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Khristopher Hamlin named Vice President, Asset Protection & Retail Technology for Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA)


See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here  |  Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position

 

 

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Everon Appointed to NASPO Supplier Advisory Group

Leading integrator deepens engagement with public procurement sector, advances industry through strategic supplier collaboration.

Irving, TX. [February 17, 2026]Everon, LLC (“Everon” or “the Company”), a leading security integrator and premier provider of commercial security, video, fire and life safety solutions ranked the third-largest security company in the U.S. by SDM Magazine, announced today its appointment to the National Association of State Procurement Officials (NASPO) Supplier Advisory Group (SAG) for the 2026–2027 term. Everon joins a select cohort of suppliers chosen to provide feedback, advice, and strategic counsel to NASPO leadership on critical issues shaping public procurement and cooperative purchasing.

NASPO’s Supplier Advisory Group brings together a diverse group of suppliers representing key industries that support state and local government operations. Members serve two-year terms and engage with NASPO leadership both virtually and in person to share insights on contract terms and conditions, solicitation processes, market trends, and opportunities to advance the value of cooperative purchasing programs nationwide.

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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


Retail Crime at Outdoor Shopping Centers
Security Considerations in Outdoor Shopping Centers as Crime Patterns Evolve


By the D&D Daily staff

Outdoor shopping centers — often referred to as open-air lifestyle centers or strip centers — have become a dominant format in many suburban and mixed-use developments. Blending retail, dining and entertainment with walkable layouts, these properties typically lack the centralized entrances and enclosed corridors found in traditional malls. While that design appeals to consumers, it also presents unique considerations for loss prevention and asset protection professionals.

Unlike enclosed malls, outdoor centers generally feature multiple points of entry and direct storefront access from parking areas. This open configuration can create challenges around surveillance coverage, coordinated response and consistent enforcement of security policies. Retailers operate with varying security postures, and shared common areas are often managed by property owners or third-party firms, requiring close collaboration across stakeholders.

Recent retail crime trends — including organized retail theft, vehicle-based “boosting” crews and grab-and-run incidents — have prompted many outdoor center operators to take a closer look at their security strategies. Parking lots and perimeter roadways can provide quick exit routes, increasing the importance of proactive deterrence and rapid communication between tenants and on-site security.

In response, some outdoor shopping centers are investing in expanded camera networks with license plate recognition, improved lighting design and upgraded signage to reinforce deterrence messaging. Real-time crime centers or centralized monitoring hubs are also becoming more common, allowing property management teams to coordinate with local law enforcement and individual retailers more efficiently.

Tenant collaboration has emerged as a critical component of effective crime prevention in open-air environments. Regular security meetings, shared incident reporting platforms and standardized communication protocols help reduce information silos. Some centers have implemented digital alert systems that notify neighboring stores when suspicious activity is observed, improving situational awareness across the property.

Environmental design principles also play a role. Clear sightlines, strategic landscaping and thoughtful placement of seating and gathering areas can reduce concealment opportunities while maintaining the welcoming atmosphere that lifestyle centers aim to provide.

As consumer preferences continue to favor convenience and accessibility, outdoor shopping centers are likely to remain a key retail format. For asset protection leaders, balancing open design with layered security measures — while preserving the customer experience — will remain an ongoing priority.


Theft-Prevention is Central to Target's Turnaround
Are Target’s store investments enough to turn its experience around?

Additional labor hours could help the mass merchant overcome some in-store challenges like poor in-stock rates and long checkout lines, experts say.

Target is now working toward Fiddelke’s goal with a plan to invest more into store payrolls with an eye on adding more labor hours and improving the customer experience. Target’s effort includes new customer experience training for every employee at every store.

The change is not without cost. Target is eliminating about 100 roles at the store district level and 400 supply chain-related roles as part of the effort, but experts see this as a move in the right direction.

The additional labor hours could help Target overcome some of its major in-store challenges, such as poor in-stock rates and long checkout lines, without cutting into the speed of its store-based fulfillment options. Its new training will play a role as well, provided the district-level cuts don’t dampen its impact.

More labor hours could also help Target solve other problems, like reducing theft, according to Nikki Baird, vice president of strategy and product at Aptos Retail.

