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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
COMING NEXT
WEEK
The D&D Daily's
Exclusive 2025 ORC
Report
Next
week, the D&D Daily will release its highly anticipated 2025 ORC Report,
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 in 2025.
From the total number of reported ORC cases, store types, merchandise
categories targeted most often, and regional hot spots, the D&D Daily's
2025 ORC Report provides a comprehensive look at the year's organized
retail crime landscape.
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Recovering From Retail Crime
What Happens the Morning After a Retail Security Scare?
Most conversations around payment fraud end at discovery, at the moment
when a skimming device is found or card activity is flagged. Then the
discussion usually moves immediately toward prevention, statistics,
or the latest technology designed to stop it from happening again.
The assumption often made is that finding the problem represents the
end of the story. But for many independent retailers, it is the
beginning, because after the device is removed and the initial shock
wears off, there is still a business sitting there the next morning that
has to open its doors.
Customers and employees still show up, deliveries still arrive, and
bills still need paying, yet something has changed. The questions
become less technical and more immediate. Do customers know what
happened? Will they think the store caused it? Do we need to tell
people? Will they come back?
Large companies often manage incidents through formal playbooks, with
teams and specialists who can coordinate a response. Independent
retailers rarely operate with that kind of structure. For a neighborhood
store or retailer, the owner handling payment issues may also be the
person stocking refrigerators an hour later. That creates an overlooked
aspect of retail security conversations in which recovery frequently
receives less attention than prevention.
Businesses are often told how to reduce risk, monitor equipment, and
identify suspicious activity. Less attention goes toward what
happens after a problem appears or the practical steps owners need to
take to regain confidence from customers and employees. The emotional
side of these situations can also be stronger than outsiders might
assume.
"When a store owner finds a skimmer, the conversation is often
emotional," said Elie Y. Katz, President and CEO of National Retail
Solutions (NRS). "They are worried about their customers, their
business, and their reputation. Many are asking, 'How did this happen?'
and 'What do I do now?' Our role is to help them respond quickly,
understand the next steps, and put protections in place so they can
rebuild confidence."
The response itself is becoming a larger conversation within retail
technology. Historically, point-of-sale companies operated primarily
as vendors, but increasingly, providers working closely with independent
retailers are finding themselves involved in broader operational
questions around fraud response, security practices, and customer
confidence.
sfweekly.com
SNAP Fraud Surging Nationwide
New York retailer arrested, accused of stealing more than $643K in Ohio
SNAP benefits
A
New York convenience store operator has been arrested and charged with
stealing more than $643,000 in food stamp, or SNAP, benefits from
low-income Ohioans.
The Ohio Investigative Unit and the Cuyahoga County prosecutor's office
announced Monday that Raed Subhi Abu Mohammad of Brooklyn, New York, is
facing charges of illegal use of SNAP benefits, telecommunications
fraud, aggravated theft and money laundering in Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Court.
Criminals employ skimmers and other devices to capture EBT card
numbers and PINs at store checkouts. Then they use that information
to hack and drain people’s accounts, often stealing SNAP benefits just
moments after the cardholders’ monthly payments arrive.
The federal government stopped reimbursing theft victims for their
stolen benefits in late 2024.
“Nationally, we are seeing an increase in food assistance fraud, and
criminals from other states and online continue to prey on vulnerable
Ohioans who rely on SNAP to feed their families,” Matt Damschroder,
the director of the Ohio Department of Job and Family Services, said in
a news release.
State and federal prosecutors are pursuing several other SNAP benefits
theft cases in Northeast Ohio.
news5cleveland.com
Canada Strengthens Repeat Offender
Penalties
Canada's sweeping bail and sentencing reforms become law
Over 80 targeted changes to the
Criminal Code on bail and sentencing are now law
"Canada's new government promised stricter bail laws and tougher
sentencing laws. That promise is now law," said the Honourable Sean
Fraser, Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada. The
Government of Canada has been relentlessly focused on keeping
Canadians safe. The Bail and Sentencing Reform Act (Bill C-14)
received Royal Assent yesterday, delivering on our commitment to
strengthen the Criminal Code.
These sweeping reforms make bail laws stricter and sentencing laws
tougher for repeat and violent offenders, support the front lines,
and invest in long-term prevention.
Shaped by extensive consultations and close collaboration with
partners across the country, these reforms were backed by premiers
from every province and territory, as well as mayors, and law
enforcement who called for the bill's swift passage. The changes on bail
and sentencing will now come into force after 30 days.
