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 2/25/26

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Brad Buckley promoted to Vice President of Loss Prevention for TJX Companies, Inc.



David Schmook named District Asset Protection Manager for Burlington Stores


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

 

 

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Interface Systems Recognized as a Great Place to Work® for the Third Consecutive Year

Employee Trust and Accountability Culture Drives Exceptional Customer Experience

St. Louis, MO — February 24, 2026Interface Systems, a leading managed service provider delivering business security, networking, and business intelligence solutions to multi-location enterprises, today announced that it has been recognized as a Great Place to Work® Certified™ workplace for the third consecutive year, based entirely on employee feedback collected through the independent Great Place to Work Trust Index® survey.

In the 2026 survey, 82% of Interface employees said it is a great place to work, well above the 57% benchmark for typical U.S. companies.

Survey results highlighted consistent strengths across the organization:

  • 93% of employees say they were made to feel welcome when they joined the company.

  • 88% report they are able to take time off when needed.

  • 88% agree that people care about each other in the organization.

  • 86% say people are given substantial responsibility.

  • 86% affirm that they have high trust in leadership credibility, respect, and fairness.

Read more here
 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Retailers Battle Gift Card Fraud
Gift Card Fraud Emerges as Growing Retail Loss Vector

By the D&D Daily staff

Gift cards remain a popular purchase category, particularly during peak holiday seasons and promotional events. However, retailers are increasingly identifying gift card fraud as a distinct and growing source of loss that requires focused prevention strategies.

Unlike traditional shoplifting, gift card fraud often occurs through manipulation of systems rather than physical theft of merchandise. One common tactic involves tampering with gift cards displayed on open racks. Criminals record or scrape card numbers and security codes, then monitor activation activity. Once a legitimate customer purchases and loads funds onto the compromised card, the fraudster quickly drains the balance online before the recipient attempts to use it.

Another emerging risk involves social engineering schemes. Fraudsters may contact store associates posing as corporate representatives and instruct them to activate large batches of gift cards under the guise of a technical test or urgent directive. In other cases, scammers pressure consumers directly — convincing victims to purchase gift cards and share codes as payment for fictitious taxes, utilities, or emergencies.

For retailers, the financial impact extends beyond the card value. Investigations, customer reimbursements, brand damage, and chargebacks can compound losses. Because gift cards are treated as cash equivalents, recovery options are often limited once funds are transferred.

Loss prevention teams are responding with layered controls. Many retailers are shifting high-value gift cards behind service counters or into locked displays to reduce tampering. Packaging enhancements — such as sealed sleeves and scratch-off PIN protections — are also being upgraded.

From a systems perspective, real-time monitoring tools can flag rapid balance depletion, high-risk activation patterns, or repeated transactions tied to known fraud indicators. Employee training is equally critical, particularly in identifying social engineering attempts and escalating suspicious requests.

As digital and physical gift card programs expand, retailers are recognizing that proactive controls, cross-functional communication, and customer awareness campaigns are essential to minimizing fraud exposure and protecting both revenue and reputation.


1,600 Violent Retail Attacks Per Day
UK: Violent attacks on shop staff down by a fifth but still ‘too high’

British Retail Consortium figures show that while incidents against retail workers are down to 1,600 a day, they’re still far higher than before the pandemic

Violence and abuse against retail workers declined by a fifth last year but levels of crime remain “unacceptably high”, the industry has warned.

There were 1,600 daily incidents against shop workers in 2024/25, down from 2,000 the year before and bringing the yearly total to 590,000, according to figures from the British Retail Consortium (BRC) and Sensormatic Solutions.

The BRC, which represents the UK retail sector, cautioned that daily rates of violence and abuse were still the second highest on record and far greater than an average of 455 incidents a day before the pandemic. In particular, physical violence remained largely unchanged year-on-year at 118, with 36 incidents a day involving a weapon.

The government’s Crime and Policing Bill is set to introduce a specific offence for assaulting a retail worker to act as an additional deterrent after rates of retail crime surged during the pandemic. It will also remove the £200 threshold for “low-level” theft.

