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


 |
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
 |
Laura
Morris promoted to Sr. Asset Protection Regional Manager
for KnitWell Group
|
|
See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 &uuid=(email))
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
In Case You
Missed It
Interface Systems Releases 2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report
Annual study of 1.6
million monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail locations shows
AI-powered technologies and interactive remote video monitoring deliver
measurable results for retail loss prevention teams
St.
Louis, MO –
Interface
Systems, a leading provider of AI-powered security and expert remote
video monitoring for restaurants, retailers, and commercial businesses,
recently released its
2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report, an annual study
based on 1.6 million remote monitoring events across 18,258 U.S. retail
locations and 51 brands throughout 2025.
The report provides operational data at a scale to help retail loss
prevention leaders understand when risk peaks, which threats escalate
fastest, and which intervention strategies prove most effective across
thousands of monitored locations.
Click here to read more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Warm Weather & Retail Crime
Open-Air Retail Centers Face Seasonal
Shift in Crime and Safety Risks
By
the D&D Daily staff
As warmer weather drives increased foot traffic to open-air shopping
centers and lifestyle malls, retailers and property managers are
entering a period that often brings a noticeable shift in both crime
patterns and safety considerations. Unlike enclosed malls, open-air
environments introduce a broader set of variables — from multiple entry
points to less controlled common spaces — that can create unique
vulnerabilities.
One of the most consistent seasonal trends is a rise in opportunistic
theft. Higher volumes of shoppers, combined with outdoor layouts and
easier access to parking areas, can make it more difficult to monitor
activity in real time. Grab-and-go thefts, vehicle break-ins and
distraction-based shoplifting incidents tend to increase during spring
and summer months, particularly during weekends and promotional events
that draw larger crowds.
Open-air centers can also face challenges related to perimeter
control. With public walkways, adjacent streets and mixed-use
developments often integrated into the property, distinguishing between
shoppers and non-shoppers becomes more complex. This can create
opportunities for organized retail crime groups to blend in, conduct
surveillance and move quickly between stores and exits.
Violence risk, while less frequent, is also a consideration.
Disputes in parking lots, confrontations tied to theft incidents and
isolated acts of aggression can occur in areas with less physical
separation between retail space and public access points. The
decentralized nature of open-air properties can slow coordinated
responses if communication systems and protocols are not clearly
established.
In response, many operators are adapting their strategies for the
season. Increased visible security presence, including mobile
patrols and off-duty law enforcement, is a common approach to
deterrence. Retailers are also placing greater emphasis on employee
awareness, particularly around recognizing suspicious behavior and
safely responding to incidents.
Technology continues to play a growing role. License plate
recognition in parking areas, expanded camera coverage across outdoor
corridors and real-time communication platforms between tenants and
security teams are helping to close some of the visibility gaps inherent
in open-air environments.
Ultimately, the seasonal shift is less about a dramatic change in threat
level and more about adapting to different conditions. As
open-air retail continues to grow in popularity, aligning security
strategies with these environmental and behavioral patterns remains a
key priority for the industry.
Retailers Lost Nearly $8B in Stolen
Packages in 2025
Survey: Package theft totaled $12.8 billion in 2025
Package theft remains a persistent
problem for Americans.
A new survey from Omnisend that combined FBI crime data reveals that
nearly a third (30%) of U.S. households reported having a package
stolen in the past year. In total, Americans lost an estimated
$12.8 billion from approximately 228 million stolen packages in
2025.
Nearly two-thirds (62%) of victims received a refund or a free
replacement, costing retailers an estimated $7.9 billion in 2025. A
further 16% were offered a discount or store credit. Roughly a quarter
(24%) of retailers refused responsibility entirely.
In response to porch piracy, 23% of victims order online less often,
while 18% limit purchases to retailers with easy refund policies and
12% shift to lockers or in-store pickup. Nearly half (48%) of those
surveyed by Omnisned reported no change to their habits at all following
package theft.
