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Wicklander-Zulawski & Associates Announces Promotion of Chris Norris to Vice
President, WZ International
Move reinforces company’s commitment to strategic
global expansion and international standards in investigative interviewing
CHICAGO,
IL, UNITED STATES, February 10, 2026 --
Wicklander-Zulawski & Associates
( WZ ), a global leader in investigative interviewing and ethical communication
training, is proud to announce the promotion of Chris Norris, CFI to Vice
President of WZ International. This elevation marks a significant step in WZ’s
continued commitment to international growth and the advancement of globally
aligned interviewing standards.
Norris, who has represented WZ internationally for more than 15 years, most
recently served as Director of WZ EU, EMEA and Webinars. In his new role as Vice
President of WZ International, Norris will oversee all operations and growth
initiatives outside of North America, further expanding WZ’s global footprint.
Read more here |
See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Retail Crime Beyond Viral Moments
Retail Crime’s Visibility Problem Is
Shaping the Conversation — and the Response
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retail crime has become increasingly visible. Viral videos of
smash-and-grab incidents, dramatic security footage, and social media
clips now dominate public perception of retail theft. But for many
retailers, the most disruptive forms of loss are far less visible — and
that gap is quietly shaping how the issue is understood.
Highly public incidents tend to be episodic and visually striking.
They generate immediate attention, political commentary, and pressure
for rapid response. Yet retailers often report that their most
persistent losses come from repeat, lower-profile activity: organized
theft carried out incrementally, return fraud, ticket switching, and
professional theft rings operating across multiple locations over time.
The result is a visibility imbalance. What draws the most attention
externally is not always what drives the most operational impact
internally. While smash-and-grab incidents can be costly and
traumatic, they are often outliers rather than the primary source of
shrink. Meanwhile, repeat theft patterns — less dramatic and harder to
capture on video — accumulate loss quietly and consistently.
This visibility gap matters because it influences decision-making.
Public narratives shape investor questions, employee perceptions, and
legislative responses. Internally, retailers may feel pressure to
respond to the most visible threats even when their data points
elsewhere. That tension can complicate resource allocation, policy
decisions, and communication strategies.
Retailers also face a challenge in how theft is documented and shared.
Video-driven narratives reward spectacle, but many forms of organized
theft are designed to avoid attention altogether. Small quantities,
dispersed activity, and policy exploitation are less likely to trend
online, despite their cumulative impact.
As a result, the retail crime conversation often moves faster than the
underlying data. Headlines amplify visible incidents, while
slower-moving loss patterns require sustained analysis and cross-store
intelligence to fully understand.
This does not diminish the seriousness of high-profile incidents or
their impact on safety and morale. But it highlights a growing
disconnect between what the public sees and what retailers manage day to
day.
For retailers, addressing crime increasingly requires separating
visibility from severity — and ensuring that prevention strategies
are guided by patterns and evidence, not just the most shareable
moments.
Australia's Retail Crime Surge
Victoria Leads as Retail Crime Continues to Surge
Retail crime across Australia surged sharply in 2025, with new
data showing Victoria recorded the nation’s biggest increase in threats,
violence and weapon-related incidents – accelerating calls for
greater use of technology to protect workers and customers.
Figures from crime intelligence technology firm Auror show
threatening behaviour across Australia’s $444 billion retail sector rose
26% compared with 2024.
Violent incidents increased 17%, while the use of weapons climbed 10%,
with knives and blades accounting for more than half of all
weapon-related threats.
Victoria stood out as the worst-affected state. Weapon-related
incidents rose 24%, violent events increased 29% and threats spiked 43%
– well above national averages and higher than comparable increases in
New South Wales and Queensland.
The data lands days after a landmark
Administrative Review Tribunal decision backing Bunnings’ use of
in-store facial recognition technology, overturning a ruling
by the privacy commissioner.
The tribunal found the retailer was justified in deploying the
technology to address a “real” and escalating risk to staff and
property, provided stronger transparency and privacy safeguards are
in place.
channelnews.com.au
The Great Debate Over Shopping Cart
Ordinances
Hawaii: Proposed bill looks at targeting abandoned shopping carts
A newly introduced bill moving through the state legislature aimed at
reducing abandoned shopping carts in Hawaii communities is
generating debate between lawmakers and the retail industry.