“I cheer this,” Baird said in an email. “They need more cashiers, and they need more people in the aisle, especially in areas that are both high-value sales and high-theft targets. Alcohol, electronics, small appliances, beauty, health.”  retaildive.com


Anti-Theft Measures & Customer Impact
Home Depot Checkout Rules Spark Shopper Questions After Locked Displays
You walk into Home Depot expecting a quick grab-and-go, but now locked displays, extra receipt checks, and new self-checkout rules change how quietly you shop. The store says these steps cut theft and protect staff, but they also slow you down and raise questions about convenience.

Shoppers now face locked cases, more staff interventions, and changing self-checkout layouts that affect speed, privacy, and purchase certainty. These measures aim to prevent organized retail crime while introducing new steps at the register and kiosks.

Home Depot and other retailers increasingly perform receipt checks and may verify devices when customers exit, especially in high-theft locations. These checks can include scanning a receipt, matching items to a transaction, or confirming a mobile payment on a phone.

Where kiosks remain, Home Depot has introduced systems that lock carts, use video monitoring, and run AI alerts to flag suspicious actions.

These changes aim to preserve convenience while curbing losses, but they alter the self-checkout experience: shoppers may face longer lines, more manual checks, or required attendant assistance. Associates trained in both theft prevention and customer interaction help keep the process fast and less invasive for honest customers.  aol.com


California's Crime Crackdown Continues
Governor Newsom awards $107 million to prevent gun violence and improve community safety across state
With the most recent data showing that violent crime is down 12% in California’s major cities, Governor Gavin Newsom today announced that an additional $107 million is being awarded to communities to prevent gun violence and reduce crime. With 42 grants to cities, counties, community-based organizations, and tribal governments across California, this funding, known as the California Violence Intervention and Prevention (CalVIP) Grant Program, will support proven, community-driven strategies to reduce shootings, homicides, and retaliatory violence.

Enacted in 2019, the state’s total investment for the CalVIP Program is more than $350 million, stopping more than 30,000 incidents of violence before they happened, as reported by grantees. In addition, these grants in total have helped more than 18,500 participants complete violence intervention programs.

This fifth round of funding that’s being awarded supports programs that include trauma-informed intervention, credible messenger street outreach, wraparound services for families at risk, and intensive case management for youth and adults most impacted by violence. gov.ca.gov


2025 stats by Raleigh police show slight drop in violent crime; lays out 2026 plans

What Juvenile Justice Data Reveal — And What the Numbers Can’t Tell Us
 



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$800B in Retail Returns
Study: Returns, shrink totaled nearly $800B in 2025

Return abuse, shrink and fraud took a heacy toll on retailers last year.

A total of $796 billion was lost to returns and shrink in 2025, according to the 2026 Total Retail Loss Benchmark Report from loss solution provider Appriss Retail. The report found that $706 billion in merchandise was returned in 2025, and of that total, and of that total, 14.2% ($100 billion) was preventable loss from fraud and abuse.

Twelve percent of returns-related loss was attributed to returns abuse (excessive but legitimate returns, while fraud (fake receipts, stolen merchandise, etc.) made up only 2%. Last year, Appriss found that $90 billion in retail losses were due to shrink, 73% of which was preventable due to employee theft ($26 billion), inventory errors ($19 billion), operational errors ($12 billion) and organized retail crime ($9 billion).

When it comes to returns Appriss provided a breakdown of the $706 billion in total returns:

  • $367 billion (52%) from BISRIS (buy in-store, return in-store), still the dominant channel.

  • $208 billion (29%) from BORIS (buy online, return in-store), representing the fastest-growing fraud and abuse vector.

  • $131 billion (19%) from BORO (buy online, return online).

The Appriss report also surveyed consumers on the importance of a good return process. Eight-in-10 shoppers say a good return experience boosts repeat purchase intent. Nearly three-quarters (73%) of shoppers (80% of frequent returners) made an extra purchase after a positive return experience.

When it comes to the use of AI in the return process, 80% of consumers in the survey want transparency in how AI makes return decisions. Seven-in-10 ( 71%) trust human associates more than AI for approvals. Only 10% trust AI outright. chainstoreage.com


OSHA Inspections Drop 20%
Workplace Inspections by OSHA Dropped Over a Six-Month Period of 2025

Labor advocates worry that the Trump administration is relaxing oversight of companies and increasing the potential for serious injuries and deaths.