These changes are an important step, but laws alone are not enough.
Their full impact will depend on implementation across the justice
system. Provinces and territories are responsible for administering
and resourcing key parts of that system, including policing, prosecution
services, bail courts, bail supervision programs, provincial courts,
jails, and victim services. The Government of Canada has acted swiftly
to strengthen the law and will continue working with partners across the
country to support effective implementation.
newswire.ca
Mississippi to try armed minors in violent crimes as adults under new
law
Florida Gov. DeSantis signs new crime laws in Winter Haven
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Inventory Errors
Drive Hidden Losses
The
Hidden Cost of Inventory Inaccuracy
By
the D&D Daily staff
Inventory shrink is often associated with theft, fraud, or organized
retail crime. While those issues remain important concerns, another
source of retail loss frequently receives less attention despite its
significant impact on operations and profitability: inventory
inaccuracy.
When inventory records do not match what is actually available, the
consequences can be felt throughout the business. A product that
appears to be in stock but cannot be located may result in a missed
sale. Replenishment systems may fail to reorder needed merchandise
because inventory counts suggest sufficient quantities already exist.
Associates can spend valuable time searching for products that are no
longer available, reducing productivity and creating frustration for
both employees and customers.
Inventory inaccuracies can stem from a variety of causes.
Receiving errors, incorrect item counts, ticketing mistakes, fulfillment
discrepancies, administrative mistakes, and process failures can all
contribute to inventory records becoming unreliable. In many cases,
these losses occur gradually and may not be discovered until a cycle
count or physical inventory reveals a problem.
The growth of omnichannel retail has increased the importance of
inventory accuracy even further. Services such as buy online, pick
up in store (BOPIS), same-day delivery, and ship-from-store depend on
real-time inventory visibility. When inventory data is incorrect,
retailers risk canceled orders, delayed fulfillment, and damaged
customer trust.
As a result, many loss prevention and asset protection teams are
expanding their focus beyond traditional shrink investigations.
Inventory integrity programs, exception reporting, cycle counting
strategies, and technology solutions that improve visibility across the
supply chain are becoming increasingly important components of loss
prevention efforts.
Retailers are also investing in tools such as RFID, advanced
analytics, and automated inventory management systems to identify
discrepancies more quickly and reduce the likelihood of errors.
While no system can eliminate inaccuracies entirely, improved visibility
can help organizations address problems before they grow into larger
operational issues.
For retailers seeking to reduce losses and improve customer
satisfaction, inventory accuracy is more than an operational concern.
It is a foundational element of effective loss prevention, ensuring
the right products are available in the right place at the right time.
Safety Ruling Favors Brinks Workers
Unifor wins major workplace safety victory for armoured car workers at
Brinks
The Canada Industrial Relations Board has sided with a Unifor member who
refused dangerous work at Brinks in Toronto, dismissing the
company's appeal and confirming that armoured car workers cannot be
directed to work alone without the protection of a guard.
"No worker should ever be forced to choose between their safety and
their job," said Unifor National President Lana Payne. "This
decision is a powerful affirmation that the right to refuse dangerous
work is real and protected under federal law. Armoured car workers
face serious risks every day, and no employer can strip away those
protections in the name of cutting costs. When our members raise the
alarm, Unifor backs them all the way."
The decision stems from a work refusal by an Armoured Car Messenger and
member of Unifor Local 112. Brinks had directed two-person crews,
normally made up of a messenger and a guard, to separate inside shopping
malls and both operate as messengers, leaving workers to collect and
carry liability without guard protection. Unifor challenged the
arrangement as creating an unacceptable risk to workers.
"This ruling matters far beyond a single workplace," said Samia
Hashi, Unifor Ontario Regional Director. "It tells every armoured car
carrier in this country that splitting crews and sending messengers out
alone, without a guard, is not acceptable. The safety procedures that
protect armoured transport workers exist because the work is dangerous,
and they cannot be cast aside for the sake of efficiency. Our members at
Brinks fought for this, and workers right across the sector are better
off for it."
unifor.org
Can AI Fill Workforce Gaps?
Physical AI Steps in as Global Workforce Shrinks
U.S. manufacturers are projected to leave 2.1 million jobs unfilled
by 2030. In a 2021 study, the Manufacturing Institute estimated that
gap could cost the economy $1 trillion in that year alone. In
construction, the Associated Builders and Contractors earlier this year
projected the industry needed 439,000 additional workers in 2025 just to
keep pace with demand.
