In Case
You Missed It
[Whitepaper] Advice from the Loss Prevention Experts
Compiled
Quotes from Loss Prevention and Asset Protection Leaders
The best way to improve at anything is to learn from the people who have been
there before and know how to help you achieve your goals. In these unprecedented
times, collaboration has never been more important to help push the industry
forward.
So, we went directly to the brightest minds in the industry and asked them to
share some words of wisdom.
Hear from 20 LP and AP leaders on various topics in the latest research
report from Agilence.
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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
San Francisco Burglaries Up 62%
S.F. store owners in 'desperate time' after vandalism and burglaries offered
some relief from city grants
Owners
of several small businesses recently vandalized in San Francisco welcomed the
news of a program launched by the city Wednesday that
offers some financial relief to businesses like theirs hit by vandalism and
burglary during the pandemic.
The new
Storefront Vandalism Relief Grant Program program provides up to $2,000 in
financial assistance to small businesses that have been damaged by vandalism or
burglary since July 1 of last year. With $1 million in funding, the
program aims to help more than 500 small businesses with gross revenues of less
than $8 million, according to a news release.
"During the pandemic,
we've seen a surge in burglaries and vandalism in every neighborhood
targeting small businesses already struggling with unprecedented economic
challenges," said Supervisor Gordon Mar, who developed the program with Mayor
London Breed and the Office of Economic and Workforce Development.
Across San Francisco, small businesses are seeing
rampant increases in vandalism and commercial theft, The Chronicle
reported.
Burglaries in the city have increased by 62% so far this year,
even though
overall crime is down by 31%.
One application has already come in from Alice Kim, owner of Joe's Ice Cream in
the Richmond District, who got a call from Supervisor Connie Chan's office to
let her know about the grant. Last week, someone smashed the shop's front window
in an attempted burglary, Kim said, and almost got in
before being stopped by the shop's next door neighbor - a comic book store owner
who was up late.
Kim, who has owned the shop since 2012, said she has asked the landlord if he
would
consider installing security gates because break-ins are happening so often.
Replacing the windows will cost the shop at least $900, she added.
"I know it's going to look ugly, and I don't want the neighborhood to look like
it's a high crime area, but our (other) next-door neighbor already installed
one," she said. "It's going to
look like the new normal."
Sona Pehlivanian, owner and operator of Frank's Floral Shop, which was
burglarized, trashed and burned last week, said she hadn't heard about the grant
program but would be looking into it.
The program offers up to $2,000 in financial relief, a small fraction of
the some $200,000 that Pehlivanian said she will have to come up with if she
wants to rebuild the shop that she has owned for 35 years.
sfchronicle.com
Recall Efforts For San Fran's & LA's
Progressive DA's Will Continue
Effort to recall L.A. County (Progressive) D.A. George Gascón fizzles out, but a
retry is coming
Signaling that its first attempt to boot Los Angeles County Dist. Atty. George
Gascón from office was all but certain to fall short, the campaign seeking
the progressive prosecutor's recall said Thursday it would relaunch its
efforts later this year.
The campaign - which struggled to attract financial support or collect
signatures after an initial burst of enthusiasm in May - needed to collect the
signatures of approximately 580,000 L.A. County voters by Oct. 26 to force
Gascón into a recall election, had compiled just 200,000 with a little over five
weeks before the deadline, according to Tim Lineberger, a campaign spokesman.
Lineberger said the committee did not withdraw its current recall petition, but
rather signaled it would be refocusing efforts toward the rebranded recall
campaign.
Gascón ousted incumbent Jackie Lacey from office last November, riding a wave of
support for police reform that followed the murder of George Floyd. His
policies drew immediate backlash among law enforcement officers, victims'
rights groups and many of Gascón's own line prosecutors.
While Thursday's move will sting for recall boosters, similar tactics have
worked in other cities. In San Francisco, the first effort to force
progressive Dist. Atty. Chesa Boudin into a recall race failed earlier this
year, but a second campaign now seems likely to meet the signature requirements.
latimes.com
Voting Started Thursday on Minneapolis Policing
Measure
Minnesota Supreme Court: Minneapolis policing measure stays on ballot
Minneapolis residents will
decide the future of policing for the first time since George Floyd's death
after the Minnesota Supreme Court cleared the way Thursday for their votes to be
counted.
