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RLPSA to hold virtual summit October 22 
 
 The 
Retail Loss Prevention and Security Association (RLPSA) will be launching its 
THINK Tank II forum in a virtual format this year on October 22, 2020. The 
agenda includes a session titled, "Real World Strategies for Disruptive Guests: 
Masks, Policies and Q&A." Another session covers, "The Investigations 
Playbook: Case Development through Conclusion."
To register or view the full agenda, click here.  
 
RLPSA has also launched a 
new website, which includes a new interactive member directory. The 
website is set up with a topic center to allow security professionals to find 
articles, videos, white papers and blogs.  
 
 
Industry Spotlight: Hanwha Techwin America's Tom Cook 
 
 Company's 
SVP of Sales for North America provides an in-depth overview of the new Wisenet 
7 SoC 
 
Tom Cook, Senior Vice President of Sales for North America at Hanwha Techwin 
America, discusses the advanced functionality that the new
Wisenet 7 System on Chip (SoC) brings to the company's product lines as well 
as the enhanced cybersecurity it offers to end users in this episode of 
'Industry Spotlight.' 
Watch Here 
  
  
 
COVID Update 
US: Over 8.1M Cases - 222K Dead - 5.3M Recovered 
Worldwide: 
Over 38.9M Cases - 1.1M Dead - 29.2M Recovered 
 
Private Industry Security Guard Deaths: 
200+  
Law Enforcement Officer Deaths: 
121 
*Red indicates change in total 
deaths 
 
NRF Foundation Introduces COVID-19 Trainings to Aid Retail Employees 
 
 The NRF Foundation today launched 
two 
new credentials in its RISE Up program in response to the coronavirus 
pandemic. The credentials focus on Retail Operations and Customer Conflict 
Prevention to further ensure retail workers - and the millions of customers 
they serve - can work and shop more safely and help keep the economy open.  
 
"Retailers have been on the front lines of this pandemic as economic first 
responders and are going above and beyond to maintaining a safe work environment 
for themselves, their colleagues and their customers," NRF President and CEO 
Matthew Shay said. "These new credentials will give employees the training they 
need to continue operating and serving customers safely. An informed 
workforce will build customer confidence and show local and state governments 
that retailers are taking all steps possible to prevent the spread of COVID-19."  
 
While major retailers began implementing training for employees at the outset of 
the pandemic, the NRF Foundation's new trainings have streamlined these best 
practices from retailers and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention 
(CDC) to create a more comprehensive training for the entire industry. Both 
credentials are targeted toward front-line retail employees of small and 
mid-size businesses that do not have learning and development teams. 
nrf.com 
 
COVID Slowed Security Biometrics Adoption Worldwide 
COVID-19 Forces Global Fingerprint Revenues to Drop 22% in 2020  
In the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic, global biometric device revenues are 
expected to drop 22 percent to $6.6 billion, according to a recent report from 
global tech market advisory ABI Research. The entire biometrics market, however, 
will regain momentum in 2021 and is expected to reach approximately $40 billion 
in total revenues by 2025. 
 
"First, they have been instigated primarily due to economic reforms 
during the crisis which forced governments to constrain budgets and focus on 
damage control, personnel well-being and operational efficiency.  Governments 
had to delay or temporarily cancel many fingerprint-based applications 
related to user/citizen and patient registration, physical access control, 
on-premise workforce management and certain applications in border control or 
civil, welfare, immigration, law enforcement and correctional facilities.  Second, 
commercial on-premise applications and access control suffered as the rise of 
the remote workers became the new norm for the first half of 2020. 
Lastly, hygiene concerns due to contact-based fingerprint technologies pummeled 
biometrics revenues, forcing a sudden drop in fingerprint shipments worldwide."
sdmmag.com 
 
Survey: Consumers say indoor air quality crucial to prevent COVID-19 spread 
Consumers are paying close attention to the indoor air quality of public spaces 
amid the pandemic. Ninety-one percent of consumers believe that IAQ is important 
in the prevention of COVID-19 spread, according to a survey from Carbon 
Lighthouse, an energy savings-as-a-service company for commercial real estate. 
Also, 76% said that a 'rating system' on the IAQ of a building - similar to 
restaurant ratings - would help them feel better about entering the building.
chainstoreage.com 
 
COVID Fatigue Setting In - New U.S. Cases Up 23% Last 14 
Days  
As Virus Hits Rural U.S., Numbers May Be Small, but the Impact Is Not 
 
'A regional Covid storm,' one governor says as cases spike in less populous 
states. 
 