Companies are deploying AI-powered robots and autonomous equipment not
to cut headcount, but because the headcount isn’t there. ManpowerGroup’s
2026 Talent Shortage Survey found 72% of employers globally reported
difficulty finding the talent they need. That figure has held above
70% for several consecutive years.
Agility Robotics reported in November that its Digit humanoid robot had
moved over 100,000 totes in live commerce operations. The robot now runs
across multiple Fortune 500 partners. In April, Agility Robotics
detailed deployments at Amazon, Schaeffler Group and logistics
provider GXO.
According to a 2024 Manufacturing Dive report, Figure AI’s Figure 02
robots ran 10-hour shifts at BMW’s Spartanburg, S.C. plant over 11
months. The robots processed more than 90,000 sheet-metal cycles on
the active assembly line. BMW has since expanded the program to its
Leipzig, Germany facility.
In an April report on physical AI adoption among companies in Japan,
TechCrunch said Japan’s population declined for a 14th straight year in
2024, with those of working age accounting for 59.6% of the total. That
share is projected to shrink by nearly 15 million over the next two
decades. “Physical AI is being bought as a continuity tool: how do
you keep factories, warehouses, infrastructure and service operations
running with fewer people?” Global Brain General Partner Hogil Doh
told TechCrunch. Sho Yamanaka of Salesforce Ventures told the news
outlet that the country’s labor shortage made physical AI necessary,
even urgent.
pymnts.com
C-Store Expansion Continues
8 c-store companies entering new states
Super regionals like Wawa, QuikTrip
and Sheetz along with chains like Dash In and Yesway are among the
retailers targeting fresh markets.
Wawa is continuing to make progress along its multi-year, multi-state
roadmap, while Sheetz and QuikTrip revealed their own plans to expand
their reach through new builds. Yesway and Wally’s will introduce
themselves to fresh markets this year, while Legacy Markets and Pump &
Pantry reached new states through M&A.
New state debuts should continue in coming months as well, as Dash In
has bought property in South Carolina and Buc-ee’s continues working on
its first stores in multiple states.
cstoredive.com
Inflation, tax refunds push May retail sales up 6.6%
U.S. consumers kept up their spending
despite putting more toward gas, though they got less for their money.
COS names top safety leaders under 35 in 2026 Young Achievers report
Canadian Occupational Safety has released
its 2026 Young Achievers special report, recognising 40 of Canada's top
safety leaders under 35 who are reshaping the occupational health and
safety profession through technical expertise, emotional intelligence,
and a commitment to genuine worker protection.
Burlington supports growth with next-gen distribution center
Advance Auto Parts AI-enables same-day fulfillment from stores
Chick-fil-A's reign is over. See who is now the top fast food chain
Publishing Note:
The D&D Daily will be closed on Friday, June 19, in observance of
Juneteenth. We will resume publishing on Monday, June 22.
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Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
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Sekura's MoveAlert Wins LPRC 2026 Product Protection
Summit Integrated Solutions Award
Sekura is proud to
announce that
MoveAlert has been recognised with the 2026 Loss Prevention Research Council
(LPRC) Product Protection Summit Integrated Solutions Award.
MoveAlert
is an intelligent, zone-based shelf protection solution designed to identify
suspicious product interaction and intervene before merchandise is removed. The
system monitors high-risk shelves and displays, applying programmable behavioral
thresholds to distinguish normal shopping activity from patterns associated with
swipe theft.
When predefined risk criteria are met, MoveAlert activates an immediate audible
response, introducing guardianship at the point of escalation. The system can
also integrate with existing CCTV infrastructure to automatically capture and
record incidents, providing valuable footage for investigation, analysis and
deployment optimization.
The LPRC Integrated Solutions category recognizes technologies that successfully
combine detection, deterrence, and operational integration to address retail
loss and improve on-shelf product availability.
"Receiving this recognition from the LPRC is a significant milestone for our
team and validates our belief that effective loss prevention should be proactive
rather than reactive," said Chris Napthine, CEO, Sekura Global "MoveAlert was
developed to help retailers disrupt theft behavior in real time while preserving
the shopping experience and reducing operational complexity."
For more information:
https://sekura-global.com/movealert/
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FBI’s Kinetic Cyber Range
FBI gives first peek inside 22,000-square-foot town it’s built for
digital crime training — the ‘one of a kind’ facility has a gas station,
houses, and a data center with 200 hackable servers
‘This is about as real as it’s going
to get’
In the never-ending cat-and-mouse game between hackers and law
enforcement, it helps the latter to know exactly what they’re up
against. Usually, that might mean sitting in a classroom and getting a
little hands-on time with a hacked server or laptop. But that’s not the
case with the FBI’s Kinetic Cyber Range — no, this time the US’s
Federal Bureau of Investigation went out and built a whole town to
keep itself sharp.