House Bill 1636 would require businesses to permanently label their
shopping carts and adopt security measures to prevent them from being
taken off store property. The measure would also authorize counties
to impound carts found away from business premises, charge retrieval and
storage fees, and, in some cases, issue fines of up to $500 per cart.
Under the bill, if a labeled cart is discovered off-site, counties would
notify the business owner, who would have three business days to
retrieve it. If not claimed, the cart could be impounded or disposed of.
The measure also encourages stores to use anti-theft tools such as
wheel-lock systems, perimeter-triggered braking devices, physical
barriers or contracted cart-retrieval services.
But retail and grocery industry groups are opposing the bill, arguing it
unfairly penalizes businesses that are already victims of theft.
The group says many stores already invest in retrieval services and
anti-theft technology, but still cannot safely recover every cart.
khon2.com
DHS Clarifies ICE Arrest Data
(Update) Data shows 60% of those arrested by ICE had criminal records
Less than 14% of nearly 400,000 immigrants arrested by Immigration
and Customs Enforcement over the past year had charges or convictions
for violent criminal offenses, according to an internal Department of
Homeland Security document obtained by CBS News.
However, as DHS spokesperson Tricia McLaughlin said, "Drug
trafficking, Distribution of child pornography, burglary, fraud, DUI,
embezzlement, solicitation of a minor, human smuggling are all
categorized as 'nonviolent crimes.'"
With this included, nearly 60% of ICE arrestees over the past year
had criminal charges or convictions, the document indicates.
cbsnews.com
Did crime in Salem increase or decrease in 2025? What new report says
Some Hendersonville crime numbers slightly up in 2025. See the stats
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How Retailers Can Keep Stores Powered
Even When the Grid Fails
Keeping retail stores powered in an uncertain energy future
The U.S. power grid is under growing
strain, with blackouts increasing in both frequency and duration.
The Department of Energy (DOE) has warned that, without meaningful
additions of firm generation capacity, outages could become up to 100
times more common. This is an escalation that would have far-reaching
consequences for U.S. businesses.
For retailers, especially those dependent on refrigeration, fueling
and EV charging, these reliability challenges translate into
financial risk. As a result, energy reliability has become as essential
to daily operations as inventory management or workforce scheduling.
In response, today’s infrastructure pressures are accelerating a new
era of on-site energy innovation in retail as businesses look for
resilient, cost-effective solutions that ensure continuity regardless of
how the broader grid evolves.
Grocers, convenience chains and big-box stores face high stakes when
outages occur. Traditionally, the only backup power options were
diesel and natural gas generators that could bridge these gaps. Today,
there are more backup power options that can support a retailer's
sustainability and resiliency goals.
Battery energy storage systems (BESS) combined with on-site solar energy
generation are emerging as a viable solution for providing reliable,
resilient backup power for mission-critical operations.
Real-world pilots are already demonstrating the viability of these
solutions. Costco’s off-grid pilot shows the potential for
large-scale adoption, while Chick-fil-A’s PV-plus-storage projects
in the West illustrate how retailers are beginning to test more
resilient, energy-independent models.
chainstoreage.com
Eight-Armed Safety:
Why EHS Leaders Must Think Like an Octopus, Not a Tin Man
The eight arms framework provides a
structured approach to transforming safety culture and practices for
complex, unpredictable environments.
Traditional safety approaches often resemble the Tin Man—rigid, slow,
and lacking adaptability—failing to address the complexities of
modern work environments.
The 'octopus' model promotes decentralization, local decision-making,
and continuous learning, enabling safety systems to respond swiftly to
unpredictable conditions.
Key principles for an adaptive safety strategy include clear purpose,
frontline ownership, fostering curiosity, encouraging experimentation,
recognizing subcultures, developing feedback systems, spreading best
practices, and strong leadership.
Organizations should focus on involving workers in safety
development, reducing bureaucracy, and viewing near misses as learning
opportunities rather than just compliance issues.
Transitioning to an octopus-like safety approach requires ongoing
reflection on current practices, identifying rigid areas, and
simplifying processes to enhance agility and resilience.
ehstoday.com
Employers Delivering Work-Life Balance
Employees Concerned About Well-being
However, employers are delivering
work-life balance programs, says new survey from Employee Benefit
Research Institute.
