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 2/26/26

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What’s Happening at OpenEye's Booth at ISC West?

OpenEye will be at ISC West in Las Vegas from March 25-27

ISC West is the leading security and public safety event in the U.S., and one of the best ways to see OpenEye’s surveillance solutions up close. Use code ISCW26CIP335 for a complimentary Exhibit Hall pass until March 12, or register for a discounted pass of $100 from March 13-24.

See OpenEye's latest AI-powered search and alert features that will help automate operations and security for businesses. Stop by for exciting giveaways and more—there’s lots to be seen at booth #14039.

Learn more

 




 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


New Law Requires Retailers to Report Theft
Douglas County, Colorado adopts law requiring stores to report theft — but drops fines for failing to do so

‘This is the most prosperous county in the state … we don’t want us to become a target for organized crime

Douglas County commissioners passed a measure Tuesday that requires hundreds of retail stores in unincorporated parts of the county to file a report with law enforcement when thieves rip them off.

But unlike an initial version of the law that was made public in December, the county will levy no fines on retailers for failing to do so — instead leaving any decision about punishment to a local court.

The first version of the law called for fines of $50, and all the way up to $1,000, for businesses that failed to report a crime. That caused some unease in the business community that Douglas County was overreaching.

Commissioner Abe Laydon said during the business meeting Tuesday that the ordinance was not meant to punish retailers but to keep the community safe.

“This is the most prosperous county in the state of Colorado — we don’t want us to become a target for organized crime,” he said. “When we tolerate organized retail theft, we normalize lawlessness.”

The latest rendition of the ordinance increased the time — from 24 hours to 96 hours — that businesses will have to report a theft. It also allows a retailer to report a crime via an online form rather than have police called to the scene.

“We don’t feel it punishes retail,” he said. “The focus on retail crime is overall going to be a benefit to us.” denverpost.com


ORC Driving Up Prices
Home Depot, Target, Lowe’s, and Walmart shoppers all warned organized group ‘driving up costs for every consumer’

SHOPPERS who frequent popular chains have been warned of an organized group that’s driving up costs.

Price tags at Home Depot, Target, Lowe’s, and Walmart could all skyrocket thanks to the recently unearthed scheme, cops said. Authorities in North Carolina and South Carolina say they uncovered a “sophisticated retail theft ring” that targeted the popular chains.

They conducted a sting operation in Durham and uncovered a mountain of stolen merchandise after an eight-month investigation. The piles of items include expensive home goods, power tools, televisions, electronics, and other household products, authorities announced in a release.

Durham County Sheriff Clarence F. Birkhead said the issue has a serious ripple effect, as it can change prices for the law abiding consumer.

“Organized retail crime isn’t just a headache for store owners; it drives up costs for every consumer and often fuels further criminal activity in our neighborhoods,” he said in a statement. Birkhead said they collaborated with half a dozen agencies across the two states to finally make the arrests.

Organized retail crime has led to more than $125 billion in lost economic activity across the US and caused the loss of 685,000 jobs, according to the US Chamber of Commerce.

Experts say that fraudsters are able to avoid capture by cruising down highways and targeting different stores through the country. the-sun.com


Big Cities Continue to See Huge Drops in Homicides
Violent crime in San Diego dropped in 2025 in all but one major category
Violent crime in San Diego dropped in 2025 in all but one major category, according to new police data reviewed by Axios. Crime rates, particularly homicides, have been dropping locally and across major U.S. cities for years following a COVID-era crime wave.

Homicides in San Diego fell 19% from 2024 to 2025, per preliminary data analyzed by the Major Cities Chiefs Association, which examined statistics for 67 of the nation's biggest police departments.

Robberies decreased by 11% and aggravated assaults by 4%. But rapes increased 9%.

Nationally, cities report that homicides overall fell 19%, robberies dropped about 20%, aggravated assaults were down nearly 10% and rapes declined by about 9%.

