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EDEKA Jaeger Introduces AI-powered Age Verification at Self-Service Checkouts
Smart Vision technology-based solution from
Diebold Nixdorf automates age-restricted sales in the 24/7 store at Stuttgart
Airport
STUTTGART,
Germany and NORTH CANTON, Ohio, April 30, 2024 -- EDEKA Jaeger, part of the
EDEKA Group, which is one of the leading German supermarket organizations, is
now offering customers in the 24/7 store at Stuttgart Airport the opportunity to
authorize the purchase of age-restricted goods like alcoholic beverages at the
self-service checkout using automatic age recognition. The AI-based solution
Vynamic® Smart Vision I Age Verification from Diebold Nixdorf, a world
leader in transforming the way people shop, complements the previously required
approval by store attendants. This considerably speeds up transactions at the
self-service checkouts and gives employees more time for customer service and
other responsibilities.
Read more here
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Theft & Customer Friction Have Retailers
Backing Away from Self-Checkout
WSJ: Retailers Scale Back Self-Checkouts to Curb Irritation-and Theft
Problems with technology are prompting
companies including Target and Walmart to change operations or ditch the
stations
Attention,
shoppers: Retailers are rethinking your cashier job. Store operators are
modifying how they use
self-checkout stations in a bid to boost their bottom lines and improve
the shopping experience for customers.
Some retailers are pulling kiosks out of stores as a
way to keep a lid on theft. Others, including Target, Dollar
General and the regional grocery chain Schnucks, have limited how many items
customers can bring to self-checkouts to avoid bottlenecks and alleviate
headaches for staff.
In March, Five Below Chief Executive Officer Joel Anderson said the
retail chain limited the number of open self-checkout registers and
positioned employees at more checkout lanes to assist customers. Walmart
pulled self-checkout lanes from a handful of stores in recent months based
on feedback from associates and customers, a spokesman said.
Self-checkout use accelerated during the Covid-19 pandemic, when human-to-human
contact lessened. But self-checkouts have contributed to
increased "shrink"-an industry term used to describe losses from theft,
lost inventory or damaged goods-because shoppers make mistakes or steal.
Retailers, hesitant to spend more on staffing, are deciding if they prefer to
reduce labor costs or combat shrink.
About a fifth of people who used self-checkouts said they accidentally took
an item without paying for it, according to a survey of 2,000 shoppers last
year by LendingTree. Some 15% of self-checkout users
admitted to stealing an item on purpose.
"Shoplifting used to be mostly invisible," said David
Johnston, vice president of asset protection and retail operations at the
National Retail Federation, a trade group. "What we are seeing today
are methods that are open and brazen."
wsj.com
California Law Forcing Stores to Shut Down
Self-Checkout?
Proposed California law could force some stores to do away with self-checkout
A proposed state law could change regulations on self-checkout, forcing some
California stores to do away with the service altogether.
"The hope is that we can reduce the amount of theft that happens. That's
a much better solution than punishing theft after it occurs," said Cristine Soto
DeBerry, founder and executive director of Prosecutors Alliance of California.
Senate Bill 1446 would regulate self-checkouts
in hopes of boosting employment and cutting down on thefts. If voted into law,
grocery and pharmacy retailers would have to meet certain requirements or get
rid self-check outs, including upping the number of employees monitoring the
stations.
"One of the main deterrents from theft is that there are staff paying
attention in the store to your activities," said Soto DeBerry.
The California Chamber of Commerce is coming out against the proposed
legislation, in part, over concerns it could hurt business. The bottom line
is also a concern among some shoppers.
"Are we as a consumer going to have to pay for that to take it down and redo
it or whatever is decided, you know? The cost shouldn't be on us. It should
be them as a corporation," said Maryellen Mascitti, a San Francisco resident.
"I understand the concern for theft," said San Francisco resident Steven
Brummond. "I'd be concerned, though, that if grocery stores were required to
staff more checkout aisles, that that would be a huge cost increase for them
and they'd pass that cost on to customers."
abc7news.com
Retailers Pour Millions Into Effort to Roll
Back Prop 47
California retail theft captured the Capitol's attention. How major stores have
lobbied for it
National big box chains and the trade groups that represent them have
dramatically increased spending on lobbying this year - and it appears as
though it's paying off. Since the beginning of the year, Assembly Speaker Robert
Rivas, D-Hollister, and Senate President Pro Tem Mike McGuire, D-Healdsburg,
have both proposed multi-bill packages to address
shoplifting and organized retail theft.
