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Everon wins 2026 Security Sales & Integration SAMMY Award for Integrated
Installation of the Year
Award-winning Robbins Brothers
project recognizes Everon’s commercial security innovation, advanced
integration capabilities, and operational excellence as a leading
national integrator
Irving,
TX. [April 20, 2026] – Everon, LLC (“Everon” or “the Company”), a
leading security integrator and premier provider of commercial security,
video, fire and life safety solutions ranked the
third-largest security company in the U.S. by SDM Magazine, received
the prestigious Integrated Installation of the Year award at the 2026
Sales & Marketing (SAMMY) Awards, presented by Security Sales &
Integration (SSI) magazine. The honor recognizes Everon’s innovative
security installation at the new Robbins Brothers Fine Jewelers location
in Pasadena, California.
For over 30 years, the SAMMY Awards have celebrated commercial security
industry leaders that set the standard in sales and marketing
excellence, technological innovation, and the execution of complex,
high-impact security installations. The Integrated Installation of the
Year honor recognizes Everon for its exceptional ability to combine
advanced security technology, engineering expertise, and design into a
unified security solution that protects both people and critical assets
in a highly complex commercial environment.
“This honor is a powerful testament to what Everon has been able to
achieve as a standalone integrator since GTCR’s investment,” said Don
Young, Chief Executive Officer for Everon. “In a two-and-a-half-year
period, we’ve strengthened our capabilities, added differentiating
service offerings, expanded our expertise, and elevated the standard of
operational excellence we can deliver for our customers. Winning the
Integrated Installation of the Year award reflects not only the
innovation and dedication of our team, but also the momentum we’re
building as we continue to grow and redefine what’s possible for our
customers.”
The
award-winning project involved designing and integrating a modern
security ecosystem capable of protecting Robbins Brothers’ high-value
inventory, ensuring employee safety, and preserving the integrity of the
historic building housing its new Pasadena location – all while
maintaining the aesthetic central to the Robbins Brothers experience.
Click here to read more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Organized Groups Weaponizing
Returnless Refunds
Organized Retail Crime Is Going Digital: The Surge in “Returnless
Refund” Abuse
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retailers have long battled return fraud at the store level. But a
growing wave of organized activity is now shifting the battlefield
online—and it’s exploiting one of the industry’s most
customer-friendly policies: returnless refunds.
Originally designed to improve the customer experience and reduce
reverse logistics costs, returnless refunds allow retailers to issue
a refund without requiring the item to be sent back. For low-cost
goods, damaged items, or high shipping expense scenarios, the policy
makes operational sense.
But organized groups have figured out how to weaponize it.
Bad actors are now systematically targeting retailers with liberal
returnless refund policies, placing orders for specific categories
of goods—often apparel, electronics accessories, or consumables—and then
filing claims that the item was damaged, defective, or never arrived.
Instead of returning the product, they receive a full refund while
keeping the merchandise.
The scale is what’s alarming.
These aren’t isolated customer service abuses. Organized networks are
using multiple accounts, rotating identities, and even automated tools
to submit claims at volume. In some cases, groups are sharing which
retailers have the most lenient policies, what price thresholds trigger
returnless approvals, and which product categories are least likely to
be challenged.
The result is a form of “invisible shrink.”
Unlike traditional theft, there’s no incident in-store, no CCTV
footage, and no immediate red flag. The loss is processed as a
legitimate customer service transaction—making it harder for LP teams to
detect and quantify in real time.
Retailers are beginning to respond.
Many are tightening eligibility thresholds, limiting returnless
refunds to verified customers, or requiring additional verification for
repeat claims. Advanced analytics are also being deployed to flag
abnormal refund patterns tied to accounts, addresses, or purchasing
behavior.
Still, the challenge remains balancing fraud prevention with customer
experience. Returnless refunds were built to reduce friction—but in the
wrong hands, they’ve become a low-risk, high-reward opportunity for
organized retail crime.
For LP leaders, this shift underscores a broader reality: the next
wave of retail theft isn’t just happening in aisles or at self-checkout.
