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Why Retailers Should Brace for
Increased Retail Theft in 2026

As 2025 draws to a close, retailers are preparing for another year of economic
uncertainty. Inflation has cooled from historic highs, but prices remain
elevated across essential categories — and many consumers continue to feel real
pressure at the checkout. New consumer behavior data suggests a troubling
reality for retailers: when wallets tighten, theft tends to rise.
Learn more
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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Local Theft Crackdowns Aren't Enough
San Diego DA testifies in Congress, urges federal help to combat
organized retail theft rings
San Diego DA Summer Stephan told
Congress that local prosecutors can't stop theft rings alone, as stolen
goods cross state lines and disappear overseas.
District Attorney Summer Stephan returned to Capitol Hill on Wednesday,
testifying before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime and Federal
Government Surveillance about the growing threat of organized retail
theft and why local law enforcement needs federal coordination to stop
it.
Stephan, who chairs the National District Attorneys Association,
appeared for the second time this year to support the bipartisan
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act. The legislation would create a
national coordination center and improve data-sharing between local,
state and federal agencies to track theft rings that cross state lines.
"Criminals travel across county lines and state lines and international
lines," Stephan told lawmakers. "So the only way that you can defeat
a big monster like that is to come together and leverage our
individual power set to take care of our communities."
Since forming an Organized Retail Theft Task Force several years
ago, the San Diego County District Attorney's Office has prosecuted 336
defendants tied to organized retail crime, documenting more than $3.2
million in losses. Major retailers, including Target, Ulta Beauty, Home
Depot and jewelry stores have been hit repeatedly.
But Stephan told Congress that local task forces can make arrests
without being able to recover stolen goods or reach the kingpins running
the operations. "By having a database, you will learn information,
connect the dots and be able to go after organized crime," Stephan said.
"There's really no other way to do it."
Stephan emphasized that federal involvement would be a partnership,
not a replacement, for local law enforcement. The proposed law would
create data-sharing tools to connect cases across jurisdictions before
evidence vanishes.
cbs8.com
Lawmakers Feeling the Heat
Trucking, retail pressure lawmakers to pass anti-theft bill
Federal oversight key to stopping
cargo theft originating overseas, lawmakers told
Without
federal oversight and the ability to coordinate and share information,
cargo theft – particularly high-tech “strategic theft” directed by
organizations operating outside the U.S. – will continue to surge,
trucking and retail officials told lawmakers on Wednesday.
“This goes way beyond the hit-and-run type of straight theft that
we’ve seen for over a hundred years with trucks,” American Trucking
Associations President and CEO Chris Spear told House Judiciary
committee lawmakers.
“This is a very complex, digitally-driven renaissance. These groups are
operating out of Eastern Europe, Russia, South Africa, China – places
where if you have a laptop, you can go into a bill of lading and
redirect freight as it’s in motion. That freight’s long gone before
the company figures out that it was taken.”
Strategic theft, Spear said, has risen 1,500% since the first quarter
of 2021, with the average value per theft over $200,000.
Solving the problem, he told the committee, will require a “federal
fabric” that closes a current law enforcement gap that currently
undercuts the ability to understand where threats are coming from and
how to prevent them.
It’s a key piece of the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA),
bipartisan, bicameral legislation that has a combined 230 cosponsors
between House and Senate companion bills.
freightwaves.com
Crime & Safety Crackdown Ahead of
Super Bowl
Super Bowl LX: Santa Clara to restrict street vendors, illegal
merchandise sales in ‘clean zone’ around Levi’s Stadium
The zone will be activated from 8
a.m. on Feb. 1 through 10 p.m. on Feb. 10 at 10 p.m.
In the week leading up to Super Bowl LX and several days after, Santa
Clara will restrict certain activities in the area surrounding Levi’s
Stadium in an effort to protect public safety in case of a disaster.
The Santa Clara City Council recently approved the special event
zone, which the NFL requires as part of the city’s hosting agreement.
The map mirrors the one enacted the last time Santa Clara hosted the
Super Bowl in 2016, with the area bounded by State Route 237 to the
north, Calabazas Creek to the west, Highway 101 and Montague Expressway
to the south and the Guadalupe River to the east.