The Retailers Association paid significantly more for lobbying
year-over-year, spending about $70,391 during the first quarter of 2023 and
about $577,682 during the first quarter of 2024, according to Secretary of
State's Office lobbying disclosures.
Michelin in her Press Club comments attributed the legislative changes to Rivas'
committee. But her own organization - as well as Target, Home Depot and other
store chains - have been lobbying lawmakers and the governor at least since
the time the speaker created it. Retailers support bills
making it easier for prosecutors to go after repeat thieves and
those who take items from stores to resell them online, among other pieces of
legislation.
While chains and trade groups are lobbying lawmakers, some of the same
retailers have donated millions of dollars to back a ballot measure rolling back
portions of Proposition 47. The voter-approved initiative made certain
lower-level crimes - including shoplifting property under $950 - misdemeanors.
Newsom, Rivas and McGuire have all said they are against changing Proposition
47. Walmart had contributed $2.5 million to the initiative campaign, and Home
Depot and Target had each contributed $1 million as of Friday, according to
campaign finance filings from the Secretary of State's Office. Californians for
Safer Communities last month announced it had collected more than 900,000
signatures to put the measure on the November ballot.
sacbee.com
Kroger is 'Fed Up with Thieves'
Grocery store theft increasing in Tennessee
"There are a lot of enterprising thieves out
there who are doing a booming business of stealing product and selling it at a
discount."
Retail theft is on the rise in Tennessee. That's the word from Tennessee Grocers
and Convenience Store Association President and CEO Rob Ikard. Although stealing
is a crime in Tennessee, a shoplifter has to swipe at
least $1,000 worth of items to be charged with a felony.
Ikard said people don't just steal food to serve at a restaurant, often times
they take items off the grocery shelves and sell them online later on.
"There are a lot of enterprising thieves out there who are doing a booming
business of stealing product and selling it at a discount," Ikard said. "And we
know that the retail industry and the grocery industry in particular are
laser-focused on stopping this trend. We are watching very carefully. And
we're going to make sure that we prosecute every violation to the max."
Kroger spokeswoman Lauren Bell said that the grocer is
fed up with thieves in a statement below:
"At Kroger, we are truly disappointed by the rising crime rates affecting
retail establishments and the negative consequences they have on our valued
customers. Ensuring their safety is our utmost concern, which is why we
are dedicated to collaborating closely with local law enforcement to tackle this
issue head-on. We have already implemented various security measures to
deter crime and effectively handle any potential incidents. However, we are
fully committed to exploring and implementing further solutions to enhance the
security within our stores."
"I think that for retailers and grocers, it's important to greet your
customers and watch them and be helpful to them and communicate with them while
they're in the store," Ikard said. "That way they know that you're there to
help. They also know that you're paying attention
and you're not going to let them get away with robbing them blind."
wbir.com
Reflecting on the Allen Mall Shooting One Year
Later
Active shooter response training is key
Their training changed the course of the Allen mall shooting. Then the attack
changed them
A year after confronting a mass shooting in
their city, three first responders reflect on how tragedy taught them to lean on
their training and then on each other.
Daniel Williams, an Allen Fire division chief, said
training reduces an active shooter response into three goals: Stop the killing,
stop the dying and evacuate rapidly. Chance allowed for swift
completion of the first goal, and with first responders arriving in droves from
Graham's funeral, they tended to the wounded just as fast.
Gunshots at the outlet mall didn't immediately raise alarm; similar reports had
been made in the high-traffic area before. Wirstrom explained "shots fired"
calls have different magnitude scales, comparable to how tornadoes, earthquakes
and hurricanes are ranked, but overlapping voices coming through his radio
caused information to splinter. He didn't know what to believe.
Then there was a shift. The cadence and pitch of the officer tracking down the
gunman changed from elevated to quiet, Wirstrom said. That officer, alone and
breathless, was running toward bursts of rapid shots, body-worn camera footage
released by Allen police nearly two months after the massacre showed.
The officer first classified the gunfire as a mass shooting as he walked by
the mall's H&M. The footage blurred multiple bodies on the ground outside
the store.
"The number of people that were laying on the ground bleeding was the principal
indicator that something horrible had happened here," Wirstrom said.
dallasnews.com
Ventura County Sheriff's Office's newest task force arrests retail theft
suspects
Is NYPD too political? Cops drive Gaza protest narrative with Columbia raid
All Sam's Club Store Exits Will Soon Be
Managed By AI
'Largest-scale implementation of member-facing
AI-powered tech in the retail industry'
AI will manage all Sam's Club exit checks by end of 2024 in effort to slash
bottlenecks at the door
Any Sam's Club member is familiar with the lines that can form at the exits of
the big box store during busy shopping times as customers line up for an
associate to check their receipts to confirm their purchases.