Omnisend’s report shows that theft clusters seasonally, with
nearly half of all incidents occurring in
November and December. December is the peak month, with 27%
of victims hit during the holiday rush and November (21%) close behind.
"When you have 228 million stolen packages with retailers quietly
absorbing $7.9 billion of that loss, it stops being a consumer
inconvenience and starts being an industry-wide cost of doing business,"
says Marty Bauer, e-commerce expert at Omnisend. "The retailers who will
win long-term will be those who are building delivery and returns
infrastructure around the reality that roughly a third of their
customers will face this at some point." chainstoreage.com
Crime-Fighting 'Blueprint'?
Memphis' staggering 40% violent crime drop a 'blueprint for other
cities,' law enforcement expert says
Fewer than 200 murders were recorded
in Memphis in 2025 for the first time since 2019, police data shows
A law enforcement expert says Memphis' dramatic drop in violent crime
is a "blueprint for other cities" across the nation.
Data from the Memphis Police Department shows violent crime is down
over 40% so far in 2026 compared to the same period last year,
following President Donald Trump's establishment of the Memphis Safe
Task Force — a coalition of local, state and federal law enforcement
agencies and the Tennessee National Guard.
See how much Memphis crime has dropped in 2026 vs. 2025:
-
Overall violent
crime: -40.52%
-
Aggravated
assault: -28.14%
-
Arson: -33.33%
-
Burglary: -28.06%
-
Homicide: -36%
-
Larceny: -39.07%
-
Motor vehicle
theft: -63.98%
-
Robbery: -44.96%
-
Sexual assault:
-27.43%
"Memphis is absolutely a blueprint for other cities around the nation,"
National Police Association spokesperson Sgt. Betsy Brantner Smith told
Fox News Digital. "When you look at the level of cooperation between
state, local and federal law enforcement, and you combine that with
prosecutors who were involved and judges who were willing to follow
along, that is something that every large crime-ridden city in the
nation should take a look at."
foxnews.com
2026 First Quarter Supply Chain Risk
Trends Analysis
Incident Volume Falls as Organized Crime Reshapes Cargo Theft Landscape
Through Impersonation and Targeted Commodity Selection
Verisk CargoNet, a Verisk business and leader in cargo theft prevention
and recovery, recorded 767 supply chain crime events across the
United States and Canada in the first quarter of 2026, a 5.3 percent
decrease from Q1 2025 and a 12.2 percent decline from Q4 2025.
Despite fewer incidents, estimated losses reached $131.58 million,
essentially unchanged from Q1 2025, and confirmed cargo theft reports
rose by 41 incidents to 596 of 767 total events.
Verisk CargoNet’s Q1 analysis points to a clear pattern: reduced
activity from domestic criminal organizations, particularly in Texas and
the Southeast, paired with sustained or growing activity by
organized crime groups with a nexus in California and the New York City
metropolitan area. This shift is reflected not only in where cargo theft
is occurring, but in what is being stolen and how.
Among the top eight states for cargo theft, most saw year‑over‑year
declines— with two notable exceptions. California increased from 255
to 277 incidents, and New Jersey surged from 27 to 59, a 119 percent
jump that continues the trend identified in Verisk CargoNet’s Q3 2025
analysis. Both states are primary operating environments for
organized crime networks, offering dense logistics infrastructure and
proximity to major consumer markets.
Meanwhile, Texas declined from 102 to 80 incidents, a 22 percent drop.
The types of opportunistic theft historically common in the Dallas–Fort
Worth and Houston logistics corridors appear to be giving way to more
targeted operations elsewhere in the country.
cargonet.com
How to get your hands on good violent crime data
Crime dropped in Santa Paula in 2025. But 1 offense is on the rise
&uuid=(email))
Brick & Mortar is Here to Stay
The resilience of in-stores shopping isn’t about to end
Wasn't digital supposed to kill off
brick and mortar? At larger chains and small shops, folks just keep
coming back to physical stores.