The spread of the coronavirus in the United States in recent weeks has been 
worse than it seems, not because of how it has been spreading but where. The 
virus has been pummeling some of the least populous states in the country, but 
the relatively low numbers can be deceptive. The surges in rural areas have 
been just as severe as the spikes in densely populated cities in the Sun Belt 
over the summer. 
  
North Dakota, South Dakota and Montana, for example, have announced the 
country's highest number of cases on a per capita basis. Already, the North 
Dakota and South Dakota numbers exceed the per capita figures seen at the peak 
of summer surges in the Sun Belt. 
 
Other states with large rural areas - including Wyoming, Idaho, West Virginia, 
Nebraska, Iowa, Utah, Alaska and Oklahoma - have recently recorded more cases 
in a seven-day stretch than in any other week of the pandemic. 
 
"We, as North Dakotans, find ourselves in the middle of a regional Covid storm," 
said Gov. Doug Burgum, who warned of "additional adversity and perhaps deadlier 
outcomes" after months of watching from afar as other places faced large 
outbreaks. 
 
"And," he said, "we're doing this at a time when perhaps our citizens and 
parents and many are fatigued at the stress of managing this for so long." 
 
It is hardly just the country's less populated regions that have health experts 
worried. Numbers are up across the country, and around the world. 
 
"I don't know why anybody would think it's not so bad," said Dr. Peter Hotez, 
dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine 
in Houston and an expert on contagious diseases. "We went to a low of around 
35,000 cases per day late in the summer. Now we're up to over 50,000, with those 
numbers climbing every day. Nationally, it's going back up, and I'm really 
worried that we're seeing a big increase."
nytimes.com 
 
DC Mayor: Rising numbers show 'COVID fatigue' relaxation 
Officials in the nation's capital are warning residents not to relax their 
COVID-19 vigilance as the local infection numbers rise and the winter flu season 
approaches. More than 20% of new cases are people who had been to a 
restaurant or bar in the preceding two weeks and nearly a quarter had attended 
some sort of social event, according to contact tracing interviews. 
 
"We should continue to choose our activities wisely and don't succumb to COVID 
fatigue," Mayor Muriel Bowser said Wednesday. "Don't get tired of protecting 
yourself and your entire community."
apnews.com 
 
Europe Shutting Back Down 
Paris Under Curfew: Europe Reacts As Countries See Highest-Ever COVID #'s 
 Coronavirus restrictions are taking effect in the Netherlands, the U.K., the 
Czech Republic and other parts of Europe on Wednesday as nations try to reverse 
an alarming wave in new cases. The continent is now seeing more new coronavirus 
cases - an average of 100,000 daily - than at any other time during the 
pandemic. 
 
France has declared a national state of health emergency, the U.K. appearing 
to approach a second national lockdown and Germany introducing further rules to 
restrict the spread of the virus. 
 
Bars, restaurants and schools are being shut down or sharply limited, and 
officials are working to bolster hospital capacity, to accommodate an expected 
influx of new COVID-19 patients. 
 
Numbers that showed signs of taking off in late August and September are now 
skyrocketing. Europe reported more than 700,000 new coronavirus cases last 
week - a surge representing a 36% weekly increase, 
as NPR's Reese Oxner recently reported. 
npr.org
cnbc.com 
 
1 in 5 small businesses have closed 
Pandemic hammers small businesses vital to economic recovery 
The pandemic has hammered small businesses across the United States - an 
alarming trend for an economy that's trying to rebound from the deepest, fastest 
recession in U.S. history. Normally, small employers are a vital source of 
hiring after a recession. They account for nearly half the economy's output and 
an outsize portion of new jobs. 
 