Now, the company says those bottlenecks will be slashed at its clubs
nationwide by the end of the year, thanks to new artificial
intelligence-powered technology.
At the Consumer Electronics Show in January, the Walmart division unveiled a
new AI-powered scanning system positioned at store exits that captures
images of carts and verifies payment for all items within a member's basket.
Since then, Sam's announced this week, the new tech has been rolled out at
20% of its stores, and will be in each of the company's 600 locations by
the close of 2024. The company says that in the 120 stores where the AI
scanners have been deployed so far, more than half of customers have ushered
through them, reducing wait times for all members by
23%.
Sam's Club took a victory lap in its announcement, saying that the rapid
deployment of its new AI exit technology, which was developed in-house,
represents the largest-scale implementation of member-facing AI-powered
technology in the retail industry.
nypost.com
Dollar Tree Distribution Center Flattened by
Tornado
Tornado destroys Dollar Tree Oklahoma distribution center
None of the warehouse’s 456 associates were
harmed during the disaster and are being given resources to help with temporary
work relocation.
Dollar
Tree’s 1 million-square-foot distribution center in Marietta, Oklahoma, was
destroyed after a series of tornadoes ripped through the state on April 27,
according to a press release.
Twenty-two tornadoes swept through several towns in western and central
Oklahoma on April 27, tragically killing at least four people and leveling
multiple neighborhoods, according to reports from
The Washington Post.
The company confirmed that none of the distribution
center’s 456 associates were injured, and will help with temporary
work relocation, well-being resources and access to Dollar Tree’s Associate
Relief Fund, according to the release. Dollar Tree is also partnering with
the Red Cross to provide immediate assistance.
The retailer did not immediately respond to a request for comment on where
employees will be relocated to or how operations from the center will be shifted
throughout its network.
To maintain distribution operations following the storm, the retailer
“pivoted its network to deliver product to the approximately 600
Marietta-serviced Dollar Tree stores,” the company stated.
retaildive.com
Sam Ash closing all stores
The family-operated, 100-year-old music instruments
retailer announced that, with a heavy heart," it was closing all 42 stores
nationwide.
Kohl's launches same-day delivery with Instacart
Kroger to renovate stores in Greater Cincinnati area - here are the locations
Senior LP & AP Jobs
Market
Director, Asset Protection job posted for Crate & Barrel in Northbrook, IL
This
role is the "protector in chief" of the Company's assets, ensuring the security
of our people, our locations and our physical assets; partnering
cross-functionally to ensure proper development and implementation of inventory
control and loss prevention programs; and providing for sound emergency response
and business continuity plans, in partnership with key leaders and operations
team members.
jobs.crateandbarrel.com
Multi-Asset Protection Manager job posted for The Home Depot in St. Louis, MO
The
Multi-Store Asset Protection Manager (MAPM) is responsible for teaching,
coaching, and training associates to ensure the effective execution of core
Asset Protection initiatives. They are responsible for driving core programs and
strategies relating to theft and fraud mitigation, operational excellence,
safety, and environmental compliance in The Home Depot stores without adding
complexity or tasking to the stores' operation.
careers.homedepot.com
Last week's #1 article --
More Retailers Lean on Body Cams to Fight
Crime & Boost Safety
Stores Roll Out Employee Body Cameras as Retail Crime Precaution
Retail crime is on the rise-and flash mobs, smash-and-grabs and even
everyday instances of
shoplifting are becoming more violent.
With the trend accelerating, retail workers are more
concerned with the safety of their workplaces than they have been in years past.
In fact, according to a recent survey from
Lotis Blue Consulting, strong
health and safety measures make employees 68 percent more likely to stay
with their employer-a 10-percent jump from 2022.
According to recent research from Axonify, a
retail technology solutions provider for frontline employees, 40 percent
of retail workers are afraid to go to work due to hostile or threatening
situations. Half of the 1,000 employees polled said they had witnessed a theft
in person during their tenure.
With these concerns as a backdrop, retailers are looking at new ways not only
to deter theft, but protect their workforces.
Locking up merchandise and employing private security have failed to address the
issue, and that's where body cameras come into play.
Often used by police officers in the field of duty, the technology is
increasingly gaining traction as a means of monitoring retail employees'
safety.
sourcingjournal.com
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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.
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Interface iSOC Heroes - Jeramie Owens
Interface
is excited to share with you the latest addition to our Interface
iSOC Heroes video series!