There were 5.5 million incidents of shop theft last year costing British retailers close to £400 million, although the true figure is likely to be significantly higher, given hat many thefts go undetected. The report also examined incidents of parcel delivery thefts for the first time, which cost shops more than £100 million last year.

Troubles with retail crime in recent years have piled pressure on an industry already grappling with increases to national insurance contributions and the national living wage and have intensified the demand on ministers and local police forces to find a solution.

Shoplifting rates have risen in tandem with the price of British goods, while parliament’s business and trade committee warned earlier in February that the government was at risk of “hollowing out” the high street without a series of urgent reforms to ease cost pressures across the board. thetimes.com


Cartel Unrest Impacting C-Stores
‘Like a war zone’: Bay Area residents live through violence in Mexico
Many Americans have been impacted by violent outbursts that swept through a number of cities in Mexico after the government there killed the head of the powerful Jalisco New Generation drug cartel, Nemesio Oseguera Cervantes, known as “El Mencho.” The wave of unrest included the burning of buses, cars and convenience stores, especially in Puerto Vallarta and Guadalajara.

Some North Bay residents found themselves sheltering in place in an unexpected vacation twist, or frantically trying to reschedule flights home. Others had to cancel upcoming visits to Mexico. Many worried from afar as family members and friends recounted taught situations.

Hermosillo described dramatic incidents in Jalostotitlán. The cartels burned a car on a roadway leading into and out of town, and a bank that catered to people with disabilities. She called it “unnerving.”

“We were fortunate, by chance we went shopping Saturday,” Cosgrove said. “We were told lines are an hour, two hours to get into grocery stores. Uber just opened up.”  mercurynews.com


$725M Cargo Theft Losses in 2025
ICYMI: Cargo Theft Is Exploding — And Congress May Finally Step In
Cargo theft losses surged to nearly $725 million last year, according to CargoNet, and the problem is no longer local or opportunistic.

In this HDT Talks Trucking Short Take, Editor and Associate Publisher Deborah Lockridge speaks with Scott Cornell, VP of Transportation Risk & Strategy at LogistIQ Insurance Solutions and chair of TAPA Americas, about how cargo theft has evolved into a sophisticated, international crime — and why federal tracking and enforcement have lagged behind.

Cornell explains how cargo theft provisions were added to the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA), what the legislation would do differently, and how federal tracking, task forces, and prosecutors could help motor carriers, brokers, and shippers fight back. truckinginfo.com


Retail theft remains persistent in Redding, Calif.

UK: Chocolate kept in anti-theft boxes as shops warn it's being stolen to order

Data shows nearly 50% decrease in crime in Myrtle Beach
 



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Retailers & Tariff Uncertainty
Tariff Uncertainty Persists as Retailers Seek Refunds After Court Ruling

By the D&D Daily staff

Despite the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision limiting the executive branch’s authority to impose certain tariffs, uncertainty continues for retailers and importers seeking to recover duties already paid.

The Court decision does not automatically trigger refunds. Instead, companies must pursue reimbursement through ongoing litigation in the U.S. Court of International Trade.

Even before the Supreme Court ruling, refund lawsuits were already underway. Beginning in December, 10 Wisconsin-based companies filed claims seeking reimbursement of tariffs paid under the disputed authority. Among the most recognizable names were Kohl’s and Milwaukee Tool.

Additional companies pursuing tariff refunds through litigation include:

  • FedEx

  • Columbia Sportswear

  • Under Armour

  • Adidas America

  • Costco

  • Goodyear

  • Alcoa

The financial stakes are significant. Tariffs affected a wide range of categories, including apparel, footwear, tools, electronics, home goods and industrial materials. Retailers either absorbed higher costs, renegotiated supplier contracts, shifted sourcing strategies or passed increases along to consumers.

Key questions now facing the industry include:

  • Which importers qualify for refunds?

  • How far back reimbursements may apply

  • How U.S. Customs will treat already liquidated entries

  • The timeline for court decisions and potential appeals

Legal experts expect the refund process to take months — potentially longer — depending on how lower courts structure repayment mechanisms.

While the Supreme Court ruling provides clarity on executive authority, the financial consequences of the tariff period remain unresolved. For retailers and importers, trade policy uncertainty continues to impact planning, sourcing and cost forecasting moving forward.