Worries about overall well-being are on the rise, according to findings
from the Sixth Annual Workplace Wellness Survey released by the Employee
Benefit Research Institute (EBRI) and Greenwald Research.
A positive finding from the report is that a majority of workers are
satisfied with their jobs and value work-life balance. However, many
feel disengaged and uncertain about the economy, health care
affordability and long-term security.
“Even as workers tell us their personal financial stress has eased
compared with a few years ago, inflation and health care costs remain
persistent pressure points—and that strain is showing up in rising
concerns about overall well-being," said Jake Spiegel, senior research
associate, EBRI, in a statement.
ehstoday.com
Target cuts 500 roles, invests in store payroll
The mass retailer, which cut about 1,000
corporate positions last year, is now putting “significantly” more
investment into store labor and hours.
Import cargo volume expected to see ‘significant’ decline amid tariff
impact
Ongoing uncertainty surrounding tariffs
continue to impact import volume. Import cargo volume at the nation’s
major container ports is expected to see a significant year-over-year
decline during the first half of 2026 as the impact of tariffs
continues, according to the Global Port Tracker.
Customer satisfaction is flat; wave of ‘pent-up customer defection'
building
Digital price tags are coming to Milwaukee grocery stores
US economy added 130,000 jobs in January, unemployment falls to 4.3%
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Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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Reduce Human Involvement With
Intelligent Video Monitoring

Every second counts when a security threat emerges—yet
traditional surveillance still relies heavily on on-site guards and constant
human oversight. This dependence not only drives up operational costs but also
puts staff in harm’s way during high-risk incidents, especially when confronting
potentially violent offenders. As threats evolve, organizations are urgently
seeking ways to strengthen security without requiring in-person guarded
protection.
This article examines modern strategies for remote monitoring that reduce the
need for continuous human involvement. It explores how overreliance on manual
processes can slow efficiency, and how intelligent, cloud-powered video
solutions can relieve security teams of routine tasks—freeing them to focus on
higher-value responsibilities that improve overall safety and operations.
Limitations of Manual Surveillance in Modern Security
Organizations have traditionally relied on security guards and monitoring teams
to surveil facilities, respond to incidents, and keep people and assets safe.
While human oversight remains an important component of surveillance, it brings
notable complexities that can affect both productivity and safety.
Cost and Resource Inefficiency
Employing a security staff complete with on-site guards requires significant
resources. Overnight or weekend shifts often result in substantial salary
expenses and overtime payments. In many cases, multiple staff are needed to
ensure complete coverage and reduce the possibility of blind spots, further
driving up operational costs. As many businesses struggle to incorporate these
costs into their budgets, finding solutions that are more cost-effective while
still providing complete security coverage becomes vital.
Difficult Coverage and Remote Sites
No matter how skilled or dedicated security staff may be, on-site personnel can
only monitor a limited area at a time, inevitably leaving blind spots and
vulnerabilities. This situation becomes further complicated for remote, low
traffic sites that need continuous coverage but cannot justify round-the-clock
physical guarding. These realities highlight the need for alternative security
approaches that can ensure round-the-clock vigilance.
Susceptibility to Threats
On-site security roles inherently involve personal risk, especially when dealing
with potentially aggressive or violent individuals. In high-tension situations,
security personnel can quickly become the focus of confrontation. Incidents can
escalate suddenly, leaving little time to react and increasing the potential for
injury. Beyond the immediate danger, these encounters can have lasting effects
on a guard’s mental well-being. The reality is that even the most experienced
and well-trained security professionals operate in unpredictable environments
where safety cannot be guaranteed. These risks highlight the importance of
modern monitoring solutions that can manage threats effectively.
Continue Reading
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LP & Cybersecurity: No Longer Parallel
Tracks
The Convergence of Retail Loss
Prevention and Cybersecurity
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retail loss prevention and cybersecurity have traditionally been treated
as separate disciplines — one focused on physical theft and in-store
risk, the other on data breaches and digital crime. But as retail
operations become increasingly connected, those two worlds are rapidly
converging.