Also known as a “clean zone,” the restricted area aims to manage
congestion, keep sidewalks clear of street vendors and ensure first
responders have easy access to the stadium and surrounding streets.
Santa Clara officials first unveiled the zone last month, but the mayor
and much of the council felt the restrictions were too narrow and would
have unintended consequences.
The zone will be activated at 8 a.m. on Feb. 1 and run through 10 p.m.
on Feb. 10. During that time the following will be prohibited:
outdoor food or beverage sales except those within a businesses’ normal
operations, outdoor merchandise sales and mobile vending or advertising.
Sidewalk vending permits will also be paused, temporary structures will
need permits in order to be erected on non-residential properties and
promotional giveaways will be limited except on private property by
businesses operating in the area.
The city is also warning individuals without a ticket to the Big Game
to stay away.
mercurynews.com
Progress in the Global War on Retail
Crime
Retail crime falls in ‘important milestone’
The “significant problem” of retail
crime in New Zealand is reducing, according to research from the global
retail crime intelligence company,
Auror.
Between January and October 2025, Auror said
the use of weapons fell by 12 per cent, violent events dropped by 6 per
cent, and threatening events for retailers were down by 5 per cent.
The figures juxtapose the trends in Australia, where the use of weapons
rose by 12 per cent, violence by 17 per cent, and threatening behaviour
by 20 per cent.
“While both violent and non-violent crime targeting retailers remains a
significant problem, we are now seeing retailers record fewer
incidents involving weapons, violence and threats of violence,”
Auror co-founder and CEO, Phil Thomson, said.
“This is an important milestone in the work being done to get on top of
this issue as a country, and shows New Zealand is leading the way.”
Auror’s findings also show that the top 10 per cent of offenders
cause over 60 per cent of all retail crime.
“There is still much more to be done – violence in retail is still a
huge challenge and is impacting frontline workers,” Thomson added.
insideretail.co.nz
Riding along with LASD's Retail Theft Task force
With holiday shopping in full swing, the Los
Angeles County Sheriff's Department has stepped up efforts to curb
retail theft by partnering directly with stores to catch thieves in the
act. CBS Los Angeles rode along with deputies on Tuesday as their Retail
Theft Task force conducted an operation, which law enforcement believes
is a more efficient way to catch criminals.
Police 'Expanding Efforts' To Combat Organized Retail Crime In Arlington
Heights
California governor’s new data dashboard tracks declining crime rates
U.S. D.C. Attorney sounds off on DC crime data manipulation controversy
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17% of Holiday Purchases Will Be
Returned?
Total holiday returns to reach $160B
Holiday return rates have
dramatically risen since the pre-pandemic area.
Close to one-in-five (17%) holiday purchases will be returned,
and total returns for purchases made during the 2025 holiday season are
expected to amount to approximately $160 billion. New analysis emailed
to Chain Store Age from business-to-business resale platform B-Stock
also indicates there will be a slightly higher return rate of 19% for
online holiday purchases, totaling roughly $50 to $60 billion dollars.
B-Stock data further reveals that holiday return rates have more than
doubled since 2019, which was the last holiday season before the
outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic. Other findings include that the
return percentage for online holiday apparel purchases is closer to 30%,
and that processing a return can cost a retailer around 30% of the
item’s original price, or higher for low-cost products.
In addition, about seven-in-10 (71%) consumers say they are less
likely to shop with a retailer again after a poor returns experience.
Recent
Adobe Analytics data is more bullish on holiday returns. Adobe found
that from Nov. 1 to Dec. 12), returns were down 2.5% compared to
the comparable period in 2024.
chainstoreage.com
Stores Cashing In On Last Minute
Shopping
ICSC: Shoppers to flock to physical stores in final days before
Christmas
Nearly nine in 10 consumers plan to partake in last minute holiday
shopping.