   RELATED: De minimis still shelved after Supreme Court’s tariff ruling


Retail's Tariff Relief
Is the SCOTUS Tariff Ruling a Major Win for Retail?
While the move creates other uncertainties, retail trade groups loudly applauded the Supreme Court’s ruling Friday that struck down most of President Donald Trump’s global tariffs, believing it may usher in more predictability and free up related costs.

Matt Priest, president and CEO of Footwear Distributors and Retailers of America (FDRA), said, “By removing these widespread tariffs, the footwear industry can redirect billions of dollars toward innovation, job creation, and affordability for families across the country.”

American Apparel & Footwear Association (AAFA) president and CEO Steve Lamar said, “Today’s Supreme Court decision reaffirms that only Congress — through its Article I, Section 8 powers enumerated in the U.S. Constitution — has the authority to impose tariffs. This is a bedrock principle that was present at the founding of our country.”

A group of small businesses, joined by Costco and more than a dozen states with Democratic attorneys general, sued the Trump administration over the tariffs, accusing Trump of inappropriately stretching his power to “regulate” to unlawfully impose taxes.

Among the unknowns is when and how the government may refund tariffs that have already been paid and were deemed unconstitutional. retailwire.com


Workplace Safety Trends
Never a Quiet Day on the EHS Front

Mental health, AI fatigue and environmental deregulation dominate the latest trends in workplace safety.

According to a recent Pie Insurance study of workplace employees at more than 1,000 small businesses, the top safety concern for workers today is mental health, not physical injuries or equipment safety. What’s more, employees say mental health is the greatest risk they face in the workplace as well as the most overlooked risk. And the gap between how well employers think they’re doing at addressing mental health issues, and what employees are actually experiencing, is wide and getting wider. Employees, you see, don't always feel heard by their senior managers. According to the survey, the top request from employees to improve their mental health is flexible work hours and remote work options; employers, take note.

A survey of 1,250 corporate workers by human resources firm ResumeTemplates found that despite the promise of artificial intelligence lightening the load for workers, the opposite is often true. Nearly one-third (31%) of respondents said that their workload has actually increased since their company adopted AI, and that their bosses often expect employees to double or even quadruple their output now that they have AI at their disposal. It’s led to a condition known as AI fatigue, which is similar to burnout because it’s rooted in a feeling of being overwhelmed, explains Julia Toothacre, chief career specialist at ResumeTemplates. “Employees should watch for workload creep, when managers assume AI means you can take on more without providing the resources to support it.”

Burnout rates are high and the threat of AI is triggering significant fear [among employees] about their relevance at work,” adds Scott Anderberg, CEO of Moodle, a provider of education technology. Many employees feel that they have more work to complete than time to do it, a situation which, as every safety professional knows, can often lead to unsafe behaviors by workers. ehstoday.com


The fractured, fragile US consumer
There are various reasons why spending in the U.S. remains strong despite low consumer confidence, and it’s not just about having higher incomes.

Eddie Bauer files for bankruptcy: Why 'now' matters

French department store BHV to open new Shein stores in more French cities
 
Survey: Nearly half of U.S. consumers support tariffs
 



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Agilence AI - Artificial Intelligence Delivering
Next-Level Fraud Detection and Loss Prevention

Agilence AI is a set of AI features across the entire Agilence product suite that include fraud detection, natural language queries, and more.



MOUNT LAUREL, N.J. - Agilence, the leading provider of data analytics and loss prevention (LP) solutions for retail, supermarket, restaurant, and hospitality organizations, announced the launch of Agilence AI, a groundbreaking suite of artificial intelligence capabilities integrated across Agilence Analytics, Agilence Case Management, and Agilence Audit Management. This new technology empowers businesses to combat fraud more effectively by delivering tailored insights and streamlining workflows to address high-risk activities faster than ever.

Key Capabilities of Agilence AI:

AI Transaction Fraud: Precision Scoring - Agilence AI surfaces high-priority risks by scoring suspicious transactions inside Agilence Analytics. This adaptive system learns from user input to refine its fraud prediction accuracy. Fraud scores seamlessly integrate into dashboards, reports, and queries, enhancing analysis for faster and better decisions.

