia Mall shooting case for the
3rd time
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Buffalo, NY: Violence erupts at Walden Galleria, two women arrested
Another night of violence at the Walden Galleria is raising alarms across
Western New York. According to the Cheektowaga Police Department, late Sunday
night, multiple 911 calls came in reporting a fight involving dozens of people
outside Aloha Krab at the Walden Galleria. Responding officers found a crowd of
roughly 100 people in the parking lot, but there was no active fight. After the
crowd was cleared, there were more calls reporting additional disturbances.
Police said a short time later, a woman then reported she was allegedly
assaulted inside the restaurant. Alexis Nelson, 23, of Buffalo and 27-year-old
Latoya Cheatom of Buffalo were located by patrol officers and arrested for
third-degree assault. The motive for the assault remains unclear. “I’ve seen
what happens when fights erupt and the security freezes,” Pastor James Giles
said. “For the most part, they’re not trained to deescalate this kind of thing.
They’re not trained for that.”
wivb.com
Seattle, WA: Red Mill Burgers burglarized 4 times since Christmas, owners demand
Seattle police action
Harris County, TX: Police believe high school student linked to 10 Houston-area
Subway store robberies
Laredo, TX: Third suspect arrested in March robbery that injured store clerk
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•
C-Store –
Jacksonville, FL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Laredo, TX –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Niagara
Falls, NY – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Rome, GA –
Robbery
•
Dollar – Valley City,
ND – Burglary
•
Dollar – Hyattsville,
MD – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Summerville, SC – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Waukegan,
IL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Atlanta,
GA – Armed Robbery / Uber Eats killed
•
Restaurant – Columbus,
OH – Robbery
•
Restaurant - Seattle,
WA - Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Washington, DC – Armed Robbery
•
Tobacco – Goldsboro,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
Vape - Schuylkill
County, PA – Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 10 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 1 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Insight,
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one of LP's most trusted voices |
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Most AP Leaders Are Quietly Comparing “Signal vs Noise”
- Not Feature vs Feature
They’re not just asking “What does it do?”
They’re asking “Does it help me focus on what actually matters?” The
tools that reduce chaos - not just measure it - get remembered long
after the booth carpet is rolled up.
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