|
|
|
|
|
|
Sponsor Vector Security Joins Junior Achievement of Pennsylvania to Celebrate
Grand Opening of JA BizTown®
Vector Security Joins Forces with Dozens of
Top Regional Businesses to Provide Youth with a Real-World Experience in
Economics, Business Management & Personal Finance
Junior Achievement of Western Pennsylvania (JA of Western PA) today celebrated
the grand opening and first student visit to JA BizTown®, a fully-interactive,
true-to-life simulation that recreates the day-to-day functions of thriving
communities. Vector Security was one of more than two dozen top regional
businesses that have come together and invested millions to create this powerful
experience that will inspire students to dream big and reach their full
potential.
vectorsecurity.com
Checkpoint Systems Adds Alpha® ShoeLok to line of Specialized
Anti-Theft Hard Tags for Retailers
Provides Retailers Protection For Shoes When Traditional Devices Won't Work
Checkpoint
Systems, a leading global supplier of Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS),
RFID solutions and Alpha High-Theft Solutions for the retail industry, today
added the Alpha
ShoeLok to its line of specialized tags to protect against retail footwear
theft.
The one-piece alarming tag easily clamps onto footwear that is challenging to
protect. The ratcheting compression mechanism attaches to the shoe - no pin or
lanyard required, and no marks left behind after removal.
According to Stuart Rosenthal, Vice President of Sales for Checkpoint's Alpha
High-Theft Solutions, "Our first ShoeLok adaptors are reporting significant
reductions in theft incidents as well as ease of use and quick removal at the
point of sale - making this solution a win for both retailers and consumers."
yahoo.com
ECR Community Shrink and OSA Group in the UK
UK Group of LP Executives Met Last Week - Led by Professor Adrian Beck,
ECR Community Shrink & OSA Group
Use
of Video in Retail - Three Key Takeaways from the ECR meeting
Hosted
by URW, over 40 participants, representing 20+ retailers attended last weeks
annual ECR working group on video meeting in London. Click here for the
presentations and meeting recap. Three key takeaways were as follows:
1. Retailer investment in Video is growing
- 68% of the participants stated that their company planned to increase
investment this year Vs prior year
2. Central Operations, Loss Prevention and
the Risk / Audit teams remain the most routine users of video in retail
organizations - with only 5% of the
participants stating that their Marketing team were routine users of video.
3. Interest in facial recognition in
retail remains high, but few are trialing
- 63% of participants stated that they
would like to run a trial but their company was unwilling, with just 11%
reporting that their company was preparing for / were undertaking a trial.
Closing
out the workshop were presentations from Primark and Tesco, who reported on
their video journey, the lessons learnt, and where they see the technology
headed.
The next Video in retail working group meeting will be held on January 20th
/21st 2021, these meetings are open to any retailer and are free to attend. If
you would like to participate, please email:
info@ecr-shrink-group.com
In the meantime, the ECR group will aim to publish
new research on the use of video in retail, lead by Professor Beck, in April
/ May 2020. Please email ECR if you would like to be put on the mailing list for
this research.
ecr-shrink-group.com
New Report Demonstrates the Importance of Inventory Record Accuracy Within the
Retail Industry, and Its Impact on Sales
Study
deducted that 60% of the inventory records are inaccurate
and sales can grow on average by 6% when corrected
RGIS and the ECR Community Shrinkage & OSA Group are announcing the results of a
new study regarding inventory record accuracy undertaken by academics from
EMYLON Business School, TU Darmstadt, and Cardiff Business School.
The researchers conducted an experiment at seven European retailers from the
grocery/general merchandise and fashion/apparel sectors where approximately one
million stock keeping units (SKUs) sold in about 100 stores were counted at
specific points in time. A comparison of stores that were subjected to stock
counts to stores that were not, allowed the researchers to understand how an
improvement in inventory record accuracy improves sales.
The
research showed that approximately 60% of the analyzed SKUs suffered from
inventory record inaccuracies. The average magnitude of inventory record
inaccuracies for the affected SKUs were roughly +6.6 and -6.0 units for positive
and negative discrepancies, respectively. After correcting the inventory record
inaccuracies, the participating retailers experienced a sales increase between
4% and 8% - for the entire portfolio of SKUs on stock.
newswire.com
Thanks to Colin Peacock,
Group Strategic Coordinator for the ECR Community Shrink and OSA Group in the
UK, for submitting.
Coronavirus Update
"Officials Are Grossly
Underestimating the True Toll of Infections"
China is 'Out of Control'
China now has more cases of coronavirus than it had of SARS
Are retailers ready for the coronavirus?
To date, five patients in the U.S. have tested positive for the virus, while 32
were negative and 73 others are still awaiting confirmation. States with
confirmed cases of the virus include Arizona, California, Illinois and
Washington. People infected with the virus have symptoms including fever, cough
and shortness of breath. Symptoms may appear anywhere from two to 14 days after
exposure.
Concerns about a global outbreak of the virus have been blamed for turmoil in
financial markets in recent days. The Dow Jones industrial average fell 267
points in trading on Monday.