AI Alerts: Priority Ranking - Agilence Analytics alerts are based on business criteria, conditions, and metrics that provide actionable insights to correct and resolve fraud issues. Agilence AI ranks alerts so your teams focus on the most pressing threats. The system learns in order to minimize "noise," preventing alert fatigue and ensuring high-impact issues are addressed promptly. Related alerts are grouped, enabling teams to spot and stop potential widespread fraud faster.

Natural Language Query (NLQ): Intuitive Data Exploration - Users can now investigate their Agilence Case Management and Agilence Audit Management data using plain-language questions, accelerating fraud analysis and making insights more accessible across all levels of expertise. Real-time visualization of queries simplifies data exploration and fosters faster comprehension.

AI Automations: Workflow Efficiency - Agilence AI enables rapid creation of automated workflows for Agilence Case Management and Agilence Audit Management using natural language inputs and queries. This technology enhances compliance, assigns tasks for resolution, and reduces the burden of manual oversight, ensuring quicker corrective actions and improved operational safety.

Agilence AI boosts team productivity with AI-driven scoring, helping prioritize critical fraud cases and saving time through NLQ-powered insights. It uncovers hidden fraud, adapting to complex patterns like refund, loyalty, and ecommerce abuse. Tailored to your business, it evolves with your data, offering flexible workflows, alerts, and dashboards aligned with organizational priorities.

For more information about Agilence AI and how it can transform your loss prevention efforts, visit www.agilenceinc.com
.


 

 

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E-Crime Speed Up 65% - Fueled by AI
Threat groups move at record speeds, as AI helps scale attacks

A report by CrowdStrike shows cybercrime groups are outpacing security teams and increasingly abusing legitimate tools.

Threat actors are using AI to add speed and scale to their hacking toolkits and setting records for attack speeds that increasingly outpace security teams, according to a report released Tuesday from CrowdStrike.

The average e-crime breakout reached 29 minutes in 2025, a 65% increase in speed from the prior year, according to the report. The fastest observed breakout time in 2025 was only 27 seconds, compared with 51 seconds the prior year.

Researchers define breakout time as the period between initial intrusion until an adversary is able to move onto another system. In one particular case, hackers were able to exfiltrate data within four minutes of gaining initial access.

CrowdStrike researchers see the reduction in breakout time as placing additional pressure on security teams to be able detect and respond to attacks. He compared the role of network defenders to security guards in a building lobby.

“If that threat actor gets past the guard and they get into the elevator, now they have to go floor to floor and door to door to figure out every place that adversary went,” Adam Meyers, head of counter adversary operations, at CrowdStrike said during a conference call. “What did they touch? What did they get into?”

Threat groups are also abusing legitimate AI tools as part of their attacks. About 90 organizations were impacted by hackers dropping malicious prompts into these tools in order to steal credentials or steal cryptocurrency. cybersecuritydive.com


AI Has CISOs on Alert
In the AI era, CISOs worry about data leaks and doubt tech will solve skills gaps

CISOs see AI as necessary but insufficient technology and fraught with risks, a new report found.

The AI era is transforming what CISOs do and how they do it, the enterprise software firm Splunk said in a report published on Tuesday. Nearly all CISOs have been assigned to manage their organizations’ AI governance responsibilities, the report found, a significant expansion of “their already overwhelming mandates.”

CISOs interviewed in the report expressed both an awareness that they needed to use AI and a range of concerns about its potential harms.

CISOs are feeling increasing pressure to integrate AI into their workflows, Splunk found, particularly as threat actors use the technology more often and in more potent ways.

If your security function isn’t using AI, it’s like taking a knife to a gun fight,” Mike Salem, CISO of communications infrastructure operator IHS Towers, said in the report. “For CISOs, that can be a tough pill to swallow.”

Despite CISOs’ drive to adopt AI — more than two-thirds of them said investing in AI-driven cybersecurity capabilities was a very important or the most important priority — many of those who have already presided over significant AI deployments report only mixed results.