For all the speculation, physical retail choices remain — and in a
bigger way than some might expect. While e-commerce has definitely
delivered long-term growth, it still stood at less than 17% of overall
retail sales in the U.S. on an adjusted basis in the final quarter of
last year, according to the Census Bureau of the Department of Commerce.
That’s roughly three decades after the founding of firms like Amazon.com
— and it’s after the tumult of the pandemic that accelerated digital
adoption.
That physical resiliency is on full display in Dallas-Fort Worth
where you see shopping hubs welcoming new names, grocery stores popping
up and even some malls (though definitely not all) gaining traction.
Shoppers continue to make their way to storefronts for discovery,
connection and other factors. At the same time, retailers are using
more digital platforms and tools to power overall results. While nothing
is certain, physical, in-store efforts show strength that sets it up
well for the future as Texas-based names like Mizzen+Main, Half Price
Books, Kendra Scott and others invest in shops with actual walls.
It’s clear e-commerce is a massive and transformative force. The
traditional retail industry has endured a major upheavals that include
closures, bankruptcies and ongoing layoffs. Joann, Party City and
others saw their fortunes sour and shops shutter. Saks Global, which
includes Neiman Marcus, filed for bankruptcy earlier this year.
Yet physical store investments continue. And while the Dallas
area has been blitzed by closures at times, local shoppers are getting
more options all the time. Take BJ’s Wholesale Club, a new arrival
that’s planning for nearly a half-dozen new stores in the region — while
Costco itself is investing in new sites. Home Depot is opening stores
later in the spring. And Timberland, the brand known for its boots, is
planning new sites for North Texas as it amps up investments in physical
shops.
dallasnews.com
AI & Workplace Safety
The Evolution of AI in Workplace Safety: The SaaS Revolution
We’re tracking the development of
Software as a Service (SaaS) and how digital recordkeeping has allowed
workplace safety programs to centralize and scale.
What matters most throughout the SaaS adoption process was the deeper
shift in the safety profession. SaaS helped EHS move from injury
reporting to managing risk. That move matches the foundation of ISO
45001, which centers on systematic risk management, leadership
involvement, and continual improvement rather than paperwork for its own
sake. It also sets the stage for what came next, because advanced
analytics and AI cannot fix messy inputs. They only amplify what is
already there—good or bad.
The SaaS revolution did not just digitize EHS; it fundamentally
changed the job. SaaS has created a new kind of safety professional:
the safety systems designer. This person is not defined by how quickly
they can complete a form. They are defined by how well they can build
simple workflows that match real work, create standard definitions so
data actually means something, coach sites to use the system without
fear, and use leading indicators to prevent harm instead of only
reacting to lagging outcomes.
That is the bridge from the SaaS era into the future. Organizations
that “won” in the 2010s were not those with the fanciest software, but
those that used EHS SaaS to build a shared language of risk and a habit
of acting early to make workplaces safer.
ehstoday.com
Will The Other Shoe Drop?
Consumers are down, yet retail sales keep going up. How long can this
last?
Retailers wrapped up the first
quarter with another healthy boost in March.
Consumer confidence has been on the wane all year, and economic
realities aren’t helping much. Yet retailers just wrapped up the
month, and the first quarter, with surprising strength.
In March, consumer sentiment hit a new low as inflation rose —
the highest spike in four years — as the Iran war took a toll on energy
supplies and people’s nerves. In the mostly discretionary segments
covered by Retail Dive, though, retail sales surged more than 8%,
with gains in most categories. That came on top of a nearly 5% increase
in February and a nearly 6% increase in January.
“Overall, a solid March rounds off a good start to the year for
retail,” GlobalData Managing Director Neil Saunders said in emailed
comments.
But he warned that economic storm clouds are gathering, and the
numbers aren’t all that they seem.
retaildive.com
Spending rises in March, but underlying pressures signal caution ahead
Bed Bath & Beyond will operate stores in California after all
EBay closes San Francisco office
|
|

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

 |
|
|

|
|
Regain
Control in High Employee Turnover
Environments with InstaKey
In
today's dynamic business landscape, organizations are facing an unprecedented
challenge -
high employee turnover. It's an inevitable part of the business ecosystem,
impacting industries across the board. As employees come and go, the safety and
security of businesses becomes a top concern.
