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 7/2/26

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Retail LP Community Remembers Amanda Hobert

METRORCA president and longtime asset protection leader remembered for her commitment to collaboration and the fight against organized retail crime.


The retail loss prevention and organized retail crime community is mourning the loss of Amanda Hobert, CFI, President of METRORCA, whose leadership, professionalism and commitment to collaboration left a lasting impact on the industry.

Amanda dedicated nearly two decades to asset protection and organized retail crime investigations, serving in leadership roles with Sephora, Lowe's, Harbor Freight Tools, Toys "R" Us and Nordstrom.

As President of METRORCA since 2017, Amanda helped strengthen partnerships between retailers and law enforcement while championing collaboration and information sharing in the fight against organized retail crime. Colleagues also remember her as a mentor who supported fellow professionals throughout the retail loss prevention community.

The D&D Daily extends its heartfelt condolences to Amanda's family, friends, coworkers and the many professionals throughout the retail loss prevention and law enforcement communities whose lives and careers she touched. Her dedication to the profession and her enduring commitment to partnership and service will not be forgotten.   linkedin.com


 

 

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LPRC Study Reveals Dramatic Efficiency Gains with FaceFirst® Technology


Investigators using FaceFirst® solved cases faster, uncovered more value, and built stronger cases against organized retail crime.

A Loss Prevention Research Council (LPRC) case study has demonstrated the substantial impact of FaceFirst®’s facial recognition technology on organized retail crime investigations, revealing dramatic improvements over traditional CCTV methods.

The study compared two investigators with similar backgrounds working the same case: one using FaceFirst® and the other relying on traditional CCTV reviews. The results were striking.
 

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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


In Case You Missed It

The D&D Daily's Exclusive 2025 ORC Report

The D&D Daily's highly anticipated 2025 ORC Report is now available, providing a comprehensive look at the organized retail crime landscape in 2025.

Based on hundreds of publicly reported ORC incidents tracked by the D&D Daily from news publications, law enforcement announcements and court records, the report examines the cases, trends and criminal activity that shaped the ORC landscape throughout the year.

Inside the report you'll find:

  • Total publicly reported ORC cases tracked during 2025

  • States and cities with the highest reported ORC activity

  • Retail sectors most frequently targeted

  • Merchandise categories stolen most often

  • Average financial losses and the year's largest ORC cases

If you haven't read it yet, be sure to check out the report here and subscribe to the D&D Daily to receive future exclusive reports and industry coverage directly in your inbox.


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New Cargo Theft Target?
Cargo thieves have set their sights on data center supplies
Cargo thieves have a new target. Investigators with the Cook County Sheriff's office in Illinois said last week they recovered a pair of trailers with $1.3 million worth of data center supplies at a Chicago-area truck yard.

Officials said the organized retail crime unit was tipped off about a trailer containing about $300,000 worth of copper wire spools, which had been reported stolen from Pine Hill, Alabama. Copper wiring is a key supply for building and connecting data centers.

After inspecting the trailer and finding the wire, investigators said the truck yard owner told them that the person who delivered that load had dropped off another load a week earlier.

That trailer also turned out to have been stolen — from Jacksonville, Florida — and contained $1 million worth of data center infrastructure equipment, the Sheriff's office said.

Cargo theft is a problem that typically affects retailers, as criminals target supply chains to intercept products on their way to stores. The US Department of Homeland Security estimates that cargo thefts account for as much as $35 billion in losses a year.

Theft rings have also targeted metals such as platinum, palladium, and copper used in industrial applications.

The recent boom in data center construction presents a new opportunity for criminal groups that the National Retail Federation said last year continue to evolve in their targets and tactics. businessinsider.com


Retail Theft Case Questions Bond System
Retail theft case raises questions about crime, accountability and Delaware’s bond system
Police said Tillman recruited people struggling with addiction to steal merchandise from stores. Those individuals allegedly shoplifted targeted products and were paid only a fraction of the retail value.

