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Casey Wright named Sr.
Director, Planning, Logistics, & Distribution for Brinker
International
Before joining Brinker International as Sr. Director, Planning,
Logistics, & Distribution, Casey spent nearly two years with
Dawn Foods Global as Sr. Director, Supply Chain & Procurement
Strategy & Center of Excellence and Sr. Director, Supply Chain
Transformation & Program Management. Earlier in his career, he
held roles with US Foods and Core-Mark International.
Congratulations, Casey!
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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ROC and FaceFirst Deliver Real-Time Intelligence for Safer Retail Spaces
Gatekeeper Systems has selected
ROC for its high
performance, NIST-ranked face recognition algorithms. The strategic
partnership unifies ROC’s trusted capabilities with
FaceFirst’s AI-powered video analytics platform, which helps
retailers prevent violence, theft, and fraud through a powerful
combination of artificial intelligence and human oversight.
Making
the World Smarter, Safer, and Stronger
ROC today announced a strategic partnership with Gatekeeper Systems to
enhance its FaceFirst software, the trusted solution for retail life
safety and loss prevention. The new initiative integrates ROC’s
top-ranked facial recognition technology into the FaceFirst AI-powered
platform to help retailers proactively identify threats, prevent violent
incidents, and reduce losses with unmatched speed and accuracy.
A Shared Commitment to Safety and Trust
FaceFirst’s video analytics platform was built from the ground up for
operational use in busy, high-traffic settings. Deployed across major
retailers and public venues, it pairs powerful AI with human
decision-making to ensure alerts are both fast and responsible. By
embedding ROC’s face recognition, ranked in independent NIST evaluations
as the #1 American algorithm in accuracy, FaceFirst enhances its core
offering with even greater speed, precision, and resilience in the
field.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Employees, Not Just Merch, Are At
Growing Risk
ORC Crews Increasingly Target Employees With Distraction & Intimidation
Tactics
By
the D&D Daily staff
While organized retail crime (ORC) has long focused on high-value
merchandise, an emerging pattern across several retail sectors suggests
that the behavior of ORC groups is shifting. Increasingly, offenders
are targeting store employees themselves — not just with physical
violence, but with calculated distraction and intimidation strategies
aimed at manipulating staff behavior and creating openings for theft.
Recent incident reports show a rise in coordinated “customer
pressure” scenarios in which groups deliberately overwhelm a department,
engage employees with repetitive or aggressive questions, or create
minor disturbances to divert attention away from high-risk zones. In
some cases, one individual initiates a loud argument or dispute while
others quickly remove merchandise behind the distraction.
The intent is not necessarily to harm employees but to influence
their responses. Offenders have learned that associates often step
back, disengage, or focus on de-escalation when confronted with
confrontational behavior. ORC groups are exploiting those predictable
patterns. Loss prevention leaders note that these tactics are becoming
more structured, with teams assigning designated distractors and
watchers in addition to boosters.
Another emerging trend involves intimidation without direct
confrontation. Some offenders shadow or closely follow employees
around the salesfloor, stand uncomfortably near them, or make vague
comments to unsettle associates. The goal is to deter staff from
monitoring certain areas or approaching suspects, effectively creating
temporary “no-go zones” within the store.
These behavioral strategies complicate traditional LP approaches that
rely on surveillance of merchandise movement or exit paths. When
employees themselves are the focus, the frontline response becomes more
nuanced. Training programs increasingly include modules on recognizing
ORC-linked behavioral manipulation and maintaining situational awareness
without escalating encounters.
Retailers are also evaluating staffing models, particularly
during evening hours, and reviewing policies that govern employee
engagement thresholds. As ORC tactics evolve, some organizations are
reconsidering how associates balance safety, observation, and service
during high-risk interactions.
The broader takeaway is clear: ORC groups are refining their
playbooks in ways that target human behavior as much as store assets.
As these methods grow more common, retailers will need to strengthen
both their procedural guardrails and employee readiness to ensure safety
while mitigating risk.
A Proactive Approach to Fighting ORC
Genesee County/Sheriff’s office, regional partners work together to
thwart organized retail theft
It takes hard work and plenty of collaboration, but the Genesee County
Sheriff’s Office is taking a bite out of organized retail theft rings
that cost New York State stores billions of dollars in annual revenue.
“Over the last year we’ve seen a dip in the
numbers (of retail theft incidents) as we’ve definitely
leveraged our relationships with the private sector – the stores and
their asset protection or loss prevention personnel,” Undersheriff Ryan
DeLong said on Friday afternoon.