American businesses have begun restricting travel to China and arranged charter
flights to bring U.S. citizens home.
U.S. companies operating stores in China are taking steps to address the virus.
Starbucks has temporarily closed more than 2,000 of its locations. The coffee
giant has cautioned that the coronavirus outbreak in China could "materially
affect" its results this year.
Apple: "We've currently closed one of our retail stores and a number of channel
partners have also closed their storefronts," said Apple CEO Tim Cook on the
company's first-quarter earnings call yesterday. "Many of the stores that remain
opened have also reduced operating hours. We're taking additional precautions
and frequently deep-cleaning our stores as well as conducting temperature checks
for employees."
The CDC has offered preventative actions to help reduce the spread of the
coronavirus and other viruses. Number one on the list is for people to wash
their hands with soap and water for at least 20 seconds. If soap and water are
not available, the agency recommends alcohol-based sanitizers. Cleaning and
disinfecting frequently touched surfaces is also recommended by the CDC. retailwire.com
●
2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) in the U.S. - Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
●
About 2019 Novel Coronavirus (2019-nCoV) - Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention
●
Prevention & Treatment - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
●
Deaths rise to 132 in China outbreak as foreigners leave - The Associated
Press/MSN
China Infections Are 'Out of Control'
Protect yourself against coronavirus infection with one simple step
Businesses
Suspend Operations in China
Starbucks - Yum China - KFC - Pizza Hut - McDonald's - Domino's - Carnival -
Royal Caribbean - MGM Resorts - Walt Disney - GM - Ford -
All Close Operations
The Dow Falls 400+ Points as Coronavirus Fears Escalate
As the World Health Organization mulls whether to label the widening coronavirus
outbreak a global public health emergency, an expert warned that
the crisis is only "at the beginning"
- but people can help protect themselves with one simple step.
Chinese health officials are rushing to contain an outbreak of coronavirus that
originated in the city of Wuhan and
has infected at least 4,500 people, claimed the lives of at least 100 others,
and is
slowly popping up in other countries.
yahoo.com
Coronavirus Live Updates: U.S. Evacuates Citizens, and Deaths Mount
6,000
Cases - 132 Deaths - 5 Cases in U.S. & 3 in Canada
Chinese
officials confirmed nearly 6,000 cases of
the mysterious illness as foreign governments airlifted their citizens out of
Wuhan, the outbreak's epicenter.
China said on Wednesday that
132 people had died from the virus,
which is believed to have originated in the central city of Wuhan and is
spreading across the country. The previous count, on Tuesday, was 106.
The number of
confirmed cases increased by nearly 25
percent to 5,974 on Wednesday, up from
4,515 on Tuesday, according to China's National Health Commission.
Thailand has reported 14 cases of infection; Hong Kong has eight;
the United States,
Taiwan, Australia and Macau have
five each;
Singapore, South Korea and Malaysia each have reported four; Japan has seven;
France has four;
Canada has three;
Vietnam has two; and Nepal, Cambodia, Germany and the United Arab Emirates each
have one.
Rise in number of cases outside China is
"very concerning," expert says.
Scientists are racing to develop a
coronavirus vaccine.
Scientists are working to develop a vaccine
capable of stopping the spread of a mysterious new coronavirus that has infected
thousands of people, mostly in China.
nytimes.com
Read Full Update & More Articles
The Crucial Role Prevention Plays Against 2020's Top Business Travel Threats
Building a Strong Duty of Care Program
Millions of people will travel all over the world for business throughout 2020,
and it's not without its risks. International SOS recently released its annual
Travel
Risk Outlook, unveiling the top threats business travelers will face this
year. Today, we'll look at the leading three predicted risks and the critical
role that prevention plays in protecting employees against these threats as it
relates to Duty of Care.
As businesses continue to grow on a global scale and global growth becomes more
and more accessible, strengthening resilience ensures protection of human
capital.
Travel risk resilience can be broken out into three fundamental principles:
prevention, protection and productivity.
When a business takes all three factors into consideration while creating its
Duty of Care program, it builds a strong foundation for both the employer and
its employees.
The top three business travel risks of 2020 include
geopolitical shifts and civil unrest, mental health issues and physical health
issues.
securitymagazine.com
Companies, this is why your employees are stealing from you
A new survey of 1,000 employees and managers shows that
68% of workers have stolen from work,
and one-fifth of workers think it's okay to steal for the following reasons:
● Company won't notice anything missing
(24%)
● Not paid enough (21%)
● Can't afford to buy the item (17%)
● Boss is rude (13%)
Employers should expect to stock employees' homes with office supplies: 4 in 10
employees have stolen pens or pencils, and a quarter have taken paper clips and
sticky notes. Office theft has been on the rise nationally, accounting for
roughly
20% of supplies.
The most common items stolen from work are: pens, pencils, paper clips, sticky
notes, paper, notepads, and highlighters, which are commonly taken from large
companies. But 11-14% have stolen food, coffee, and soda, mostly from smaller
companies.
Only 5% have stolen more expensive items
such as tech accessories.