A single shoplifting case may involve one person making a bad decision. An organized retail theft ring turns local stores into supply lines for a resale business, pushing costs onto retailers, employees and paying customers.

From a center-right perspective, the broader issue is whether the system is treating organized retail crime with the seriousness it deserves. Police say the alleged theft ring involved more than $70,000 in goods. Yet the bond amount was $8,000 unsecured — less than 12% of the value of the merchandise investigators say was stolen.

That contrast will be hard for many small-business owners, store managers and law-abiding shoppers to understand.

Retail theft is not victimless. It raises prices, increases security costs, strains employees and can make stores less willing to operate in neighborhoods where theft becomes routine. When organized theft rings are treated like low-level nuisance cases, the public has reason to question whether the justice system is protecting the people who follow the rules. townsquaredelaware.com


Supreme Court Limits Crime Location Searches
Can Police Access Your Phone's Location Data? Here's What SCOTUS Said

The high court rejected police use of cell phone location data to hunt down bad guys.

As an adult living in 2026, you’ve almost certainly been complicit in the modern surveillance state simply by using a smartphone. Whether you read the fine print or not, you’ve probably agreed to share personal data – from your number of daily steps to where you shop – with the apps you use.

On Monday, the Supreme Court effectively said the government cannot get around Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches by going to those tech companies for the data of anyone near a crime scene at a given time.

At issue is the law enforcement tactic known as “geofencing,” in which the authorities draw a virtual fence around a crime scene and seek a warrant to compel tech companies, like Google, to identify who was in that area during a specified time period.

How decisive a blow the ruling might prove to be against this approach remains to be seen. A divided lower court had let authorities use the data in this case under a “good-faith exception” – meaning law enforcement acted with the presumption that the geofencing warrant was valid. usnews.com


North Charleston PD launches new tool to target trespassing

Gallatin County, Montana crime data shows violent crime rise as population grows
 



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Managing Vendor Risk Beyond the Store Team
Third-Party Partnerships Are Becoming a Larger LP Focus


By the D&D Daily staff

Retail operations rely on a growing network of third-party partners. Cleaning crews, maintenance contractors, merchandising teams, technology installers, delivery providers and other service vendors all play an important role in keeping stores running efficiently. As that network expands, many retailers are placing greater emphasis on managing the operational and security risks that accompany outside access to their facilities.

Loss prevention and security teams are increasingly collaborating with procurement, facilities, information technology and operations to help establish consistent standards for vendor access. The goal is not to create unnecessary barriers, but to ensure that contractors and service providers can perform their work safely while protecting employees, customers, assets and sensitive areas of the business.

Many retailers are strengthening visitor management practices by requiring vendors to check in, display temporary credentials and follow established access procedures. Depending on the nature of the work, organizations may also limit access to specific areas, designate employee escorts or establish approved work windows that minimize disruption to store operations.

Technology is also playing a larger role. Digital visitor management systems, electronic access control, mobile credentials and audit logs can provide greater visibility into who entered a facility, when they were onsite and which areas they accessed. These tools help create a consistent record that can support operational reviews, compliance requirements and internal accountability.

Vendor risk management also extends beyond physical access. Retailers increasingly evaluate service providers based on factors such as cybersecurity practices, data protection measures, insurance coverage, safety performance and contractual compliance. As stores continue to adopt connected technologies and cloud-based systems, coordination between physical security and information security teams has become increasingly important.

While third-party partnerships remain essential to modern retail operations, they also require thoughtful oversight. By establishing clear policies, standardizing access procedures and maintaining strong communication across departments, retailers can reduce operational risk while supporting productive relationships with trusted vendors.

As retail environments continue to evolve, vendor risk management is becoming less of a procurement function and more of a shared responsibility—one in which loss prevention professionals are playing an increasingly important role.