This week, we are featuring Jeramie Owens, one of Interface's iSOC
Supervisors. Jeramie's prompt response to a panic alarm from one of
their retail customer's stores led to the apprehension of suspects
attempting to assault a store employee. Watch Jeramie's heroic story
unfold by clicking on
this link.
Interface iSOC team members are at the forefront of our battle
against retail crime. Citizens like Jeramie make a big difference in
the lives of the frontline retail and restaurant workers and help
increase safety, and minimize loss. Let's share this video to show
our support.
Interface invites you to join us on this journey as we celebrate our
iSOC Heroes. Please follow along through our
YouTube playlist and don't forget to like and comment on
YouTube, and share these stories with your social network!
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Data-Rich Retailers Getting Hit by More
Cyberattacks
'Cyber threat was the most urgent and important
issue facing retail leadership'
As Retailers Collect More Data, Cybercrime Hits Retailers Including London Drugs
"On April 28, 2024, London Drugs discovered that it was the victim of a
cybersecurity incident. Out of an abundance of caution, all London Drugs
stores will remain temporarily closed across Western Canada until further
notice while continuing to provide customers with urgent pharmacy care," said
the company.
Bruce Winder, Retail Analyst and Author, said London Drugs joins the club of
Canadian retailers who have fallen victim to a cybersecurity issue.
"The disruption to operations, significant customer friction and impact to cash
flow can destroy a retailer or at least severely impact them in the short and
even long term. One just needs to use Chapters/indigo as a recent example,"
he said.
"Retailers need to band together through the Retail Council to help fight
this clear and present danger immediately. The problem is the issue remains a
moving target as cyber criminals evolve to evade current countermeasures."
David Ian Gray, Founder/Strategist with DIG360 Consulting, said in the second
half of 2023, while the industry focused on the rise in store theft, he had been
hearing of unpublicized cyber incidents in various sectors.
"Following conversations with experts at Thales and ISA Cybersecurity, I came to
the conclusion that cyber threat was the most urgent
and important issue facing retail leadership. And I'm not talking
about CIOs and technology investment. I mean, at the foundational heart of the
transforming retail model," he said.
retail-insider.com
Clorox Still Reeling from 2023 Cyberattack
Clorox lowers sales outlook as recovery from 2023 cyberattack continues
Clorox cut its
financial outlook for fiscal year 2024 as the company pushes to fully
recover from a 2023 cyberattack and confronts ongoing inflationary pressure
impacting consumer demand.
Clorox has recovered about 90% of the market share it lost after the
August 2023 attack, and fully expects to restore the lost product distribution
by the end of the fiscal fourth quarter, chair and CEO Linda Rendle told
analysts during the fiscal third-quarter earnings call on Tuesday. While Clorox
returned to normal service levels at the end of the quarter, some products
"experienced slower supply recovery than we planned," Rendle said.
"Given the magnitude of disruption from the cyberattack, we knew our plans to
restore the fundamentals of our business would be complex and a recovery path
would not be linear," Rendle said.
The Oakland, California-based firm was hit by a major cyberattack in August
2023, which led to severe operational disruptions and
extended product shortages.
Clorox makes a number of widely used household products, including Clorox
bleach, Pine Sol cleaner and Fresh-Step kitty litter.
cybersecuritydive.com
Cybersecurity Becoming Top Business Priority
CISOs aren't scapegoats: Fostering a security-first culture
Ten years ago, it was the norm for
security breaches to be the sole responsibility of the chief information
security officer (CISO). For this reason, the CISO role traditionally had a
higher turnover rate, with many experiencing extreme burnout. But now, as
data breaches make regular headlines and every organization becomes a lucrative
target for cybercriminals, IT security has become a business priority, causing
the full C-suite to take note.
Cybersecurity is now a business enabler, directly impacting the bottom line with
emerging regulations and making it more of a priority than ever for
organizations. In fact, according to the
SEC's updated guidelines that went into effect at the end of last year,
public companies now have four business days to report a cybersecurity breach
that may impact an organization's bottom line to the SEC. This means that
CFOs and
CISOs will have to work together to ensure breaches are disclosed on
10-K and 20-F forms.
Security is about more than just a single moment in time. To keep up with
today's expanding attack surface and sophisticated threats, organizations must
get proactive and create a culture of security that promotes a company-wide,
always-on approach to assessing risks and defending against them. We've seen
this evolution with financial and budget decisions, which each department now
oversees, rather than leaving full responsibility to the CFO. Given the number
of pathways that lead to a security incident, the culpability can no longer fall
solely to the CISO - every department needs to have accountability.
securitymagazine.com
Commvault adds Cleanroom Recovery for ransomware attacks
A new Cleanroom Recovery service enables
customers to spin up data center infrastructure within Commvault Cloud for
continued enterprise operations after a cyberattack.