The decision - hours before the start of early voting - appeared to bring
an end to a legal saga that dogged the city for more than a month and
cleared the stage for campaigns to refocus their efforts on persuading residents
to vote in a race that is drawing national attention.
The city is on track to have a historic election as impassioned residents
debate whether they want to replace the Police Department with a new public
safety agency. Spending is surpassing anything in recent memory as the
policing question dominates debate not only into the races for mayor and City
Council, but begins to reverberate into next year's state and federal elections
as well. Just moments after the court's ruling came down, opponents released
their first ad.
startribune.com
San Diego, CA: Violent crimes up in first half of 2021 in San Diego
Violent crimes reported in the first half of 2021 increased 14% over the last
year and were 9% higher than in 2019, according to a new report by the San Diego
Association of Governments' Criminal Justice Research Division. From January to
June 2021, the violent crime rate was 3.64 per 1,000 population, the
second-highest over the past 10 years. Compared to this time frame last year,
the region has had fewer reported homicides and robberies, but a greater number
of rapes and aggravated assaults. Property crime was also higher in the first
six months of 2021, compared to 2020, but was slightly lower than in 2019.
During January to June, burglaries decreased, but larcenies and motor vehicle
thefts increased. In April, May and June 2021, residential burglaries increased,
while non-residential burglaries decreased. The report comes at National City
police are dealing with a series of burglaries in the past week.
cbs8.com
D.C. Security Forces Buckle Down Ahead of Saturday Rally
Physical Security Task Force
January 6 vs. September 18: How law enforcement hopes to prevent another riot
A
new fence, an information-sharing alert and ramped-up airport security
are just a few of the ways law enforcement is preparing to prevent another
deadly insurrection ahead of
Saturday's rally aimed at showing support for those arrested in connection
with January 6.
Criticism of the security failures around the US Capitol riot last winter
has loomed large in the minds of federal officials and law enforcement partners
ahead of Saturday's right-wing rally, resulting in a concerted effort to avoid
the mistakes of eight months ago that left front-line officers unprepared for
the violence that unfolded.
This time, officials are preparing for the worst and erring on the side of
caution. Unlike on January 6, officers are well aware of the threats related
to Saturday's event, which is expected to be a much smaller gathering with
some spreading the false narrative that federal agencies will use the rally as
an opportunity to arrest attendees.
The Department of Homeland Security
issued a warning Thursday about the potential for violence from people
involved in or opposed to the "Justice for J6" rally.
Officials have taken steps to ensure there will be a significant security
presence and additional help will be on standby -- with the
DC National Guard ready to provide assistance in case of an emergency, a
source familiar with security conversations around the event told CNN. That is a
marked shift from what occurred ahead of January 6, when it took the National
Guard hours to mobilize as the Capitol was being overrun.
Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin approved 100 DC National Guard members to
be stationed nearby "as a Physical Security Task Force
to augment law enforcement" during the demonstration, Lt. Col. Chris
Mitchell, a Defense Department spokesman, said in a statement.
Earlier this week, a Department of Homeland Security official said more than
700 people were expected to attend the Washington event, noting that
law-enforcement agencies have shared information and are better prepared than
they were on Jan. 6.
cnn.com
Preventing a Repeat of the Jan. 6 Security
Collapse
Security forces under pressure to prevent repeat of Jan. 6
Security
officials are under intense
pressure to ensure nothing like that happens again and prove they've learned
from their failures to anticipate the chaos from more than eight months
ago when a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol while Congress was in
session.
The
tall, imposing fence that was erected around the Capitol grounds the day
after Jan. 6
was re-installed Wednesday night in preparation for this weekend. And the
Department of Homeland Security warned of the potential for violence in a memo
obtained by CNN, though officials said they were not aware of any specific
plots.
But there are also signs that Saturday's rally is unlikely to devolve into
the kind of mayhem seen in early January. Authorities are more prepared this
time around, and they do not have the added worry of protecting lawmakers or
congressional staff in the building.
The rally will take place on a weekend when
neither chamber of Congress is scheduled to be in session. And unlike the
"Stop the Steal" rally at the White House that preceded the January attack on
the Capitol, no lawmakers have said they plan to participate in Saturday's
demonstration.
thehill.com
D.C. Rally to Support Jan. 6 Rioters Prompts Increased Capitol Police Security
D.C. street closures for Saturday's rally in support of Jan. 6 rioters
'Am I scared? Absolutely,' a Capitol Police officer says before Sept. 18 rally
DEBATE OF THE WEEK: Should we Defund the Police?
