&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email)) |
|
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))
&uuid=(email))


 |
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 &uuid=(email))
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
In Case You
Missed It
Everon Launches Active Video Monitoring Services for Proactive Threat
Detection and Response
Industry-leading
integrator expands suite of remote video monitoring services to include
solution for faster, more effective response to help deter crime before
it escalates.
 Irving,
TX. –
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,
announced the expansion of its remote video monitoring portfolio
with an enhanced active video monitoring service designed to deliver
proactive threat detection and response for commercial environments at
its UL-Listed redundant monitoring centers.
Leveraging existing camera systems and infrastructure, the solution
enables real-time intervention to help deter unauthorized activity
before incidents escalate. When suspicious behavior is detected, whether
indoors or outdoors at a protected facility, Everon monitoring agents
can activate lights and audio alerts, issue personalized voice warnings,
and, if necessary, dispatch authorities or guards – ultimately helping
prevent crime and ensuring a faster, more effective response across a
wide range of commercial applications.
Click here to read more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Another Type of Retail Crime is
Dropping
Flash Mob Shopliftings Are Falling
A case where how we know is arguably
more important than that we know.
Data from the FBI shows good news — these types of incidents appear
to be falling. The big story here isn’t just that these types of
incidents are falling, but that crime data has advanced to be able to
measure flash mob shopliftings (among scores of other offense types) as
trends develop.
The first source that tipped me off to the trend was a
report that the FBI published last year titled “Reported Flash
Mob Shoplifting Incidents: 2020‒2024”.
These “flash mob” shoplifting incidents have become more common in
recent years, and they receive disproportionate coverage in the media
when they do occur. They are exceedingly rare though, with these
types of incidents making up around 0.1% of all shoplifting incidents
reported to the FBI between 2020 and 2024.
The number of flash mob shoplifting incidents reported to the FBI rose
in 2024, but that’s largely a factor of improved reporting as
agencies like NYPD and LAPD became NIBRS compliant. Among agencies
that had consistent data from 2020 to 2024, however, flash mob
shopliftings fell a bit in 2024.
The FBI report points to one factor that is notnot surprising:
offending in these incidents skews younger. A plurality of offenders
in these incidents are under 20 and around 65 percent of people arrested
between 2020 and 2024 in a flash mob shoplifting were under 30 compared
to around 36 percent of people arrested in all other shopliftings.
jasher.substack.com

14 Million People Witnessed Retail
Violence in the UK in the Past Year
UK: One in five consumers witnessed retail violence, says BRC
New survey data reveals 14 million
people saw abuse or assault against shop workers in the past year
More than 14 million people in the UK witnessed violence or abuse
against retail workers in the past year, according to new BRC-Opinium
survey data.
One in five people, or 21%, saw incidents including racial or sexual
abuse, physical assault, or threats with weapons. This figure shows
little improvement on the previous year, when 23% of customers witnessed
such events.
Nearly a quarter of people, or 23%, witnessed shoplifting.
Retailers stated that organised criminal gangs increasingly target
high-value goods for resale. The figure was almost unchanged from 24%
last year.
Separate British Retail Consortium data revealed 1,600 incidents of
violence and abuse against retail workers occurred every day last year.
While lower than the previous year, it remains the second highest level
on record.
Records include 118 incidents involving physical violence and 36
involving a weapon. Abuse is not limited to store staff, as delivery
drivers frequently face threats and physical violence.
Retailers spent an estimated £5bn fighting crime over the past five
years. This investment includes CCTV, security personnel, and
body-worn cameras. These costs limit further investment and contribute
to higher prices for customers.
Regional experiences vary across the UK. London recorded the highest
proportion of people witnessing violence at 32%, followed by
Yorkshire and Humberside at 26%. The East of England recorded the lowest
figure at 13%.
For shop theft, London and the West Midlands recorded the highest
levels at 29%. Yorkshire and Humberside and the North West followed
at 26%, with the South East at 25% and the South West at 24%.
The government is addressing the issue through the Crime and Policing
Bill. The legislation includes a standalone offence to help police
allocate resources. It also removes the £200 threshold for low-level
theft.
retailsector.co.uk
How Safe Is California?