Commvault now offers an automated infrastructure and data restoration cloud
service to keep enterprise operations humming in case of a cyberattack.
Cleanroom Recovery enables users to create a
secure, isolated cloud environment to avoid further infection during an
attack or to test a response with orchestration capabilities for recovery. Users
can also avoid paying for infrastructure maintenance and uptime when the service
is not in use.
techtarget.com
95% of organizations adjusted cybersecurity strategies this past year
CISA warned 1,750 orgs of ransomware vulnerabilities last year. Only half took
action. |
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Did Amazon CEO Violate Labor Laws?
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy broke federal labor law with anti-union remarks
A National Labor Relations Board judge found
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy broke labor law by suggesting employees would be "less
empowered" if they voted in a union.
Amazon CEO Andy Jassy violated federal labor law in comments he made to media
outlets about unionization efforts at the company, a National Labor
Relations Board judge ruled Wednesday.
Jassy
told CNBC in April 2022 that if employees were to
vote in a union, they may be less empowered in the workplace and things would
become "much slower" and "more bureaucratic." Similarly, in the
Bloomberg interview, Jassy remarked, "if you see something on the line that you
think could be better for your team or you or your customers, you can't just go
to your manager and say, 'Let's change it.'"
At the DealBook conference, Jassy said that without a union the workplace
isn't "bureaucratic, it's not slow."
Gee said the comments "threatened employees that, if they selected a union,
they would become less empowered and would find it harder to get things done
quickly."
The NLRB
filed the complaint against Amazon and Jassy in October 2022. In his
ruling Wednesday, Gee said Jassy's other comments that unionization would change
workers' relationship with their employer were lawful. But the Amazon chief's
other remarks that employees would be less empowered and "better off" without a
union violated labor law, "because they went beyond merely commenting on the
employee-employer relationship."
Amazon spokesperson Mary Kate Paradis said in a statement that the company
disagrees with the NLRB's ruling and that it intends to appeal.
The judge recommends Amazon be ordered to "cease and desist" from making such
comments in the future, and that the company be required to post and
distribute a notice about the order to employees nationwide.
cnbc.com
Mobile Apps Surge Past Websites for Online
Purchases
Survey: Time saving, convenience push mobile apps past websites for consumers
The majority of consumers prefer shopping and browsing on a company's mobile
app more than its mobile website.
Sixty-four percent of consumers are more likely to use a business's
mobile app as opposed to its website through a mobile browser, according to
a survey of 1,000 U.S. consumers commissioned by SaaS solution Bryj and
conducted by Dynata. Mobile apps have become essential to consumers, with most
of them (62%) having 10-30 mobile apps on each of their devices. Nearly a
quarter (20%) of younger generations like Gen Z downloading about an app per
week.
More than two-in-three consumers (68%) listed time savings as their number
one consideration when downloading an app, followed by simplifying their
lives as the second top consideration at 65%. Poor user experience (e.g.
software bugs, slow loading times) is the number one reason consumers delete
mobile apps on their devices (58%), followed by poor user interface at 56% and
poor security features (54%).
chainstoreage.com
Shein customers can now make returns at Forever 21 stores
Real-Time Payments Set to Soar in US With Cloud Solutions |
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Scottsdale, AZ: A jeweler in Scottsdale who had more than $250,000 worth of
items stolen believes he was followed before the criminal committed the heinous
act
Lake View Jewelry Boutique co-owners Boris and Moisei have been in business at
the location off Hayden Road in Scottsdale for five years. The father-son duo
from New York owns multiple businesses in the area and they do not believe the
burglary was a coincidence. "We built this place from scratch," Moisei said. Now
there is just shattered glass and a boarded door. "We never expected something
like this to happen," Moisei said. On Wednesday around 3 a.m., eight
motion-detecting cameras with laser triggers as part of a state-of-the-art
security system was triggered at the business. "He got in at 2:59 a.m. and in 53
seconds he was gone," Moisei added. On camera, the burglar can be seen waiting
for his moment. He paced around for several minutes before breaking in. Moisei
believes it was part of a coordinated attack.