Nearly all (82%) of consumers (approximately 238 million U.S. adults)
were planning to shop in the final days before Dec. 25, according to
a new report from ICSC. On Super Saturday (the last Saturday before
Christmas) alone, 76% of adults (203 million people) plan to shop,
up 5 percentage points from 2024 and 12 percentage points from 2023.
In-store shopping will remain key for last-minute shoppers, with
88% planning to spend in physical stores. Shopping centers will also be
an important destination, with nearly eight-in-10 (79%) shoppers
planning to visit a retail property, led by Gen Z (89%) and millennials
(86%). ICSC says that nearly six-in-10 dollars spent between now and
Dec. 25 will involve a store visit, including click-and-collect
purchases.
Nearly all (91%) shoppers said that higher prices will impact their
last-minute holiday purchases, which is the same figure as 2024. Of
these shoppers, the final holiday shopping push will see consumers more
likely to stick to a strict budget (41%), buy fewer items (39%), and
comparison shop online for the best deals (38%).
chainstoreage.com
Brighter Days Ahead for Workplace
Safety?
Let’s Make Workplace Safer by Moving Forward, not by Looking Back
It’s human nature to reflect fondly
over what once was. But sometimes, as with workplace safety, the golden
era is still to come. Let’s keep striving and making progress.
Some things change, and some stay the same. But as safety
professionals—and as a society—we should not fool ourselves by thinking
the past is always better. Much of the time, we stand on the
shoulder of previous generations’ accomplishments. That is the idea that
helped build America, after all.
With that in mind, let's not spend more time debating, or limiting, the
scope of occupational safety and health. Let’s not treat workers as
expendable labor rather than as complete people who need psychological
safety and be their authentic selves to perform their best. Let’s
stop focusing on historical data.
Instead, let's focus on how to intervene even before a near-miss
incident. Let’s allow our desire to leave our children and
grandchildren a better world guide today's efforts and decision-making.
ehstoday.com
Run retail run
Over 54,000 runners recently participated in
the Chicago Marathon, with some 1.7 million spectators lining the
streets. They came to race — and to shop.
Numerator: Home Depot, Lowe's capture nearly half of home improvement
spending
To see where Macy’s is going, head to Chicago
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Strengthen Retail Security and Enhance Workplace Safety
with Off-Duty Law Enforcement
Discover how off-duty law
enforcement enhances safety and
deters crime while protecting employees and assets.
Retailers are under more pressure than ever to prevent theft, ensure
employee safety and maintain business continuity across stores. Criminal
activities are on the rise, and they can severely disrupt operations,
leading to financial losses and a tarnished reputation. Workplace
security not only safeguards assets and sensitive information but also
protects employees and visitors, fostering a safe and productive
environment.
Hiring
off-duty law enforcement is a proven way to level up your retail
security strategy. Off-duty personnel are uniquely positioned to deter
criminal activities, respond swiftly in emergencies and provide an added
layer of protection. By integrating off-duty law enforcement into your
security strategy, you can create a safer, more secure workplace
environment.
Protos Security's workplace security blog explores ways that
off-duty law enforcement can benefit retailers and increase workplace
safety by:
-
Creating Safer Store
Environments: Law enforcement provides a strong visual deterrent and
offers peace of mind to both employees and shoppers.
-
Deterring Theft and
Workplace Threats: Regular patrols, surveillance and expert situational
awareness reduce the risk of crime before it starts.
-
Responding Swiftly to
Emergencies: Off-duty law enforcement react quickly to high-stress
situations, minimizing harm and restoring order with calm precision.
When you need trained law enforcement,
Protos Security offers second- to-none coverage through the nation’s
largest off-duty law enforcement network. With 60,000 off-duty personnel
and more than 1,400 agencies, we provide expertise when and where you
need it.
Want to reduce shrink, strengthen operations and keep your workplace
secure?
Learn More Here
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Retail’s Reality Check:
Closing the Cyber Resilience Gap
Cyber pressure on retailers isn’t easing; it’s evolving. Threat
actors have shifted away from direct attacks and are placing more
emphasis on exploiting partner ecosystems, digital platforms, and
customer-facing interfaces. In most cases, that means weaponising
supply-chain vulnerabilities, which, according to independent data in
our Retail Whitepaper, are the weakest link for most UK retailers.