It’s happening behind screens, through policies, and at a scale that
traditional loss prevention tools weren’t designed to catch.
Florida's Cargo Theft Problem
This is how we fix our cargo theft problem — and help affordability, too
Across
the state, organized cargo theft is rising in scale and sophistication,
turning Florida’s highways, rail yards, and warehouses into prime
targets for criminal networks.
These are not opportunistic smash-and-grabs. They are coordinated,
tech-savvy operations that track shipments, impersonate legitimate
carriers, and strip loads of high-value goods within hours.
Florida’s geography makes it especially vulnerable. Its ports
serve as gateways for consumer goods, food, electronics, and medical
supplies. Its highway network funnels freight quickly into dense
population centers — and just as quickly out of state. That speed is an
asset for commerce, but it is also a gift to organized thieves who know
how to exploit weak coordination between jurisdictions.
Cargo heists are becoming more daring. Just look at the string of
cargo thefts totaling some $7.8 million worth of merchandise hijacked
between May 2023 and March 2025.
The consequences are already hitting Floridians where it hurts most:
affordability. Stolen freight doesn’t just disappear. It raises
operational costs for every link in the supply chain — railroads,
trucking companies, retailers, and manufacturers — which are ultimately
passed on to families struggling with high housing, food, and electric
prices.
We know the problem. Now we need action. Congress should move
immediately to pass the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act. The
bill would strengthen federal law enforcement tools, improve information
sharing, and create a centralized coordination center to dismantle the
criminal enterprises driving cargo theft.
Further, this bipartisan, bicameral legislation would create an
Organized Retail and Supply Chain Coordination Center to bring
together federal law enforcement agencies with state and local partners,
as well as railroad police to counter and dismantle domestic and
transnational organized theft operations.
pressreader.com
Pokémon Cards Fueling More Crime
'I've stopped selling Pokémon cards - it is unsafe'
A business owner has said she will no longer sell Pokémon trading
cards after hundreds of pounds worth were stolen from her shop.
Katherine Mayer was left shaken after the theft in broad daylight, and
then vinyl was stolen when the shop window in Newark, Nottinghamshire,
was smashed a week later.
She owns the vintage store Tentacles of Time in Market Place, and had
been selling the cards since December. Now stocking the playing cards
was "too risky" and "not worth it", she said.
Cards related to the Japanese animation series have soared in value over
recent years, with some selling for thousands of pounds. Mayer said: "I
was oblivious to how valuable they were and how many people had been
burgled because of them.
"Kids would come in and trade them, and it's been heartbreaking to tell
them that we're no longer selling them. "I told one of our regulars, and
his little boy started crying. Who wants to do that to their customers?
"But I have to keep customers and staff safe - that is the priority."
Since the thefts, Mayer has made the decision to stop selling Pokémon
cards. The business is currently closed while the windows are repaired,
which will cost about £5,000.
After the latest incident, Mayer was not sure if she would reopen.
"For something like this to happen eight months in - this is a business
owner's worst nightmare," she said.
"But other local businesses in Newark rallied around me, they
bought me cakes and flowers, and even offered to sell some of my stock
for me in the meantime."
bbc.com
No More Excessive Product Lockups?
End of the road for locked up items? New anti theft measure ‘total game
changer’ for big box retailers
A new law has given police a new way to approach pursuing repeat
shoplifting offenders, and with impressive results. These results
could soon mark the end of items being locked away, a major change
for both customers and retailers alike.
The new measures’ main impact has been revising the way authorities
can charge shoplifting offenders in New York State. Previously,
shoplifters could only be charged for what they stole from a single
store at a time and the value of those stolen items.
However, one of several anti-theft measures passed as part of the 2024
budget now lets authorities combine the value of multiple retail
theft charges.
This lets authorities charge repeat offenders with felony grand larceny
rather than misdemeanor petit larceny, serving as a more effective
means of both deterring repeat offenses and pursuing repeat offenders.
The exact charge is determined by the value of stolen goods, with the
former reserved for values exceeding $1,000 and the latter for those
under $1,000.