Crime, Wildfires, and Travel Risks
An in depth look at crime, wildfire
danger, natural hazards and practical safety tips to help travelers
decide how safe California is right now.
California’s public image often swings between glamour and alarm, with
viral videos of shoplifting or street crime shaping perceptions far
beyond what most travelers actually experience. Recent crime data tells
a more nuanced story. After increases in some categories in the early
2020s, California’s overall violent and property crime rates have
generally been edging down again, aligning more closely with national
trends. The state still sits above the United States average for
violent crime, but current figures are near multi decade lows compared
with the 1980s and 1990s.
In 2024, California’s violent crime rate was in the mid to high 400s per
100,000 residents and its property crime rate just under 2,100 per
100,000 residents, according to compilations of FBI and state data. That
means that while serious crime is not rare in a state of nearly 40
million people, the likelihood of a visitor being victimized on a
short trip remains relatively low, especially if they avoid higher
risk neighborhoods and use standard urban precautions. For many
travelers, their home city may have comparable or even higher rates of
certain crimes.
It is also important to distinguish between different types of
incidents. Much of the rise in public concern
has centered on organized retail theft, catalytic converter
and auto theft rings, and visible homelessness and drug use in certain
downtown districts. These issues can affect perceptions of safety and
require awareness, but they are not the same as targeted violent crime
against tourists. Police departments in major cities have deployed
focused strategies around tourist corridors, transit hubs, and shopping
districts, contributing to the recent drops in reported incidents in
many of those areas.
Travelers should treat crime risk in California the way they would in
any large and diverse destination. The state includes dense
metropolitan regions, affluent suburbs, rural agricultural valleys, and
remote mountain and desert towns, each with distinct safety profiles.
Researching city by city conditions, sticking to well used areas at
night, and taking sensible precautions with valuables go further in
protecting you than any single statewide statistic.
thetraveler.org
'Nationwide Shoplifting Spree'
UK: Left-wing activist group launches nationwide shoplifting spree to
‘liberate’ food in protest against 'billionaires'
Police have made no arrests so far
following the mass theft stunt, the group said
A left-wing activist group staged a nationwide shoplifting spree
to "liberate" food from supermarket shelves in protest against
"billionaires".
Take Back Power members carried out coordinated thefts from major
supermarket chains across four British cities on Saturday morning,
taking items from shelves before delivering them to food banks.
The group, widely seen as the successor organisation to Just Stop Oil,
targeted branches of Sainsbury's, Morrisons and Tesco in Exeter, Truro,
Manchester and south-east London.
The action began at around 8.30am, with participants entering
stores in Devon, Cornwall, Didsbury and Lewisham at the same time.
Footage released by the group showed activists removing items including
tinned tomatoes, pasta sauce, dried pasta, stock cubes, rice, baked
beans, tea bags and nappies from shelves. The goods were placed into
cardboard boxes labelled: "These things are going to those who need
them."
Activists then left the stores without paying before depositing
the items at food bank collection points or distributing them to
passers-by.
gbnews.com
Violent crime in downtown Seattle down 14%, new data shows at State of
Downtown
Crime Figures Climb for Fourth Year in Japan, Exceeding Prepandemic 2019
Level
&uuid=(email))
AI Sensors Improve In-Store Visibility
Smart Store Sensors Are Expanding the Role of In-Store LP Teams
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retailers continue investing in technology to improve store
operations, a growing number are deploying sensor-based systems that
provide real-time visibility into activity across the sales floor. While
these tools are often introduced to support merchandising and
operational efficiency, many loss prevention teams are finding they
also provide valuable insights into store performance.
Smart store sensors — which may include ceiling-mounted traffic
counters, product interaction sensors, and location-tracking technology
— collect data about how customers move through a store and interact
with merchandise. The systems use AI-driven analytics to turn that
data into insights about traffic flow, dwell time and product
engagement.
For loss prevention teams, this type of information can offer a new
layer of situational awareness inside the store. Understanding where
customers spend the most time, which areas see the highest traffic, and
when activity spikes throughout the day can help teams better
understand store dynamics and adjust staffing or coverage accordingly.
Retailers are also using sensor data to improve floor layouts and
product placement. If analytics show that customers frequently
gather in a certain area or interact with particular displays, stores
can adjust merchandising strategies to improve both sales opportunities
and visibility across the floor.