The 22,000-square-foot Kinetic Cyber Range is built to be as lifelike
as possible. Pay it a visit, and you’ll find 11 different facilities,
including houses, a data center, a gaming arcade, a convenience store, a
hotel, and much more. It’s designed to replicate the kind of town
you might find anywhere in America, yet it’s all contained within an
enormous hangar at the FBI’s training campus in Huntsville, Alabama.
All the businesses and tech in the ersatz community can be hacked,
allowing students to put their skills to the test. Would-be cyber
officers will encounter firewalls, email systems, file directories, and
more, helping to prepare them for future digital investigations. That
said, the Kinetic Cyber Range is designed to ensure that nothing
nefarious spills out of its secure bounds and into the wider world.
In addition to the FBI, the facility can be used by NASA, the US
Army, and local law enforcement agencies. The idea is to get people
up to speed with the latest cyber techs — including drone software,
vehicle forensics, and the internet of things.
Given how incredibly lucrative the cybercrime industry is for hackers
and fraudsters, it makes sense for law enforcement to seek as much
real-world, hands-on time as possible. Theory alone will only
provide so much education, and without encountering the kinds of
situations you might find in the real world, FBI agents will be a step
behind their adversaries.
techradar.com
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Cyberattacks & Financial Losses Tied
to AI
AI adoption correlates with incident frequency, underscoring need for
governance
Even organizations that haven’t been
breached expect an AI-related incident in the near future, a new survey
found.
More than one-fifth of organizations running macOS networks have lost
money or experienced a cyberattack because of their use of AI tools,
according to a report that network management vendor Jamf released
on Tuesday.
Roughly six in 10 macOS-based organizations expect an AI-related
incident in the near future, the survey found.
The report, based on interviews with 687 IT and security leaders
managing MacOS network environments, also describes system
administrators’ AI implementation priorities, the largest areas of
risk they face and Jamf’s recommendations for mitigating those risks.
MacOS-based enterprises are overwhelmingly using AI, according to Jamf’s
report, with roughly 73% reporting that they have deployed it already
and another 20% exploring deployments. But network administrators
overseeing the adoption of AI face a range of dangers.
The biggest and best-known risk is
shadow AI, which refers to employees’ use of unapproved and
ungoverned AI tools. When “IT is left in the dark about what AI systems
are used,” that “lack of visibility makes security and governance
difficult, if not impossible,” Jamf said.
Agentic AI is becoming popular within enterprises, but it
carries risks, too. IT and security leaders said they struggled to
deploy AI agents “in a way that enables users without putting data at
risk,” according to the report. “With appropriate permissions, agentic
AI opens serious risks to code bases if insecure or problematic code is
added or necessary code is removed.”
cybersecuritydive.com
Defenders Hurt More Than Attackers?
Cyber leaders defend Anthropic's banned model
Prominent cybersecurity leaders — including chief information security
officers, security researchers and executives at Adobe, Zoom and Sophos
— are urging the Trump administration to reverse restrictions on
Anthropic's most advanced AI models, arguing the move hurts cyber
defenders more than attackers.
Pulling back access to Anthropic's first publicly available Mythos-class
model could kneecap cyber defenders just as they're bracing for a
wave of AI-powered hacking threats, the leaders argue.
The loosely organized group of experts, led by former Facebook chief
security officer Alex Stamos, argue in the letter that the issue Amazon
researchers flagged exists across other leading AI models, too.
Stamos, now the chief product officer at Corridor, told Axios that the
Fable 5 security capability that appeared to alarm the White House was
the model's ability to create a "proof of concept" for
vulnerabilities.
axios.com
Apple is bringing Hide My Email and Sign in with Apple under one domain |
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Fake Reviews Surging
Small Businesses Say Fake Reviews Are Running Rampant — Is This True,
and What’s the Solution?
A recent report issued by LocalImpact — with survey results being
derived by polling 400 U.S. small business owners — suggests that
there’s a serious problem concerning fake reviews targeting local
establishments.
“If you run a local business, fake reviews are now part of the job.
72% of the owners we surveyed say they’ve received at least one fake
review in the past 12 months, and only 8% are confident they’ve
received zero,” Boris Mustapic wrote in describing the survey results.