At the core of this shift is technology. Modern loss prevention
strategies now rely heavily on digital systems, including
cloud-based video platforms, point-of-sale (POS) integrations, facial
recognition tools, license-plate recognition, electronic article
surveillance (EAS) analytics, and centralized incident management
software. Each of these tools generates, stores, or transmits data —
making LP systems both a security asset and a potential cyber risk.
Retailers are also facing more sophisticated criminal activity that
blends physical and digital tactics. Organized retail crime (ORC)
groups increasingly use cyber tools to scout locations, exploit
self-checkout vulnerabilities, manipulate return systems, or access
employee credentials through phishing and social engineering. In some
cases, cyber intrusions are used to disable alarms, tamper with cameras,
or identify store layouts and security blind spots ahead of physical
theft attempts.
At the same time, the expansion of LP technology has increased the
attack surface retailers must protect. Internet-connected cameras,
IoT sensors, access-control systems, and third-party LP vendors can
introduce vulnerabilities if not properly secured. A compromised
surveillance system or LP database can expose sensitive operational
data, employee information, or customer records — turning a loss
prevention investment into a cybersecurity liability.
This convergence is pushing retailers to rethink how LP and
cybersecurity teams collaborate. Increasingly, retailers are
aligning physical security, fraud prevention, IT, and information
security under shared risk frameworks. Cybersecurity teams are being
asked to evaluate LP vendors and devices, while LP leaders are becoming
more involved in data governance, privacy compliance, and system access
controls.
Regulatory pressure is also accelerating this alignment. Privacy
laws, data-protection requirements, and growing scrutiny around
biometric data use mean that LP technologies must now meet both security
and compliance standards — not just effectiveness benchmarks.
As retail environments continue to digitize, loss prevention and
cybersecurity are no longer parallel tracks. For many retailers,
they are becoming two sides of the same risk-management strategy —
requiring coordinated oversight, shared intelligence, and integrated
security planning.
Cybersecurity is 'Core Business
Function'
Visa Says Cybersecurity Decides Who Wins Digital Commerce
The word “cybersecurity” can imply a defensive, even reactive
discipline.
But effective cybersecurity has never truly been either of those
things, and as fraud scales faster, attack surfaces sprawl across
ecosystems and consumer trust hardens into a competitive moat, treating
cybersecurity as merely a protection is in many ways inviting attack for
the businesses that do so.
“It is a core business function. I find it hard to think of any
business today that isn’t at its core a technology business,” Jeremiah
Dewey, head of Cyber Solutions at Visa, said during a conversation for
the “Visa Protect Series” hosted by PYMNTS.
When security is relegated to an ancillary role, he argued, companies
miss its most important contribution: enabling the business to grow
safely and confidently in a digital-first world. In today’s digital
economy, cybersecurity is increasingly about enabling trust and turning
resilience into competitive advantage.
The numbers on the side of the attackers alone demand attention.
Ransomware attacks surged 126% in 2025, according to Spin.ai, with
average breach costs approaching $5 million per incident. Nearly 70% of
breaches now cause material business disruption. And yet, many
organizations continue to treat cybersecurity as a subsidiary of IT
rather than a core business function.
pymnts.com
Security By Default
Microsoft tightens Windows security with app transparency and user
consent
Microsoft is strengthening default protections in Windows through two
security initiatives, Windows Baseline Security Mode and User
Transparency and Consent.
User Transparency and Consent introduces a structured approach to how
Windows presents security decisions to users. The operating system
will prompt users when applications request access to sensitive
resources such as files, cameras, or microphones, and when installers
attempt to add additional software.
Permission decisions are recorded so they can be reviewed and changed
later. Applications and AI agents are also expected to meet higher
transparency standards.
Windows Baseline Security Mode moves Windows toward operating with
runtime integrity safeguards enabled by default. Under this
approach, the operating system allows only properly signed applications,
services, and drivers to run.
The safeguards are intended to protect system integrity by limiting
unauthorized changes during operation. Users and IT administrators
retain the ability to approve exceptions for specific applications when
operational requirements call for it.
helpnetsecurity.com
Ivanti EPMM exploitation widespread as governments, others targeted
Polish power grid hack offers lessons for critical infrastructure
operators, CISA says |
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The Scourge of Fake Online Reviews
FTC warns businesses about fake reviews
Whether you’re hiring a contractor, looking for an apartment, or
shopping online, chances are you check out online reviews first. Many
people use reviews to see the honest opinions of other buyers — and
companies rely on reviews to stand out from the crowd. But some
companies write, post, or pay for fake reviews — and that hurts people
and honest companies.