Another advantage of these systems is that they provide continuous
data collection without requiring additional effort from store
associates. Rather than relying on manual observation or periodic
reporting, store teams can access dashboards that summarize traffic
trends and activity patterns throughout the day.
Some retailers are beginning to combine sensor data with existing
store systems, including inventory platforms and workforce management
tools. When integrated effectively, the technology can help create a
more comprehensive view of store performance — from product availability
to customer movement.
As AI-powered sensor systems continue to evolve, many retailers see
them as part of a broader shift toward data-driven store operations.
For loss prevention teams, these tools can help provide clearer
visibility into how stores function in real time while supporting a more
informed approach to store management.
New 'Safety Champions' Program
OSHA Announces Safety Champions Program
The program is a new cooperative
initiative that includes special government employees to assist
employers.
OSHA announced on March 16 that it is launching a
Safety
Champions Program.
The agency describes the program as a "new cooperative initiative
designed to help employers develop and implement effective safety and
health programs."
The Safety Champions Program emphasizes seven elements:
management leadership, worker participation,
hazard identification, prevention and control, education and training,
program evaluation, and communication.
The agency notes that by incorporating these elements, employers can
create safety and health programs that not only meet regulations but
also enhance workplace safety and health.
Upon completion of all three levels of the program, participants are
expected to have implemented all seven elements and show plans for
continuous improvement of their safety and health programs.
The agency says that this program "meets businesses where they are on
their pathway to safety and health success and encourages them to
take proactive steps with a philosophy of continuous improvement to
prevent workplace injuries, illnesses, and fatalities."
ehstoday.com
Retail Rough Patch Coming?
The US consumer is hitting a rough patch
Even before the Iran war’s oil price
spikes, people were getting more cautious about spending. That means
buying less from retailers.
Month after month — despite inflation, tariffs and rising debt — the
fragile U.S. consumer has come through for retailers, even in the
discretionary categories covered by Retail Dive. Case in point: January
retail sales in those segments surged 6% year on year despite a new low
in consumer sentiment.
Consumers may not remain so resilient in 2026, however, as fresh
challenges arise, leading some analysts to question retail sales
forecasts that top 3%. In a report released earlier this year, Bain &
Company researchers noted greater strain on U.S. consumers would hem in
spending and undermine volumes, but nevertheless predicted sales would
rise 3.5%.
retaildive.com
Cautious shoppers show retailers how best to use AI assistants
Consumers are shopping with AI assistants on
retailer sites and through third-party chatbots like ChatGPT and
Perplexity, and retailers are paying attention.
Saks Global snags final $300M in bankruptcy financing, nears home
stretch
Inside the rapid rise and fall of San Francisco’s strangest retail
empire
Opinion: A proposed CT law would make groceries more expensive
Target offers Circle loyalty members three-day spring savings event
|
|

|
All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|

&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
fffff.png)
|
|
SECURING RETAIL. COAST TO COAST.
In the first half of 2026, Sekura is hitting the road across the United States.
We’re bringing smarter, stronger retail security directly to the industry’s
leading events, with more stops planned for later in the year.
From next-generation tagging solutions to customer-accessible shelf security,
we’re meeting American retailers face-to-face to focus on what truly moves the
needle: reducing shrink, protecting inventory, and elevating the in-store
experience without sacrificing store design.
We don’t believe retail security should be complicated. It should be
practical. Proven. Built to perform on the store floor every single day.
If you’ll be there, let’s connect – we’d love to meet you. Bring your toughest
challenges. Ask the hard questions. We’re ready.
Where to find Sekura in
2026

Visit our
website
to explore our solutions.

|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
|
Verizon Data for Sale By Hackers?
Hackers are selling a massive database of Verizon’s retail customers
More than six million telecom
customer records are now allegedly up for sale online, raising fresh
fears about how deeply attackers may have penetrated a major Verizon
partner.
While the Netherlands is still reeling from a catastrophic breach of its
major telecommunications provider, Odido, in which the personal data
of 6.2 million customers was exposed, another US telcom giant might
also be facing a cyber heist.
Russell Cellular, one of the largest Verizon Authorized Retailers in the
United States, has allegedly been compromised in a cyber incident
exposing more than 6.3 million customer records.