aol.com
San Francisco Woman Convicted Of Stealing $60,000 From Target
San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins announced her office has secured
a conviction of Aziza Graves (43), of San Francisco, after a trial by jury for
repeated theft from retailers. Ms. Graves was convicted of one felony count of
grand theft in violation (PC 487(a)) and 52 misdemeanor counts of petty theft
(PC 490.2(a)) in relation to a series of retail thefts occurring at Target in
Stonestown Galleria in San Francisco. She was also convicted of one count of
misdemeanor petty theft (PC 490.2(a)) in relation to a theft that occurred at
Abercrombie and Fitch, also in San Francisco. "Retail theft continues to have a
major impact on San Francisco businesses from the small mom-and-pop corner store
to the large retail stores," said District Attorney Brooke Jenkins. "Individuals
such as Aziza Graves commit egregious thefts through brazen and repeated conduct
that greatly impacts retailers' ability to operate and serve the general public
in their area.
svdaily.com
Brownsburg, IN: Thief steals $15K worth of 'Magic: The Gathering' cards from
Indiana shop: 'The loss is tremendous'
A thief was caught on camera breaking into an Indiana game shop and stealing
more than 1,600 highly prized "Magic: The Gathering" playing cards. The
estimated value of the stolen cards is $15,000, according to the Brownsburg
Police Department. Valkyrie's Vault, located in Brownsburg, said the thief used
tools to dismantle the locking mechanism in a side door before making entry into
the store just before 4 a.m. on Friday.
msn.com
Fort Myers, FL: 2 posing as Target Corporate employees steal over $6K at Fort
Myers Target
Southwest
Florida Crime Stoppers is seeking information on two people who allegedly
claimed to be employees of Target Corporate and stole over $6,000 from a Target
in Fort Myers. According to Crime Stoppers, two men entered Target at 15880 San
Carlos Boulevard on Tuesday and convinced a cashier they worked for Target
Corporate. The duo told the cashier to ring up 12 gift cards valued at $500 each
and apparel and toys in cash. They walked out with over $6,100 in gift cards and
other merch without paying. According to Trish Routte from Crimestoppers, this
is not their first time trying this scheme "We were quickly able to find out
that the same two guys at two other Target stores in Southwest Florida tried to
do the same thing."
the-sun.com
Newark, DE: Police recover $2,100 of Kohl's merchandise
The Villages, FL: Suspect allegedly steals more than $1,200 in merchandise at
Walmart
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Shootings & Deaths
Leesburg, GA: Little Caesars employee accused of murdering manager inside store
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI) has identified the suspect involved in
a shooting at Little Caesars in Lee County on Friday, May 3. Daquan Divonte
Harris, 28, of Lithonia, Georgia, has been arrested and charged with felony
murder and aggravated assault in connection to the death of 50-year-old Joseph
Dorminey, of Leesburg, according to the GBI. Both Harris and Dorminey were
employees at the restaurant. The sheriff's office requested the GBI's assistance
in the investigation. At around 9:20 p.m. on Friday, the Lee County Sheriff's
Office responded to the Little Caesars on U.S. 19 in Leesburg. First responders
found Dorminey suffering from gunshot wounds. He was taken to Phoebe Putney
Hospital in Albany, where he later died. On Saturday, May 4, at around 8:30
a.m., Harris was taken into custody in the 100 block of Philema Road by deputies
with the Lee County Sheriff's Office. Harris has been booked into the Lee County
Jail, according to the GBI. The Lee County Sheriff's Office also received
assistance from the Albany Police Department, the Dougherty County Sheriff's
Office, and the Dougherty County Police Department, according to Lee County
Chief Deputy Lewis Harris.
walb.com
Cleveland, OH: Amazon driver fatally shoots armed carjacker
An Amazon delivery driver shot and killed an armed carjacking suspect in
Cleveland on Saturday afternoon, according to police. A spokesperson from the
Cleveland Division of Police confirmed the incident to 3News. According to a
media release, the shooting took place at approximately 4:05 p.m. near the
intersection of West 28th Street and Franklin Boulevard. An initial
investigation showed that the Amazon driver was working in the area when they
were approached by the suspect. The suspect attempted to take the worker's
vehicle at gunpoint. At some point during the altercation, the suspect was shot
by the worker. The suspect tried to drive away in the worker's vehicle after
sustaining the gunshot wound, but crashed the vehicle shortly after driving
away. Cleveland EMS pronounced the suspect dead at the scene. Cleveland police
did not provide any additional details. The identities of the worker and suspect
have not been released at this time.