Each handover increases the chances of unauthorized access, theft, and potential
data breaches. Keys can be duplicated, lost, or misplaced, and in many cases,
businesses find it challenging to keep an accurate record of key holders.
InstaKey redefines
conventional lock and key systems by infusing technology, innovation, and
simplicity. It bridges the gap between physical hardware and digital management,
ensuring that your security apparatus isn't just robust but also agile and
adaptable.
With
InstaKey, businesses gain an edge through its cloud-based management platform,
which ensures that data integrity and security are maintained at all times. The
dedicated support team is on standby, ensuring your program remains compliant
and tailored to your unique needs.
When safety matters most and locks need to be changed, InstaKey emerges as a
game-changer,
making the rekeying process straightforward and efficient. Gone are the days
of complicated lock changes and expensive locksmith visits. With InstaKey's
user-rekeyable cores, security is as seamless as a simple turn of the step
change key, allowing users to rekey affected locks within seconds.
InstaKey's innovative
cloud-based key tracking software epitomizes the convergence of technology
and security, ushering in a new era of peace of mind for organizations.
SecurityRecords.com® emerges as a pivotal tool in this transformation, offering
unparalleled visibility and control over key management.
In the world of InstaKey, high employee turnover no longer translates to
security nightmares. Every key transfer is managed with precision, ensuring that
your business, employees, and assets remain safe, secure, compliant, and primed
for growth.
Learn more here

|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
|
AI & Cybersecurity
How Retailers Are Using AI to Strengthen Cybersecurity Defenses
By
the D&D Daily staff
As cyber threats grow more sophisticated, retailers are increasingly
turning to artificial intelligence (AI) to strengthen their
cybersecurity posture. With large volumes of customer data, payment
information, and interconnected systems, the retail sector remains a
prime target for ransomware, phishing, and credential-based attacks. AI
is emerging as a practical tool to help organizations detect, respond
to, and even anticipate these risks.
One of the most immediate benefits of AI in cybersecurity is its
ability to identify anomalies in real time. Traditional security
systems often rely on predefined rules, which can miss new or evolving
threats. AI-powered platforms, by contrast, analyze patterns across
networks, user behavior, and transaction data to flag unusual
activity—such as unexpected login attempts, irregular data transfers, or
deviations in point-of-sale behavior. This allows security teams to
investigate potential incidents faster and reduce response times.
AI is also being used to enhance threat detection through machine
learning models trained on large datasets of known attack patterns.
These systems can recognize subtle indicators of compromise that may not
be visible through manual monitoring. For retailers managing thousands
of endpoints—from in-store devices to e-commerce platforms—this level of
visibility is increasingly important.
Another key application is automated response. In some
environments, AI-driven tools can isolate affected systems, block
suspicious IP addresses, or enforce multi-factor authentication
protocols without requiring immediate human intervention. This helps
contain threats before they spread, particularly during off-hours when
staffing may be limited.
Retailers are also leveraging AI to combat phishing and social
engineering attacks, which remain a leading entry point for
breaches. AI-based email filtering systems can analyze language
patterns, sender behavior, and metadata to detect fraudulent
communications with greater accuracy than traditional filters.
Despite these advantages, AI is not a standalone solution.
Effective cybersecurity still depends on a layered approach that
includes employee training, regular system updates, and clear incident
response plans. Additionally, retailers must ensure that AI tools are
properly configured and monitored to avoid false positives or overlooked
threats.
As the threat landscape continues to evolve, AI offers retailers a
scalable way to enhance detection and response capabilities—helping
security teams stay ahead in an increasingly complex digital
environment.
Stealthy Chinese Cyberattacks
China disguises cyberattacks with ‘covert network’ botnets, US and
allies warn
A new security advisory highlights
Beijing’s stealthy techniques.