First State to Mandate Self-Checkout Staffing
Rhode Island becomes first state to mandate staffing ratio for self-checkout

Legislation signed by Gov. Dan McKee and due to take effect in 2027 comes as other states also consider self-checkout restrictions.

Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee on Thursday signed into law a bill that mandates a staffing ratio for the self-checkout area in grocery stores.

The legislation, which the United Food and Commercial Workers Local 328 supported, will require stores to assign at least one worker to staff every three self-checkout stations.

The law goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2027, and its passage marks the first statewide self-checkout staffing ratio in the U.S. as other states consider restrictions on self-checkout.

The lawmakers who sponsored the newly enacted Rhode Island law did so because they were concerned that self-checkouts can overtax workers and frustrate shoppers, particularly older ones, according to a press release from the state’s General Assembly.

The law aims not only to improve the customer experience but also to curb theft at self-checkouts, the UFCW said. The labor group cited a report by Capital One that found that retailers in Rhode Island lost $244 million in 2022 due to theft.

California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio and Washington state are considering similar self-checkout restrictions in a bid to reduce shoplifting, USA Today reported.

Once the Rhode Island law takes effect, employees assigned to the self-checkout area must be relieved of all other duties, including working at manned checkout counters. Grocery stores won’t have to follow the staffing ratio during off-peak hours — before 8 a.m. or after 8 p.m. — or during any declared state of emergency or severe weather alert.

Grocers that violate the law will first receive a written warning before facing fines for multiple violations that occur at the same store. The fines, which cannot exceed $500 per day, will match wages for one four-hour shift based on the highest wage for hourly retail clerks for each day a violation occurs. retaildive.com


Kroger Buys Giant Eagle Chain
Kroger to buy grocer Giant Eagle in $1.65 billion deal as competition heats up
Kroger said on Wednesday it would buy regional ⁠supermarket chain Giant Eagle in a $1.65 billion deal, strengthening its presence in the Midwest and the ​Mid-Atlantic region amid intensifying ​competition.

The transaction, the ​first under CEO Greg Foran, is also the company’s first major acquisition since its $25 billion merger with Albertsons fell apart in 2024.

Family-owned Giant Eagle generates about $9 ⁠billion in annual sales and operates around 197 supermarkets ⁠and 11 standalone pharmacies across northern Ohio, western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland and Indiana.

The company has been battling intense ​competition from Walmart, Amazon and other grocers as value-conscious consumers facing cost-of-living pressures seek cheaper essentials. cnbc.com


The Rise of 'Quiet Hours'
Sephora joins Walmart, Target with new 'quiet hours' shopping experience

The beauty store will lower music, screens and scents in U.S. stores to support sensory-sensitive shoppers

Sephora is bringing "quiet hours" to all of its U.S. stores, the latest sign that major retailers are investing in sensory-friendly shopping experiences aimed at making stores more accessible for neurodivergent customers.

Walmart became the first major U.S. retailer to permanently introduce daily sensory-friendly shopping hours nationwide in 2023 after testing the concept during the back-to-school season. Target has tested quieter shopping hours at select stores by dimming lights, limiting overhead announcements and reducing music, while Toys "R" Us has offered "Quiet Hour" events at some locations. foxbusiness.com

 
Former retail giant has closed over 1,000 locations

Primark nears 50 US stores with latest openings

Consumer sentiment rises from record low on prospect of lower inflation

Are Nike’s ‘kernels of progress’ enough?
 




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Case Study: Rooftop Intruders Deterred at a Jewelry Store


Peter Suchy Jewelers—a local vintage and estate jewelry store located in Stamford, CT—approached Everon seeking a stronger solution to deter unauthorized and criminal activity on and around their property. Because of the store's proximity to surrounding businesses and ongoing concerns about after-hours crime, the owner needed a proactive way to prevent incidents before they occurred.