wkyc.com
San Antonio, TX: Shooting leaves 2 dead in Park North Shopping Center parking
lot
On
Sunday, May 5 at about 2 a.m., the SAPD went to the 600 block of NW Loop 410 in
the Park North Shopping Center to respond to a call for a shooting. When
officers arrived, they found two men, a 28-year-old and 22-year-old, who had
been shot in the parking lot of the shopping center. Emergency medical services
arrived at the scene, however, they pronounced both men dead. At the time of the
shooting, police said they were working with security at the shopping center to
possibly get more information on "possible suspects." SAPD officials said that
security did see two men running away from the scene. Police added that when
they arrived on-scene as well, others had also began to run from the shopping
center. Police said the investigation is ongoing, and the SAPD is investigating
the shooting as a capital murder.
mysanantonio.com
Tampa, FL: Man arrested in shooting that killed 2 outside C-Store
Police arrested a man early Saturday in connection to a Friday morning shooting
that left two people dead outside an Ybor Heights area convenience store. An
all-night manhunt ended when police found Whitney Newsome, 37, less than 2 miles
from the shooting scene. He was booked a little before 9 a.m. in the Orient Road
Jail, records show. The shooting happened about 10:30 a.m. Friday near Kings
Plaza, at the corner of North Nebraska Avenue and East 26th Avenue. Officers
received an alert through ShotSpotter, a gunfire detection system the city uses,
and arrived to find a man and a woman who'd been shot near a coffee shop. Both
died. A third person told officers she'd been shot at but was not hit, police
said.
tampabay.com
Jacksonville, FL: Woman dead after shooting at gas station in Fairfax area
Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said a woman is dead after she was shot while
getting gas on Roosevelt Boulevard. Detectives said that at around 5:25 a.m.,
officers responded and located a woman between 30 to 35 years old with a gunshot
wound in the chest at the Daily's gas station. She was lying outside at 4-door
black sedan at the gas pump. Lifesaving measures were attempted, but the woman
died at the scene.
actionnewsjax.com
Long Beach, CA: 7 people wounded, 4 critically, in shooting in Long Beach
An investigation was underway following a shooting in Long Beach where seven
people were wounded. The shooting unfolded around 11:15 p.m. Saturday in the
parking lot of a bar in the area of South Street and Paramount Boulevard where
Long Beach officers responded. Once there, officers learned of seven victims who
had been struck by gunfire. All of the victims either self-transported to the
hospital or were transported by first responders, according to police. Three of
the victims had non-life-threatening injuries, and four others were in critical
condition. The circumstances leading up to the shooting were under
investigation. A motive for the shooting was not known.
cbsnews.com
Fort Wayne, IN: Mall Shooting: The Fort Wayne Police Department is investigating
a shooting that took place at a mall on the city's north side
According
to a release from FWPD, around 2:41 p.m. on Saturday, May 4, officers responded
to a report of a shooting at the Glenbrook Square Mall . Several officers,
including officers from other agencies, medics and the Fort Wayne Fire
Department responded to the scene and began to clear guests and employees from
the mall. Police say the preliminary investigation showed that the shooting
allegedly occurred in the food court of the mall. Police believe that two males
were armed with guns and one was the main shooter. One person was shot in their
lower body while another has a lower body injury. Both individuals were
transported to a local hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. FWPD says
they arrested a 22-year-old man for felony criminal recklessness, intimidation
and misdemeanor resisting law enforcement. FWPD says that the second suspect,
the person police believe was the one doing the shooting, remains at large.
wthr.com
Los Angeles, CA: Update: Mely Corado's family tentatively settles lawsuit
against LA over Trader Joe's shooting
The
city of Los Angeles and relatives of a Trader Joe's assistant manager mistakenly
shot by police inside the Silver Lake store in 2018 have tentatively settled the
family's lawsuit. Attorneys for the plaintiffs and the City Attorney's Office
informed Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Alison Mackenzie of the "conditional"
resolution of the long-running case involving the late Melyda "Mely" Corado on
Friday. The plaintiffs' lawyers also said in their court papers that they expect
a request for dismissal will be filed by Sept. 3. No terms were divulged and the
judge vacated Monday's scheduled trial date. It was unclear whether final
approval of the accord is up to the City Council. The family also sued Officers
Sinlen Tse and Sarah Winans. Corado was hit by a bullet from Tse's gun and
former Irvine Deputy Police Chief Jeffrey J. Noble, a use-of-force expert, gave
a sworn declaration regarding the actions of Tse and Winans in their vehicle
pursuit of suspect Gene Evin Atkins that subsequently led to the mistaken
shooting of Corado.