Hackers working for the Chinese government are increasingly hiding
their attacks behind ready-made networks of hacked routers and other
networking equipment, the U.S. and several allies said on Thursday.
Attackers’ use of these so-called covert networks is not new, the
agencies said in a joint advisory, “but China-nexus cyber actors are
now using them strategically, and at scale.”
By funneling their activity through compromised networking equipment —
mostly small office and home office (SOHO) routers, but also internet of
things devices — hackers can obfuscate their origins and make it
harder for defenders to spot reconnaissance, malware deployment and data
exfiltration.
China-linked hackers used the KV Botnet, which included hundreds of
malware-infected devices, for the Volt Typhoon attacks on U.S.
critical infrastructure, and the Raptor Train botnet, which included
more than 200,000 devices, for the Flax Typhoon attacks on Taiwan.
Justice Department operations disrupted both of those botnets by
removing the hackers’ malware from the infected devices.
cybersecuritydive.com
'Undetectable Attack'
With AI’s help, North Korean hackers stumbled into a near-undetectable
attack
For many years, state-sponsored hacking was defined by human expertise
in finding security holes, writing malware and exploits, pulling off
social engineering and phishing attacks, and much more.
Since the advent of LLM-powered AI assistants and tools, less skilled
attackers have been able to carry out attacks and compromises that
might otherwise have been out of their reach.
Case in point: HexagonalRodent. According to Expel’s research, the group
makes heavy use of generative AI, with telemetry showing active use of
Cursor (an AI-native code editor) and ChatGPT across their operations.
HexagonalRodent is a state-sponsored North Korean APT group that’s, in
Expel’s assessment, a subgroup or operational offshoot of Famous
Chollima, which specializes in infiltrating companies by posing as
legitimate, remote IT workers.
helpnetsecurity.com
Hacker with a special interest in breaching sports institutions ends
behind bars
Iran-nexus threat groups refine attacks against critical infrastructure |
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
 |
|
|
Scam Social Media Ads
Meta Is Sued Over Scam Ads on Facebook and Instagram
A lawsuit from the Consumer
Federation of America accuses Meta of misleading consumers about its
efforts to combat scams advertisements on its platforms.
On Tuesday, the nonprofit Consumer Federation of America filed a
lawsuit against Meta, alleging that the way the social networking giant
handles scammers on its platforms violates Washington, DC’s consumer
protection laws.
While many online scams involve direct outreach to victims by scammers
(who are often themselves human trafficking victims trapped in scam
compounds), CFA’s lawsuit focuses on fraudulent advertising that CFA
alleges Meta profited from and allowed to "proliferate on its
platforms,” despite publicly promising that it takes cracking down on
fraud and scams seriously.
In its complaint, CFA points to ads found in Meta’s ads library that CFA
claims are types of well-known scams, including several that appear
to target people by their birth year and tout $1,400 checks, as well
as others that advertise free government iPhones.
In a statement, Meta spokesperson Chris Sgro says, “These allegations
misrepresent the reality of our work and we will fight them.”
Speaking with WIRED, Ben Winters, CFA’s director of AI and data privacy,
says others can find more dubious ads just by searching Meta’s ad
library using key words like “free phone” and “stimulus check.” WIRED’s
quick perusal of the ads library on Monday shows more live ads for
“secret tax checks” that lead to a website that promises to reveal “Wall
Street’s recession-proof investing strategy.”
Meta did not respond to questions about whether the ads for “secret tax
checks” are allowed under its policies.
Meta has faced particular scrutiny because Facebook, Instagram, and
WhatsApp—which are all owned by Meta—are among the most widely used
online platforms by Americans, according to a recent Pew Research
Center report. In late 2025, Reuters reported on a set of internal Meta
documents that detailed how the company dealt with fraudulent and
prohibited user activity, including a May 2025 presentation that
estimated that its platforms were involved with a third of all
successful scams in the US. Another presentation cited by Reuters
alleged that an internal Meta review found it “is easier to advertise
scams on Meta platforms than Google.”
wired.com
South Korea e-commerce probe opens rift in US ties
South Korea pushed back on Thursday against criticism of its business
environment by US lawmakers, as a rare spat deepens over Seoul's
investigation into online retail company Coupang. US-listed Coupang's
South Korean arm operates the country's most popular shopping platform.