DeLong and Criminal Investigator Erik Andre sat down with Video News
Service to talk about the agency’s push to crack down on organized
retail theft.
Much of the theft occurs from the big-box stores along Veterans Memorial
Drive, DeLong said, providing statistics that show the number of
calls responded to by the sheriff’s office from those stores has
decreased from 134 in 2023 to 124 in 2024 and 74 through November of
this year.
He said his office has “created an environment” where store asset
protection and/or loss prevention personnel are communicating with each
other and with law enforcement on a daily basis.
“If one loss prevention person sees something, they talk to the other
stores, which helps us (in attempting to locate the perpetrators),” he
said. “We have established a really good relationship with them
where they call us right away and Erik can speak to some instances where
we have notified stores that property is being stolen from them without
their knowledge.”
videonewsservice.net
Canada's Retail Crime Crackdown
Windsor police arrest 32 during 4-day city retail crime crackdown
Windsor police last year began a
full-on offensive against retail theft in response to a swelling number
of shoplifting cases.
Windsor police arrested 32 individuals and laid 33 charges during
a four-day retail crime crackdown initiative last week.
Officers with the Windsor Police Service’s problem-oriented policing
unit partnered with 15 local retailers, from Wednesday, Dec. 3, to
Saturday, Dec. 6, in a co-ordinated effort to prevent and deter
shoplifting and related offences.
“Retail theft has a significant impact on local businesses,
staff, and our community,” said Staff Sgt. Brian Caffarena. “This
initiative demonstrates our commitment to working closely with our
retail partners to deter crime and hold offenders accountable.”
Earlier this year, Windsor police closed nearly 530 cases and
arrested almost 200 suspects — including organized gang members and
dozens of repeat offenders — in a major citywide crackdown on
shoplifters.
windsorstar.com
Holiday Thefts Rising
How to protect yourself from theft during holiday shopping season
Holiday shoppers adapt to rising
theft threats
With
holiday shopping in full swing, many Americans are adjusting how they
shop to protect themselves amid a sharp increase in theft incidents.
The National Retail Federation reports shoplifting has risen 93%
since 2019, causing most shoppers to worry about theft and change
their habits.
With holiday thefts on the rise, crime and safety expert Darnell
Blackburn offers practical advice to help shoppers protect themselves
and their belongings.
clickondetroit.com
DC sees 27% drop in homicides, but data integrity questioned amid
federal probes
Hawaii launches new way you can view crime statistics
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Safety Metrics Not Doing Their Jobs?
Recalibrating EHS Risk in 2026
Nearly 1 in 5 EHS leaders say
current safety metrics have no relation to real risk, says new report
from What Works Institute.
Standard safety metrics are not doing their jobs. EHS leaders say
they do little to prevent serious, life-altering harm, according to
a recent report, Risk Recalibrated: 2026 Executive Leadership Report on
AI, SIF, and Human-Centric EHS, by the What Works Institute and Evotix.
SIF Prevention: Agreement on What Gets Measured
Serious injuries and fatalities (SIFs) definitions vary widely,
resulting in inconsistent classification, muddled data and confused
priorities. Most (80%) have SIF prevention efforts in place today,
yet they do so with different definitions, scopes and maturity levels.
Nearly 1 in 5 EHS leaders say current safety metrics have no relation
to real risk.
“Leaders agree on the destination—preventing life-altering harm—but
not yet on the common language or tools needed to get there,” said
Jonathan English, CEO, Evotix, in a statement. “This misalignment slows
progress at a time when safety leaders won’t be satisfied with
incremental change.”
ehstoday.com
The Revival of 'Just Walk Out'?
Is Amazon’s ‘Just Walk Out’ Cashierless Retail Solution Set For Wider
Third-Party Success?
Amazon’s “Just Walk Out” (JWO) cashierless retail solutions have had a
checkered history, with earlier closures of its Go stores — and the
shutdown of autonomous or cashierless shopping competitor Grabango last
October — an ominous sign for the tech, as Cashierless Industry
Insights reported.
However, according to a recent Retail Touchpoints interview of Amazon
Web Services’ business development lead Anthony Leggett conducted by the
publication’s Adam Blair, the JWO third-party deployment scene is set
for new heights after recent successes in test markets.
Noting that over 300 third-party JWO rollouts across the U.S.,
Canada, France, the U.K., and Australia had already been enacted —
spanning stadiums, hospitals, college campus stores, and warehouse
fulfillment centers — Leggett signaled that Amazon’s tech was ready to
move from its pilot phase toward a “potential scaled growth phase.”