Yesterday's Anti-Defund Position & Today's Pro-Defund
Position
In the wake of the death of George Floyd, protests sprung up arguing "defund
the police." What this precisely means depends on who you talk to (literally
stop funding the police or engage in widespread police reform) but it has
become one of the most polarizing issues of the last year. Wilfred Reilly,
associate professor of political science at Kentucky State University, and Geo
Maher, political theorist and Visiting Associate Professor at Vassar College,
join us to debate the topic of defunding the police across America, with guest
host Celeste Headlee.
Yes, We Should Defund the Police | Opinion
I
think it's absolutely true that the question of dismantling, even abolishing the
police, which was put to the fore of public debates in the aftermath of the
Minneapolis rebellion, following the death of
George
Floyd, is a broad conversation. It's going to be a long-lasting
conversation. However, when it comes to the simple question of defunding, I
honestly would be shocked that there wouldn't be far more consensus on this
question. When we look at the history and the development of American policing,
what we see are ballooning police budgets. We see the dramatic expansion of the
police into every sphere of American life, into schools, into public libraries.
And we see policing as a growing phenomenon that currently claims hundreds of
billions of dollars nationwide. We've seen very little when it comes to actual
pay-off, in terms of those budgets. What we have seen is the decimation of
public services, the decimation of the kinds of social programs that we know,
and which provide a far more measurable impact on reducing violence in
communities.
So the question of merely defunding, in other words, shifting some of those
budgets from these dramatically expansive police budgets toward the budget of,
social welfare, of after-school programs and other programs, in cities in
particular-that should be a no-brainer, as far as I'm concerned. If we're going
to be talking statistically, we at least need to be coherent and systematic
about what it is that we're saying. I live in Philadelphia. There has been a
dramatic spike in violent crime and in homicides that in no way is connected to
a reduction in stops, and certainly is not connected to any kind of reduction in
policing. There was a sort of surface-level fake defunding that occurred in
Philadelphia, but it did nothing to change the function of the policing in the
city of Philadelphia.
We need to be a little more nuanced when we think about what is causing the
dramatic increase in violent crime in cities, in the country. It's got
everything to do with people who are trapped inside during COVID, who have even
fewer opportunities for employment, to get out of the house, to get a job, to
move out from their parents' homes specifically. We're talking about young
people. It's got everything to do with the radical destabilization of people's
worlds around them. In the context of this pandemic, there are far more systemic
questions that we need to deal with on top of the fact that there was absolutely
no funding for social programs. There's been a pittance of support for people
suffering under the COVID pandemic-suffering from unemployment and barely
hanging on to their houses, when it comes to the eviction moratorium. So we need
to think about these broader questions.
newsweek.com
By Geo Maher, political theorist and visiting associate professor at Vassar
College.
Yesterday:
Defunding the Police Is Asinine and Counterproductive
COVID Update
383M Vaccinations Given
US: 42.6M Cases - 688.4K Dead - 32.3M Recovered
Worldwide:
227.9M Cases - 4.6M Dead - 204.6M Recovered
Former Senior Loss Prevention Executive
Know of any fallen LP exec? Let's remember &
recognize.
Private Industry Security Guard Deaths: 314
Law
Enforcement Officer Deaths: 406
*Red indicates change in total deaths
Businesses Face Challenges & Questions Over
Vaccine Mandate
Companies Grapple With Questions About Covid-19 Vaccine Mandate
Companies
preparing to implement the Biden administration's Covid-19 vaccine mandate
face logistical challenges and unanswered questions about how to comply,
employment and compensation lawyers say.
Businesses are
awaiting more details in a formal rule that the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration plans to issue in coming weeks.
One of the biggest unknowns is
who will be responsible for covering the cost of testing for employees who
choose to remain unvaccinated, lawyers said. Under the
mandate announced last week, all employers with 100 or more workers would
have to require that their workers be vaccinated or undergo at least weekly
Covid-19 testing.
Employers that don't comply can face fines of up to about $14,000,
according to the administration.
Companies also are wondering exactly
how OSHA will determine the threshold for which businesses are covered by the
requirement, and about exemptions for employees who continue to work from
home or who have religious or medical accommodations that are protected under
the Americans with Disabilities Act.