With this new power, authorities across the state have noticed a
major impact on curbing repeat offenses, a boon to retailers suffering
from these thefts.
the-sun.com
D.C. curfews are not enough to curb crime. Arrest data shows why.
How Pembroke Pines reached a five-year low in crime
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Stress in the Workplace Remains High
Workplace stress in 2026 is still worse than before the pandemic
Roughly 40% of employees worldwide said they experienced a lot of
stress during the previous day, according to Gallup’s State of the
Global Workplace 2026 report, a figure that has remained above
pre-pandemic levels for several years. Daily anger stood at 22%
globally, sadness at 23%, and loneliness at 22%. Together, these numbers
point to a workforce that has not returned to the emotional baseline it
held before 2020.
Engagement at a five-year low
The emotional picture sits against a backdrop of declining engagement.
In 2025, the share of employees described as engaged at work fell to
20%, down from a peak of 23% in 2022 and the lowest reading since
2020. It was the second consecutive year of decline, and no world region
recorded an increase.
Researchers estimate that low engagement cost the global economy
approximately $10 trillion in lost productivity in the past year,
equal to roughly 9% of global GDP.
Engagement, as Gallup defines it, measures the psychological
attachment employees feel toward their work, their team, and their
employer. Workers who are not engaged or are actively disengaged
tend to contribute to less profitable organizations, which in turn
reduces broader economic output.
Managers are bearing the brunt
The steepest erosion in engagement has occurred among managers rather
than rank-and-file workers. Since 2022, manager engagement has dropped
nine points. The sharpest single-year decline came between 2024 and
2025, when manager engagement fell five points, from 27% to 22%.
Individual contributor engagement also declined over the same period,
though it showed a slight rebound more recently.
Leaders carry more emotional weight
Leaders report substantially more stress, anger, sadness, and
loneliness on a daily basis than individual contributors, and they
are less likely to report smiling or laughing a lot. Higher status at
work does not appear to translate into better days.
helpnetsecurity.com
Recognizing Fallen Workers
OSHA Honors Fallen Workers On April 23
OSHA will host Workers Memorial events throughout the week of
April 20-24, including safety and health trainings, panel discussions,
and interactive exhibits, to bring awareness and educate employers and
workers to prevent future workplace tragedies.
On April 23, the U.S. Department of Labor's Occupational Safety and
Health Administration and Mine Safety and Health Administration will
gather with families from across the country to honor loved ones who
have lost their lives on the job during its national Workers
Memorial program.
Families who have lost a loved one – whether recently or in years past –
are invited to the department's Washington headquarters to attend this
year's ceremony recognizing our fallen workers and serving as their
voice to help prevent other families from experiencing such a loss.
OSHA will host Workers Memorial events throughout the week of April
20-24, including safety and health trainings, panel discussions, and
interactive exhibits, to bring awareness and educate employers and
workers to prevent future workplace tragedies. OSHA's Workers
Memorial page has a list of events and information on how to sign up for
them.
"Every American deserves a safe work environment," said U.S.
Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer. "At the Department of Labor, we
are committed to Putting American Workers First by ensuring they have
the protections they deserve. These events provide an opportunity to
honor the lives of those who went to work and did not return safely
home, and to reaffirm our unwavering commitment to safety in the
workplace."
ehstoday.com
Retailers Continue Investing in
Electronic Shelf Labels
Canadian grocer Sobeys to invest $51M in electronic shelf labels
A leading Canadian supermarket chain is upgrading how it notifies
customers of prices at the shelf.
Sobeys is partnering with JRTech Solutions to deploy the latest
electronic shelf label technology and Pricer Plaza cloud-based platform
from digital shelf-edge solutions provider Pricer AB across an
estimated 300-350 stores.
The rollout will include multicolor electronic shelf labels and the
necessary store infrastructure, with a total hardware and infrastructure
value of approximately $51 million, excluding the Pricer Plaza platform.
The deployment is scheduled to occur during an 18-month period
starting in May 2026 and builds on an existing collaboration between
Sobeys and Pricer.
chainstoreage.com
New Career Development Tool
Kroger launches career development, training platform
One of the nation’s leading grocery chains is launching a new career
development tool for employees to grow with the company.