Roughly one in five small businesses have closed, according to the data firm 
Womply. Restaurants, bars, beauty shops and other retailers that involve 
face-to-face contact have been hardest hit at a time when Americans are 
trying to keep distance from one another.
apnews.com 
  
  
	
 
LP Body Cameras in the UK 
Central England Co-op rolls out new measures in a bid to prevent criminals 
targeting stores 
Bosses at a Lichfield retailer say they are rolling out new measures in a bid to 
tackle criminals targeting stores this winter. City-based Central England Co-op 
said it hoped the steps would keep staff and shoppers safe at its 260 stores 
across the country. 
 
Among the measures are a trial of body-worn cameras, an increase in the use 
of tracking devices in products and a system allowing staff to press a button 
for immediate assistance. 
 
Craig Goldie, the company's loss prevention manager, said: "We want to send a 
clear message out to anyone who might be thinking of committing a crime at one 
of our stores this autumn and winter - this behaviour will not be tolerated and 
targeting our stores is not worth the risk."
lichfieldlive.co.uk 
 
DOJ's Operation Legend Nets 5,000+ Arrests 
Since July 
Attorney General William P. Barr Announces Updates on Operation Legend at 
Roundtable in Albuquerque, New Mexico 
  
Since Operation Legend's launch in July 2020, more than 5,000 arrests - 
including approximately 247 for homicide - have been made; more than 2,000 
firearms have been seized; and nearly 22 kilos of heroin, more than 15 kilos of fentanyl (enough to deliver more than 7.5 million fatal doses), more than 130 
kilos of methamphetamine, more than 28 kilos of cocaine, and more than $7.3 
million in drug proceeds have been seized. 
 
Of the more than 5,000 individuals arrested, approximately 1,057 have been 
charged with federal offenses. Approximately 568 of those defendants have been 
charged with firearms offenses, while approximately 411 have been charged with 
drug-related crimes. The remaining defendants have been charged with various 
offenses. 
 
The Attorney General launched the operation as a sustained, systematic, and 
coordinated law enforcement initiative in which federal law enforcement agencies 
work in conjunction with state and local law enforcement officials to fight 
violent crime. 
 
Breakdown of Operation Legend charges: 
 
The initiative, which was first launched first in Kansas City, MO., on 
July 8, 2020, is named in honor of four-year-old LeGend Taliferro, who was shot 
and killed while he slept early in the morning of June 29 in Kansas City. The 
operation was subsequently expanded to Chicago and Albuquerque on July 
22, 2020; to Cleveland, Detroit, and Milwaukee on July 29, 2020; to 
St. Louis and Memphis on August 6, 2020; and to Indianapolis on 
August 14, 2020.  
 
A breakdown of the federal charges in each district can be found here:
justice.gov 
 
Amazon Workers Say Prime Day Rush Breaks Virus Safety Vows 
 
Amazon reinstates policy that penalizes 
workers for taking too many breaks: lawsuit 
 
 Workers at an Amazon fulfillment center in Staten Island, New York, who are 
suing the e-commerce giant for workplace violations, say the company has broken 
a promise to the judge overseeing the suit to not harass workers to get more 
productivity out of them, according to a 
report from Bloomberg.  
 
Plaintiffs in the suit, filed in New York in June, which alleges Amazon violated 
employee safety laws, on Wednesday filed a complaint with the court claiming 
Amazon "has recklessly reinstated dangerous warehouse productivity quotas," 
Bloomberg's Josh Eidelson and Spencer Soper report.  
 
The authors note that today's complaint accuses Amazon of going back on a 
pledge made to the court in July not to discipline workers for productivity 
lapses. 
The complaint alleges extra pressure around Prime Day, Amazon's annual 
shopping holiday that took place yesterday and today. 
 