With over 2000 employees, the company operates over 750 locations
nationwide and plays a significant role in the US telecommunications
retail ecosystem.
A database allegedly belonging to Russell Cellular is now circulating on
a well-known hacker forum. It is being offered for sale for
$1,200. According to the threat actor, the dataset spans roughly
61GB and is organized across 209 tables.
To support their claims, the threat actor uploaded two file samples,
which the Cybernews team has investigated. Our researchers reviewed both
and found structured and legitimate-looking data.
Telecommunications services have been a primary target for threat
actors. In 2024, the Beijing-linked threat actors labeled Salt
Typhoon breached several internet service providers in the US, including
AT&T and Verizon. Verizon claimed at the time to “have contained” the
attack.
cybernews.com
AI Security & Industry Collaboration
National cyber director expands on Trump administration’s vision for AI
security, industry collaboration
The government wants AI companies to
embrace security, not see it as a barrier.
The Trump administration will make sure that new AI technologies are
secure by design, a senior U.S. official said on Tuesday.
“What we are working for in my lane is to ensure that the technical
security is not seen as a barrier to that innovation, but is seen as
a fundamental piece of the ability to scale it and move it as quickly as
possible,” National Cyber Director Sean Cairncross said at an event
hosted by the McCrary Institute for Cyber and Critical Infrastructure
Security.
President Donald Trump rescinded several of his predecessor’s AI
security initiatives early in his second term, arguing that they
hindered innovation and focused excessively on social harms such as
misinformation and bias. But he also proposed creating an information
sharing group for the AI industry that would help companies stay ahead
of threats. The remarks from Cairncross, a former Republican political
operative who assumed leadership of the Office of the National Cyber
Director last August, suggest that some officials in the Trump
administration believe cybersecurity can be a selling point for AI
platforms.
The administration is focused on helping American AI companies win
the global competition with China for market dominance, Cairncross
said. “If we’re going to win this race,” he argued, “we’re going to have
to scale innovation, and we’re going to have to deploy it and get use
cases and development moving.”
cybersecuritydive.com
Millions of UK firms on alert after Companies House data exposure
Companies House, the UK’s official company registry, said its WebFiling
service is back online after being shut down on Friday to fix a
security issue that may have exposed the personal data of millions of
firms. An investigation indicates the flaw was likely introduced
during an October 2025 update.
According to Companies House, only users who were logged in and had a
valid authentication code could have exploited the flaw.
However, the vulnerability raised concerns because it exposed data
that is not public, including dates of birth, residential addresses,
and company email details. It may also have been possible to submit
unauthorized filings, such as changes to directors or company accounts.
helpnetsecurity.com
EU sanctions Chinese company behind 65,000-device hack
Security teams might be overlooking wider threat to Cisco SD-WAN |
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
|
AI Shopping Agent Ban?
Should
Amazon Be Banning AI Shopping Agents From its Platform?
Amazon won a temporary injunction against Perplexity to block its
Comet browser from accessing password-protected parts of Amazon’s
website to shop on behalf of human customers.
The ruling sets a precedent for how retailers can defend against
unauthorized AI data collection on e-commerce sites, but further
legal battles are expected as more AI startups build autonomous shopping
and browsing tools.
Amazon sued Perplexity in November, accusing the AI startup of
covertly scraping data from private Amazon customer accounts through
its Comet browser and associated AI agen — and of disguising
automated activity as human browsing. The lawsuit said Perplexity’s
system posed security risks for customer data. Amazon wrote in its
original complaint that Perplexity’s agents “can act within protected
computer systems, including private customer accounts requiring a
password.”
Amazon also said Perplexity’s agents created challenges for the
company’s advertising business, because when AI systems generate ad
traffic, the impressions have to be detected and filtered out before
advertisers can be billed. Unlike humans who visit shopping sites,
AI bots can those bypass ads and sponsored search results.
“This requires modifications to Amazon’s advertising systems, including
developing new detection mechanisms to identify and exclude automated
traffic,” Amazon wrote in its complaint. “These system adaptations
are necessary to maintain contractual obligations with advertisers who
pay only for legitimate human impressions.”