The Kroger Co. has debuted Pearl Street Academy, a “comprehensive”
career development and training platform designed to provide
high-quality learning opportunities to associates. Kroger says the
platform centralizes leadership development, training courses and
professional growth experiences, making it easier for associates to
access “consistent, intentional development” aligned with the company's
leadership goals.
Kroger employs more than 400,000 associates across its banners
and supply chain network.
chainstoreage.com
Target to open 6 new stores in May
Survey: Majority of supply chain leaders aiming to reduce environmental
impact
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Strengthen Retail Security and Enhance Workplace Safety
with Off-Duty Law Enforcement
Discover how off-duty law
enforcement enhances safety and
deters crime while protecting employees and assets.
Retailers are under more pressure than ever to prevent theft, ensure
employee safety and maintain business continuity across stores. Criminal
activities are on the rise, and they can severely disrupt operations,
leading to financial losses and a tarnished reputation. Workplace
security not only safeguards assets and sensitive information but also
protects employees and visitors, fostering a safe and productive
environment.
Hiring
off-duty law enforcement is a proven way to level up your retail
security strategy. Off-duty personnel are uniquely positioned to deter
criminal activities, respond swiftly in emergencies and provide an added
layer of protection. By integrating off-duty law enforcement into your
security strategy, you can create a safer, more secure workplace
environment.
Protos Security's workplace security blog explores ways that
off-duty law enforcement can benefit retailers and increase workplace
safety by:
-
Creating Safer Store
Environments: Law enforcement provides a strong visual deterrent and
offers peace of mind to both employees and shoppers.
-
Deterring Theft and
Workplace Threats: Regular patrols, surveillance and expert situational
awareness reduce the risk of crime before it starts.
-
Responding Swiftly to
Emergencies: Off-duty law enforcement react quickly to high-stress
situations, minimizing harm and restoring order with calm precision.
When you need trained law enforcement,
Protos Security offers second- to-none coverage through the nation’s
largest off-duty law enforcement network. With 60,000 off-duty personnel
and more than 1,400 agencies, we provide expertise when and where you
need it.
Want to reduce shrink, strengthen operations and keep your workplace
secure?
Learn More Here
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Ransomware in Retail:
A Growing Threat Demanding Stronger Defenses
By
the D&D Daily staff
Ransomware attacks are no longer isolated IT incidents — they’ve become
a persistent and costly threat to the retail industry. As retailers
continue to expand digital operations, from e-commerce platforms to
interconnected store systems, cybercriminals are finding more entry
points to exploit.
Over the past year, ransomware groups have increasingly targeted
retailers for one simple reason: disruption equals leverage. When
point-of-sale systems, inventory management platforms, or distribution
networks are locked down, the operational impact is immediate. Stores
can’t process transactions, shipments are delayed, and customer trust
erodes quickly. For high-volume retailers, even a few hours of downtime
can translate into significant financial losses.
What makes ransomware especially dangerous in retail is the
combination of sensitive data and time-sensitive operations.
Attackers often exfiltrate customer information, employee records, and
payment data before encrypting systems, adding the threat of public
exposure on top of operational paralysis. This double-extortion model
has become the standard playbook, forcing retailers to weigh the cost of
paying a ransom against the long-term damage of a data breach.
Retailers are responding by strengthening cybersecurity strategies,
but the challenge remains complex. Many organizations operate across
hundreds or thousands of locations, each with its own network endpoints
and potential vulnerabilities. Legacy systems, third-party integrations,
and employee access points all expand the attack surface.
To combat this, leading retailers are investing in layered defenses.
This includes endpoint detection and response (EDR) tools, network
segmentation to contain breaches, and regular system backups that can be
restored without paying a ransom. Employee training has also become a
critical line of defense, as phishing emails remain one of the most
common entry points for ransomware attacks.
In addition, collaboration between retailers, law enforcement, and
cybersecurity firms is becoming more important. Sharing threat
intelligence and attack patterns can help organizations identify risks
earlier and respond more effectively.