“The momentum is definitely picking up; 150 of our more than 300
deployments were added [just] this year, and this growth allows us to
set up for a much bigger expansion in 2026 and beyond,” Leggett said.
retailwire.com
L.L.Bean details store expansion for 2026 — here’s where
Reporter’s notebook: New York City’s last department stores
Advance Auto Parts puts 83 properties on the market
Starbucks workers are still without a labor deal four years after their
first union win
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Cyber Budgets to Grow in 2026
Majority of global firms plan to boost cyber spending in 2026
A report by Marsh shows companies
are also focused on third-party risk mitigation.
Two-thirds of organizations across the globe are planning to increase
their investment in cyber risk prevention over the next 12 months,
according to a report released Tuesday by Marsh. More than a quarter of
organizations plan to boost their spending by more than 25%.
The top spending priorities include security technology and mitigation,
incident response and preparation, and hiring. Seven of every 10
organizations have experienced at least one material third-party
incident over the past 12 months, according to the report.
The report highlights how organizations worldwide plan to address the
growing challenges of maintaining the security of their customer data
and boosting operational resilience. Marsh’s conclusions are drawn
from a survey of more than 2,200 cybersecurity leaders in 20 countries
across eight regions.
Organizations in the U.K. were the most likely to increase
investments, with three-quarters of respondents saying they planned
to do so. A Marsh cyber leader cautioned it is tough to fully protect
against cyber risk, but added that cyber hygiene and governance changes
can help.
“Organizations need to create a framework to vet vendor security and
audit their vendors frequently,” said Payal Patel, a managing
director in Marsh’s Cyber Practice. “Other measures organizations can
take include adhering to a robust governance framework, negotiating
strong contractual protections, reviewing access control rights, and
off-boarding vendors when they are no longer utilized.”
The U.K. went through a historically difficult period of cyber risk this
year, with a wave of social engineering attacks targeting the retail
sector, followed by an attack against automaker Jaguar Land Rover,
which crippled production for more than a month. U.K. authorities
challenged corporate leaders to make cyber resilience a board-level
concern and focus on maintaining business continuity.
cybersecuritydive.com
Higher Budgets But Still No Safer?
CISOs are spending big and still losing ground
Security leaders are entering another budget cycle with more money to
work with, but many still feel no safer. A new benchmark study from Wiz
shows a widening gap between investment and impact. Budgets keep rising,
cloud programs keep expanding, and AI is reshaping both threats and
defenses. Still, CISOs say the fundamentals of risk reduction are
not improving fast enough.
Bigger budgets do not create confidence
Organizations continue to increase cybersecurity spending across
industries. Even with that growth, respondents say their programs
fall short of what the threat landscape now demands. The concern is
strongest among people closest to day to day work. Architects,
engineers, and security managers report that well funded programs still
struggle to keep up with new attack techniques, rapid cloud adoption,
and broader business needs.
Large enterprises share the same concern. Teams with larger budgets say
rising costs and added responsibilities make it difficult to show
progress.
Teams carry a heavy cloud workload
Cloud security now takes up a significant share of the security
team’s time. In many organizations, a large portion of staff focuses
on cloud issues each day, and some now have more than half the team
dedicated to cloud work.
This trend is expected to continue as cloud environments grow and as
risks tied to scale and distributed ownership become more pronounced.
These pressures are driving teams toward automation and away from
manual processes that cannot match development speeds.
Spending priorities shift toward cloud and data:
helpnetsecurity.com
Businesses Must Prioritize
Cybersecurity
Initial access brokers involved in more attacks, including on critical
infrastructure
A research firm also finds
nation-states aligning their cyberattacks more closely with geostrategic
goals.
The market for initial access brokers has blossomed over the past two
years, making it easier for advanced adversaries to outsource the
grunt work of intrusions and breach more targets, Check Point said
in a report published on Monday.
The surge in the IAB ecosystem comes as nation-states increasingly use
cyberspace to project power, according to the report. Check Point urged
policymakers and businesses to prioritize identity security, protect
software supply chains and harden operational technology.
cybersecuritydive.com
Invisible IT is becoming the next workplace priority
AI-driven threats are heading straight for the factory floor |
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Amazon vs. Online Holiday Fraud
EXCLUSIVE Q&A: Here’s how Amazon prevents online holiday fraud
Amazon is taking action in several key areas of its e-commerce business
to help ensure holiday shoppers don’t fall victim to cybercriminals.