San Francisco, Los Angeles and Sacramento police reported declines across the board. axios.com


'Skip-Scan' Self-Checkout Trick
Walmart customer banned from store after worker ‘spotted her actions with shopping cart at self checkout
The skip-scan trick is when a self-service checkout customer deliberately avoids ringing up every item in their basket before leaving the store with their stolen goods. The loss prevention agent is said to have been monitoring her actions on surveillance footage.

They claim Ross walked up to self checkout with her cart full of items, including shoes and a blanket, before leaving the store without paying for certain goods. She is reported to have told cops that was “not on purpose”.

It’s estimated that Walmart loses as much as $3billion every year due to thefts, according to Reuters. Theft tactics have even included lighting fires as a distraction.

Both Walmart and Target have resorted to locking some items in cabinets at their stores to combat shoplifting offenses. Walmart also appears to have started using a frozen self-checkout register tactic to stop rampant shoplifting. the-sun.com


Is US crime at a historic low?

New crime data out of Fayetteville shows overall crime is down, violent crime is up
 



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Walmart's AI Employee Training
According to Walmart, AI Doesn’t Work If People Don’t

Walmart’s mass training push suggests the bottleneck in corporate AI adoption may be worker readiness, not software

Instead of cutting jobs, the US's largest private employer announced plans to train its entire U.S. and Canadian workforce (about 1.6 million people) on how to use AI tools through a partnership with Google. Frontline store associates and corporate staff alike will get an eight-hour course covering the basics of AI and how it can help with everyday work.

Walmart’s leaders have been clear: they do not expect AI to mean layoffs. “It’s unfortunate when companies use it as a reason to replace workers instead of preparing them for what’s ahead,” said Walmart’s chief people officer Donna Morris. CFO John Furner said the company expects to have “roughly the same number of people we have today.”

The announcement quickly grabbed attention, but the deeper story isn’t about one company being “nice.” It’s about a problem most organizations are quietly discovering: having powerful tools means little if the people who are supposed to use them don’t know how.

The way Walmart is approaching AI makes sense once you think about what its workforce actually does.

This is not a tech company where much of the work happens on screens or in code. Walmart employees operate in physical stores, on loading docks, behind registers, and in customer service roles that involve human interaction. In these settings, purely replacing workers with software or machines isn’t practical.

Instead, AI is most useful when people use it as an assistant, not a replacement. A separate enterprise report from OpenAI found that many workers who use AI tools report saving time or improving the quality of their work, with some employees saying they save up to an hour a day.

This insight helps explain Walmart’s approach: the company isn’t promising robots will do the work of people. It is betting that teaching people to use AI will make each worker more effective, from scheduling shifts to managing stock levels to handling customer inquiries. aimmediahouse.com


New Retail Law Center Announced
CalRetailers Launches California Retail Law Center

California Retailers Association Launches California Retail Law Center to Address Retail’s Top Legal and Regulatory Challenges

The California Retailers Association (CRA) announced the official launch of the California Retail Law Center, a new legal and policy initiative designed to support retail legal teams navigating California’s complex and fast-evolving legal and regulatory environment.

The California Retail Law Center will be chaired by Danielle Hohos, Deputy General Counsel for Williams-Sonoma, Inc. and former Chair of the California Retailers Association Board of Directors. The Center brings together in-house retail counsel and trusted legal partners to collaborate on the most pressing litigation, regulatory, and compliance issues facing retailers doing business in California.

“California sets the pace for the nation when it comes to regulation, litigation, and public policy,” said Hohos. “The California Retail Law Center creates a dedicated forum for retail legal leaders to share best practices, track emerging legal trends, and engage directly in shaping policies that impact our industry.”

In addition to serving as a professional resource, the California Retail Law Center will play a key role in supporting CRA’s advocacy before the Governor, the State Legislature, and California regulatory agencies by providing legal insight, strategic guidance, and industry expertise. Members may also participate in amicus briefs, regulatory comment letters, and policy strategy discussions focused on reducing over-litigation and promoting balanced, workable regulations.