Ransomware isn’t going away — it’s evolving. For retailers, the
focus must shift from reactive recovery to proactive resilience. Those
that prioritize cybersecurity as a core business function, rather than a
back-office concern, will be best positioned to withstand the growing
wave of attacks.
Cloud Development Platform Accessed
Vercel systems targeted after third-party tool compromised
An employee using a consumer app was
breached after granting too many permissions.
Vercel, a cloud development platform, said that some of its internal
systems were accessed after a third-party tool called Context.ai was
compromised while being used by one of Vercel’s employees, according
to a blog post released Sunday.
Vercel is widely known as the creator of Next.js, which is the
open-source framework for React.
The attacker was able to take over the employee’s Vercel Google
Workspace account and access certain company “environments and
environment variables” that were not designated as “sensitive.”
Vercel said that a limited number of customers had their credentials
compromised during the attack, and that they have been notified.
They were urged to immediately rotate credentials.
The company said it believes the attacker is highly sophisticated,
based on an assessment of their “operational velocity and detailed
understanding of Vercel’s systems.”
Vercel is working with Mandiant, the incident response unit of Google,
as well as other outside companies and law enforcement.
cybersecuritydive.com
Getting Ahead of Major Flaws
Vulnerability exploitation surges often precede disclosure, offering
possible early warnings
Organizations can get ahead of major
flaws with the right threat intelligence, according to a new report.
In the weeks before technology vendors disclose new software
vulnerabilities, hackers sometimes stumble upon the flaws and begin
exploiting them prior to customers even knowing there’s a problem.
In a report published on Monday, the internet intelligence firm
GreyNoise revealed that roughly half of the scanning and exploitation
activity surges it tracked between mid-December 2025 and late March 2026
were followed, within the next three weeks, by vulnerability disclosures
from the targeted vendors.
Nearly two-thirds of the activity surges led to vulnerability
disclosures within six weeks, according to the report.
cybersecuritydive.com
CISOs and Security Leaders Shaping Texas Retail and E-commerce
How to spot a North Korean fake in a job interview
AI platform ATHR makes voice phishing a one-person job
Stellantis teams with Microsoft to strengthen digital capabilities |
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Amazon Price Fixing?
California Accuses Amazon of Price Fixing in Legal Filing
The state claimed the e-commerce
giant pressured brands like Levi’s and Hanes to ask competing retailers
to raise prices on certain products.
Amazon engaged in price fixing by pressuring major brands like Levi’s
and Hanes to ask competing retailers to raise prices on certain products,
according to a newly unsealed filing released Monday in a California
antitrust lawsuit against the e-commerce giant.
California sued Amazon in San Francisco Superior Court in 2022 over
allegations the retailer harms competition and increases prices that
consumers pay online. The lawsuit, which is scheduled to go to trial
next year, claimed Amazon punished sellers on its marketplace for
offering lower prices on other websites, like those of Walmart or
Target.
Now, the state is providing more details on ways Amazon pressured brands
to urge other retailers to increase prices. In the 16-page filing,
Amazon asked the brands to get involved when it spotted a competitor’s
lower price or was losing money selling an item. As a result of the
pressure, rival sites raised their prices for the products, the state
said.
“You don’t see price fixing so explicitly and egregiously in writing
like this,” California’s attorney general, Rob Bonta, said in an
interview.
The newly unsealed filing offers a rare behind-the-scenes look at how
Amazon operates its $2.66 trillion empire. The Seattle company has
long maintained that it prioritizes offering customers the lowest price.
But it has faced more scrutiny from regulators, who have argued that the
company’s policies harmed online competition and inflated consumer
costs.
The Federal Trade Commission and 17 states sued Amazon in 2023,
accusing the company of illegally maintaining a monopoly in online
retail by squeezing merchants who sell on its site and prioritizing its
own products. Those actions resulted in “artificially higher prices,”
according to the government’s suit.