Chain Store Age recently spoke with Amazon executives Scott Knapp, VP of
worldwide buyer risk prevention, Kebharu Smith, associate general
counsel and director of the Counterfeit Crimes Unit, and Claire
O’Donnell, VP of selling partner trust & store integrity, about specific
steps the online giant is following to guard against holiday fraud.
Knapp also looked ahead to some of the biggest e-commerce security
issues for 2026.
How does Amazon prevent impersonation scams
during the holidays?
Scott Knapp: When busy shopping activity surges, it’s
likely that attempts to commit impersonation scams will too. During the
holiday season and throughout the year, we work to
help educate consumers on how to avoid scams, ensure they know it’s
us, and take action against bad actors.
In 2024 alone, we initiated takedowns of more than 55,000 phishing
websites and 12,000 phone numbers being used as part of impersonation
schemes. We also partner with law enforcement across the globe to ensure
scammers are held accountable.
How are you cracking down on counterfeit
products?
Kebharu Smith: We have a zero-tolerance policy for
counterfeit or intellectual property-infringing products and proactively
combat fraud. This starts with a robust seller verification process and
listing restrictions, followed by additional proactive controls.
Amazon’s systems consistently monitor selling accounts to identify
anomalies or changes in account information, behaviors, and other risk
signals. We couple this with automated technology that continuously
scans billions of products, and attempted changes to products, daily in
our store, leveraging advanced machine learning and expert human
investigators to proactively identify risks, including the creation of
new listings and changes to existing listings. In 2024, Amazon's
proactive controls blocked more than 99% of suspected infringing
listings before a brand ever had to find and report them.
chainstoreage.com
Scaling Back Robotic Warehouses
Kroger to pay $350 million to automation partner as it scales back
robotic warehouses
The Kroger Co. is making a one-off cash payment to compensate U.K.-based
online grocer Ocado Group as it scales back a leading-edge automated
warehouse concept.
Kroger has agreed to pay $350 million cash to Ocado following the
grocery giant’s recent decision to rely less on a leading-edge automated
warehouse concept known as a customer fulfillment center (CFC).
Introduced in 2018 in partnership with U.K.-based online grocer Ocado
Group, the CFC model combines vertical integration, machine learning and
robotics with affordable and fast-delivery service for fresh food.
CFC facilities leverage proprietary technology solutions focused on
artificial intelligence (AI) and advanced robotics and automation to
create more seamless and efficient fulfillment, picking and delivery
capabilities for enhanced digital commerce.
chainstoreage.com
Survey: Consumers lean on AI for product research, online shopping help |
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Los Angeles, CA: Masked LA flash-mob robbery suspect boasts cameras
can’t catch ‘my face’ in 7-Eleven heist
A flash mob of armed teens brazenly invaded a Los Angeles 7-Eleven and
swiped anything they could get their hands on as one of the suspects
bragged that surveillance cameras couldn’t catch his face. The teens
arrived on their bicycles and stormed the downtown convenience store on
Saturday, breaking down the door and tossing food to others gathered in
the lot, according to wild footage. One of the suspects allegedly
pointed a gun at the clerk during the heist, police told Fox 11. When
one of the masked teens was told by a bystander it’s not worth it, he
was quick to yell “Bro, it’s worth it because it ain’t got my face on
it.” The clerk had to push the store panic button, but by the time
police arrived the mob had moved on. Instagram videos shared publicly
have become part of the investigation, so far no arrests have been made.
nypost.com
Jefferson County, CO: Deputies arrest Golden game store burglary
suspects who stole more than $10,000 in items
Two people were taken into custody after breaking into a game store in
Golden and stealing items worth thousands of dollars, according to the
Jefferson County Sheriff's Office. At 4:20 a.m. Monday, deputies with
the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office were called to the Atomic Games
store located at 1921 Youngfield St. for a burglary, the agency said in
a social media post. The business owner reportedly received an alert
from a store camera showing two people inside. The sheriff's office said
that, when deputies arrived at the store, they found that the door had
been "smashed." Shortly after that, the two suspects were seen walking
from behind the building carrying bags full of items, including gaming
cards, dice and miniature figurines, according to the agency's post.