New data about the federal agency responsible for workplace safety suggests a substantial drop in inspections in the months after President Trump returned to office last year. The internal data from the Labor Department raises concerns about the government’s ability to police workplaces and protect U.S. workers.

The data, which was released by Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, shows a 20 percent decrease in work site inspections by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration during a six-month period last year compared with the same period in 2024.

The government has not publicly released data for the number of inspections for the entire 2025 fiscal year. But the decrease during that six-month period raises the specter among labor advocates that the Trump administration is relaxing oversight of companies and increasing the potential for serious injuries and deaths.

The drop in inspections comes on top of efforts by the Trump to roll back regulations for worker safety and protections, including efforts to close OSHA offices and offices that protect coal miners across the country. The Labor Department has also said it plans to pull back a requirement that employers provide appropriate lighting at construction sites and ease evaluation mandates for protective equipment for workers regularly exposed to dangerous chemicals.

The number of work site inspections has fluctuated from year to year, but by a much smaller margin. (There was a 34 percent decrease in inspections between the 2019 and 2020 fiscal years because of the pandemic.) nytimes.com


Tariffs Struck Down
Supreme Court strikes down Trump tariffs

The Supreme Court struck down a huge chunk of President Donald Trump’s far-reaching tariff agenda.

The Supreme Court on Friday struck down a huge chunk of President Donald Trump’s far-reaching tariff agenda. The law that undergirds those import duties “does not authorize the President to impose tariffs,” the majority ruled six to three.

Chief Justice John Roberts delivered the opinion of the court. Justices Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito and Brett Kavanaugh dissented.

Since retaking the White House, Trump has rapidly reshaped America’s longstanding trade relationships by imposing a staggering array of import duties that have touched nearly every country on earth.

Many of those tariffs were invoked using a novel reading of the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, or IEEPA. They include Trump’s near-global “reciprocal” tariffs, and separate duties related to the alleged trafficking of deadly drugs into the U.S. cnbc.com


Retail Could See Possible 'Tailwind' After Tariffs Struck Down
How the US Supreme Court's Tariff Ruling Could Shift Retail and Search Growth
The US Supreme Court appears poised to rule as early as February 20 that President Donald Trump lacks the emergency authority to impose many of his administration’s tariffs under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), including the so-called “Liberation Day” duties and levies on Canada, Mexico, and China.

The Trump administration’s trade policies have upended the retail and advertising landscapes. As of November, nearly half of all US imports were subject to duties, according to a New York Times analysis of Census Bureau trade data. Roughly 29% of all US imports were specifically subject to IEEPA-based tariffs—the law at the center of the Court’s decision.

The Supreme Court invalidating the IEEPA-based tariff actions would create a modest but measurable tailwind for US retail sales. The Court could force the government to halt collections and begin refunding previously paid duties to importers of record (often retailers or wholesalers). We expect lower import costs combined with refund-driven discounting to modestly lift nominal retail sales relative to the Q1 2026 baseline, with the biggest gains accruing to import-heavy discretionary categories.

Specifically, we expect: Immediate cost relief for retailers: ​​Retailers will see lower landed costs, driving disinflation across import-heavy categories like apparel, furniture, toys, and consumer electronics. While retailers absorbed a meaningful share of tariff-related costs, they did pass through some of those costs. A June New York Fed survey found that roughly three-quarters of both manufacturers and service firms facing tariff-related cost increases passed along at least some of those higher costs to customers, and about one-third to nearly half reported fully passing through the increases. Consistent with that pattern, the average price of imported goods rose 5.4% in the first six months after the administration imposed tariffs, while domestic goods prices increased 3.0%, per a Harvard Business School report. As price pressures ease, retailers are likely to keep prices more stable.  content-naf.emarketer.com


NRF opens nominations for 2026 America’s Retail Champions
“Small businesses are at the heart of every Main Street across the United States and are the ultimate embodiment of the American dream,” said NRF Executive Vice President of Government Relations David French.

Phoenix pool supplies retailer closes 80 locations amid major losses
Leslie's Inc., the Phoenix-based pool supplies retailer, shuttered dozens of locations and an Illinois distribution center in a rapid restructuring effort amid steep losses.