For example, just 39% of the CISOs who have partially or fully adopted agentic AI “strongly agree it has increased their team’s reporting speed,” Splunk said in its report. Nearly two-thirds of CISOs overall disagreed with the statement “agentic AI will replace some level 1 security team functions.”  cybersecuritydive.com


Chatbots Helping Criminals
AI is becoming part of everyday criminal workflows
Underground forums include long threads about chatbots drafting phishing emails, generating code snippets, and coaching social engineering calls. A new study examined conversations captured between January 1, 2025 and July 31, 2025 across dozens of cybercrime forums to map how AI tools are entering day to day criminal operations.

The dataset includes 163 discussion threads drawn from 21 forums, totaling 2,264 messages posted by 1,661 distinct contributors. Much of the activity clustered on well known platforms such as XSS, BreachForums, Dread, and Exploit.in.

Four themes dominated the discussions: repurposing mainstream AI services, marketing criminal AI products, adapting models for specific operations, and debating operational risk. helpnetsecurity.com


Microsoft expands Sovereign Cloud security with governance, local productivity and AI

Windows 365 for Agents brings managed cloud PCs to autonomous workflows

 


 

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Porch Piracy By State
The state where packages are most likely to be stolen is…
"Porch pirates" are everywhere, but are most active in one particular U.S. state.

As measured by the average number of monthly searches per 100,000 people for relevant Google Keyword Planner key terms related to stolen mail, including phrases such as “Amazon delivery stolen” and “DHL lost my package,” Alaska has the most stolen packages with 76.70 average monthly searches per 100,000 people, 58% higher than the nation's average of 48.27.

Analysis from demand planning software provider Algo indicates “USPS lost my package” is the most popular stolen mail-related search term in Alaska, followed by “USPS lost mail” and “porch pirates.”

The other non-contiguous U.S. state, Hawaii comes in second with an average relevant monthly search volume of 75.25 per 100,000 people; “Porch pirates’ is the fourth most searched-for term, coming after "USPS lost my package" in first, "USPS lost mail" in second, and "USPS lost my package claim" in third.

On the opposite side of the U.S. map, Vermont ranks third in porch piracy with an average monthly search volume of 74.91 per 100,000 people. In Vermont, “USPS report lost package” is the most popular search term after “Amazon package stolen,” “porch pirates,” “USPS lost mail,” and “USPS lost my package.”

On the other end of the porch piracy spectrum, Michigan is the state least likely to have packages stolen. The state has an average monthly search volume of just 32.72 per 100,000 people, 32% below the national average, with “USPS lost my package” being the most used search term.

According to the Algo study, Oklahoma is the second-safest state to order packages in, with only 33.51 average monthly searches per 100,000 people. “USPS lost mail” is the most popular term in the state after “USPS lost my package.” Ohio, with 33.66 average monthly searches per 100,000 people, ranks as the third-best state for safe package delivery.   chainstoreage.com


Hiding Online Shopping?
44% of Americans Admit Hiding Online Purchases as Budget Pressure Reshapes Shopping Habits

As 66% of consumers switch to cheaper products, Omnisend's psychology of shopping report shows financial pressure is changing not just what Americans buy – but how they feel about spending.

Americans are changing what they buy, how they buy, and how they feel about it. New Omnisend survey data from 1,072 Americans shows 44% admit hiding an online purchase from someone, 66% have switched to cheaper products in the past year, and 60% abandon carts expecting a discount.

Together, the findings point to a shift in behavior under financial pressure: as more Americans trade down to cheaper brands and wait for better deals, purchases are carrying greater emotional weight – and in many cases, becoming harder to explain at home. prnewswire.com


Bath & Body Works launches on Amazon


 


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Goldsboro, NC: Former Mar-Mac Mart Employee Charged in $100,000 Theft Investigation
A former employee of Mar-Mac Mart is facing felony charges following an investigation into a large-scale theft reported earlier this year. On Jan. 14, 2026, the Mar-Mac Mart located at 928 Old Grantham Road in Goldsboro filed a report with the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office after the store owner suspected an employee of stealing merchandise and cash. The owner estimated between $50,000 and $100,000 had been taken from the business, including cigarettes, vape products, lottery tickets, gasoline and U.S. currency from the cash register. Detectives with the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office Major Crimes Unit reviewed surveillance footage and store inventory records as part of the investigation. As a result, charges were filed against Tracy Johnson Bottarro.  goldsborodailynews.com