9news.com
Glendale, AZ: Man accused of golf club thefts tried selling gear online
Glendale police say a man is facing multiple felonies after allegedly
stealing expensive golfing equipment in a string of thefts at two
sporting goods stores in October. He’s suspected in similar crimes
throughout the Valley. Authorities said Connor Joseph Burgess, 31, was
arrested on Nov. 25 on accusations of organized retail theft, tampering
with physical evidence and possession of a narcotic. According to court
paperwork, the investigation began when officers first called out to the
PGA Tour Superstore on Oct. 10. At the time, police learned that a man,
now identified as Burgess, walked up to the display area and took six
Ping brand drivers, worth about $620 a piece, while making “no effort to
pay” for the clubs, the document said. The store totaled the loss at
$3,719.94. During that investigation, Burgess’ description matched a
similar case linked to PGA Tour Superstores in Phoenix and Scottsdale,
prompting detectives to contact the chain’s loss prevention department
to review security camera footage. Glendale police shared part of the
surveillance video on social media. Investigators linked Burgess to the
crime scene and found he had an OfferUp page listing a golf club for
sale that was the same brand as the ones that had been stolen, police
said. Four days later, Glendale police were again called out to the same
store where officers said Burgess walked in with a woman and took six
more Ping drivers and one TaylorMade club, all together worth about
$4,050. On Oct. 27, Glendale police were called to a shoplifting call at
DICK’S House of Sport, near the Loop 101 and Maryland Avenue, where
police said Burgess stole another $4,200 worth of golfing equipment and
ran away. Glendale detectives estimated a total loss of $12,000 in
that city alone. Authorities said Burgess was on probation and had
prior arrests for assault, burglary, theft and drug possession.
azfamily.com
Laredo, TX: Man arrested at Walmart for theft, 3 outstanding warrants
Pittsburgh, PA: Update: Man charged with stealing $13K worth of trading
cards from New Kensington store
Enfield, CT: Shoplifting Crackdown In Enfield Leads To 5 Arrests
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Shootings & Deaths
Atlanta, GA: Bojangles manager accused of fatally shooting employee’s father in
parking lot
A manager at a Georgia fast food restaurant is charged with murder after he
allegedly shot and killed a fellow employee’s father in the restaurant parking
lot. Maurice Evans, a 25-year-old Bojangles manager, is accused of fatally
shooting 43-year-old Dominique Goodman in the restaurant’s parking lot in
Palmetto around 1:15 p.m. Sunday, according to an arrest warrant. The warrant
states Evans admitted to law enforcement at the scene that he killed Goodman.
Evans was charged with murder, aggravated assault and possession of a weapon in
the commission of a felony. Before the shooting, Palmetto Police say Goodman’s
daughter, who works at the Bojangles location, called him about a “disagreement
with the team manager.” Family members allege Evans was harassing Goodman’s
daughter. The two men got into an altercation in the restaurant parking lot,
according to police, during which Evans shot and fatally wounded Goodman.
wsfa.com
Toronto, Canada: 25-year-old man fatally gunned down in mall parking lot
Peel Regional Police say they broke open the rear window of a car on Monday
night to retrieve the male victim of a shooting in Brampton. The victim, now
identified as a 25-year-old man from Brampton, died at the scene. Police are
calling it targeted shooting. The shooting happened around 7 p.m. in the busy
parking lot of the Shoppers World mall — in the Hurontario St. and Bartley Bull
Pkwy. area — when shots were fired into a vehicle with a lone occupant. “When
officers arrived on the scene they located a male, non responsive, inside of the
vehicle,” Const. Mandeep Khatra told reporters on Monday night. “In order to
gain access to the vehicle, officers smashed the window and attempted to provide
life-saving measures to that victim, but unfortunately he was pronounced
deceased at the scene here.” Peel Regional Police have yet to provide a
description of any suspects or a suspect vehicle. “The suspect or the suspects
had already fled prior to police arrival,” Khatra told reporters.
torontosun.com
Walton County, GA: Update: Secret Service assisting investigation of CVS worker
killed walking in store
The partner of a CVS worker was shot and killed as she walked into work in
Loganville is searching for answers as the investigation continues. The Secret
Service are assisting Loganville police with the investigation into the Nov. 14
killing of Kimberly Whaley on Atlanta Highway. Police Chief M.D. Lowry said he
does not believe it was random. “He didn’t rob her. Nothing was taken from her,”
Lowry told Channel 2’s Tyisha Fernandes. Whaley’s spouse, who asked to remain
anonymous, expressed fear and uncertainty. “I can’t even sleep in our bed yet -
it’s awful,” he said. The shooting happened at a busy intersection, but despite
the presence of many drivers, no one has been charged yet. The victim’s spouse
believes the shooter may have meant to kill someone else, suggesting it could be
a case of mistaken identity. Lowry said the Secret Service has technology his
department doesn’t have, since they do not work many of these cases. One
challenge in the investigation is the lack of surveillance cameras at the CVS. A
person of interest was detained early in this investigation, but there was not
sufficient probable cause at that time to make a formal arrest, the police chief
said.