Walgreens Cuts Hundreds of Jobs After Private Equity Buyout

Walmart furthers gains with higher-income shoppers

UK: Retail job cuts could be on the horizon amid rising costs, BRC warns

Virginia General Assembly advances cannabis retail framework

U.S. economy slows to 1.4% GDP growth in Q4
 



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Massive Adidas Beach
Adidas investigates alleged data breach affecting 815,000 records
Adidas confirmed it is investigating a possible data breach involving one of its third-party customer service providers.

The company stated that there is no indication its IT infrastructure, e-commerce platforms, or consumer data were impacted by the incident.

An individual claiming to belong to the Lapsus$ Group posted on BreachForums alleging they had compromised the sportswear giant’s extranet. The stolen dataset is described as containing 815,000 rows of information, including names, email addresses, passwords, birthdays, company names and technical data.

Lapsus$ is part of the hacker collective Scattered Lapsus$ Hunters, specializing in social engineering attacks. If confirmed, Adidas would be the latest organization linked to the group’s activity in recent years.

This is not the first time Adidas has experienced a cybersecurity incident. In May 2025, the company notified customers that some of their data had been stolen after an unauthorized individual gained access to a third-party system. helpnetsecurity.com


Business AI Security Risks
AI’s ‘connective tissue’ is woefully insecure, Cisco warns

In a new report, the company also said businesses should beware of the “SolarWinds of AI.”

The vulnerability of the “connective tissue” of the AI ecosystem — the Model Context Protocol and other tools that let AI agents communicate — “has created a vast and often unmonitored attack surface” that is making it easier for hackers to use AI to launch cyberattacks, Cisco said in a report published Thursday.

Cisco said AI tools’ increasing ability to “execute processes, access databases, and push code on behalf of humans” has become the dominant AI risk and warned companies not to give AI “unsupervised control over critical business functions.”

The new report also described nation-state hackers’ use of AI and warned businesses about potential AI supply-chain crises.

Hackers’ abuse of AI tools has garnered significant public attention, but few business leaders understand how the vulnerabilities in the MCP could make that abuse worse.

MCP has become the de facto standard for connecting AI models to external data sources since Anthropic introduced it in 2024. But over the past few years, theoretical and real-world attacks have exploited flaws in the protocol. Cisco highlighted examples involving WhatsApp chat exfiltration, remote code execution and unauthorized file access. cybersecuritydive.com


Data on 1.2 million French bank accounts accessed in registry breach
In late January 2026, a malicious intruder accessed France’s national bank account registry, FICOBA, enabling them to view information tied to 1.2 million accounts, the Ministry of the Economy and Finance disclosed on Wednesday.

They managed to access bank account information and related personal data: the international bank account number (IBAN), the holder’s first and last name, their address and, in some cases, the holder’s tax identification number issued by the Directorate-General for Public Finance (DGFiP). helpnetsecurity.com


Microsoft reveals critical Windows Admin Center vulnerability

Palo Alto Networks CEO sees AI as demand driver, not a threat

 


 

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Walmart Dethroned by Amazon
Amazon dethrones Walmart as world’s biggest company by sales
Amazon.com Inc. has officially dethroned Walmart Inc. as the biggest global company by revenue, a milestone attesting to the massive scale the e-commerce and cloud-computing giant has achieved since its humble beginnings in 1994 as an online bookseller in Jeff Bezos’ Seattle-area garage.

Walmart, which had been the largest company by revenue for more than a decade, on Thursday reported sales of $713.2 billion for the 12 months ending Jan. 31. Amazon, which operates on a fiscal year ending in December, earlier this month reported 2025 sales of $717 billion.

Bezos carefully studied Walmart founder Sam Walton, embracing many of his business strategies while building his company. Over the past decade, Amazon’s revenue has increased at almost 10 times the pace of Walmart’s, fueled by a shift in consumer spending from stores to websites and its rapidly growing cloud-computing business, Amazon Web Services.

Amazon and Walmart compete head-to-head for shoppers’ dollars. Amazon is the biggest online retailer, with its website and mobile apps attracting 2.7 billion visits each month. Walmart is the biggest physical retailer in the world, with more than 10,000 stores and shopping clubs globally. Both companies generate most of their revenue in the US.

Walmart is having more success developing its e-commerce operation than Amazon is having in creating a physical stores business despite its 2017 acquisition of Whole Foods Market.