To enhance the store's security, Everon recommended the installation of video cameras paired with Active Video Monitoring, equipping the retailer with:

  • A visible, proactive deterrent for would-be offenders

  • Real-time detection of suspicious or unauthorized activity

  • Recorded footage to provide critical evidence in the event of an incident

Everon Active Video Monitoring is a proactive, real time remote monitoring service designed to help detect, deter, and respond to threats before they escalate. Operating through Everon’s UL listed redundant monitoring centers, Active Video Monitoring leverages retailer’s existing camera infrastructure to reduce upfront costs while providing high engagement security oversight and loss prevention solution across both indoor and outdoor environments.

The monitoring system at Peter Suchy Jewelers was designed to automatically escalate responses—activating strobe lights, speakers, and live monitoring intervention when threats were detected.

Only one day after the installation went live, the Active Video Monitoring solution worked to detect people on the roof of the property and identify that two hooded people were trespassing.

The Everon monitoring center was quickly alerted to the trespassing. Operators quickly activated audio warnings and multicolor strobe lights to deter them from stealing copper on the roof or breaking into the jewelry store for valuables. Both intruders fled, racing to the back of the roof, climbing down, and running away.

Turn Your Video Surveillance into an Active Layer of Protection

With Everon’s Active Video Monitoring, retailers can enhance after-hours security, reduce loss, cut down on loitering and vandalism, and protect high-value inventory.

Learn how Everon can keep watch on your retail locations to help identify and deter threats, reduce loss, and provide peace of mind that your stores and inventory are protected across your locations after hours with Active Video Monitoring.


 

 

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AI Cybersecurity Concerns
Apple says it is releasing updates early in response to AI cybersecurity concerns
Apple said it is pushing forward a series of software updates that would previously have been ​bundled with a new version of its iOS operating ‌system, making them available earlier than in previous cycles in response to AI-driven security concerns.

The company told Reuters on Monday it was adapting to ​the reality that, given the ability of artificial intelligence ​to speed the development of malicious hacking tools, it ⁠needed to reduce the time between when updates were first ​made public and when they were put into customers' hands.

The ​shift marks a notable change in Apple's longstanding practice of packaging security fixes with broader software releases, an acknowledgment that AI is compressing the ​window attackers need to exploit known flaws.

Unless security experts discover ​a hacking campaign targeting a previously unknown software flaw, Apple usually releases security ‌updates ⁠as part of a move from one version of iOS to the next, for example from the currently available version - 26.5 - to the next planned update, 26.6. In the interim, developers and ​other testers trial ​the next ⁠update to iron out any kinks.

The company said that, instead, the latest round of security updates ​were being made available to everyone ahead of ​the ⁠wider release of 26.6.

It said that while there was no evidence that any of the newly patched vulnerabilities had been taken ⁠advantage of, ​the time between the point when ​security fixes were first announced and when they were deployed to customers' phones ​needed to be compressed. reuters.com
 



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Browser-Only Ransomware:
From LLM Hallucinations to a Practical Attack Technique
AI can turn high-level malicious ideas into concrete techniques, and can independently design and implement novel attack paths that have not yet appeared in real-world campaigns.

In this research, DeepSeek connected unrealistic browser-malware concepts with a real browser capability, turning an AI-generated malware hallucination into a plausible browser-native ransomware technique. Although the generated sample was incomplete, it exposed a practical abuse path based on the File System Access API and access to photo directories.

The technique does not require a native payload, APK installation, browser exploit, or root access. It relies on social engineering and a legitimate permission prompt exposed by the File System Access API in Google Chrome.

The Android scenario is especially concerning because photo directories are high value personal data stores and, unlike iOS, modern Android Chrome versions expose a browser API that allows web pages to read and modify files in those directories after user approval. Using a fake AI image-enhancement workflow gives users a plausible reason to approve folder-level file access. Our PoC demonstrates this browser-only workflow against selected image directories on Android.