After a string of high-profile attacks, the sector should be
questioning its cyber security posture. Instead, our data shows that
while confidence levels across the National Cyber Security Centre’s 10
Steps to Cyber Security are high, the real-world experiences of retail
sector IT leaders tell a different story. It’s a prompt to shift
perspective and ask a different question: not “Are we confident?” but
“Are we recoverable?”
Understanding the resilience gap
According to our research, 80% of retail IT leaders are confident that
their risk, identity and access, asset, and incident management controls
could prevent a cyber-attack. Look deeper, however, and cracks begin to
show. For example, 86% think their organisation is more at risk than
it was a year ago – and a similar number feel the same about the
sector in general. Can confidence really be that high under those
conditions?
Respondents also told us that supply chain disruption is constant
across all common forms of cyber-attack, affecting operations, business
continuity, and partner relationships. Yet this is the area where
survey respondents had the least confidence in their ability to prevent
an incident. Again, can reported confidence really hold up against that
reality?
Recovery times further underline the gap between perceived confidence
and actual resilience. Only 13% of retailers fully recover within six
days. Fewer than a third return to normal within three weeks. More than
a third take one to six months, and close to 20% take seven to twelve
months. If confidence were based on lived experience, these figures
would prompt urgent re-evaluation. Instead, confidence stays high while
recovery stays slow. Retailers need a reality check – and a plan.
cybersecurity-insiders.com
Attacks & Cybersecurity Spending Both
Rise
KPMG: Cybersecurity spending rises as attacks increase
Security organizations are almost universally boosting their
cybersecurity budgets, and with good reason.
An overwhelming 99% of surveyed C-suite and senior-level security
executives plan to increase their cybersecurity budgets over the
next two to three years, and 98% have increased their cybersecurity
spending in the past 12 months.
Results of the 2025
KPMG Cybersecurity Survey, which polled more than 300 security
executives, also showed 83% of respondents reported a rise in
cyberattacks. These incidents included a range of security events, such
phishing and ransomware as well as more advanced artificial
intelligence-based social engineering attacks.
With 99% of respondents planning to increase cybersecurity budgets in
the next few years, more than half (54%) are planning for increases
of 6% to 10%, even as 52% cite competing priorities for security budget
allocation such as data security and privacy, identity and access
management, and cloud security.
AI
While only 38% of respondents cited AI-powered attacks as a major
challenge in the next two to three years, 70% are already dedicating
more than 10% of their budgets to AI-related cybersecurity initiatives,
and 58% dedicate more than 15%.
Respondents also said that the areas where AI will have the greatest
cybersecurity impact are proactively identifying and stopping threats
with fraud prevention (57%), predictive analytics (56%), and enhanced
detection (53%).
HR
More than half (53%) of respondents cite a lack of qualified
candidates as a high-impact cybersecurity challenge. Responses to
this situation include increasing compensation (49%), boosting internal
training (49%), and relying more on external partners (25%) including
managed security service providers to fill critical talent gaps.
chainstoreage.com
Verizon Cybersecurity Tips
Six holiday cybersecurity tips for travelling with families
There’s nothing quite like traveling with kids during the holidays.
You’ve got gifts shoved between socks, snacks stashed in every pocket,
someone crying about forgetting a stuffed animal and TSA questioning
whether substances like Play-Doh counts as a liquid. For the record: It
does.
By the time you get to the gate, the last thing on your mind is digital
safety. But traveling with kids and devices is when families are most
vulnerable online.
I know better than to tell you to embrace holiday travel without
screens: A few simple steps can keep your family’s data, devices and
sanity safe while you make those holiday memories. The six topics below
are my must-dos for any family vacation travel.
1. Take five minutes to do a little prep for
digital safety for kids.
2. Skip the public Wi-Fi.
3. Take at-home screen boundaries with you.
4. Set up a secure family chat to maintain cybersecurity during the
holidays.