abc7.com
Chicago, IL: Liquor store employee wounded in shootout during robbery attempt
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Oklahoma City, OK: OKC Metro Cellphone stores banding together after dozens of
suspiciously similar break-ins
Cellphone stores across the Oklahoma City metro are banding together after
dozens of break-ins, saying their cases look suspiciously similar. A board now
covers where the glass was before an early morning burglary at a Midwest City
cellphone store. The owner said it's not the first time someone has broken in,
and it's not the first cellphone store to be targeted in the metro. "It's
probably 10 to 20 stores over the last three to four weeks," Travis Landsaw,
the owner of Wireless Solutions and Accessories in Midwest City, said. Cellphone
store owners are frustrated over a string of burglaries that have been caught on
camera. "They get a rock, come in the front window. They're in and out in under
30 seconds," Landsaw said. And despite alarm after alarm after alarm, no arrests
have been made. Now, business owners pulled their footage and took matters into
their own hands. "They're saying they're going to defend their livelihood, and I
think they have the right to do so," Landsaw said. They're also tired of losing
thousands of dollars. "Last time, they got 15 iPads from us, a bunch of
Bluetooth headsets. You're thinking that's a day or two's wages, and that really
hurts when you're trying to pay employees and make a living. It really does hurt
the little guy," Landsaw said. The business owners hope all the footage and
their combined efforts can help catch the suspects. Police have not connected
the cases or confirmed whether the suspects are potentially the same.
koco.com
Smash-and-grab thieves hit Sunnyvale jewelry store
Police are investigating after they say a group of suspects stormed into a
Sunnyvale jewelry store Saturday afternoon, clearing it out in minutes. The
incident happened just after 1 p.m. at Nitin's Jewelers on El Camino Real.
Police said that at least 10 people in masks burst into the store and started
smashing cases. One of the suspects had a gun. According to store employees, the
thieves used hammers to break the tempered glass of the display cases and clear
out the store. Police say at least one of the suspects had a handgun.
nbcbayarea.com
Long Beach, CA: Food truck robbed for second time in 6 months, worker attacked
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•
C-Store - Chicago, IL
- Armed Robbery
•
C-Store - White
County, AR - Burglary
•
CVS - Queens, NY -
Robbery
•
Clothing - Newark, DE
- Robbery
•
Collectables -
Brownsburg, IN - Burglary
•
Dollar - Montgomery
County, AL - Burglary
•
Gas Station -
Greenville, NC - Robbery
•
Gas Station - Toledo,
OH - Armed Robbery
•
Hardware - Wadesboro,
NC - Burglary
•
Hardware - Palm Coast,
FL - Robbery
•
Jewelry - Miami, FL - Robbery
•
Jewelry - Tacoma, WA - Robbery
•
Jewelry - Scottsdale,
AZ - Burglary
•
Jewelry - Sunnyvale,
CA - Armed Robbery
•
Liquor - Chicago, IL -
Armed Robbery / emp wounded
•
Restaurant - Long
Beach, CA - Robbery/ emp assaulted
•
Restaurant - Chicago,
IL - Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant - Wausau,
WI - Burglary
•
Walgreens - Apple
Valley, WI - Burglary
•
Walmart - Stillwater,
TN - Robbery
•
Walmart - The
Villages, FL - Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 14 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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None to report.
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Plano, TX -
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April 18
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Pittsburgh, PA -
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April 9
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Responsibilities: Detect and apprehend shoplifters with the use of standard
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Multi-Store Detective (Cleveland Operating Market)
Cleveland, OH -
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April 9
Job Summary: Store Detectives are key players in serving
their assigned locations in the detection and apprehension of shoplifters. Job
Responsibilities: Detect and apprehend shoplifters with the use of standard
visual practice and CCTV in multi-store environment; Utilize CCTV to create
video records of incidents requested by law enforcement and internal
departments...
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Multi-Store Detective (Akron/Canton Operating Market)
Akron/Canton, OH -
Posted
April 9
Job Summary: Store Detectives are key players in serving
their assigned locations in the detection and apprehension of shoplifters. Job
Responsibilities: Detect and apprehend shoplifters with the use of standard
visual practice and CCTV in multi-store environment; Utilize CCTV to create
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departments...
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Being in a slump is an absolutely scary place where your brain does more damage
than your actions or lack thereof. More mental than anything else a slump
happens to all of us and getting out of it can look like the longest darkest
tunnel you've ever experienced. But remember there's always light at the end of
every tunnel and getting focused on that light is the key. And turning it always
begins with getting back to basics. Forcing yourself to find that focus and
using the basics to get out of the slump is the only way out. Lean on your
basics and trust you know them well enough that the old performance will start
showing itself because once they do, you'll find yourself having fun and out of
that slump.
Just a Thought, Gus
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