Eighty percent of managers said that stealing is an automatic fireable offense
at their company. The survey was commissioned by job-seeker resource
TheInterviewGuys.com, who presumably don't want you to get canned for pilfering.
theinterviewguys.com
EEOC Harassment Charges Reflect #MeToo's Relevance
Despite a slight dip in the number of sexual-harassment charges filed last year,
the monetary benefits of sexual-harassment cases settled by the Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission (EEOC) - excluding the awards obtained through litigation
- was nearly $70 million. This was much higher than in previous years, showing
that the #MeToo movement continues to make changes in the workplace.
The monetary benefits from the agency's sexual-harassment settlements have
steadily risen over the past four years:
2016 -- $40.7 million
2017 -- $46.3 million
2018 -- $56.6 million
2019 -- $68.2 million
State Anti-Harassment Laws Have Been Strengthened
In the wake of the #MeToo movement, many states have strengthened their
anti-discrimination laws and developed more-robust workplace sexual-harassment
prevention training requirements. HR professionals and organizational leaders
should treat the eruption of such mandates as an opportunity - not an
obligation.
shrm.org
Staten Island Wholesaler Smuggles $40 Million of Tobacco into New
York
L Brands Investigates Sale of Victoria's Secret - Wexner May Step
Down
NRF welcomes signing of USMCA legislation
Home Depot launches drive thru for pros & trucks in Dallas
Lucky's Markets Sells 11 Stores, Begins Chapter 11
Pederson's Natural Farms Adopts ReposiTrak for Compliance
DHS Free E-Verify Webinars - February 2020
Hotels Tackle Human Trafficking at Super Bowl
Quarterly Results
LVMH
Full Year revenue up 15%, world's largest luxury brand with 4,915 stores, 829 in
U.S.
Asia = 30%, U.S. = 24% of revenue
McDonald's Q4 Global comp's up 5.9%, U.S. comp's up 5.1%, International comp's
up 6.2%, sales up 3.7%
McDonald's Full Yr. Global comp's up 5.9%, U.S. comp's up 5%. International
comp's up 6.1%, sales up 4%
Starbucks
Q1 comp's up 5% Globally, comp's up 6% in the U.S., comp's up 3% in China, net
revenue up 7%
|
|
All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well please.
If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Axis Communications named on the 2020
List of Best Workplaces for Inclusion
A commitment to diversity and inclusion makes Axis
one of the top workplaces for
inclusion in Canada
Axis Communications, the market leader in network video, today announced that
Axis Canada has been named on the 2020 list of Best Workplaces for Inclusion by
Great Place to Work®. Axis ranked in the top organizations in inclusion based on
direct feedback from employees, provided as part of a survey about workplace
culture and experience by Great Place to Work. Great Place to Work is the global
authority on high-trust, high-performance workplace cultures, providing the
benchmarks, framework and expertise needed to create, sustain and recognize
outstanding workplace cultures.
"We are proud to announce that our organization has been named on the 2020 list
of Best Workplaces for Inclusion," said Keith D'Sa, Country Manager, Canada,
Axis Communications, Inc. "This recognition, which aligns with our company
culture and core values, further solidifies our diversity and inclusion
initiatives. As we continue to grow, our commitment to hiring a diverse
workforce will remain a top priority."
Read More Here |
|
|
|
|
Wawa's Massive 30M Customer's Details - 850 Stores - Credit Card Data For Sale
on Darkweb
The Wawa breach may rank as one of the
biggest of all time
One of the biggest card breaches known to date
This prolonged infection period, along with a massive compromise of hundreds of
different locations, appears to have allowed the criminal group behind this hack
to amass a huge trove of payment card details.
"Since the breach may have affected over 850 stores and potentially exposed 30
million sets of payment records, it ranks among the largest payment card
breaches of 2019, and of all time," Gemini Advisory said today when describing
the breadth of the Wawa breach.
"It is comparable to Home Depot's 2014 breach exposing 50 million customers'
data or to Target's 2013 breach exposing 40 million sets of payment card data,"
they said.
Card details are for sale for around $17/card
Gemini Advisory said that after analyzing the data, the Wawa card dump appears
to include "30 million US records across more than 40 states, as well as over
one million non-US records from more than 100 different countries."
zdnet.com
NSA Releases Guidance on Mitigating Cloud Vulnerabilities
The National Security Agency (NSA) has released an information sheet with
guidance on mitigating cloud vulnerabilities. NSA identifies cloud security
components and discusses threat actors, cloud vulnerabilities, and potential
mitigation measures.
The Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) encourages
administrators and users to review NSA's guidance on Mitigating Cloud
Vulnerabilities and CISA's page on APTs Targeting IT Service Provider Customers
and Analysis Report on Microsoft Office 365 and other Cloud Security
Observations for information on implementing a defense-in-depth strategy to
protect infrastructure assets.
The document divides cloud vulnerabilities into four classes (misconfiguration,
poor access control, shared tenancy vulnerabilities, and supply chain
vulnerabilities) that encompass the vast majority of known vulnerabilities.