Perplexity argued in its opposition to a preliminary injunction that
Amazon isn’t so much interested in cybersecurity as it is in
eliminating a competitor to its own agentic AI tools.
retailwire.com
Lowe's AI
How Lowe’s tailors its AI-backed Mylow to different customers
The home improvement retailer gets
about a million questions a month between Mylow and Mylow Companion,
with customer inquiries ranging in terms of expertise and needs.
Lowe’s launched its AI-powered assistant Mylow about a year ago to
help answer customers’ home improvement questions. The retailer also
launched a version for store associates, called Mylow Companion, last
May.
Home improvement is inherently a complex category for retail, which
makes AI an even more exciting potential solution for it, according to
Nair.
The home improvement retailer gets about a million questions a month
between Mylow and Mylow Companion, Nair said. Given that Lowe’s has
both DIY-focused and professional customers, that requires tailoring the
technology to all types of questions and expertise levels.
retaildive.com
Amazon Brings 1-Hour Delivery to Hundreds of Cities |
|
|
&uuid=(email))
|
|
Milwaukee woman convicted of battery of officer, retail theft after intense
Wauwatosa mall incident
A Milwaukee woman was caught stealing from a Sephora at Mayfair Mall in
Wauwatosa and then assaulted a police officer during her arrest, newly released
body camera footage shows. TMJ4 acquired the footage via our partners at Midwest
Safety. Charlee Chappell, 31, was inside the Sephora on Dec. 3, 2023, when a
loss prevention worker spotted her placing items into her newborn's stroller
before leaving the store without paying. The worker caught up with Chappell and
asked her to return to the store. Wauwatosa police were on scene for backup.
When Chappell was asked to go to the back of the store, she tossed the stolen
products onto the counter and tried to go around it to avoid the back room.
During a struggle, the arresting officer's body camera was knocked off her
uniform. Chappell struck the officer on the head and took her taser after it
failed to subdue her. Additional Wauwatosa officers arrived shortly after.
Chappell was charged with battery of an officer and retail theft for stealing
nearly $900 worth of goods. Chappell was also seen with Davoughna Haley, 35, who
was charged with misdemeanor retail theft. Both women were found guilty. Haley
was sentenced to one year of probation instead of nine months in the
reintegration center. Chappell was sentenced to three years of probation instead
of a prison and parole term totaling three and a half years.
tmj4.com
Stuart, FL: 2 arrested in connection with multi-state Ultra Beauty store thefts;
linked to more than 40 cases across several states
On March 16, the Stuart Police Department arrested two suspects tied to a
multi-state retail theft operation. The Port St. Lucie Police Department
contacted Stuart police about two individuals suspected in multiple shoplifting
incidents at Ulta Beauty locations throughout the area, according to SPD.
Officers located the suspects, identified as Isabel Pardo Ramos and Oleiber Rios
Rosabal. Investigators linked the pair to more than 40 retail theft cases across
several states, all involving Ulta Beauty stores. Ramos was charged with
tampering with a security device and grand theft. She also had an active warrant
out of Galveston, Texas, for engaging in organized criminal activity. She was
extradited, and her bond was set at $100,000.
hometownnewstc.com
Toronto, Canada: Update: Big safe filled with jewelry stolen in Toronto; cops on
hunt for Mississauga man
A Mississauga man is one of multiple people being hunted by police after bandits
broke into a jewelry store in Toronto’s west end earlier this month and made off
with a large safe filled with valuables. Toronto Police said the culprits broke
into an adjoining business on March 1, a Sunday, to gain entry to the Islington
Avenue/Albion Road area jewelry store. The company’s alarm system alerted police
to the break-and-enter. Multiple culprits are alleged to have stolen “a large
safe containing jewelry and other valuable items,” police said in a news release
on Tuesday. Investigators said the bandits loaded the safe into a silver Dodge
Caravan and fled the scene. Police didn’t say how many people they’re looking
for in connection with the theft, only that more than one person is believed to
have been involved.