But the revenue story is more about Amazon’s dominance in cloud computing, a business Walmart doesn’t compete in. Without AWS, Amazon’s 2025 revenue would have been $588 billion. So its ascendance rests largely on the importance of data centers as critical infrastructure in the age of artificial intelligence. detroitnews.com


Prestige Fragrance’s Online Shopping Problem
More fragrances are now sold through digital channels than in store, posing challenges for the traditional “try before you buy” playbook. As channels like Amazon and TikTok Shop pick up speed, brands must adapt to a new reality.

Amazon and City Hall line up for battle over delivery licence in New York

Amazon snaps 9-day losing streak during which it lost more than $450 billion in value


 


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Miami-Dade County, FL: Jewelry store owner busted with over $1.8 million of counterfeit goods
Authorities in Miami-Dade County arrested a jewelry store owner accused of selling fake merchandise. Deputies with the Miami-Dade Sheriff’s Office said they took Manuel DeJesus Beltran-Machado, 43, into custody on Wednesday after he surrendered himself at the MDSO Organized Crimes Bureau. Authorities said the suspect was selling counterfeit merchandise of brands Tiffany & Co., Gucci, Chanel, Christian Dior, Louis Vuitton, Cartier, Prada and Rolex. The arrest was a result of a months-long investigation in which deputies utilized the assistance of a brand investigator and made several purchases at two storefronts owned and operated by the suspect. Items purchased at the Miami-Dade storefronts, located at 7148 SW 8th St. and 530 West 29th St., were then presented to experts with the specific brands to be tested for validity, and all came back as counterfeit, deputies said. After executing a search warrant simultaneously at both locations on Feb. 12, deputies said they recovered 136 items with a “documented retail comparison valuation” of $894,070 at the location on 29th Street, and 126 items with a valuation of $939,895 at the Eighth Street location, to total 262 items valued at $1,833,965 local10.com


New York NY: Fashion model stole $1M in designer goods from ritzy SoHo boutique in movie-like heist
A 21-year-old fashion model was nabbed for stealing more than $1 million in high-end designer merchandise from an upscale SoHo retailer — then released without bail. Abdallah Diaby was arrested Thursday and charged in an early morning, caught-on-video heist at the ritzy 4Gseller boutique on Spring Street on Dec. 1, when cops said four masked crooks broke in and made off with 20 St. Laurent designer jackets, 30 handbags, 20 belts and other ritzy goods. Diaby was linked to the break-in through security camera footage, while the other three suspects remain on the loose, according to police and prosecutors. In an interview after the heist, 4Gseller owner Tommy Macari said the crew of crooks appeared to have planned the heist well, sporting construction crew equipment and head lamps as a spotter and a getaway driver waited outside.  nypost.com


Milwaukee Big-Box Bandits Hit With Felony Raps In $50K Theft Spree
Prosecutors say a crew of five Milwaukee men turned big-box stores into their personal shopping grounds, walking out with more than $50,000 in merchandise in what they describe as an organized retail-theft ring. One of the accused, 35-year-old Earl Jones III, appeared in Milwaukee court this week. A judge set his cash bond at $20,000 and scheduled a preliminary hearing. Authorities say the group is linked to dozens of felony counts tied to thefts at Target, Home Depot and Lowe’s locations across the city between May and October 2025. At least one other man has already been arraigned, while several more suspects are still wanted on outstanding warrants. According to CBS 58, a criminal complaint lays out more than 60 charges, most of them felonies, accusing the men of stealing tens of thousands of dollars’ worth of goods.  hoodline.com


Columbia, SC: Suspect breaks into T Mobile, stealing thousands, crashes into another business
A 19-year-old in South Carolina is accused of breaking into a T-Mobile store and stealing merchandise and then crashing into another business while trying to get away from police. Columbia police said Joshua Porch, Jr. is accused of breaking into the T-Mobile store on Garners Ferry Road on Wednesday and stealing thousands of dollars worth of merchandise. They said when a patrol officer tried to pull his car over, Porch kept driving and crashed into the nearby Take 5 building. Porch was arrested and charged with second-degree burglary, grand larceny, malicious damage to real property and failure to stop for blue lights.  wyff4.com


Auburn, WA: Auburn Police arrest 10 during retail theft enforcement ‘blitz’
According to the Auburn Police Department, patrol officers, the Community Response Team and detectives took part in the focused operation aimed at addressing rising retail theft. During the operation, officers coordinated with Fred Meyer loss prevention staff to identify suspected shoplifting activity and make arrests. SCORE Jail provided transportation to assist with booking the suspects into jail, the department said.  auburnexaminer.com