“The volume isn’t trivial either. A quarter of owners report receiving
six or more fake reviews in the past year, with 7% saying they’ve
received more than ten,” he added.
Other top-line takeaways presented by the polling results:
-
Nearly four-fifths
(79%) of business owners polled stated that their business was the
subject of a targeted fake review attack.
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Suspicion runs deep in
the other direction as well, with 70% of respondents believing
that their competitors were leveraging positive false reviews to
enhance their own reputations.
-
It appears difficult
to get alleged fake reviews scrubbed, with only 28% of
independent business owners reporting success in this arena.
-
Less than one-third
(31%) of businesses are adequately prepared to respond with a
dedicated review management platform.
Fake reviews appear most prevalent on Google (~68%), Facebook (~53%),
and Yelp (~52%), with Trustpilot (~20%), Tripadvisor (~19%) pulling
up the rear.
What exactly constitutes a fake review boils down to detection signals,
with factual inaccuracy (~60%) being the No. 1 indicator of a false
review in the eyes of independent business owners. That means
reviews which include details which are way off base versus the actual
business operations, inclusion of amenities not offered by the business,
a non-existent location, or workers who don’t actually work there.
Verifying that the complainant was never actually a customer, no prior
review history on the account, a glut of similar reviews hitting at the
same time, or platform flagging/auto-removal are other signs of false
reviews.
retailwire.com
FTC vs. Amazon
Amazon Faces Billions in Penalties From Potential FTC Ad Suit
Amazon.com Inc. is facing a possible lawsuit from the US Federal Trade
Commission that may lead to billions of dollars in civil penalties, over
claims the e-commerce giant misled advertisers, according to people
familiar with the matter.
The FTC, which enforces antitrust and consumer laws, has drafted a
potential complaint against Amazon as part of an ongoing investigation
by the regulator, said some of the people, who asked not to be named
discussing a confidential matter. Multiple state attorneys general are
also involved, the people said.
bloomberg.com
Why Is Etsy Expanding Its Marketplace Reach Across Global E-Commerce
Trends?
Lessons From Finance About Running An E-Commerce Business |
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Houston, TX: Veteran-owned Houston sneaker store hit by $50K burglary
A veteran-owned sneaker store in east Houston is temporarily closed
after thieves stole an estimated $50,000 worth of merchandise during a
weekend burglary, according to the store's owner and Houston police.
Jennifer Martinez, owner of 2 Trill Soles, said she is working to
recover after three masked men broke into her store along the East
Freeway near Federal Road around 4:30 a.m. Sunday. " Everything changed
in the blink of an eye," Martinez said. The burglary comes less than a
year after Martinez, an Army veteran and mother, opened the storefront
after growing her business online through buying and reselling sneakers.
"It's devastating," Martinez said. "It's not just my livelihood. It's my
kids, my family and my community."
khou.com
Milford, CT: Man Burglarized AT&T Store, Stole Over $9K Worth Of
Products
A man was charged in connection with the burglary of a store where over
$9,000 worth of merchandise was stolen, according to police. Nicholas
Verity, 38, of Derby, was arrested on a warrant Monday. Police said
Verity was involved in the burglary of an AT&T store in which glass was
broken and over $9,000 worth of products was taken.
patch.com
Kenosha, WI: Walmart Theft Crew Faces Felony Charges; One Defendant
Reportedly in ICE Custody
Four people accused of participating in a retail theft scheme targeting
the Walmart in Somers are now facing felony charges in Kenosha County
after authorities alleged they worked together to steal more than $1,100
worth of merchandise from the store.
kenoshacountyeye.com
Coconut Creek, FL: Cosmetics Worth Nearly $850 Stolen From Kohl’s
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Shootings & Deaths
Anchorage, AK: Shootout with police at South Anchorage Walmart leaves man dead
and Police Officer injured
Anchorage Police shot and killed a shoplifting suspect, who also allegedly shot
two officers, during an attempted arrest at a Walmart on the city’s southside
late Tuesday. That’s according to Anchorage Police Chief Sean Case, who shared
preliminary details of the incident in a press conference with news media
Wednesday morning. One officer remained hospitalized in stable condition
Wednesday after the shoplifting suspect shot him in the lower body, Case said.