In September, the F.T.C. agreed to settle a lawsuit against Amazon
that accused the company of making it difficult for consumers to cancel
its Prime subscription service. Under the terms of the settlement,
Amazon agreed to pay up to $2.5 billion — including $1 billion in
penalties and additional payouts to consumers. It did not admit or deny
wrongdoing.
In a statement, an Amazon spokesman, Mark Blafkin, said the company
looked forward to responding to California in court. The filing is a
“transparent attempt to distract from the weakness of its case,
coming more than three years after filing its complaint and based on
supposedly ‘new’ evidence it has had for years,” he said.
nytimes.com
Fulfillment Tech Boosts Speeds
Home Depot acquires warehouse tech firm to boost fulfillment strategy
The deal follows a distribution
center pilot with Simpl Automation, which resulted in faster pick speeds
and fewer product touches.
The Home Depot has acquired warehouse technology company Simpl
Automation as the home goods retailer looks to strengthen
distribution center speed and efficiency, according to a news
release Wednesday.
Terms of the deal were not disclosed. Simpl Automation offers automated
storage and retrieval systems that can handle goods-to-person and
person-to-goods workflows, along with vertical lift modules for
high-density storage, according to the company’s website.
The acquisition follows a pilot of Simpl Automation’s technology at Home
Depot’s distribution center in Locust Grove, Georgia. The pilot
resulted in faster pick speeds and cycle times, in addition to fewer
product touches, the release said.
retaildive.com
Amazon expected to report strong quarter on backs of Claude, AI demand |
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Chicago, IL: Burglars steal $100K in Pokémon, other cards from Chicago shop
Burglars stole more than $100,000 worth of collectible trading cards after
breaking into a Northwest Side shop early Monday. he break-in happened around
1:54 a.m. at Elite Sports Cards and Comics, located at 3406 N. Harlem Ave., in
the Belmont Heights neighborhood. Police said two offenders shattered the front
window of the business, entered and took merchandise before fleeing in an
unknown vehicle. Ronnie Holiday, the owner of Elite Sports Cards, said the
suspects appeared to target high-value items and knew exactly where to go inside
the store. According to Holiday, the thieves didn't touch the register. They
broke in, hopped over the counter, went straight to the high-end cards and ran
out. Holiday said more than $100,000 worth of Pokémon, NFL and other collectible
cards were stolen.
fox32chicago.com
Santa Clara County, CA: $83K in stolen goods recovered in South Bay organized
retail theft bust
Four people allegedly tied to an organized retail theft operation that targeted
stores across Northern California were arrested, and tens of thousands of
dollars worth of stolen merchandise was recovered in the South Bay, the Santa
Clara County Sheriff’s Office announced Monday. The organized retail theft crew
has been connected to almost 100 incidents in Northern California and Nevada,
authorities said. According to the sheriff’s office, search warrants executed at
several San Jose properties last week discovered more than $83,000 in stolen
merchandise. The stolen items, which were found by deputies in bags and
containers, came from The Home Depot, Burlington and TJ Maxx.
kron4.com
Woodbury, NY: Police: $30K worth of handbags stolen from Gucci store at Woodbury
Common; suspects flee to New Jersey
Police say four suspects stole about $30,000 worth of designer handbags from the
Gucci Outlet Store at Woodbury Common Premium Outlets Thursday afternoon before
fleeing into New Jersey. According to Woodbury Town police, the theft happened
around 3 p.m. in Central Valley. Authorities say three men and one woman broke a
display case and stole more than a dozen handbags before running from the store
on foot.
bronx.news12.com
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Shootings & Deaths
Fort Gibson, OK: One dead after incident involving crash and shooting in
Muskogee County
The Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office responded to what was initially just a car
accident with injuries at a local convenience store near 100 North 4 Mile Road
in Fort Gibson. The Cherokee Nation Marshal Service was on scene first. After
arrival, law enforcement determined the incident also involved a shooting. Both
the Muskogee County Sheriff’s Office and the Cherokee Nation Marshal Service
investigated the scene. According to law enforcement, a man and woman were both
injured. The woman was involved in the car accident and was taken to a local
hospital for treatment. The man, identified as Jesse McQueen, 28, was also taken
to the hospital for his injuries and was later pronounced dead. According to law
enforcement, this incident stemmed from what seemed to be a drug deal that
escalated into a fatal shooting.