Colma, CA: 1 Arrested, 2 Suspects Remain At-Large For $700 Theft At Target
 



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Shootings & Deaths


Charlotte, NC: Update: Teen sentenced for role in Charlotte Jack in the Box killing
A 17-year-old was sentenced to prison in connection with a deadly shooting that left another teen dead at a Jack in the Box in northwest Charlotte. Shaheim Robinson pleaded guilty to robbery with a dangerous weapon on Thursday in Mecklenburg County Court. He accepted a plea deal that dropped a first-degree murder against him. Robinson was sentenced to 80-108 months in prison, credited with serving 630 days in jail. Police say Robinson and Marcus Dahn, 29, entered the Jack in the Box near North Hoskins Road and Brookshire Boulevard on March 29, 2024, robbed Fate Brannon, 17, and shot him. Brannon was working at Jack in the Box at the time of the shooting, police said. Robinson and Dahn were both charged with murder. Prosecutors assert that Dahn was the one who shot Brannon. In court on Thursday, Brannon's father said he believes Robinson was an accessory to murder and the punishment should match the crime. He rejected the idea of a plea deal in the case.  wcnc.com


Temple, TX: Police investigate accidental firearm discharge, injuring one person
Temple police are investigating an accidental firearm discharge that left one person injured Thursday afternoon. Officers responded to the 3500 block of South General Bruce Drive around 12:37 p.m. after receiving reports of an accidental shooting inside a store, according to the Temple Police Department. Police say the person accidentally discharged the firearm and shot themselves in the leg before leaving the store. Officers found the person nearby and provided medical attention until emergency medical services arrived. The person sustained a non-life-threatening gunshot wound.  kxxv.com


Miami, FL: Update: Video shows gunman open fire at Allapattah restaurant
Video obtained by Local 10 News on Thursday shows a man opening fire at a restaurant in Miami’s Allapattah neighborhood. Francisco Alexis de Leon, 36, of Miramar, is facing an attempted murder charge in connection with the Oct. 5 incident. According to Miami police, he got into an argument with the victim at Republica Food & Lounge, located at 1260 NW 36th St., then opened fire. The video shows a man, whom police said is de Leon, running up to the victim and shooting him. In the clip, the victim is seen limping away. As of Thursday, de Leon was on house arrest awaiting trial. His next hearing is scheduled for May 7 local10.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Rochester, MN: Cub Foods store reportedly robbed at knifepoint, suspect on the loose
Rochester Police responded to the report of a robbery at a Cub Foods store early Thursday. Communications Coordinator Amanda Grayson says the incident occurred around 1 a.m. The reported robbery occurred at the grocer’s southeast Rochester location, at 1021 15th Ave SE. The police report indicates a man wearing a ski mask approached a check out lane and threatened the cashier with a knife.  kttc.com


Commerce City, CO: CCPD Arrests Prolific Burglars targeting Hispanic business across Denver-Metro
Guns, stolen vehicles, and hundreds of thousands of dollars in cash recovered. We hope our business community can breathe a collective sigh of relief knowing that two individuals responsible for at least six high-dollar burglaries in Commerce City alone and as many as three dozen total across the Denver-metro area have been arrested after an exhaustive investigation in conjunction with a number of other agencies and jurisdictions.  facebook.com


Philadelphia, PA: Two Philadelphia men charged in Lululemon $11,000 burglary on the Main Line


 


 

C-Store – Harford County, MD – Robbery
Cellphone - Columbia, SC - Burglary
Clothing – Newark, DE – Robbery
Dollar - Tangipahoa County, LA – Robbery
Grocery – Rochester, MN – Armed Robbery
Jewelry - Manchester, NH – Robbery
Laundry – Opa-Locka, FL – Robbery
Liquor – San Clemente, CA – Robbery
Restaurant – Pageland, SC – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Kankakee, IL – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Jackson, MS – Burglary
Restaurant – Las Vegas, NV – Burglary
Restaurant – Commerce City, CO – Burglary
Restaurant – Ventura County, CA – Burglary
Target – Colma, Ca – Robbery
Tobacco – Billings, MT – Armed Robbery
Walmart - Elkins, WV - Burglary                                

 

Daily Totals:
• 11 robberies
• 6 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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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...




 


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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