"The plaintiffs allege that in the lead-up to 'Prime Day,' Amazon's 
self-created, labor-intensive annual promotional holiday that started Tuesday 
and ends Wednesday, the company has once again been hassling employees about 
productivity, and warning them that slowness could get them terminated," the 
article relates.  
 
In the original suit, the workers claim that Amazon's pressure to deliver 
productivity has increased the risk to the workers of catching COVID-19 
because the pressure prevents them from taking adequate safety precautions.
zdnet.com 
 
SIA's Latest Security Market Index Shows Returning Confidence 
 The 
September/October 2020 Security Market Index (SMI), released by the 
Security Industry Association (SIA), shows that after May/June 2020's low SMI in 
the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, the industry is returning to confidence, 
a trend that was seen also in the July/August SMI report. 
 
The Security Market Index measures the current status and future expectations of 
security industry executives through a select survey of SIA members. The index's 
goal is to provide a macro-view of confidence levels in the security industry 
every two months while closely examining nine specific business measures: Number 
of employees or hours worked; marketing spending; product production or service 
output; capital equipment spending; product inventories or service backlogs; R&D 
spending; new product or service introductions; product or service sales; and 
new orders or contracts. 
 
The SMI for September/October 2020 is 49, up from 32 in the July/August 
report and up from 30 in the May/June report. The last time the security 
industry's confidence was this high was in the March/April SMI, which recorded a 
confidence level of 50 before the full effect of the pandemic impacted the 
security industry. An index above 50 indicates that conditions within the 
industry are largely positive and that security industry professionals are 
predominantly confident in their business outlooks. 
 
Special focuses of SIA's September/October 2020 SMI include: Improvement in 
the video surveillance sector of the market, which is showing high 
confidence; Continued decline in confidence within the integration sector; 
and strong confidence within the access control solutions market, driven 
by new product introductions, with 100 percent of the access control industry 
leaders surveyed predicting the market will be "much better" or "a little 
better" in the near future. 
sdmmag.com 
 
Las Vegas, NV: More than $1.6M in grants awarded to improve services for Nevada 
crime victims 
U.S. Attorney Nicholas A. Trutanich made the announcement on Wednesday, saying 
$1,617,954 in grants, awarded by the Department's Office of Justice Programs, 
are a part of over $144 million distributed to improve the district's response 
to victims of crime all through the U.S. The awards, made to organizations in 
the Silver State, will advance using expertise, improve neighborhood 
preparedness and regulation enforcement coaching and supply emergency and 
transitional shelter to help victims of crime, in accordance to the Attorney's 
Office.
us.newschant.com 
 
 
Macy's is turning stores dark for the holidays 
Macy's has decided that it will close two of its department stores to on-site 
shopping for the holidays. The retailer is choosing instead to convert the 
locations into dark stores that offer in-store and curbside pickup of online 
orders and enable product returns. The retailer will use stores in Dover, 
DE, and Littleton, CO, as pilot locations for the dark store test, reports the 
Delaware News Journal. Macy's did not disclose if it intends to turn any other 
locations into dark stores for the holiday season.
retailwire.com 
 
Nordstrom removes BOPIS silos between banners 
Nordstrom is turning its Nordstrom Rack off-price stores into one-stop online 
order pickup locations for all of its banners. The luxury retailer is 
introducing online order pickup at U.S. Nordstrom Rack stores for Nordstrom.com, 
NordstromRack.com and HauteLook.com orders. Nordstrom is also enabling all 
Nordstrom Rack stores to fulfill online orders for customers.
chainstoreage.com 
 
Google's Thorsen to Keynote TMA's 2020 Annual Meeting 
 The 
Monitoring Association (TMA) is pleased to announce that Wayne Thorsen, Managing 
Director, Hardware Business Development for Google, will deliver the keynote 
address at its upcoming 2020 Annual Meeting. Mr. Thorsen will speak virtually 
via Zoom on Tues., Oct. 27th at 11:10 AM EST.
Full details and registration options are available at
www.tma.us/annual-meeting/. 
 