Descriptions of each vulnerability class along with the most effective
mitigations are provided to help organizations lock down their cloud resources:
Misconfiguration - Poor Access Control - Shared Tenancy Vulnerabilities -
Supply Chain Vulnerabilities
"With careful implementation and management, cloud capabilities can minimize
risks associated with cloud adoption, and empower customers to take advantage of
cloud security enhancements. Customers should understand the shared
responsibility that they have with the CSP in protecting the cloud. CSPs may
offer tailored countermeasures to help customers harden their cloud resources.
Security in the cloud is a constant process and customers should continually
monitor their cloud resources and work to improve their security posture."
us-cert.gov
CISOs: Make 2020 the year you focus on third-party cyber risk
Data breaches and third-party cyber risk
If there is one work-related New Year's resolution I'd like CISOs to make as we
enter 2020, it's to give the challenge of third-party cyber risk the attention
it needs. In fact, I no longer see this as optional or as an extension of an
enterprise risk and cybersecurity strategy, because third-party data breaches
will dominate the threat landscape in 2020.
Estimates indicate that around 60 percent of data breaches are linked to third
parties, and we can expect that percentage to increase as more companies embrace
digital platforms and new operating models that require sharing of data with
partners and service providers.
Enterprise boundaries will continue to blur in 2020 with more organizations
investing in cloud computing, using file sharing platforms such as DropBox,
Google Drive or OneDrive, and connecting more devices on the edge of their
networks.
If CISOs continue to focus cybersecurity tools and resources within the company
perimeter, they are fighting the wrong battle in an increasingly multi-front
cybersecurity war.
Elevating third-party cyber risk to a C-suite and board imperative
One of the most important things CISOs can do to put the appropriate focus on
third-party cyber risk is to make it a corporate reputation issue requiring
support and oversight from C-suite and board executives.
With the average enterprise engaging with several hundred partners and other
third parties, it's not a question of "if" the data will be exposed, but of "when" and how much corporate reputation will suffer as a result of loss of
trust.
What CISOs should do
CISOs in 2020 must become stronger advocates for shifting from reactive to
proactive cybersecurity postures. They must advocate for creating more resilient
and cyber-aware cultures where cybersecurity is seen as everyone's
responsibility.
That means not only assessing third parties for potential vulnerabilities, but
using new approaches and tools coming to market that can identify actual data
that a third-party inadvertently exposed, and that can enable immediate
remediation.
Are you optimistic?
With the right resolve and the right support from the cybersecurity industry,
CISOs can take charge of this challenge in 2020, commit to shifting
their focus toward third-party cyber risk, and engage C-suite and board
executives about the strategic importance of doing so.
helpnetsecurity.com
Are Companies Adhering to CCPA Requirements?
Some Are Not Giving Customers Option to Opt
Out of Data Sale, Legal Experts Say
Many companies that should be offering customers the ability to "opt out" of the
sale of their information under the California Consumer Privacy Act are failing
to do so because of the law's ambiguities, some legal experts say. CCPA went
into effect Jan. 1, but it won't be enforced until July.
"Given the ambiguities in the statue, we're seeing a lot of variances in
organizations' compliance efforts," Sadia Mirza, an attorney at the law firm
Troutman Sanders, tells Information Security Media Group. "Most organizations
don't agree on what constitutes the "sale" of information she says.
govinfosecurity.com
Biometric Top News Articles:
Credit card, retail and tech giants, and government ID projects
top biometrics news of the week
The FBI's Most Wanted Cybercriminals online slideshow
Request for Comments: PCI PTS Point of Interaction (POI) v6
|
|
|
|
|
|
The Canadian Push is Over -
Stores Start Closing
It was a great 10-year run & It ignited
e-commerce
When the great recession started in October 2008 and got into full swing in 2019
we saw two things happen. First retail jobs came to a stand still. Which, by the
way gave birth to the D&D Daily. Second, with retail's ever-persistent need to
grow top line sales regardless of circumstances, we immediately heard in the
beginning of 2009, U.S. retailers starting to announce their expansion into
Canada.
Which up until then had remained an underserved and underdeveloped retail market
with absolutely no e-commerce to speak of, admittedly so by a number of
retailers because of the lack of competition.
Now after ten years and hundreds of stores, we're starting to see the pull back.
La Senza closing, 34 Lowe's stores closing, Sears, the great Target debacle (one
for the history books - being used at business college's now on what not to do)
- and the recent article
Hundreds of Stores to Close in Canada in Early 2020 [Analysis].
Retail Insider counts well over 700 store locations that will be closing or
have recently closed in this country, with news coming in daily that more
stores and chains will be shuttering.
So now Canada may have joined the U.S. ranks with being 'over stored.' But
regardless many will survive and thrive and the Canadian consumer wins out
because the 'Push' brought jobs, competition and more product selection.
Something Canadians were screaming for. As evidenced by their cross-border
shopping. Overall it was a great thing for Canada. Just some thoughts - Gus
Downing
'This is not the end:'
Slew of closures shows challenges in Canadian Retail Industry
2020 is off a rocky start for the Canadian retail industry, with
several companies announcing store closures this week due to what is being
called a challenging and difficult retail environment. Several retailers,
including Carlton Cards, Papyrus, Bench and Ten Thousand Villages, announced
this week that they would shutter store locations across the country. This comes
shortly after other companies - including Pier 1 Imports, Bose and Links of
London - also unveiled plans to close stores.