For more information about the California Retail Law Center or membership opportunities contact cra@calretailers.com.


600 Lowe's Cuts
Lowe’s cuts jobs, issues cautious guidance amid sector pressures
As the housing market remains pressured, Lowe’s is cutting jobs and issuing what executives themselves are describing as “cautious” financial guidance for the year ahead. The home retailer slashed 600 corporate and support roles earlier this month as part of its productivity initiatives.  retaildive.com

Consumer confidence inches up in February but worries over high costs persist

Placer.ai: Visits to Trader Joe's, Aldi outpacing grocery category

How Financial Wellness Improves Manufacturing Safety
 



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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.



 

 

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Security Operations Centers Facing Crisis
Why SOCs are moving toward autonomous security operations in 2026
The modern security operations center faces a crisis of scale that human effort cannot fix. With alert volumes exponentially growing and threat actors automating their attacks, organizations must pivot to autonomous SOC strategies. This shift to AI-driven defense is the only way to survive the operational realities of 2026.

The mathematical impossibility of legacy defense

We need to be honest about the state of the traditional SOC. It is failing. It is not failing because our analysts are lazy or unskilled. It is failing because the math no longer works.

In late 2025, the average mid-market enterprise security team processed over 4,000 alerts per day. Even a fully staffed team of seasoned tier-one analysts cannot investigate that volume with any degree of accuracy. The result is a dangerous game of probability where teams are forced to tune out “noisy” signals just to keep the queue manageable.

Attackers know this. They rely on it.

The operational blindness caused by this alert fatigue is not hypothetical. It is the direct cause of the National Public Data breach in 2024. In that incident, attackers did not use a zero-day exploit to gain access. They simply lived in the blind spots between disconnected security tools. They moved slowly. They harvested credentials. They exfiltrated nearly 3 billion records over several months.

The security tools likely saw pieces of this activity. The firewall saw data leaving. The endpoint protection saw a process spawn. But without a unified brain to connect those signals, the alerts were likely dismissed as low-priority noise. This is the cost of manual triage in an automated age. helpnetsecurity.com


Threat Groups Moving Faster Than Ever
Software vulnerabilities are being weaponized faster than ever

A report by VulnCheck shows threat groups are exploiting a small percentage of critical flaws well before security teams can mitigate.

Less than 1% of software vulnerabilities were exploited in the wild over the past year, but those flaws are being weaponized faster and on a larger scale than ever before, according to a report released Wednesday by VulnCheck.

Researchers tracked more than 14,400 exploits linked to about 10,500 unique CVEs in 2025, representing a 16.5% increase from the prior year. A large percentage of that increase was linked proof-of-concept code that was generated by AI.

Researchers cautioned that much of that AI-generated code was non-functional.

The results highlight the difficulties security teams have in prioritizing which are the most serious threats that need to be investigated. Threat groups are increasingly able to weaponize flaws before network defenders can apply security patches and take other mitigation measures.

Condon said the research shows that an overwhelming amount of AI-generated information is creating problems for defenders trying to judge what are legitimate threats and what can be ignored. cybersecuritydive.com


Malware Hidden on Google Sheets
China-linked hackers breach dozens of telecoms, government agencies

The campaign involves a clever technique: malware that hid in plain sight on Google Sheets.

Hackers working for the Chinese government broke into more than 50 telecommunications companies and government agencies in 42 countries, in a campaign that exploited cloud platforms’ legitimate features to hide the attackers’ tracks.

Google said the “prolific, elusive” China-linked hacker team, which it tracks as UNC2814, “has a long history of targeting international governments and global telecommunications organizations across Africa, Asia, and the Americas.”