Another officer was shot in the chest, but protective armor stopped the shots,
the police chief said. “We almost lost an officer last night, probably two, at
what took place,” Case said. “This went from a simple misdemeanor arrest to a
very violent act at the snap of a finger in close quarters.” Case described a
chaotic struggle between the man – whose name police have not yet released – and
three officers responding to a reported shoplifting at the Walmart store on the
Old Seward Highway near Dimond Boulevard at about 10:25 p.m. Tuesday. Walmart
staff had stopped the man and brought him to a loss prevention office at the
store, because they believed he had some stolen merchandise that was hidden on
his person, Case said. The man was sitting in the office with Walmart employees
when officers arrived, Case said. “The three officers and the suspect went down
to the ground,” Case said. “During the struggle, the suspect fired rounds at one
of the officers that hit him twice in the lower body. The suspect then fired
some additional rounds that struck another officer in the chest. That round was
stopped by a ballistic plate in his vest.” Anchorage Police Chief Sean Case
discusses a police shooting with news media on June 17, 2026. The shooting
occurred at a Walmart near Dimond Boulevard the night before. Case said officers
were unaware the man had a gun on him until he began firing. The officer struck
in the chest returned fire, killing the man, Case said.
alaskapublic.org
Columbus, OH: C-Store Employee shot and killed during Armed Robbery
A growing memorial now marks the spot where friends, coworkers and customers are
mourning a man they say was much more than a store employee. “Once I realized it
was him, I instantly started crying," said Michelle Rucker, a longtime friend.
"I looked at him as family." Neighbors said a clerk at the Karl Road Market in
North Columbus was shot and killed Tuesday just after 10 p.m. Police said the
shooting happened during a robbery. As of Wednesday afternoon, police have not
identified the victim.
abc6onyourside.com
Dayton, OH: 2 teens arrested in deadly shooting of man near Dayton convenience
store; 2 suspects remain at large
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Bakersfield, CA: Kern County Investigation Leads to 13 Arrests in Series of
Armed Robberies
A months-long investigation into two armed robberies at a Rosedale Highway store
has resulted in 13 arrests on charges including robbery, conspiracy, and
gang-related offenses, according to authorities. The case began on Feb. 3, 2026,
when an employee at Smoke Era was robbed at gunpoint by four masked suspects who
stole more than $3,000 worth of merchandise, according to the Kern County
Sheriff’s Office. Six days later, the store was targeted again by five
additional suspects, investigators said. Detectives with the sheriff’s Crimes
Against Persons Division, working with the Bakersfield Police Department Gang
Suppression Unit, conducted a months-long investigation into both incidents.
gvwire.com
Danville, KY: Danville Police searching for suspects in relation with pharmacy
burglary
Danville Police are asking for help identifying two suspects accused of a
burglary. Police say an investigation into a June 17 burglary at Good Neighbor
Pharmacy revealed two suspects caught on surveillance cameras. “He’s in the
store for less than two minutes. There’s another suspect that we catch on
surveillance video that appears to be on some kind of lookout. He’s on the east
side of the building,” said Danville Assistant Chief Glenn Doan. One suspect
reportedly entered the pharmacy by smashing the front door with a rock around 5
a.m. “A significant amount of glass damage, once they made entry,” said Doan.
The second suspect waited outside as a lookout, police say.
wkyt.com
Greenville, NC: DOJ: Man gets 20 year max sentence for Wilson robbery, stabbing
of store clerk
Newburgh, NY: ‘Snatch and grab’ robber makes off with $10K necklace from jewelry
store
Englewood, FL: C-Store Employee arrested after alleged theft of $20,000 in
lottery tickets from Englewood gas station
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Auto – Solvay, NY –
Burglary
•
Beauty – Coconut
Creek, FL – Robbery
•
C-Store – Columbus, OH
– Armed Robbery / Emp killed
•
C-Store – Rockledge,
FL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store –
Murfreesboro, TN – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Seattle, WA
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Truro, MA –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Brookings,
SD – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Brookings,
SD – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Owego, NY –
Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Milford,
CT – Burglary
•
Handbag – Miam, Fl –
Robbery
•
Jewelry – Wayne, NJ –
Robbery
•
Jewelry – Blaine, MN – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Rosebury, OR – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Tulsa, OK – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Newburgh, NY – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Cleveland, OH – Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Montgomery
County, PA – Armed Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Danville,
KY – Burglary
•
Shoes – Houston, TX –
Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 4 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 1 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
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Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
'Best in Class' Community
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District Asset Protection & Safety Manager
South San Francisco
This position provides evaluation, communication, coordination,
recognition, and enforcement in the areas of safety, health, environment, and
asset protection on a district level. This position works with Stores, and
Corporate management to control inventory shrink...
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