Durham, NC: Retail Theft Ring Taken Down After 8-Month Multi-State Probe
What authorities say was a well-organized retail theft operation stretching across three states has now been shut down following an eight-month investigation led by the Durham County Sheriff’s Office in partnership with the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation. Investigators say the case involved coordinated thefts from major retailers throughout North Carolina, South Carolina, and Virginia. After months of surveillance, evidence gathering, and cross-state collaboration, deputies served arrest warrants on February 21 before executing a search warrant at a residence in the 800 block of Liberty Street in Durham. According to authorities, once inside the home, investigators discovered what they describe as a large quantity of merchandise believed to have been stolen. The recovered items reportedly included power tools, flat-screen televisions, electronics, small appliances, and various household goods. Officials say several well-known retail chains were impacted, including Home Depot, Target, Lowe’s, and Walmart thencbeat.com


Flushing, NY: Retail theft crew wanted for stealing more than $5K in merch from two stores in Flushing
Police from the 109th Precinct in Flushing are looking for four members of a retail theft crew who have stolen more than $5,000 in merchandise from the Target store at The Shops at Skyview and the Macy’s on Main Street on three occasions this month. Police say the string of grand larcenies began at the Target located at 40-24 College Point Blvd. on Sunday, Feb 1. The four men entered the store and removed 16 pairs of sneakers valued at approximately $1,000 and fled the shop on foot in an unknown direction. Four days later, the crew hit the Macy’s at 136-50 Main St. at around 7 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 5, and removed 11 bottles of perfume valued at approximately $2,700 and fled the store on foot in an unknown direction, according to authorities. Police say the suspects returned to the Macy’s store at 5:15 p.m. on Thursday, Feb. 12, and stole 11 more bottles of perfume valued at approximately $1,600 before fleeing on foot. Nobody was injured in any of the incidents and the suspects made off with approximately $5,300 in merchandise.  qns.com


Boston, MA: Man is accused of shoplifting $1,800 in merchandise from the Abercrombie and Fitch store on Newbury Street

Richmond, BC, Canada: Richmond RCMP: Organized shoplifting group allegedly among those arrested in sting; $3,200 in merchandise recovered
 



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Shootings & Deaths


San Jose, CA: Two Dead in Shooting at West San Jose Shopping Center
Two people were found dead following the report of a mid-day shooting today at a West San Jose shopping, according to San Jose police. The shooting was reported at 11:38am at El Paseo de Saratoga, just north of Campbell, which includes REI and Petco stores and an AMC movie theater. Police said a man and woman were pronounced dead at the scene. Police did not release any further details. The parking lot surrounding the crime scene was closed for several hours while detectives investigated the incident.  sanjoseinside.com


Baltimore, MD: Nighttime Shootout Near Mondawmin Mall Leaves 24-Year-Old Dead, 3 Hurt
Baltimore police have identified KeShown Lake, 24, as the man killed in a shooting near Mondawmin Mall last night, a burst of gunfire that wounded three other men and shut down several streets along the Liberty Heights Avenue corridor. Officers were first alerted around 9:30 p.m. by ShotSpotter notifications and arrived to find two badly damaged vehicles in a mall parking lot and multiple people suffering from gunshot wounds, CBS Baltimore reported. Detectives recovered three handguns and a rifle at several nearby locations and believe the incidents are connected.  hoodline.com


Morrisville, NC: One dead in shooting at Morrisville shopping center; suspect in custody
One man is dead and another man is facing a murder charge in a shooting at a Morrisville shopping center Monday night. Officers arrived between Crumbl Cookie and Ruckus Pizza, Pasta & Spirits around 9::30 pm and found Zachary David Horn, 45 of Morrisville, with a gunshot wound. He later died. John Willis Fraizer III, 55, of Morrisville is charged with murder and discharging a firearm in city limits, according to court documents. Zek Silva, the general manager of Ruckus Pizza, told WRAL a bystander helped him tackle and disarm the shooter when he came into the restaurant after the incident. Silva then tried to provide first aid to the victim, who died at the hospital, WRAL reported.  amp.newsobserver.com