5. Prepare with these holiday cybersecurity tips in case of digital
emergencies.
verizon.com
China-linked hackers exploit insecure setting in Cisco security products
Surge of credential-based hacking targets Palo Alto Networks
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Counterfeit Christmas:
PCPC sounds alarm on fake cosmetics flooding e-commerce
Consumers are more exposed to counterfeit cosmetics and the harm they
pose to public health during the festive season when online shopping
surges, according to the Personal Care Products Council (PCPC).
Fake cosmetics may contain harmful ingredients since they are not
subjected to proper cosmetics testing. Consumers buying counterfeit
beauty products, believing they are the real deal, can undermine their
confidence in the cosmetics industry.
According to the PCPC, cosmetics are among the top categories of fake
goods seized by US Customs and other law enforcement agencies. The
council cites data indicating that the US beauty industry loses
approximately US$5.4 billion annually to counterfeits, contributing
to a global fakes market worth over US$1 trillion.
“Cyber criminals are pushing larger counterfeit shipments in the
lead-up to the holiday demand. They infiltrate social and paid media
channels by running fake ads and storefronts that offer enticing deals,”
Paul DelPonte, executive director at the National Crime Prevention
Council (NCPC), tells Personal Care Insights.
“These bad actors treat the holiday season like a giant market surge,
scaling production and speed, and lean into modern shopping habits to
take advantage of today’s fragmented e-commerce landscape.”
Ahead of the festive season, the PCPC has launched the Buy No Lie
campaign to help educate consumers about the dangers of counterfeit
cosmetics. The initiative also features a guide on how to
distinguish genuine cosmetics from fakes when shopping online.
personalcareinsights.com
Fast Delivery Trend Continues
Ahold Delhaize to close distribution hubs as fast delivery trend grows
Ahold Delhaize USA is altering its fulfillment strategy for its
Giant Food and Giant Company banners.
The U.S. subsidiary of Dutch supermarket conglomerate Ahold Delhaize is
closing six centralized fulfillment locations for Giant Food and The
Giant Company by the end of the first quarter of 2026. They include
a centralized Giant Food e-commerce fulfillment center in Manassas, Va.;
as well as five Giant Company facilities in Philadelphia, Willow Grove,
Coopersburg, North Coventry and Lancaster, Penn.
According to Ahold Delhaize USA, it decided to close these facilities
after considering customer trends and preferences for home delivery
that increasingly include fast delivery and wider assortment and
delivery availability.
chainstoreage.com
Amazon Business adds new benefits to Prime membership program
Amazon bans driver accused of stealing California family’s cat |
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San Francisco, CA: Thieves who stole $52K in alcohol from Bay Area
Safeways arrested
A “prolific” team of thieves who stole more than $52,000 in merchandise
from stores in the Bay Area were arrested following a months-long
investigation, the San Francisco Police Department announced Thursday.
The suspects allegedly stole bottles of alcohol during dozens of
organized thefts at Safeway stores in San Francisco and Oakland. The
thefts also caused $6,000 in damages to the businesses. Six suspects
were arrested between Oct. 25 and Dec. 5. Police also seized multiple
illegal guns in the case.
kron4.com
Gurnee, IL: Officers chase down suspect accused of burglarizing Vape
store in Gurnee, stealing almost $20K worth of merchandise
Officers chase down suspect accused of burglarizing business in Gurnee,
stealing almost $20K worth of merchandise. Ranshawn Q. Pitts, 33, of
Zion, is accused of forcing entry to Cloud9 Smoke and Vape, located at
3567 Grand Avenue in Gurnee, and burglarizing the store of over $18,000
in merchandise Tuesday morning.
lakemchenryscanner.com
Pittsburgh, PA: Former medical marijuana store employee charged with
stealing nearly $20,000 of product in McKeesport
A former employee of Trulieve Medical Marijuana in McKeesport was
arrested and admitted to stealing nearly 20 pounds of medical marijuana,
mushrooms, and other products from the store. According to the criminal
complaint provided to KDKA-TV, Dajahun Massie is now facing charges of
theft by unlawful taking, theft by deception, possession with intent to
deliver, trespassing, and burglary. In late October, Stephen O'Neil, the
supervisor at the Trulieve store in McKeesport, filed a theft report
with the McKeesport police, as he had noticed that a lot of product had
gone missing.