krmg.com
Lubbock, TX: Lubbock Man Arrested after Deadly C-Store Fight
A man in Lubbock was arrested over the weekend following a convenience store
fight that led to the shooting death of a 37-year-old. On Friday, April 17, the
Lubbock Police Department (LPD) responded to a call of shots fired at a
convenience store on the 5900 block of Avenue P at 10:36 p.m. When officers
arrived on the scene, they located 37-year-old Jonathan Trevino with a gunshot
wound. He also suffered several serious injuries, requiring an EMS transport to
University Medical Center where he was later pronounced dead. An investigation
was immediately opened where it was discovered that Trevino and another man,
41-year-old Tommy Rios, were inside the convenience store, later exiting as they
began to engage in a verbal altercation.
kfyo.com
Wetumpka, AL: Police charge man in convenience store shooting
A 21-year-old was shot multiple times inside a convenience store and remains in
critical but stable condition. Wetumpka police responded to the 500 block of
Coosa River Parkway on April 19 around 11:55 a.m. after getting a report about
the shooting. The victim was treated at the scene before being taken to Baptist
South Hospital with life-threatening injuries. Officers arrested a suspect at
the scene and recovered the gun used in the shooting. Police charged 20-year-old
Daveyun Stinson from Wetumpka with assault first degree.
waaytv.com
Savannah, GA: Man shot after pointing gun at officer during convenience store
robbery
Bunkie, LA: Suspect Arrested Following Shooting in Bunkie Family Dollar Parking
Lot
Milwaukee, WI: Wisconsin's Most Wanted: Samuel Wilson in custody, sought for
armed robbery
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Sydney, Australia: Germani Jewellers at Sydney's Hilton Hotel faked
multimillion-dollar heist for insurance
Michel Germani claimed his luxury store - Germani Jewellers at Sydney's Hilton
Hotel - was robbed by two men who bound him and a sales assistant with cable
ties inside the shop in January 2023. But the robbery was no more than a ruse
for the 67-year-old to recoup funds before his store was shut down due to an
outstanding $184,000 rental debt, a NSW District Court jury determined on
Friday. Germani and accomplice Mounir Helou, 59, previously admitted the robbery
was faked. The insurance claim seeking to recoup $2,821,348 for 164 items of
jewellery "stolen" was denied, the court was told previously.
canberratimes.com.au
St John’s County, FL: Second arrest made in connection with $8,000 Ponte Vedra
Beach Rolex armed heist
Murfreesboro, TN: License plate readers, public safety cameras lead to arrest of
armed robbery suspects in Murfreesboro, police say.
Bridgeport, CT: DOJ: 2 Bridgeport Men Indicted In Jewelry Store Robbery Case
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C-Store – Trumbull, CT
– Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Savannah, GA
– Armed Robbery
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C-Store - Wetumpka, AL
– Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Bledsoe
County, TN – Burglary
•
C-Store – Falls
Township, PA – Robbery
•
CBD – Murfreesboro, TN
– Armed Robbery
•
Collectables –
Chicago, IL – Burglary
•
Clothing - Champaign,
IL – Robbery
•
Eyewear – Pocono
Township, PA -Robbery
•
Grocery – Leesburg, VA
– Robbery
•
Grocery – Charlotte,
NC – Robbery
•
Handbags – Woodbury,
NY - Robbery
•
Jewelry – Denver, CO – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Toms Rivver,
NJ – Robbery
•
Pet - Cleveland, OH –
Burglary
•
Pet – Yuba County, CA
– Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 12 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
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Regional AP & Safety Business Partner - South Region
Texas
This position is considered Field based and is considered to be a blend
of onsite and remote work activity. Field associates will spend their time both
traveling to and spending time in various PetSmart locations and can expect to
be asked to travel to Phoenix Home Office periodically throughout the year.
Field associates typically work out of their home office when not traveling as
outlined above...
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