Over the past several years, large language models have reshaped software development, and malware development has followed the same path. Check Point Research has documented this trend from early experiments showing that AI systems could generate offensive components, to cases of cybercriminals using ChatGPT to create malicious tools, and later to advanced AI-authored malware frameworks such as VoidLink. In some cases, LLMs lowered the barrier enough for users with little or no development experience to produce working offensive code.

As frontier models became better at writing reliable code, including complex security related components, major AI vendors also turned cyber safety into a dedicated control area. Clearly malicious requests involving credential theft, malware deployment, ransomware behavior, persistence, stealth, or unauthorized exploitation are now commonly blocked or refused. OpenAI’s cyber-safety documentation, for example, describes additional safeguards for models classified as having High Cybersecurity Capability, while Anthropic has published reports on detecting and countering cyber misuse of Claude. research.checkpoint.com


Public-Private Cybersecurity Partnership
DHS proposes new system for public-private infrastructure security collaboration

The Trump administration eliminated the previous framework in 2025, sparking backlash from experts and infrastructure operators.

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) on Tuesday proposed a new public-private critical infrastructure collaboration system to replace a framework that President Donald Trump eliminated weeks after returning to office.

The Alliance of National Councils for Homeland Operational Resilience – Critical Infrastructure (ANCHOR-CI) will serve as an umbrella system for a group of advisory councils composed of critical infrastructure operators, government officials and “organizations with direct responsibility for cybersecurity and critical infrastructure security and resilience activities,” according to a DHS filing set to be published in the Federal Register on Wednesday.

DHS said ANCHOR-CI would “provide forums through which cybersecurity, law enforcement, intelligence, national security, and other government representatives at the federal, state, local, tribal, and territorial levels may engage representatives of private sector entities and critical infrastructure owners and operators in reviewing the current threat environment, discussing potential vulnerabilities, and forming recommendations on securing a more resilient critical infrastructure and cyberspace.” cybersecuritydive.com


Huntress CEO says threat hunter used 'poor judgment' in alerting ransomware crim about law enforcement probe

OpenAI voluntarily limits new AI models at government’s request


 




AI Drove Prime Day Purchases
AI Played A Big Role In Prime Day Sales, With 40% Better Conversion
During this year’s four-day Prime Day sales event, consumers were more likely to search for products using AI, and consumers who were steered to retail sites by AI were more likely to make a purchase, according to Prime Day data released today by Adobe.

Adobe, which analyzed digital transactions on U.S. retail sites during the four Prime days, saw a marked shift this year in the ability of AI-powered chat and browsers to drive sales.

Shoppers who used AI to find product information and deals had a 40% better conversion - or purchase - rate, than non-AI channels such as paid search, email, and social media. That is in sharp contrast to last year’s Prime event, when conversion from AI-directed traffic was 23% worse than other channels.

While AI still generates a modest volume of online traffic compared to other channels, the new figures show AI is “shortening the time it takes for consumers to confidently get the information they need,” Adobe reported.

AI-powered chat services and browsers have cemented their role in the online shopping experience, providing utility for shoppers who value the speed and convenience,” Vivek Pandya, lead analyst, Adobe Digital Insights, said when releasing Adobe’s report on the first day of Prime Day.

But, Pandya noted, a big problem for retailers is that “sizable portions of retailer’s websites, up to 46 percent in some cases, are not readable by machines.”

That problem, Pandya said, “limits their visibility across AI surfaces and will push brands to invest in more AI-friendly content such as tutorials, how-to guides, customer service pages, and more.”  forbes.com


Retail Agentic AI Targets Basics
Brands focus agentic AI on lower-level customer experience workflows

Agentic AI is growing in popularity for customer engagement, but not in all areas.

While 53% of global brands have adopted agentic AI as a customer experience tool, the technology is largely absent from high-value, high-friction customer interactions. A new study from AI-based cloud communications platform Infobip, the “2026 Customer Experience Maturity Report,” indicates that relatively high percentages of surveyed brands are using agentic AI to perform customer experience-related tasks such as feedback collection (56% adoption), reminders and notifications (52%) and authentication (45% adoption).