Although some companies already had vaccine requirements or were considering
them before President Biden's announcement,
the move puts pressure on many others to begin determining how to comply with a
rule that hasn't been fully articulated and that is likely to face a
flurry of
legal challenges and conflicts with state laws.
The first question many companies will face is
whether they want to allow employees to opt out of getting a vaccine and instead
undergo weekly testing, employment and compensation lawyers said. The
logistics and costs of providing such tests to what could be a sizable
percentage of a company's workforce could pose serious challenges for some
businesses. And the federal government already has made it clear that
companies can require vaccines for employees physically entering a workplace,
with certain exceptions.
wsj.com
COVID's Impact on Food Retailers
FMI sizes up pandemic's financial impact on food retailers
Double-digit same-store sales gains partly
offset by higher costs, Industry Speaks 2021 study finds
Consumer
demand for groceries swelled by 50% last year, lifting food retailer same-store
sales nearly 16% industrywide, according to new research in FMI-The Food
Industry Association's "The Food Retailing Industry Speaks 2021" report.
On average,
grocery retail comparable-store sales rose 15.8% year over year in 2020, marking
the fourth straight year of increases, FMI said in the
Industry Speaks study, released Wednesday.
Fueled by consumer stockpiling as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, the
gain dwarfed same-store sales growth in recent years, including 3.3% in 2019,
2.5% in 2018, 1.7% in 2017 and 1% in 2016.
Over 90% of the food retailers surveyed reported higher same-store sales for
2020, with
double-digit increases across company sizes. Retailers operating more
than 100 stores averaged gains of 15.8%, compared with 14.7% for those with 11
to 100 stores and 18.5% for those with one to 10 stores.
FMI's study is based on responses from 103 food retail and wholesale companies
representing a combined 38,000 stores. A third of respondents operate more than
100 stores, and over half are independent grocers with fewer than 10 stores.
Forty-one percent of companies generate annual sales of more than $1 billion,
and 45% report less than $250 million in yearly sales.
"Food retailers experienced
significantly higher sales and transaction sizes during 2020, but expenses have
also surged and impacted financial performance. And that situation
continues in 2021," FMI President and CEO Leslie Sarasin said Wednesday in a
video press call on the Industry Speaks 2021 report.
supermarketnews.com
'Reevaluating Cost-Benefit Equation for
In-Person Meetings & Events'
Pandemic Reshapes the World of Corporate Travel
Deloitte survey examines when business
travel will pick up & what factors will influence its return.
Deloitte surveyed 150 travel managers and executives with travel budget
oversight. The survey and accompanying interviews shed light on when corporate
travel is expected to come back, how companies will budget for travel, and what
types of business travel will likely return first. (For the complete forecast,
see the full report.)
62%
of U.S.-based companies reduced travel budgets by 90% or more beginning in
early 2020.
In the fourth quarter of 2021, spending on corporate travel is projected
to reach between 25% and 35% of 2019 levels.
If U.S. vaccination rates continue to increase, and the vaccines' effectiveness
proves durable-particularly for emerging variants of the virus-travel managers
expect a big release of pent-up demand in the second half of 2022. More
clarity about the health situation and the state of office versus remote work
will better support both planned trips and last-minute visits to seal deals and
execute projects.
By the end of 2022, U.S. corporate travel may near its new normal.
Assuming significantly reduced quarantine requirements on arrival for Europe,
the Middle East, and the Americas, and several months of a stable health
situation, U.S. corporate travel could reach 80% of 2019 levels.
As the pandemic ultimately subsides, corporate travel will be affected by the
changes adopted and lessons learned over the past 18 months. Travel remains
critical to many businesses' growth, but executives are reevaluating the
cost-benefit equation for in-person meetings and events.
wsj.com
Editor's Note: This "reevaluation" will end up impacting everyone.
Especially with the advent of Zoom & Teams. With in-person conferences probably
being the most impacted of all the travel categories. As we were witnessing some
trade association consolidation pre-pandemic. Just some thoughts. - Gus Downing
'The situation is dire': Idaho activates crisis standards statewide over
COVID-19
Doctors will now prioritize patients most likely to survive as COVID cases
overwhelm hospitals.