The group breached 53 organizations worldwide as part of the latest campaign, a massive scope that Google said likely reflected “a decade of concentrated effort.”  cybersecuritydive.com


Fake Zoom meeting leads to silent install of surveillance software

CISA orders agencies to patch Cisco devices now under attack

 


 

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Retail AI Use Continues to Surge
Nordstrom’s AI Effort Is Focused on the Basics

The department store is focusing on procurement analytics and customer support before chasing bigger bets

At Manifest 2026 in Las Vegas, Nordstrom’s chief procurement officer described how artificial intelligence is being used inside the company’s sourcing systems.

“It spits out so much information that it would really take me hours to compile,” Karoline Dygas said during a panel discussion about procurement analytics. She was referring to the company’s spend intelligence platform.

Nordstrom uses procurement intelligence software from Suplari to analyze supplier spending and category data. According to Suplari’s published case study, the platform consolidates fragmented financial systems and provides cross-category visibility into supplier relationships. The case study describes the system delivering “actionable data and deep insights,” including identification of overly complex supplier relationships and single-sourcing risks.

Nordstrom has also piloted AI use in customer service. Reporting from industry outlets described a program that used AI to provide more accurate delivery time estimates. Delivery status was identified as one of the most common reasons customers contact support.

Heather Bissell, senior director of customer care, said at a retail conference, “The biggest thing for us is really about the human connection.” She also said, “If you contact Nordstrom, we don't have an IVR… That is very intentional because we are very much a personal connection service company.”

Conference coverage noted that frontline employees were involved in shaping how AI tools integrate into service workflows. The AI system handles routine delivery inquiries, while customer care agents address more complex issues.

Nordstrom has incorporated generative AI features into its mobile app. According to Marketing Dive, the refreshed app introduced “Style Swipes,” a recommendation tool that adapts based on user interaction. The update also included AI-powered trend reports that blend stylist input with generative AI to surface personalized insights.

Digital channels accounted for more than one-third of total sales in recent quarters, according to Nordstrom’s earnings releases. aimmediahouse.com


Amazon's Grim Prediction
Amazon’s CEO just made a scary prediction for 2026. Economists worry he’s right

Consumers are hoping life will get more affordable in 2026. Administration policies make that unlikely.

Last year was full of talk about tariffs. Are they coming up or going down? On which products and countries? How could businesses handle all the uncertainty? But while there was a lot of discussion of these fees, paid on imported goods and raw materials, there wasn’t actually that much evidence of their price impact at stores. According to Amazon CEO Andy Jassy, that’s about to change.

Tariffs are a tax on businesses, which means you’d expect that if tariffs go up, so do prices. But the effect of President Trump’s ever-changing but always aggressive tariff policies didn’t cause the huge price hikes and widespread economic damage many feared in 2025.

Economists offer several likely explanations. One is all the exceptions and carve-outs the government made after announcing the tariffs. What Trump threatens and what ends up being charged are often very different. fastcompany.com


E-commerce sales to hit $1.8 trillion by 2030 - thanks to the habits of one generation

Thousands of smoke alarms sold on Amazon recalled over potential fire hazard


 


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Los Angeles County, CA: Modesto company loses $1.2 million to cargo theft
Merchandise will be returned. The stolen merchandise seized during a Southern California investigation last week included $1.2 million in clothing owned by First Tactical, a Modesto-based company. Detectives with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department conducted the Feb. 18 search in an Ontario warehouse as a part of “cargo theft” investigation, according to an LASD news release. The operation seized 22 pallets owned by First Tactical, which sells clothing and tactical gear for first responders. Also recovered were 21 pallets of Mattel/Fisher Price toys valued at $250,000 and nine pallets of Amazon freight valued at $100,000. The Sheriff’s Department has not explained how the Modesto company’s merchandise ended up in the warehouse in Ontario. As of Wednesday, there were no arrests. “We are still investigating and working leads to see if it leads us to other property,” said Detective Jason Smith of the Major Crimes Bureau . Smith said the unit was investigating another case when it came across the stolen merchandise . He said the department is working to return the $1.5 million in merchandise to the owners modbee.com