To protect consumers, the FTC monitors the marketplace and brings cases
against companies using deceptive and unfair business practices. The
agency recently sent warning letters to companies urging them to take a
look at their reviews and remove any deceptive or misleading statements.
The FTC’s letters remind companies that creating, buying, or posting
fake reviews, or giving incentives for only positive reviews, may
trigger enforcement actions and fines.
Here are some steps to take when you consider reviews:
-
Look at a variety of
sources and pay attention to whether a website or its reviews
are independent or sponsored.
-
Check how recent the
reviews are and watch for a burst of reviews over a short period
of time. That can sometimes mean the reviews are fake.
-
Report fake reviews
to the website or platform where they appear — like Google,
Amazon, or Walmart, among others. Here’s how to report suspicious
online reviews across some popular websites.
Be sure to tell the FTC about the fake reviews you spot at
ReportFraud.ftc.gov. Follow the reporting path for whatever
product or service you were looking at, and choose “Other” if you don’t
see a path. Just be sure to include “fake review” in the comments field.
consumer.ftc.gov
The AI-Driven Spontaneous Shift:
Consumer E-Commerce Trends for 2026
E-commerce shoppers in 2026 are faster, more spontaneous, and
increasingly conversational. Our latest survey of 6,000 consumers across
five countries reveals explosive GenAI growth (up 75% year-over-year), a
surge in impulse buying behavior, and the critical importance of
visual reviews. Traditional search is losing ground while brand
loyalty strengthens.
digitalcommerce360.com
Ocado may cut 1,000 jobs in cost-cutting strategy
Amazon plans to launch AI content marketplace, The Information reports
Philly restaurants flooded with fake 1-star reviews online: ‘This is an
attack' |
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Washoe County, NV: From Taco shop to prison time, an ORC investigation
scheme unfolds
What looked like an ordinary taco shop turned into the center of a
retail theft case that ended with a prison sentence after a months-long
undercover operation. A man has been sentenced to more than four years
in prison after pleading guilty to Attempted Participation in Organized
Retail Theft. 53-year-old Jose Martinez-Aguilar was arrested after
detectives with the Regional Crime Suppression Unit and the Repeat
Offender Program learned that Roberto’s at 4455 S. Virginia was
operating as a fencing operation for stolen items. Investigators said
Martinez-Aguilar owned the shop and was running the operation.
Detectives learned through their investigation that thieves were
stealing merchandise from stores along the Virginia Street corridor and
selling the items to Martinez-Aguilar and his employees.
Loss-prevention officers at local retailers also developed information
that supported the findings. Home Depot, JCPenney, and TJX Companies
provided merchandise and surveillance resources for an operation led by
the Regional Crime Suppression Unit. After search warrants were
served at the business and Martinez-Aguilar's house, police said they
found thousands of dollars in apparent stolen retail merchandise. Loss
prevention personnel from 17 retailers identified the items as belonging
to their stores. Investigators also said they found a cutting tool next
to theft prevention devices that were allegedly removed from
merchandise.
2news.com
Bakersfield, CA: Burglars cut hole in wall to break into jewelry store
at Valley Plaza Mall
Bakersfield police said several suspects cut into a wall to get inside
and burglarize a jewelry store at the Valley Plaza Mall. The Bakersfield
Police Department is investigating a burglary at Zales jewelry store.
Officers got a call for a report of a burglary late Sunday night.