Maryland surpasses 10,000 COVID-19 deaths; Hogan orders state flags lowered to
half-staff in remembrance
FDA advisers to meet on highly charged issue of whether to recommend coronavirus
vaccine boosters
U.S. vaccine booster policy is in flux as studies add to dissent
The Epitome of the Insider Threat Cost AT&T $200 Million
It all started on Facebook & Social Engineering
DOJ: Pakistan resident gets 12 years prison for long-running phone unlocking
scheme to defraud AT&T
Overall
loss to AT&T estimated at more than $200 million
Seattle: A resident of Pakistan was sentenced today in the Western District of
Washington to 12 years in prison for his leadership role in a seven-year
scheme to unlawfully unlock phones to defraud AT&T Inc. (AT&T). At the
sentencing hearing U.S. District Judge Robert S. Lasnik noted that Fahd had
committed a "terrible cybercrime over an extended period," even after he was
aware that law enforcement was investigating. (Guess he didn't account for the
long arm of the FBI)
Beginning in 2012, Muhammad Fahd, 35, conspired with others to recruit
AT&T employees at a call center located in Bothell,
Washington, to unlock large numbers of cellular phones for profit. Fahd
recruited and bribed AT&T employees to use their
AT&T credentials to unlock phones for ineligible customers. Later in the
conspiracy, Fahd had the bribed employees
install custom malware and hacking tools that allowed him to unlock phones
remotely from Pakistan. In September 2020, he pleaded guilty to conspiracy to
commit wire fraud.
Unlocking a phone effectively removes it from AT&T's network, thereby allowing
the account holder to avoid having to pay AT&T for service or to make any
payments for purchase of the phone.
In June or July of 2012, using the alias "Frank Zhang,"
Fahd contacted an AT & T employee through Facebook. Fahd offered
the employee significant sums of money if the employee would help Fahd secretly
unlock phones at AT&T. Fahd also asked the employee to recruit other AT&T
employees. AT&T employees also helped Fahd's developer design malware to
unlock phones more efficiently and in larger numbers and over ride any new
security features. Fahd also taught AT&T employees how to launder the money
he was paying them with fake company's and bank accounts.
AT&T's forensic analysis shows the total number of cellular telephones
fraudulently unlocked by members of the scheme was 1,900,033 phones. AT&T
has further determined that the loss it suffered because customers, whose
cellular phones were illegally unlocked, failed to complete payments for their
cellular telephones was $201,497,430.94.
Judge Lasnik ordered restitution of $200,620,698. (The difference between this
amount and the total loss reflects restitution ordered against bribed AT&T
employees in related prosecutions.)
Fahd was indicted in 2017, and arrested in Hong Kong in 2018. He
was extradited and appeared in U.S. District Court in Seattle in
August 2019. He pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud in
September 2020.
justice.gov
DOJ: Retail CEO Gets 63 Months for $6.3M Fraud
VALDOSTA, Ga. - Rickey Carter, 60, of Nashville, Georgia, was sentenced to serve
63 months in prison to be followed by five years of supervised release
after he pleaded guilty to bank fraud and orchestrating a complicated fraud
involving millions of dollars of loans by multiple creditors, and ordered to
pay $6.3M restitution to his victims for his crime.
Carter was the President and CEO of Nashville Tractor (NTI), a business
that sold and leased agricultural and construction equipment, attachments and
parts. In 2016, he obtained a United States Small Business Administration (SBA)
loan with Farmers and Merchants Bank (FMB) in the principal amount of
$5,000,000. At the same time, NTI obtained a new line of credit and signed a
credit agreement with FMB in the amount of $625,000.
In 2015, NTI began having financial and cash flow issues which made it difficult
to make payments due on the loans and to make payroll. During that time, Carter
began a practice of selling equipment which it held in trust but not paying
the cash over to CNH and other creditors as required. As part of the
fraudulent scheme, Carter falsified NTI's financial records in order to
inflate the company's net worth. As a part of falsifying records, on
occasion Carter directed NTI employees to generate payments checks on accounts
payable but not send the checks, thereby reducing accounts payable but not
deducting the checks from NTI's accounts. In 2016, Carter falsified documents
provided to FMB to secure the $5M SBA loan and $600K line of credit.