wsbtv.com
Prince George’s County, MD: Fatal night club shooting under investigation in PG
County
Kansas City, MO: Sunday C-Store shooting victim dies at the hospital
Oakland County, MI: Judge blasts DTE imposters who murdered jewelry store owner
Sumter, SC: Man gets 45 years for deadly convenience store shooting
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Waterbury, CT: About $10K in jewelry stolen from Waterbury Brass Mill Center
kiosk in Saturday burglary
A Brass Mill Center jewelry kiosk was targeted in a smash-and-grab on Saturday
night, city police said. Waterbury police Sgt. Joseph Morais said about $10,000
worth of jewelry was stolen in the incident, which took place around 8:30 p.m.
Saturday. Morais said two men entered the Banter Jewelry kiosk and smashed
display cases with a hammer before getting away with merchandise. Morais said
the men were masked and dressed in all black. Nobody was injured, according to
Morais, and an investigation into the smash-and-grab is ongoing.
ctpost.com
Memphis, TN: Man convicted in 12 armed robbery cases
A federal jury convicted a man charged in 12 armed robbery cases in Memphis.
Fredrick Buford, 29, was found guilty and faces a mandatory statutory minimum of
75 years in federal prison. He was charged with 11 counts of robbery, one count
of attempted robbery and 11 counts of use of a firearm during and in relation to
a crime of violence. Stores involved included (6) Dollar Generals, (3) Family
Dollar, (2) Mapco and an Exxon station.. Buford is set to be sentenced on March
24, 2026.
actionnews5.com
Dayton, OH: Man arrested after alleged kidnapping and armed robbery at Harrison
Twp. gas station
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•
C-Store – Atlanta, GA
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Bristol, CT
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Kent, WA –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Memphis, TN
– Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Evesham
Township, NJ – Burglary
•
Dollar – Ferrisburgh,
VT – Robbery
•
Gaming – Golden, CO –
Burglary
•
Hardware – Lakeville,
MA – Burglary
• Jewelry - Hialeah, FL – Burglary
• Jewelry - Waterbury, CT – Burglary
• Jewelry - Wilmington, DE - Robbery
• Jewelry - Modesto, CA - Robbery
• Jewelry - Wyomissing, PA – Robbery
• Jewelry - Allen, TX – Robbery
• Jewelry - Jacksonville, FL – Robbery
• Jewelry - Orangeburg, SC – Armed
Robbery
•
Restaurant – La
Grange, IL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Enfield,
CT – Robbery
•
Restaurant -
Covington, LA - Burglary
•
Tobacco – Phoenix, AZ
– Burglary
•
Vape – Memphis, TN –
Armed Robbery
•
Walmart – Laredo, TX –
Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 14 robberies
• 8 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
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Staffing 'Best in Class' Teams
Every one has a role to play in building an
industry.
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Manager Field Loss Prevention
Arizona (Remote)
The Field Loss Prevention Manager (FLPM) coordinates Loss Prevention and
Safety related programs intended to protect Staples assets and ensure a safe
environment for associates and customers within Staples US Retail locations.
FLPM’s support the Field and are relied on as a subject matter expert in
operations, audit, training and investigation...
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District Asset Protection Manager
Jacksonville, FL
As a District Asset Protection Manager, you will develop, teach, and
lead the implementation of the company’s asset protection, shortage control and
safety programs for all stores in your district. You will train, mentor, and
collaborate with store management and shortage control associates to ensure the
effective execution and proper implementation of company policies, while driving
improvements in inventory management and loss prevention...
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Director, Safety
San Francisco, CA
The Director of Safety is responsible for developing, implementing, and
overseeing comprehensive safety programs across all retail locations, corporate
offices, and some distribution operations. This leadership role ensures
compliance with federal, state, and local safety regulations while fostering a
culture of safety excellence that protects employees, customers, and company
assets...
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Heroes Are Overrated. Systems Are Underrated.
If success depends on a few superheroes
pulling impossible hours, your system is broken. Sustainable leadership
builds processes that make excellence normal — not miraculous. Celebrate
your stars, but build workflows where everyone can shine, even on a bad
day.
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