According to officers, the suspects used an employees only hallway that
leads to several businesses in the mall and cut a 3?3-foot hole in the
wall in order to access Zales. The burglars then made off with an
undetermined amount of jewelry, according to police.
kget.com
Baton Rouge, LA: FedEx driver arrested in $32k Walmart merchandise theft
Jonesboro, AR: Three women accused of stealing $4,000 in merchandise
from Jonesboro stores
Cape Coral, FL: Man Accused of Multiple Lowe’s Thefts Within 120 Days,
Charged With Felony Retail Theft
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Shootings & Deaths
Norfolk, VA: Arrest warrant reveals homeless man shot 2 employees during robbery
of Church’s Chicken
The 32-year-old man accused of fatally shooting a man and injuring a woman over
the weekend in a Church’s Chicken was arraigned Monday morning. Larry L. Jackson
has been charged with second-degree murder, malicious wounding, robbery, grand
larceny and use of a firearm in connection to the incident. A man, identified as
47-year-old Sherod S. Rodgers, was killed in the shooting. Additionally, one
woman was shot twice but appears to be in stable condition. Court documents
revealed the two victims were employees at Church’s Chicken. After shooting the
employees, Jackson stole a register till and a vehicle to flee the scene.
wavy.com
Broadway, VA: State Police investigating fatal officer-involved shooting at
7-Eleven
Virginia State Police is investigating a fatal officer-involved shooting that
happened Tuesday afternoon in Broadway at the 7-Eleven at 118 W. Lee St.
Broadway Police Chief J.D. Weaver told WHSV that the department received
preliminary reports at 12:10 p.m. of a man with a knife at the 7-Eleven, and BPD
officers responded to the scene. There, the man was threatening patrons inside
the 7-Eleven with the knife, Weaver said, and the responding officer evacuated
the store. When the officer confronted the man at the bathroom area of the
store, Weaver said, man came toward one of his officers, “who responded with
lethal force.” Virginia State Police confirmed a 61-year-old man, died in the
shooting. VSP and its Officer Involved Critical Incident Response Team has taken
over the investigation, which remains active and ongoing.
whsv.com
Detroit, MI: Man dead after suspect runs him over at Detroit gas station
A man is dead after he was run over by his own vehicle at a gas station on
Detroit's west side, police said. The assault happened around 4:30 a.m. Tuesday
at a Sunoco gas station on Joy Road near Greenfield Road. Detroit police say a
man had parked his Jeep Compass at the gas station, went inside the building,
and found someone inside his vehicle when he went back outside. The suspect got
out of the Jeep and began to assault the man, police said. "After the attack,
the victim was severely injured. The suspect then re-entered the victim's
vehicle and drove over the victim numerous times," said Detroit Police Captain
Marcus Thirlkill.
cbsnews.com
Burlington, ON, Canada: Man killed after shooting at Burlington Centre mall
Police are looking for two people after a man died following a shooting in the
parking lot of a Burlington, Ont., shopping mall on Monday night. Police have
identified the victim as Omer Niaz Muhammad, 24, of Burlington. Const. Jeff
Dillon, a spokesperson for Halton Regional Police, said officers were notified
about the shooting at Burlington Centre mall just after 10 p.m. ET. Speaking
with reporters at the scene Tuesday morning, Dillon said emergency medical
services attended to the victim. “Unfortunately, upon transfer to hospital he
was pronounced deceased,” Dillion said. According to Dillon, Muhammad was shot
in his upper body. Dillon said investigators don't know if Muhammad and the
suspects were known to each other.
cbc.ca
Tallahassee, FL: ‘Armed and dangerous’ Perry C-store shooting suspect in custody
The search for a man wanted in connection to a deadly shooting at a Perry
convenience store has resulted in an arrest. Ulysses Woodfaulk, Jr, is in
custody, according to the Perry Police Department. Woodfaulk, 48, was wanted
for first degree murder following a weekend shooting at Choo Choos Convenience.
Police said they suspect he fatally shot Austin Wilkinson and left the scene
with a handgun. Officers also said Woodfaulk has a “violent history” prior to
Saturday’s shooting, including battery on law enforcement. On Monday, officers
said an argument between Woodfaulk, Wilkinson and another person escalated
before the shooting.
wctv.tv
Albemarle, NC: Teen accused of attempted murder at Walmart shopping center
A teenager was arrested after he allegedly shot a juvenile in Stanly County on
Monday night. The Feb. 9 shooting happened just before 10:30 p.m. on Leonard
Avenue in Albemarle, in the Walmart shopping center right off Highway 24/27.