But it has faced a backlash since a massive data leak last year
exposed the details of over 30 million customers. South Korean
authorities are investigating Coupang for potential negligence and
regulatory breaches, and statements from Seoul and Washington this week
revealed cracks in the relationship between the longtime allies.
On Thursday, South Korea's foreign ministry said the Coupang probe
was "being conducted in strict accordance with our domestic laws and due
process", adding that it was not discriminating against American
firms.
economictimes.indiatimes.com
Amazon plans to build delivery facility in Greenwood County, South
Carolina |
|
|
&uuid=(email))
|
|
Philadelphia, PA: Man accused of leading retail thefts across Philly region,
including Lululemon
A Norristown man was charged with multiple felonies after officials said he led
an organized retail theft group that carried out robberies, thefts and
fraudulent returns across stores in Pennsylvania, Delaware and New Jersey.
According to the Montgomery County District Attorney's Office, 31-year-old
Nehemeiah Jones was arrested on April 20, 2026, and charged in connection to the
theft of $155,629 from several stores, including Lululemon, Diesel, Givenchy,
Nordstrom and Dicks Sporting Goods. According to prosecutors, Jones organized
and directed the thefts beginning on April 18, 2024. Officials said Jones is
accused of hiring "drivers" to operate rental vehicles and "runners" to enter
the stores, steal merchandise and execute fraudulent returns. He then paid those
who carried out the robberies and thefts on his behalf, including multiple
minors. Moreover, prosecutors said in many the incidents, Jones' co-conspirators
sprayed store employees at close range with irritants to facilitate the thefts
and avoid being apprehended.
nbcphiladelphia.com
San Jose police arrest 4 suspects in smash-and-grab robbery at Valley Fair Mall
Police arrested four suspects in a smash-and-grab robbery at San Jose's
Westfield Valley Fair Mall in January, with two of the suspects also linked to a
separate armed robbery in San Jose days earlier. The robbery at the Macy's
store at Valley Fair Mall happened on January 11 just before 1 p.m. The San
Jose Police Department said four suspects used a sledgehammer to break open
display cases and steal thousands of dollars worth of high-end watches, fleeing
before officers arrived. Officers identified two suspect vehicles and used the
city's automated license plate reader camera network to track and locate the
vehicles, police said. One was found unoccupied in San Jose, the was found
unoccupied in Fremont. Investigators identified the four suspects as 31-year-old
Devin Hairston of Oakland, 23-year-old Charlie Jones of Oakland, 24-year-old
Emilio Sanchez of Hayward, and 18-year-old Roman Camarena of Stockton.
cbsnews.com
Chicago, IL: Pokémon, sports cards among $100K in goods stolen from Chicago shop
A comic book and sports card store in Chicago was targeted in a smash-and-grab
burglary Monday morning. Surveillance footage shared by Elite Sport Cards &
Comics shows thieves breaking the front window of the store at 3406A N. Harlem
Ave. The burglars stole about $100,000 worth of collectibles, according to the
owner. The suspects took off in an unmarked vehicle. Among the stolen items were
Pokémon cards and high-end basketball and football cards.
wane.com
Crockett, TX: Houston man wanted for stealing over $14,000 of merchandise across
East Texas
Round Rock, TX: Video Update: Moment hammer-wielding masked thieves raid Texas
jewelry store in ‘mob-style’ hit
Broward County, FL: Ross Store Tag-Team Takedown in Pompano Beach: Pair Caught
Running Coordinated Shoplifting Operation
&uuid=(email))
|
|
|
|
&uuid=(email))
|
|
|
|

|
|
|
Shootings & Deaths
Mall Mass Shooting
Baton Rouge, LA: 10 hurt in shooting at mall in Louisiana, suspect at large
10 people have been hurt in a shooting at the Mall of Louisiana in Baton Rouge,
officials said. The shooter remains at large, Baton Rouge police said. All
injured people have been transported from the scene, police said, and all
shoppers have been evacuated from the mall, Baton Rouge Mayor-President Sid
Edwards said. The shots were fired in the food court, police said, describing it
as a targeted incident during a fight between two groups, and not a random act
of violence.