Colorado Springs, CO: Suspects shoot at Security Guards after being caught red-handed during burglary near Citadel Mall
A trio of burglars remain at large after shooting at security guard while fleeing the scene overnight. Police say the crime happened around 12:40 a.m. Tuesday at a business in the 700 block of Citadel Drive East. The suspects broke into the store through a neighboring vacant building and were caught red-handed by the security guards. “As the suspects were burglarizing the business, a security officer confronted them and they fled,” a CSPD lieutenant said. As the suspects ran away, police say at least one of them fired multiple gunshots. More rounds were fired at one of the security guards as the crooks approached a getaway vehicle. None of the security guards on scene were injured.  kktv.com


Union City, GA: Masked gunman shoots Boost Mobile employee during armed robbery in Union City
A masked gunman shoved a pistol into an employee’s face before opening fire during a violent armed robbery at a Boost Mobile store in Union City, police said. Investigators believe the same suspect may also be responsible for another armed robbery earlier this month, just minutes away. According to the Union City Police Department, the shooting happened Monday at a Boost Mobile store located off Jonesboro Road in Clayton County. Police said the suspect walked into the store wearing a mask, pulled out a gun, and confronted a clerk. During a struggle inside the business, the suspect shot the employee.  wsbtv.com


Chicago, IL: Shooting near Jewel-Osco grocery store leaves man in critical condition

Cleveland, OH: 2 people hurt in shooting at Olive Garden in Warrensville Heights
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Springfield, VA: Cricket Wireless employees prevent robbery by disarming suspect
Employees of a Springfield Plaza store stifled an attempted armed robbery last night (Monday) after disarming a would-be perpetrator of his gun, police said. Officers responded to the Cricket Wireless store, located at 6330 Springfield Plaza in the northeast corner of the shopping center, around 8 p.m. after receiving a report of the attempted heist, according to scanner traffic. A caller reported that a male individual had entered the store and brandished a firearm before attempting to restrain four employees, the Fairfax County Police Department said. Despite the man’s best efforts, the employees were able to break free. An altercation then ensued, with the suspect eventually being disarmed by the employees.  ffxnow.com


Brantford, ON, Canada: Brazen daytime smash & grab robbery at Lynden Park Mall jewelry store in Brantford


 


 

C-Store – New Bedford, MA – Burglary
C-Store – Rochester, NY – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Atlanta, GA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Cumberland County, PA – Burglary
Cellphone – Springfield, VA – Armed Robbery
Cellphone – Fulton County, GA – Armed Robbery / Emp wounded
Clothing – Scottsboro, AL – Burglary
Grocery – Godfrey, IL – Armed Robbery
Hotel – Glynn County, GA – Armed Robbery
Jewelry - Katy, TX – Robbery
Jewelry - Roanoke, VA – Robbery
Liquor – Seattle, WA – Armed Robbery
Mall – Colorado Springs, CO – Burglary / shots fired
Restaurant – Chicago, IL – Burglary
Restaurant – Los Angeles, CA – Burglary
Restaurant – Seattle, WA – Burglary
Restaurant – Alameda, CA – Burglary
Sports – Vidalia, LA – Armed Robbery
Vape – Pompano Beach, FL – Robbery      

 

Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 8 burglaries
• 2 shootings
• 0 killed



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Vice President, Corporate Loss Prevention Operations
Menomonee Falls, WI
The Vice President of Loss Prevention Operations is responsible for developing and executing a comprehensive strategy to reduce and prevent loss across all aspects of the company’s operations. This role includes leadership of the corporate loss prevention team, collaboration with senior management, and the implementation of risk management programs...




 


Group Director, Asset Protection - Fulfillment Centers
Bentonville, AR
The Group Director, Asset Protection – Fulfillment Centers is responsible for leading the operations and strategy of the Asset Protection department across Walmart’s Fulfillment Centers. This role ensures the safety, security, and profitability of fulfillment operations by overseeing risk management, crisis response, financial performance, and team leadership...

 



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