insauga.com
&uuid=(email))
|
|
|
|
&uuid=(email))
|
|
|
|

|
|
|
Shootings & Deaths
Jacksonville, FL: Jacksonville police shoot man pointing gun at them
A police officer with a rifle fatally shot a man Tuesday outside a Gate gas
station on Bowden Road after Jacksonville police say the man pointed a gun at
officers while walking toward them. Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office Undersheriff
Shawn Coarsey said the incident began at 9:22 a.m. when a man walked into the
Gate not far from Interstate 95 while several customers and employees were
inside. The man walked around the store for several minutes, and once the
customers left, Coarsey said, the man pulled out a handgun and demanded that all
the employees leave the store.
jaxtoday.org
Mobile County, AL: Store owner recalls Mobile shooting that left one dead
A deadly shooting was caught on camera at a convenience store in Mobile on
Sunday night. Investigators say five people were involved, but what’s unclear is
what led to all this. Surveillance video shows a man leaving a convenience store
on Martin Luther King Jr. Avenue Sunday evening, opening the front passenger
side door of a white car, and firing shots at the driver.
wkrg.com
Phoenix, AZ: 2 men shot outside strip mall in north Phoenix
Two men are in the hospital after they were shot in north Phoenix on Monday
afternoon. The shooting was reported shortly before 3 p.m. at a strip mall near
30th Avenue and Thunderbird Road, just west of Interstate 17. Phoenix police
arrived on scene and found two men shot. Police say one man has life-threatening
injuries, and the second victim has non-life-threatening injuries and is
expected to survive. Investigators believe that the suspect fled the scene
before officers arrived. Phoenix firefighters were seen wheeling one person on a
stretcher out of a smoke and vape shop.
azfamily.com
Lumberton, NC: 1 injured, 1 arrested in Lumberton Cookout shooting
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Detroit, MI: String of Detroit dollar store robberies have police searching for
two suspects
Police are searching for two suspects wanted in a robbery that happened on 7
Mile on Thursday. On March 12 at around 12:45 p.m., Detroit police say two men
entered a dollar store on the 8700 block of E. 7 Mile Rd and stole multiple
items. Officials say while they were leaving, they threatened to shoot an
employee. Then, just before 1 p.m., the two men arrived at another dollar store
on the 19700 block of Mound, stealing several items, then leaving the scene.
fox2detroit.com
Hartford, CT: Bridgeport man sentenced to 12 years in federal prison for armed
robberies
Nederland, TX: Port Arthur teen receives 25-year prison sentence for violent
C-Store robbery
|
|
|
|
•
C-Store – Mobile
County, AL – Armed Robbery / Cust killed
•
C-Store – Honolulu, HI
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – New Haven,
CT – Burglary
•
C-Store - Marshall
County, MA – Burglary
•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Moses Lake,
WA – Armed Robbery
•
Clothing –
Tannersville, PA – Robbery
•
Clothing – Victor, NY
– Robbery
•
Dollar – San Antonio,
TX – Robbery/ Cust wounded
•
Dollar – Kingsland, GA
– Armed Robbery
•
Gas Station –
Jacksonville, FL – Armed Robbery / Susp Killed
•
Jewelry – Rehoboth Beach, DE – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Manitou
Springs, CO – Burglary
•
Motel – Florence
County, SC – Armed Robbery |
|
|
Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 3 burglaries
• 3 shootings
• 2 killed |
|
|

Click map to enlarge
|
|
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
Featured Job Spotlights
|
Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
'Best in Class' Community
|
 |
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...
|
Featured Jobs
To apply to any of today's Featured Jobs,
Click Here
 |
|
View Featured
Jobs
|
Post
Your Job
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
|
Insight,
humor & heart from
one of LP's most trusted voices |
|
|
If Your Tool Requires Perfect Network, Perfect Mounting, and Perfect
Lighting, They Get Nervous
Retail isn’t controlled space - it’s
controlled chaos. Cameras get bumped. Fixtures move. Lighting changes.
Networks get congested. The solutions that win long-term are the ones
that tolerate imperfection and still produce usable outcomes.
Reliability beats theoretical performance every single time.
Follow this space every day to see more of 'Hedgie's Hot Takes' |
|
|
|
Not getting the Daily? Is it ending up in your spam folder?
Please make sure to add d-ddaily@downing-downing.com to your contact list,
address book, trusted sender list, and/or company whitelist to ensure you
receive our newsletter. Want to know how?
Read Here |
|
FEEDBACK
/
downing-downing.com
/
Advertise with The D&D Daily |
|
 |