abc13.com
Detroit, MI: Update: Gunman acted in self-defense in triple fatal shooting at
Detroit gas station
The gunman involved in a triple-fatal shooting at a gas station Sunday morning
will not be charged. The Wayne County Prosecutor's Office is calling it a case
of self-defense. The shooter was a passenger in a car that was involved in a
prior crash with the second vehicle leading up to the altercation.
fox2detroit.com
DeSota, TX: Deadly shooting at DeSoto shopping center leaves 1 dead, several
hurt
Champaign, IL: 15-year-old arrested in connection with deadly shooting at Market
Place mall will be tried as adult
Asheville, NC: New details reveal how officer-involved shooting unfolded at
South Asheville strip mall
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Chicago, IL: Employees, Customers Robbed At Gunpoint Inside 24-Hour River North
Diner
Employees and customers were robbed at gunpoint early Thursday inside a popular
24-hour diner in River North, police said. At 3:12 a.m. Thursday, three men
entered Griddle 24, 334 W. Chicago Ave., with multiple firearms and demanded
money from people inside, police said. The men took an unknown amount of cash
from the restaurant’s register, as well as money and other personal belongings
from a 56-year-old man, a 63-year-old man, a 64-year-old man and an adult woman
whose age was not specified, according to police.
blockclubchicago.org
Chicago, IL: Police recover 9 guns, $280K in cash and make arrests in South Side
raids
Fremont, CA: Police arrest suspected UPS truck thief after overnight standoff
|
|
|
|
•
Bakery -San Jose, CA –
Robbery
•
Beauty - Asheville, NC
– Burglary
•
C-Store – Buffalo, NY
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Orangeburg,
SC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Los Angeles,
CA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store –
Philadelphia, PA – Robbery
•
Collectables –
Edwardsville, IL – Burglary
•
Collectables –
Chicago, IL – Burglary
•
Mall – San Jose, Ca –
Robbery
•
Restaurant – Chicago,
IL – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Asheville, NC – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Staten
Island, NY – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Lynchburg, VA – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Las
Vegas, NV – Burglary
•
Tobacco – Hillsborough
County, FL – Burglary |
|
|
Daily Totals:
• 8 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
|
|

Click map to enlarge
|
|
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
Featured Job Spotlights
|
Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
'Best in Class' Community
|

|
Regional AP & Safety Business Partner - South Region
Texas
This position is considered Field based and is considered to be a blend
of onsite and remote work activity. Field associates will spend their time both
traveling to and spending time in various PetSmart locations and can expect to
be asked to travel to Phoenix Home Office periodically throughout the year.
Field associates typically work out of their home office when not traveling as
outlined above...
|
Featured Jobs
To apply to any of today's Featured Jobs,
Click Here
 |
|
View Featured
Jobs
|
Post
Your Job
|
|
&uuid=(email)) |
|
|
|
Insight,
humor & heart from
one of LP's most trusted voices |
|
|
Most “Game Changing” Products Change Things… Gradually
Real transformation in retail usually
shows up as steady improvement, not overnight revolution. AP leaders
trust solutions that show consistent, measurable progress more than ones
promising instant reinvention.
Follow this space every day to see more of 'Hedgie's Hot Takes' |
|
|
|
Not getting the Daily? Is it ending up in your spam folder?
Please make sure to add d-ddaily@downing-downing.com to your contact list,
address book, trusted sender list, and/or company whitelist to ensure you
receive our newsletter. Want to know how?
Read Here |
|
FEEDBACK
/
downing-downing.com
/
Advertise with The D&D Daily |
|
 |