Carl Boutet, a retail strategist
at Studio Rx, said the slew of announcements show that Canada is not immune to
the rapidly changing dynamics seen across the retail industry.
"This is a moment of catchup," Boutet said in an interview.
While Canada is not
as overstored as the United States retail market is, he said the rise of
e-commerce and changing consumer habits and demographics are making it
increasingly difficult to remain competitive in Canada.
"I think the majority of
the stores that we saw announce this week were very undifferentiated," he said.
"These are retail concepts that you could have walked into 20 years ago and they
would have looked very similar. They haven't adjusted to how our lifestyles have
changed in those 20 years."
yahoo.com
Atlantic Canada Privacy Commissioners question growing use of Facial
Recognition
Information and privacy commissioners in Atlantic Canada marked
Data Privacy Day on Tuesday by highlighting the growing prevalence of facial
recognition technology. The commissioners from Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova
Scotia, New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island say that while the technology is
in limited use in Canada, it is being increasingly employed by public bodies and
private companies around the world.
In a joint statement, the commissioners say as the technology matures, "There is
little doubt that Canadian public bodies will explore its use to enhance their
delivery of goods and services." They say in every such instance, the privacy
implications that arise need to be carefully considered and weighed against the
potential benefits.
globalnews.ca
Alberta privacy commissioner opens investigation into ID scans at liquor stores
Alberta's privacy commissioner has opened an investigation into a liquor
retailer's decision to test ID-scanning technology at its stores. Edmonton-based Alcanna Ltd., which runs Liquor Depot, Wine and Beyond and Nova Cannabis, says
it will require customers to scan valid ID to gain entry to some of its stores.
The move was made in partnership with the Edmonton Police Service to address a
growing number of thefts. The Office of the Information and Privacy Commissioner
says it first heard about the pilot project through media reports earlier this
week. It says an independent analysis of this use of the technology has not been
conducted by the office. The investigation will determine whether the use is
compliant with the Personal Information Protection Act, Alberta's private sector
privacy law.
canadiansecuritymag.com
Mastercard to build new
$510M cybersecurity centre in Vancouver
RCC hosting theft and safety roundtable on January 31st in Winnipeg, Manitoba
Lowe's Closing 34 Underperforming stores in Canada
Apparel retailer Bench to shutter all Canadian stores
La Senza suppliers file to put it in Ch. 7 bankruptcy
B.C. winery employee fired for accidentally dumping 5,680 litres of wine down
the drain
Hamilton, Ont: Alleged Ancaster Best Buy bandits linked to GTA Organized Crime
Ring
Hamilton police are asking the public to help identify three suspects believed
to be involved in an organized theft ring. The trio are wanted in connection
with a theft at an Ancaster Best Buy, but police say it's believed they have
also targeted other Best Buy stores in the Greater Toronto Area. The Ancaster
theft happened Jan. 9. Police allege the trio entered the store around 3 p.m.,
and as they were leaving they caught the attention of store security. Further
investigation revealed they allegedly used a device that deactivates locks on
high-priced secure items, police said. This allowed them to leave without
triggering the security alarm.
thespec.com
Simcoe County, Ont: Charge laid after $2,000 in Baby Formula stolen from
Bradford Store
A man is in custody after police say about two grand in baby
food was swiped last Spring. South Simcoe Police were called to a Bradford
grocery store back on April 29th, 2019, with reports about $2,000 in baby
formula had been stolen. A warrant was issued for the suspect's arrest. On
Saturday, the South Simcoe Police were contacted by counterparts with Toronto's
police regarding the warrant, after a suspect was taken into custody there. A
local officer went to the GTA to retrieve the 49-year-old North York suspect who
has since been charged with theft.
barrie360.com
Hamilton, Ont: Two face 141 charges of fraud, identity theft
Hamilton Police
began investigating the matter in July 2018, but they have not said what
triggered the probe. Officers searched a home in the east end of the city twice
over the course of the probe, recovering bank cards and other forms of
identification both times. Bobbi-Jo Reichheld, 34, is facing 71 charges and
Joshua Virag, 31, is facing 70. The counts include fraud over $5,000, identity
theft and possession of property obtained by crime.
torontosun.com
Edmonton: Security Guard gets 18 months probation for pepper-spraying man
outside supermarket
Rafik Khlgatyan, 57, a former security guard entered a guilty plea Monday
related to a September 2019 pepper spray incident outside the No Frills in Old
Strathcona. The defense said the man hadn't been
on the job that long and used the pepper spray in the heat of the moment. But as
Julia Wong reports, the judge called it an abuse of power. Court heard that Mark Callihoo left No Frills pushing a cart with his groceries inside. A cashier
pointed to Callihoo, and Khlgatyan thought it was because Callihoo did not pay
for his groceries. Khlgatyan, who was employed by the shopping plaza and not
authorized to provide security for the supermarket, followed Callihoo to the
parking lot. It was later determined the cashier was trying to tell Callihoo
about some flowers he had left at the check out.