Once at the shopping center, Albemarle police found the juvenile with a gunshot
wound. The juvenile was then taken to the hospital and was in stable condition
as of Tuesday afternoon. Investigators identified 19-year-old William Abiormi
Browne as a suspect in the case and arrested him early Tuesday morning. He was
charged with attempted first-degree murder and was denied bond.
wbtv.com
Keozer, OR: Driver survives being shot in the head overnight at Keizer strip
mall in first of 2 shootings
Police are investigating two separate shootings that happened overnight outside
a strip mall in Keizer, the first of which left two people injured. One of the
people hurt was the driver of a family vehicle who was struck in the head, the
Keizer Police Department said. According to KPD, the first shooting happened
near the intersection of Keizer Station Boulevard and Ulali Drive Northeast
around 10:15 p.m. A vehicle with a family inside was going through the
intersection when they "had their windows shot out," police said. The driver was
struck in the head and suffered a serious injury, KPD said, but is expected to
survive. A second shooting happened near the location of the first just a few
hours later. Around 3:15 a.m., police responded to a report of a man brandishing
a handgun, menacing a Sysco delivery driver outside the Hops n Drops restaurant.
KPD said the driver was able to get safely inside the restaurant, as the suspect
"shot his delivery truck full of holes."
kgw.com
Buffalo, NY: Shots fired outside Tops on Jefferson Ave. this past weekend
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Peachtree City, GA: Peachtree City pursuit ends with arrest after store cameras
ID armed suspect
An armed robbery suspect is behind bars after ultra-high-resolution security
cameras at a new convenience store helped authorities track his getaway car in
real time Sunday afternoon. Kenny Richards, 23, was arrested following a
high-speed chase that ended in a Peachtree City industrial complex. Richards,
who is homeless, is currently being held at the Fayette County Jail without
bond. The incident began at the new Amoco station on State Road 85 near
Whitewater Middle School. Security footage shows a gunman entering the store,
pointing a weapon, and demanding cash. Though the entire robbery lasted less
than 40 seconds, the store's brand-new surveillance system captured the
suspect’s vehicle in high definition. The clarity of the recording allowed a
store clerk to identify the license plate and report it to the authorities.
Fayette County officials then used license plate readers installed throughout
the area to monitor the vehicle’s path.
fox5atlanta.com
Yuba City, CA: Two more suspects arrested after $1M Yuba City jewelry store
heist
Two more people were arrested after allegedly stealing about $1 million in gold
jewelry in the January smash-and-grab robbery of a Yuba City jewelry store,
police said. Yuba City police said in a social media update that Michael
Sanders, 24, and Kylen Byrd, 21, were identified “through continued follow-up
and collaboration with multiple Bay Area law enforcement agencies” and were
being held at Santa Rita Jail in Alameda County, awaiting transfer to Sutter
County. Police said three masked thieves rushed the store on Palora Avenue just
after 1 p.m. Jan. 18, smashing display cases and scooping up gold while a
fourth suspect waited outside in a getaway car. One of the suspects struck
the store’s owner in the chest with a hammer during the daytime heist.
amp.sacbee.com
Statesboro, GA: Man Arrested at Statesboro Walmart After Threatening Shoppers
with Stolen BB Gun
Oakland, CA: DOJ: Nine Members of “Ghost Town” Gang Sentenced for Armed
Robberies in 2022
Indianapolis, IN: DOJ: Illinois Man Convicted for Burger King Armed Robbery in
Indy
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•
Beauty - Bethesda, MD
– Burglary
•
C-Store – Houston, TX
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Shreveport,
LA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store –
Fayetteville, GA – Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Bethesda,
MD – Burglary
•
Gas Station–
Bensenville, IL – Burglary
•
Grocery – Bensenville,
IL – Burglary
•
Hardware – Cape Coral,
FL – Robbery
•
Hardware – Norcross,
GA - Robbery
•
Jewelry – Bakersfield,
CA – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Portland, OR
– Burglary
• Jewelry – Bloomington, MN – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Norfolk,
VA – Armed Robbery / 2 Emp killed
•
Restaurant – Bethesda,
MD – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Bethesda,
MD – Burglary
•
Tobacco – Visalia
County, CA – Armed Robbery
•
Walmart - Statesboro,
GA - Burglary
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Daily Totals:
• 8 robberies
• 9 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 2 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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