In total, Carter admitted to being accountable for an intended fraud loss
totaling more than $3.5 million but not more than $9.5 million. Carter is
responsible for restitution for actual monetary losses caused by the fraud which
totaled $6.3 million.
justice.gov
CFO Writing Checks & Transferring Funds to
Himself Over 8 Years for $30M
DOJ: Former Chief Financial Officer of Alden Shoe Co Gets 70 Months for $30M
Embezzlement
Boston -
Richard Hajjar, 64, of
Duxbury, the former Chief Financial Officer of Alden Shoe Co., was sentenced by
U.S. District Court Judge Nathaniel M. Gorton to
70 months in prison and three years of supervised release.
Hajjar was also ordered to
pay restitution of $33,962,880 and forfeiture of $27,300,552.
On May 5, 2021, Hajjar pleaded guilty to one count each of wire fraud, unlawful
monetary transactions and filing a false tax return.
From at least 2011 through October 2019, when he was terminated by Alden Shoe
Co., Hajjar embezzled money by
writing checks to himself from company bank accounts and transferring funds from
company accounts to his personal accounts and to another individual.
In total, Hajjar
embezzled approximately $30 million
which he used to enrich himself and to buy gifts and luxury travel for others
close to him, including private flights to the Caribbean and diamond jewelry.
In addition, between approximately 2014 and 2019, Hajjar failed to report the
proceeds of his embezzlement as income on his tax returns, thereby failing to
pay approximately $5,112,822 in taxes to the Internal Revenue Service.
justice.gov
New paper explores facial recognition biases beyond demographics
The well-reported
biases surrounding skin tone and sex are not the only biases held by facial
recognition systems, finds a new paper, which calls for far more development of
face biometric systems in order for them to be fair.
'A
Comprehensive Study on Face Recognition Biases Beyond Demographics'
from a German-Spanish team tested the FaceNet and ArcFace facial recognition
models with the MAAD-face dataset to see whether the models returned biases
beyond explicit demographics such as age, sex and skin tone.
The team also tested non-explicit demographic attributes such as accessories,
hairstyles and colors, face shapes, facial anomalies and make-up.
The early release of the
full paper, which could be subject to further editing on final publication,
includes the results for the different attributes tested, generating revealing
graphs for the level of bias for both FaceNet and ArcFace, plotting the
attributes which lead to bias causing a degraded level of biometric recognition,
and those that lead to enhanced recognition performance.
Having a moustache, goatee, round face, an obstructed forehead or rosy cheeks or
wearing lipstick or glasses can all lead to degraded recognition.
Having gray hair
improves it, as does
having a beard or even just 5 o'clock shadow compared to no beard.
The authors were able to explain some of the reasons behind the results, but not
all. "The findings of this work strongly demonstrate the need for further
advances in making face recognition systems more robust, explainable, and fair.
We hope these findings lead to the development of more robust and unbiased face
recognition solutions," concludes the paper.
biometricupdate.com
Sears to close the last department store in its home state
Walgreens offering new round of employee bonuses, rewards
NRF Voices Strong Opposition to Business Tax Rate Increases
Senior LP & AP Jobs
Market
Sr. Director, Executive Protection job posted for Ross Stores in Dublin, CA
The
Senior Director, Executive Protection Services ensures the Safety and Security
of select Senior Leaders and Assets within the organization. Responsible for
safeguarding persons and property by identifying/monitoring potential threats,
assessing/deploying security solutions and providing consistent awareness and
education. The Senior Director, Special Services must demonstrate their ability
to manage complex situations, maintain strong internal/external relationships,
have proven security expertise and a drive for results.
jobs.rossstores.com
Associate Manager - Assets Protection job posted for Yum! Brands in Plano, TX
This
role's primary focus will be to serve as the lead for Executive Protection,
Major Events Security, and assist with Travel Security programs worldwide. In
addition, this position will play a primary role in executing safety, security,
and loss prevention programs and policies for all corporate-owned locations.
This role's work will entail (re)creating and implementing a worldwide executive
program inclusive of security risk avoidance, risk management, and executive
duty of care management.
jobs.yum.com
Asset Protection Operations Manager job posted for PharmScript in Somerset, NJ
We're
looking for an Asset Protection Operations Manager to join our PharmScript team
within our Corporate Administrative department. As an Asset Protection
Operations Manager, you'll be responsible for managing departmental operations
and monitoring events that have the potential to impact the infrastructure,
company assets, security, and employee safety.
indeed.com