globenews.ca
Montreal: Longtime Milano grocery store employee dies, found in walk-in fridge
Collingwood, Ont: Sporting Life plans to re-open after massive fire; damage
in the millions
Surrey, BC: Bungling burglar gets trapped inside cellphone
store when he can't squeeze back under security fencing
Winners theft investigated by Airdrie RCMP
Toronto: Man charged after thefts of high-end vehicles from dealerships across
GTA
Toronto: Police search for man accused of tampering with food in west-end store
Hanna, AB: Arrest Warrants issued for 2 Men in Identity Theft
Robberies & Burglaries
●
C-Store - Saskatoon - Armed Robbery
●
Cellphone - Surrey, BC
- Burglary
●
Cigar Shop - Alberta, CA
- Armed Robbery
●
7-Eleven - High River, AB
- Armed Robbery |
View
Canadian Connections Archives
|
|
|
|
|
Colorado Man Pleads Guilty to Racketeering Charges Related to Darknet
Marketplace AlphaBay
Bryan Connor Herrell, 25, pleaded guilty on Monday Herrell was a
moderator on the AlphaBay marketplace, an illegal website that operated on
the so-called darknet. On AlphaBay, vendors and purchasers engaged in hundreds
of thousands of illicit transactions for guns, drugs, stolen identity
information, credit card numbers and other illegal items. At the time,
AlphaBay was considered to be the world's largest online drug marketplace.
Herrell settled disputes between vendors and purchasers and settled over
20,000 disputes. He is also accused of serving as a scam watcher - providing
a service dedicated to monitor attempts to defraud AlphaBay users. Herrell went
by the monikers "Penissmith" and "Botah" and was paid in bitcoin for his
participation. He faces a maximum statutory penalty of 20 years in prison.
justice.gov
Anti-Counterfeiting Educational Foundation
Helps General Public and Victims Easily Report Suspected Fakes
The Anti-Counterfeiting Educational Foundation (ACEF) now provides collectors,
dealers, the general public and victims of suspected fraud with a convenient and
secure way to report information about counterfeit coins, bars, holders, rounds,
mint products, paper money or other suspicious counterfeit related activities.
"See it? Report it! If you have information about a counterfeit, you can easily
go to the ACEF website and click on the Counterfeit Alert tab,
www.acefonline.org/counterfeit-alert/report-a-counterfeit," explained Doug
Davis, ACEF Director of Anti-Counterfeiting.
"From there you are able to report a counterfeit by completing the simple online
Counterfeit Report Form. Reports submitted that identify criminal or suspected
criminal counterfeit activity are promptly sent to the appropriate local, state
and federal law enforcement agencies with the necessary information to initiate
a formal investigation," said Davis, a former Texas Police Chief.
coinweek.com
Heard at NRF: Contradictory conversation from ecommerce tech vendors
Shopify, the e-commerce company that's coming for Amazon |
|
|
|
|
Bay Area Counterfeiting Gang of Six Going to Federal Prison
Bay
Area Residents Sentenced To 5 Years For Counterfeit Currency And Credit Card
Fraud Schemes
Nicole
Dunlap gets 57 months and Marcus Smith gets 63 months in federal prison with no
parole. Dunlap and Smith each took part in a conspiracy to
manufacture and pass 950 counterfeit one hundred
dollar bills.
Dunlap and Smith admitted to a credit card fraud scheme, involving the
possession and use of hundreds of fraudulent credit and identification cards in
the identities of numerous victims, as well as card-making equipment. created
fraudulent access devices to rent cars, book hotel rooms, rent high-end purses
for sale, and make other fraudulent purchases. For example, when Dunlap was
arrested, she had in her possession more than one hundred fraudulent cards with
various victims' identities, as well as multiple pieces of access device-making
equipment. Upon Smith's arrest, he also had more than 1500 fraudulent cards with
various victims' identities, as well as multiple pieces of access device-making
equipment. The defendants each acknowledged that the total losses from their
credit card fraud conspiracy were no less than
$250,000.
Four additional co-conspirators have pleaded guilty to related charges for their
roles in the counterfeiting conspiracy and await their sentences.
justice.gov
Las Vegas Man Gets 27 Months Fed. Prison For Hitting Sam's Club's in Pittsburgh,
FL. & Calif. - Making fraudulent gift card purchases of $382,000
During the month of December 2017, Pou Torres and his codefendant, Hector Podio
Gutierrez, using an encoding device, created counterfeit credit cards, and then
used the cards to make fraudulent gift card purchases totaling more than
$382,000 at various Sam's Club locations. Pou Torres had also previously been
convicted of a similar offense as recently as 2017.
justice.gov
Petaluma, CA: Organized Retail Theft Suspects Arrested In Petaluma
Four suspects believed to have been captured on video committing retail thefts
at several stores were booked into Sonoma County jail Monday after Petaluma
police caught up with them. Police received a call at 4:29 p.m. from Dick's
Sporting Goods, on Kenilworth Drive, that three people were in the store
attempting to return merchandise stolen hours prior from Dick's in Fairfield,
Petaluma police Sgt. Lance Novello said.
patch.com
Update: Hayward, CA:
Three Oakland sisters charged in Retail Theft Ring
case
Three Oakland sisters have been charged with running a Retail Theft Ring that
recruited groups of thieves to steal specific merchandise from numerous stores
that was later sold at the suspects' homes or online, police said Tuesday.