However, agentic AI adoption rates are much less for higher value customer experience use cases such as loyalty management (35% adoption), delivery management (28%), customer onboarding (26%) and product returns and refunds at only 15% adoption.

This gap exposes a missed opportunity for agentic AI to alleviate the burden on human agents. While agentic AI has the potential to orchestrate deep, seamless customer journeys - such as resolving a complex refund or navigating a multi-stage onboarding process - it is currently being stalled.

In other findings, the survey reveals that 58% of respondents say their communications channels are fully synchronized, and 27% currently use a communications orchestration platform. chainstoreage.com


How did Amazon perform during Prime Day? Depends who you ask


 


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‘International network’ accused of impersonating legitimate motor carriers to steal $10 million in high-value cargo
From March 2023 through the present, the eight individuals are accused of stealing cargo from commercial shippers valued at $10 million. The cargo theft conspiracy involved at least one “dispatcher” located abroad and facilitators, drivers, and workers located in the United States, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York said. The organized cargo theft group targeted high-value merchandise including electronics, liquor, meat, fish, eggs, clothing, skincare products, and cryptocurrency mining machines. To facilitate the cargo thefts, one member of the group would pose as a legitimate carrier to obtain a contract to transport goods from the shipper to a customer. After the contract was secured, other group members would pick up the load or divert the truck away from its intended destination, “including by altering the delivery address and other information on shipping paperwork, and by removing geolocation tracking devices affixed to shipped cargo to track its location and ensure it reaches its proper destination,” officials said. Once the truck was in the intended location, the group members would offload items to be sold on secondary markets “for an illicit profit.”  cdllife.com


New York, NY: Update: NY Man Sentenced for Fencing Organized Crime Ring’s $4.4M Jewelry Theft
A Brooklyn, New York, man was sentenced last week for fencing stolen jewelry taken from stores and kiosks across the country, according to the United States Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. On January 27, 2026, he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to sell and receive stolen goods. The man, sentenced to serve 24 months in prison and three years of supervised release, knowingly bought and sold jewelry stolen from mall-based stores and kiosks across the country. According to court documents and statements made in court, between May 2023 and April 2024, an organized jewelry theft ring of Colombian nationals burglarized jewelry stores and kiosks in malls in Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, New Jersey, Ohio, and Virginia. The total losses from the burglaries exceed $4.4 million. According to law enforcement, members of the conspiracy also cased additional jewelry stores and kiosks in Iowa, Indiana, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Delaware. The man paid his co-conspirators cash for the stolen merchandise for a fraction of the actual retail amount, and then sold it to others, including those he knew would melt down the gold.  carriermanagement.com


Crossville, TN: Woman faces multiple Thefts and Drug Charges after Buc-ees Shoplifting Spree
The investigation peaked on Friday, June 19, 2026, when Patrolman Nathan Ramson responded to a call from dispatch regarding a female inside the store’s restroom. Store staff reported that the woman, identified as Henry, had amassed a large amount of merchandise in the restroom and was driving a black Nissan Xterra. Upon entering the restroom, Ptl. Ramson discovered Henry on the floor surrounded by numerous items still bearing Buc-ee’s price tags. She was arrested on the scene for felony theft, with the recovered merchandise valued at $1,533.49. Following that arrest, Buc-ee’s management reviewed historical surveillance footage, revealing a pattern of continuous thefts throughout the month of June. According to police reports, Henry repeatedly selected and concealed merchandise, bypassing all points of sale without paying: June 9, 2026: Stole merchandise valued at $1,044.78. June 11, 2026: Stole merchandise valued at $520.86. June 14, 2026: Stole merchandise valued at $422.98. During the investigation, Henry reportedly cooperated by directing investigators to a residence where the stolen items were being stored. Authorities successfully recovered the property and returned it to Buc-ee’s. In total, Henry is accused of taking more than $3,500 worth of goods from the travel center 3bmedianews.com