cbsnews.com
Paramus, NJ: Organized retail theft operation exposed at Garden State
Plaza
On Dec. 15, just before 2 p.m., officers from the Paramus Police
Department noticed a white 2024 Nissan Rogue with South Carolina
registration at the Westfield Garden State Plaza, containing two women
who made multiple trips between the car and the mall, according to Chief
of Police Robert M. Guidetti. Police discovered that the women, later
identified as Jenai D. Crawford, 25, of Yonkers, and Shanique M.
Roberts, 30, of Brooklyn, were allegedly involved in an organized retail
theft operation across multiple stores. The duo is accused of
stealing $9,144 worth of clothing from Lululemon, Alo Yoga, and Aritzia.
When the officers stopped the women, they found burglary tools often
used to unlock anti-shoplifting devices, along with several bags,
including foil-lined booster bags filled with stolen clothes, Guidetti
said.
wobm.com
Paramus, NJ: Four women nabbed in NJ mall thefts totaling more than $11K
in luxury clothing
Two other women, Quenisha N. Smith, 38, of the Bronx, and Tieneshia
Myers, 39, of Englewood, were seen stealing multiple coats from the
Aritzia store, which was hit in the first shoplifting attempt, then
running out of the store, Guidetti said. An officer saw the two women in
the parking lot putting the shopping bags into a black Mercedes-Benz
before re-entering the mall, Guidetti said. Guidetti said two Paramus
police officers approached the women as they returned to their car and
attempted to load more merchandise. Stolen clothing from multiple
retailers, including UGG, Alo Yoga, Zara, Nordstrom, Timberland, Aritzia,
Express, and North Face, totaling $2,190, was recovered.
wobm.com
Sparks, NV: Sparks stores crack down on theft with targeted operation
that lead to multiple arrests
The Sparks Police Department, in coordination with the Sparks City
Attorney’s Office and the Washoe County District Attorney’s Office,
stated it maintains a zero-tolerance policy for retail theft and will
continue efforts to prosecute shoplifters in the city. ix people were
arrested or cited during a targeted operation against retail theft at a
Home Depot and Walmart in Sparks on Wednesday. The Sparks Police
Department partnered with the stores to address ongoing theft issues,
focusing on apprehending people involved in shoplifting and related
crimes. The Sparks Police Department, in coordination with the Sparks
City Attorney’s Office and the Washoe County District Attorney’s Office,
stated it maintains a zero-tolerance policy for retail theft and will
continue efforts to prosecute shoplifters in the city.
2news.com
Dauphin County, PA: Police seek suspect who allegedly stole $9K in Ulta
merchandise
Toronto, Canada: Massive retail theft ring dismantled in three province
police operation; 21 charged, $1M in merchandise recovered
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Shootings & Deaths
Lexington, NC: Off-duty Lexington Police Officer killed, ex-husband and
boyfriend injured in shooting at appliance store
An off-duty Lexington police officer was shot and killed late Wednesday night
and two others were injured in what authorities described as a "domestic
situation." Police said officers responded to 911 calls reporting shots
fired shortly after 9 p.m. on Wednesday, Dec. 17. When officers arrived, they
found Officer Kaitlin Crook and two men suffering from gunshot wounds. First
responders attempted life-saving measures, but Crook was pronounced dead at the
scene. One of the men wounded was Zachary Rogers, an off-duty Lexington
firefighter and Crook’s estranged husband, according to police. Rogers remains
in critical condition at a hospital. A handgun believed to belong to him was
recovered at the scene, police said. The second man shot was identified as
Joshua Moore of Thomasville. Police said Moore is believed to have been Crook’s
current boyfriend. He is hospitalized in stable condition and is expected to
recover. A handgun believed to be his was also recovered.
wxii12.com
Hillsborough County, FL: Tampa Community in Mourning After Fatal Convenience
Store Shooting as HCSO Apprehends Suspect
A fatal shooting that took place on December 17, 2025, in Tampa, is currently
under investigation by the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office (HCSO).