More
than $300,000 in suspected stolen merchandise from at least 18 stores was
recovered when search warrants were served at the suspects' homes last month,
police said. The suspects were identified by police as Jessenia Rodriguez, 24,
Jessica Rodriguez, 27, and Norma Rodriguez, 33. They were arrested Dec. 18 the
same day the search warrants were served, police said. According to court
documents, all three have admitted their involvement in the illegal operation.
They were each charged Jan. 14 with organized retail theft in concert with two
or more, directing organized retail theft and receiving stolen property, all
felonies.
eastbaytimes.com
St George, UT: Detectives still searching for some of the 21 firearms stolen
from C-A-L Ranch store in St. George
Three St. George men busted Washington County Drug Task Force detectives say
someone broke into the C-A-L Ranch store and stole more than 20 firearms.
Investigators recovered more than 13 of the stolen firearms.
abc4.com
Turtle Creek, PA., Iklas Davis, 38, Hits Best Buy & Other Retailers
Using Stolen ID's & Credit Cards Indicted - Faces 17 Yrs & $750k in Fines Max.
or Both
Crestwood, IL: Bail Revoked For Man Accused Of Swiping over $3,000 in Power
Tools From Menard's on 2 occasions
Palm Beach, FL: Man shoplifted merchandise worth $2,214 at Neiman Marcus
St George, UT: 4 Arrested on Retail Theft and Counterfeit Charges after fighting
with Police |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Shootings & Deaths
Glendale, AZ: Community remembers Astrology store manager killed in Saturday
shooting
New details have been released in the violent murder of a Glendale
store manager who was targeted this weekend by a customer. Police say
53-year-old Ray Watkins was killed in an alley behind the astrology store he
managed. Police say he suffered gunshot wounds and severe head trauma. Court
paperwork shows the man who admitted to and was arrested in connection with the
killing is 21-year-old Sean Davidson. Davidson was a known customer who was in
the astrology store earlier Saturday and was asked not to return because he was
harassing staff members. Court paperwork says Davidson bought the gun earlier
that day. The paperwork also states that he was under the influence of drugs or
alcohol at the time of the shooting.
azfamily.com
Las Vegas, NV: Teen in Fashion Show Mall shooting may argue self-defense
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Warwick, RI: Face Recognition Software Leads WPD To Man Wanted for Shoplifting
A Cranston man recorded on video stealing 11 pieces of clothing from the Warwick
Mall Macy's worth $723 didn't stop for Officer Matthew Carradimos Oct. 24 while
driving away, but facial recognition software helped police catch up to him in
Sixth District Court in Providence Jan. 14.
warwickpost.com
San Bernardino County, CA: SBCSO ask for help identifying
'falling burglar' who
crashed through ceiling in Rancho Cucamonga
Shreveport, LA: 3 men are caught in connection with a crime spree in Shreveport
and Northeast Texas; nearly a dozen burglaries including Family Dollar
Saline County, KS: Casey's General employee charged with $1,600 theft of cash
Tuscaloosa, AL: Man Sentenced to Prison for 15 Years for Two Armed Robberies in
Tuscaloosa
Urbana, IL: Man accused of robbing same store twice gets 25.5 years
Long Island, NY: Billy Joel's Long Island home is 'targeted by burglars who
vandalize 12 of his beloved motorcycles'
|
|
|
●
AT&T - Jacksonville,
FL - Burglary
●
Appliances - Dublin,
OH - Burglary
●
Auto Parts - Troy, AL
- Burglary
●
C-Store - Chicago, IL
- Burglary
●
C-Store - Somersworth,
NH - Burglary
●
Carpet Store -
Moorpark, CA - Burglary
●
CVS - Chicago, IL -
Burglary
●
Dollar General -
Alamance County, NC - Armed Robbery
●
Family Dollar -
Vicksburg, MS - Armed Robbery
●
Family Dollar -
Fresno, CA - Burglary
●
Grocery - Staten
Island, NY - Burglary
●
Grocery - Acadia
Parish, LA - Burglary
●
Guns - St George, UT -
Burglary
●
Jewelry - Hayward, CA- Robbery
●
Jewelry - Strongsville, OH - Robbery
●
Jewelry - Plantation, FL - Robbery
●
Liquor - San
Bernardino County, CA - Burglary
●
Liquor - San Antonio,
TX - Burglary
●
Restaurant - Casa
Grande, AZ - Armed Robbery (Burger King)
●
Restaurant - Chicago,
IL - Burglary
●
Restaurant - Marion,
VA - Burglary
●
7-Eleven - Goose
Creek, SC - Armed Robbery
●
7-Eleven - Hampton, VA
- Armed Robbery |
|
Daily Totals:
• 8 robberies
• 15 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
|
Click to enlarge map
|
|
|
|
|
|
Submit Your New Hires/Promotions or New Position
|
|
|
|
|
|
Featured Job Spotlights
NEW
|
Field Loss Prevention Manager
Oklahoma City, OK
As a Retail Loss Prevention Manager for Staples, you will manage and coordinate
Loss Prevention and Safety Programs intended to protect Staples assets and
ensure a safe work environment within Staples Retail locations...