Palm Beach County, FL: Cops Bust Pompano Beach Man In Lake Park Target Card Heist Spree
Deputies say a Pompano Beach man turned big-box store trading cards into his own side hustle, swiping boxes from a Target in Lake Park and flipping them online as part of a broader retail theft scheme that stretched across Florida. Palm Beach County detectives say they zeroed in on 33-year-old Keith Ryan Wallis of Pompano Beach and arrested him without incident on Feb. 23, 2026, in Broward County. According to the Palm Beach County Sheriff's Office, investigators "adopted the case as an organized retail theft investigation" and allege Wallis sold the stolen trading cards using his personal eBay account. An arrest warrant charges Wallis with two counts of organized retail theft, three counts of dealing in stolen property and one count of money laundering, the sheriff's office said.  hoodline.com


Dallas, TX: Suspect arrested after getting stuck in Oak Cliff optical store he'd previously robbed
A Dallas man has been arrested after getting stuck inside an optical store he was attempting to rob for the third time this year. Gabriel Ybarra was arrested Tuesday night after breaking into Today's Vision Oak Cliff, an optical store that sells high-end frames. Ybarra had entered through the roof of the building, which set off the building's alarms. When he attempted to leave through the roof where he entered, he became stuck inside. Dallas police arrested Ybarra and charged him with burglary of a building. On Jan. 20, Ybarra broke the first layer of a double-paned window before leaving on his bicycle. On Jan. 31, during the Texas winter storm, Ybarra returned and broke the second layer of the window and stole $15,000 worth of frames before leaving. Police documents show that Ybarra has a history of arrests. Since 2004, he has been arrested over 20 times by multiple police departments on charges of probation violation, theft, family violence and more fox4news.com


Alameda County, CA: Livermore ID theft suspect went on shopping spree at 14 stores
A 46-year-old Livermore man who went on a shopping spree at more than a dozen stores throughout February told investigators that he charged it all on a found credit card, according to Livermore police. The victim told police that there were several unauthorized charges made at 14 different Livermore stores between the timeframe of Feb. 14-22. The total amount of charges is not yet known, and police did not disclose which stores the purchases were made. Police said they soon identified the suspect as Jefferson Tolentino and recovered the property. Tolentino allegedly admitted to police that he used the credit card without permission. He faces multiple charges, including identity theft and theft by access card.  kron4.com
 



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Shootings & Deaths


Woodbridge, VA: Police ID man shot, killed in parking lot of Potomac Mills mall
Authorities have identified the man shot and killed Tuesday night in the parking lot of Potomac Mills mall Prince William County police say 34 year old Baffour Asare Gundona of Alexandria was shot in the upper body during an altercation with another man inside a parked vehicle in the 2700 block of Potomac Mills Circle. Gundona got out of the car and collapsed. He was taken to a nearby hospital, where he later died. Investigators say the suspect drove off after the shooting, which police do not believe was random. fox5dc.com


Fort Washington, MD: Man found shot dead at Ft. Washington shopping center
Police in Prince George's County are searching for answers after a man was found shot in a Fort Washington shopping center early Wednesday morning. Officers were first called to the Hunters Mill Center in the 9500 block of Livingston Road around 2:35 a.m. Once on scene, police found a man lying on the ground, shot. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Police have since identified the man killed as 31-year-old Tyrone Gantt of Washington D.C. Homicide detectives were called to investigate.   wusa9.com


Tulsa, OK: Man taken to hospital following strip mall shootout in Tulsa
Tulsa Police said a man was taken to the hospital following a shooting outside a strip mall near 63rd and Peoria on Tuesday evening. At around 6 p.m., officers responded to the shooting call and found a victim with a wound on his leg from a round that skipped off the ground. The victim told police that he was sleeping in the parking lot when he woke up to several gunshots and was hit in the leg. Several witnesses reported hearing gunshots in the area and that the victim just happened to be in between two separate parties, shooting back and forth at each other. Nearby businesses also reported damage from stray bullets, according to TPD. The victim was taken to the hospital to be treated for non-life-threatening injuries.  fox23.com