Upper Providence Township, PA: Man with 10 theft convictions recruited to steal $3,300 in computers from Collegeville Best Buy, fled across busy roadway

Henderson, KY: Evansville police respond to $1,000 theft report at Burlington Coat Factory

Clermont, FL: Suspected shoplifter tries to steal worth of $644 of merchandise a Dick’s Sporting Goods

Ontario, Canada: York Regional Police launch organized retail theft enforcement project at various stores

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Berlin, MA: Two dead after Berlin MA shopping plaza shooting, standoff in Lowell
Two men are dead – one in Berlin and the other on Interstate 495 in Lowell – after an incident that began Tuesday afternoon, June 30 with a shooting at The Shops at Highland Commons and concluded hours later about 20 miles north after police had cornered the suspect on the highway. Police began swarming The Shops at Highland Commons, one of the largest open-air shopping centers in Massachusetts, at about 3:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 30, after reports of shots fired at the plaza. Police, Fire and EMS from Berlin, Bolton, Hudson and Boylston responded to the scene in front of the Fit Factory, where they found a male victim with multiple gunshot wounds. He was pronounced dead at the scene, Worcester County District Attorney Joseph D. Early Jr. said during a press conference Tuesday night, June 30 at the plaza.  metrowestdailynews.com


Las Vegas, NV: Update: Death penalty on the table for man accused of killing couple inside Las Vegas Smith's store
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Connecticut: DOJ: Bridgeport Man Sentenced to More Than 10 Years in Prison for Gunpoint Robberies
David X. Sullivan, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, announced that RAJONNE BLAKE, also known as “Ray Ray,” 26, of Bridgeport, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Stefan R. Underhill in Bridgeport to 121 months of imprisonment and three years of supervised release for his participation in the violent armed robberies of an Amazon delivery truck in December 2022 and a Cumberland Farms store in January 2023. According to court documents and statements made court, Blake and others committed gunpoint robberies of an Amazon delivery truck and merchandise in Bridgeport on December 23, 2022, and a Cumberland Farms, located at 1290 West Broad Street in Stratford, on January 2, 2023.  justice.gov


Bay City, MI: Bay City couple fails to show for sentencing after armed robbery, pistol-whipping charges dropped

Omaha, NE: Man sentenced for using metal grinder to break into Omaha restaurant safe

Indianapolis, IN: 4 Caught on Surveillance Stealing from Indy Fireworks Store

St Johns County, FL: St. Augustine Dollar General worker accused of ‘gracing’ customers short on cash, costing store $2,850, deputies say

Knoxville, TN: Man charged after stealing puppy worth nearly $9K from Knoxville pet store, court docs say


 


 

C-Store – Crofton, MD – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Pixley, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Robstown, TX – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Cumberland Count, TN – Robbery
C-Store – Cordele, GA – Robbery
Clothing – Roseburg, OR - Robbery
Clothing – Clermont, FL – Robbery
Clothing - Henderson, KY – Robbery
Fireworks – Indianapolis, IN – Burglary
Gaming – Chicago, IL – Burglary
Hardware – Oceana, WV – Robbery
Jewelry - Monroe, NC – Robbery
Jewelry – Pineville, NC – Robbery
Motel – Omaha, NE – Burglary
Pharmacy – Cedar Rapids, IA – Robbery
Pharmacy – Victorville, CA – Robbery
Restaurant – Oklahoma City, OK – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Eunice, LA – Burglary
Sport – Mt Juliet, TN – Robbery
Sports - Clermont, FL - Robbery                            
 

Daily Totals:
• 16 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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New doesn’t always mean better.


Just because something is shiny doesn’t mean it works. The graveyard of retail is full of “next big things” that solved nothing. Evaluate new tools honestly: does it fix a real problem, fit the workflow, and actually scale? If not, it’s just glitter.


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