|
NEW
|
Risk Management and Asset Protection Manager
Kansas City, MO
This role is responsible for risk management, physical security, and loss
prevention in Hallmark Gold Crown retail stores and will monitor internal and
external theft, consumer and retailer fraud, and employee and consumer
injuries...
|
|
Assets Protection Business Partner - Food & Beverage
Minneapolis, MN
In this role you will lead a team of DC AP Managers responsible for providing
safe and secure environments for our team members and guests in Food & Beverage
Distribution Centers. AP teams will do this by leading a physical security
culture and responding to crisis events to protect our team, investigating and
resolving theft, and creating awareness and educating team members on
operational shortage priorities...
|
|
Assets Protection Business Partner - Global Supply Chain & Logistics
Multiple Field Locations, Nationwide
In this role you will lead a team of DC AP Managers responsible for providing
safe and secure environments for our team members and guests in Distribution
Centers across Central and Pac-Northwest US regions. AP teams will do this by
leading a physical security culture and responding to crisis events to protect
our team, investigating and resolving theft, and creating awareness and
educating team members on operational shortage priorities...
|
|
Investigative Analyst
Palo Alto, CA
The Investigative Analyst conducts various analysis and investigative services
for a specific client in their Investigations Center. The Analyst will complete
all-source research, gather pertinent data, review intelligence gaps, prepare
case files and complete associated investigations and reporting requirements...
|
|
Regional Loss Prevention Manager
San Francisco or Los Angeles, CA
Primary Purpose: To protect the company assets, associates and customers in the
stores located on the West Coast (majority of stores in California) and
administer the established Loss Prevention programs that have been established
at the stores of our three brands: Coach, Kate Spade and Stuart Weitzman...
|
|
Research Director
Gainesville, FL
The Research Director leads, develops, and manages the research and innovation
team and its outputs by coordinating research and innovation strategy, projects,
working group engagements, lab enhancement, IMPACT and other event
preparation...
|
|
Regional Loss Prevention Manager
Chicago, IL
The Regional Loss Prevention Manager (RLPM) oversees the daily activities of
loss prevention efforts within the assigned area to ensure an effective and
proactive approach to the reduction of shrink and protection of company
assets...
|
|
Manager of Loss Prevention & Security
Wawa, PA The Manager of Loss Prevention and Security serves as the subject matter expert
in the area of Loss Prevention and Physical Security for the Company with focus
on developing and driving solutions that will create an optimum associate and
customer experience in a safe and secure environment...
|
|
Payments Security Program Manager
San Jose, CA
The Payments Security Program Manager will oversee the strategy, identification,
coordination, implementation, execution and completion of the Security
Initiatives across eBay's Payments, Risk, and Billing systems and partnering
organizations...
|
|
Region Asset Protection Manager
Jacksonville, FL
Responsible for managing asset protection programs designed to minimize shrink,
associate and customer liability accidents, bad check and cash loss, and safety
incidents for stores within assigned region. This position will develop the
framework for the groups' response to critical incidents, investigative needs,
safety concerns and regulatory agency visits...
|
|
Asset Protection Investigator
Scarsdale, NY
The Asset Protection Investigator (API) shall consistently identify internal and
external theft opportunities, prepare AP case reports and testifies in criminal
court proceedings when necessary. The API will also develop internal case leads
and actively participate with the investigation...
|
|
Regional Asset Protection Manager
Seattle, WA
The Regional Manager of Asset Protection drives Asset Protection programs and
supports Luxottica Brands to safeguard the assets of merchandise, money,
property and the welfare of customers and associates. Responds and investigates
situations of known or suspected internal/external dishonesty...
|
Featured Jobs
To apply to any of today's Featured Jobs,
Click Here
|
View Featured
Jobs |
Post Your Job
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Managing your career upwards requires a vision of where you want to go and how
you're going to get there. Other than personal performance, one of the primary
factors is who you know and how you develop those relationships. Everything you
read talks about managing relationships around you in your current role, but the
real key is the relationships you have outside your role or your company and not
just in the LP community but with successful operators outside your current
scope. If you expect to truly excel in your career, you've got to expand your
contacts and develop them as you would the operator beside you. Obviously, this
can be difficult and slow to progress. But give it some thought for the new year
and set some goals of meeting new executives and expanding your circle. Because
one person, one contact, can make a difference and you never know who that might
be.
Just a Thought, Gus
|
We want to post your tips or advice... Click here |
|
|
Not getting the Daily? Is it ending up in your spam folder?
Please make sure to add d-ddaily@downing-downing.com to your contact list,
address book, trusted sender list, and/or company whitelist to ensure you
receive our newsletter. Want to know how?
Read Here |
|
|