Miami, FL: Chain-Snatch Chaos At Miami Design District Supreme Store
Surveillance video shows an Atlanta-based rapper getting shot inside the Supreme store in Miami's Design District after an argument spiraled into violence. The man was hit in the stomach while chasing a suspect accused of ripping a gold chain from his neck, then taken to a local hospital. Police say three people have been arrested in connection with the incident, but the person who pulled the trigger is still on the run. Online posts have identified the victim as rapper Lil Deko, though Miami police have not publicly confirmed his identity.  hoodline.com


Maplewood, MN: Suspected shooter in Maplewood Mall shooting arrested
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Duluth, MN: Man arrested after alleged armed robbery at Duluth Ace Hardware
A 22-year-old man was arrested Wednesday morning after allegedly shoplifting from a business, brandishing a knife at employees, and fleeing on a bicycle. A short time later, officers located the suspect in the 300 block of East First Street and took him into custody. Authorities said he was uncooperative during the arrest. Officers recovered a knife and fentanyl from his person.  northernnewsnow.com


Paris, TX: Viral video shows Whataburger staff fending off attacker with trash can, fry basket
What-a-whoopin! A viral video captured the moment Whataburger employees used kitchen equipment to fend off an attacker behind a restaurant counter in Paris, Texas. Witness Billy Jones was eating at the Whataburger on North Main Street when he said a man dressed in all black entered and began attacking a worker. According to Jones, another employee struck the man on the head with a wire fry basket, knocking him to the ground. Jones began recording as a manager used a trash can to repeatedly strike the suspect. In the video, other employees can be heard shouting for someone to press the panic button. The suspect eventually fled the building as workers called 911.  fox4news.com


Jonesboro, AR: Woman accused of stealing, assaulting store employee, and fleeing in a stolen vehicle
Police arrested a 32-year-old Jonesboro woman after she reportedly stomped a retail employee’s toes, stole merchandise from the store, and fled in a stolen vehicle, according to a probable-cause affidavit. On Feb. 17, a retail employee reported that a woman, later identified as Tyler, attempted to leave a store with merchandise when the employee told her to give back the items, according to the affidavit. The employee said she told Tyler she would call the police if she refused to give back the items. “The victim said that the woman then stomped her toes and shoved her out of the way and exited the store with approximately $120 worth of merchandise without paying,” the affidavit said. The victim said she followed Tyler and took pictures of Tyler and the car, the affidavit said.  kait8.com


St Cloud, MN: Robbery Suspect Brandishes Knife During Theft at NAPA Store

New York, NY: Final Fugitive In Maywood Armed Jewelry Store Robbery Captured In NYC After 22-Month Hunt

Hope, AR: DNA From Lost Vape Helps Crack Dollar General Break-In Case

Ventura County, CA: 'Sophisticated' jewelry store burglary crew sentenced to 4 years in $1M Simi Valley heist


 


 

Auto – St Cloud, MN – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Charlotte, NC – Burglary
C-Store – Tulare County, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Houston, TX – Armed Robbery
Collectables – Las Vegas, NV – Burglary
Dollar – Hope, AR – Burglary
Dollar – Bakersfield, CA – Burglary
Eyewear – Dallas, TX - Burglary
Gun – Nashville, TN – Burglary
Hardware – Duluth, MN- Armed Robbery
Jewelry – Colorado Springs, CO – Burglary
Jewelry – Miami, FL – Armed Robbery / Vict wounded
Restaurant – Paris, TX – Robbery
Tobacco – Henry County, VA - Armed Robbery
Vape – Kansas City, MO – Burglary       

 

Daily Totals:
• 7 robberies
• 8 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed



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Featured Job Spotlights

 

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




 


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

 



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If It Creates Work For Stores, It Better Remove
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Store teams already feel stretched. If your tool adds steps, alerts, logins, or processes, you need to show what it removes - clearly and honestly. The best technology feels like help, not homework.


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