According to a social media post from the HCSO, deputies hurried to a
convenience store located at 4801 Clewis Avenue following the report of an
individual who entered the store and claimed to have been shot. The victim,
transported to Tampa General Hospital, unfortunately succumbed to their injuries
and was pronounced dead.
hoodline.com
Portland, OR: Update: Convenience store employee identified as victim of SE
Portland shooting
Authorities have identified the victim of a shooting in Southeast Portland on
Dec. 9. Santi Ram Rai, 33, was shot while he was working at a convenience store
in the 1700 block of SE 139th Ave., officials said. A medical examiner has since
confirmed that he died of homicide by gunshot wound. Officers responded to the
shooting around 5:15 p.m. and found Rai dead at the scene. As of Monday, no
suspects have been identified. No suspects have been arrested.
koin.com
Philadelphia, PA: Man in custody after woman hurt in shooting outside Northeast
Philly Wawa
A man is in police custody after, officials said, he surrendered to officers
after a woman was injured in a shooting that happened at a Wawa store in
Northeast Philly's Holmesburg community early Thursday. According to
Philadelphia Police Chief Inspector Scott Small, the incident happened at about
1:53 a.m. on Thursday when a woman was grazed in the head in a shooting that
happened in the parking lot of a Wawa located along the 3500 block of Sheffield
Avenue. She was taken to a nearby hospital where officials said, in a morning
update, that she was listed in stable condition. In an update, police said the
victim, an 18-year-old woman, was struck after she heard gunshots after she
exited the Baru Restaurant, located across the street from the Wawa store.
nbcphiladelphia.com
Warner Robins, GA: Update: Man sentenced to life for fatally shooting
24-year-old outside Warner Robins convenience store
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Columbia, SC: Police working to identify suspect in Kay Jewelers armed robbery
The Columbia Police Department (CPD) is trying to identify the suspect in the
Monday robbery. Investigators say the robbery happened Monday at Kay Jewelers on
4400 Fort Jackson Blvd. Employees inside the store were reportedly not injured.
Surveillance video has been released.
wistv.com
Frederick, MD: Burglar peels plexiglass off of door to rob vape shop in
Frederick
Frederick police are searching for a burglar who robbed a vape shop. The suspect
was seen on surveillance video peeling the plexiglass of the door off, then
dashing inside. The suspect stole more than $500 worth of vape products, and the
damage to the front door cost more than $2,000 to fix. Tucson, AZ: Burglary hits
downtown Tucson jewelry store; thief steals fake ring.
kvoa.com
Greene County, IA: Security video shows 3 suspects break into Casey's store
Miami, FL: Planet Fitness member caught on video brutally attacking employee in
Little Havana
Mississauga, ON, Canada: Video shows violent robbery at Mississauga grocery
store money exchange counter
Montreal, Canda: Montreal Metro Grocery Store Robbed by Santa and Elf Crew as
Quebec Food Insecurity Hits New Highs
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Beauty - Dauphin
County, PA - Robbery
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C-Store – Beaumont, TX
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store - Reiner, OR –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Greene
County, IA – Burglary
•
C-Store – Chattanooga,
TN - Robbery
•
Collectables –
Springfield, IL – Burglary
•
Dollar – Mobile, AL –
Robbery
•
Gaming - Fayetteville,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
Grocery – Austin, TX –
Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry – Columbia, SC
– Robbery
•
Jewelry – Tucson, AZ –
Burglary
• Jewelry – Springfield, IL – Robbery
•
Liquor – San
Francisco, CA – Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Danville,
KY – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Indianapolis, IN – Armed Robbery
•
Thrift – Kalamazoo, MI
– Armed Robbery
•
Tobacco – Grand Forks,
ND – Robbery
•
Vape – Frederick, MD –
Burglary
•
Vape – Gurnee, IL –
Burglary
|
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Daily Totals:
• 13 robberies
• 6 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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Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build
a 'Best in Class' Community
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District Asset Protection Manager
Cincinnati, OH
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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