Starbucks announces new diversity targets, links executive compensation to hitting goals 
 
McDonald's, Chipotle and Domino's Are Booming During Coronavirus While Your 
Neighborhood Restaurant Struggles  
 
Acme Markets to acquire 27 Kings Food Markets and Balducci's Food Lover's 
Markets  
 
Per Mar Security Acquires Indiana-Based Martin Security Systems 
 
Peloton recalls pedals on 27,000 bikes after reports of injuries 
 
 
Quarterly Results 
Walgreen Q4 U.S. retail pharmacy comp's up 3.6%, retail pharmacy sales up 3.6%, 
retail comp's up 4.7%, retail sales up 1.5%, total sales up 2.3% 
Walgreen 2020 U.S. sales up 2.0% 
  
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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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Smart Shelf stops another ORC event! 
  
  
By Sean Ryan, President at Tally 
Retail Solutions LLC 
 
 
This was a known offender. He walks in and starts to fill the cart with laundry 
detergent. The Smart Shelf system is alerted when the third product was removed and 
sent an announcement through the paging system. 
 
"Customer assistance needed in laundry detergent" 
 
As you can see in the
video, the offender abandons the cart and leaves the store. 
 
This is the power of the 
Tally Smart Shelf!! 
 
Offenders just leave and don't come back. 
 
No tags, no keepers, no locking cabinets, no confrontation at the front door. 
 
 Merchandising friendly, oh and did I mention, the system will also send an alert 
when the shelf is out of stock. 
 
Email me to learn more. 
  
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Barnes & Noble confirms hack exposed customer details 
 Barnes & Noble has emailed its customers saying that it has been the 
"victim of 
a cybersecurity attack," in which personal data was accessed. The breach not 
only affected B&N's corporate IT systems but the Nook e-reader platform as well, 
leaving Nook owners unable to download books to their devices.  
 
This also meant that cash registers at B&N stores were rendered unusable 
while engineers scrambled to contain the issue.  
 
In a statement to 
The Register, the company says that it is 
"investigating the 
cause" but added that there was "no compromise of customer payment details." 
 
In the email to users, as published by 
The Digital Reader, the company said that 
while payment data was not accessed, data such as email addresses, billing 
and shipping addresses, as well as phone numbers, were. More troubling is 
that a user's purchase history could potentially have been breached, 
which could theoretically lead to blackmail or other repercussions if that data 
was published.  
 
In a tweet from the official Nook account, B&N said that it was "working 
urgently" to get the service "back to full operation," which has unfortunately 
"taken longer than anticipated."
engadget.com 
 
 
Barnes & Noble apologizes for 'serious network issue' after days-long Nook 
disruptions 
 
Carnival ransomware attack affected three brands 
Carnival Corporation has disclosed that an Aug. 15 ransomware attack accessed 
the personal data of guests and employees of Carnival Cruise Line, Holland 
America Line and Seabourn. However, Carnival said there is a "a low 
likelihood of the data being misused." 
 
The group said: "While the investigation is ongoing, early indications are that 
in early August the unauthorized third party gained access to certain 
personal information relating to some guests, employees and crew for three of 
the corporation's brands - Carnival Cruise Line, Holland America Line and Seabourn, 
as well as casino operations."
securitymagazine.com 
 
 
How IT Leaders Can Apply Facial Recognition Tech Responsibly 
 
The best way forward is to treat facial 
recognition data from the perspective of the rights of the people portrayed. 
 
Many people trust facial recognition technology to access their mobile phones, 
but there is still resistance toward deploying this type of technology in public 
spaces. In fact, some jurisdictions have put the use of facial recognition 
technology "on hold" because it poses particularly complex ethical dilemmas. 
Tech giants ceasing to supply facial recognition products to police departments 
and major US cities banning its use has further fueled these ethical debates. 
 
For example, two use cases for facial recognition technology include recognition 
of criminal suspects and finding missing people. However, this immediately poses 
significant ethical questions: Would the same people who support the use of 
facial recognition to catch criminals also want to use this technology to track 
down people with outstanding child support payments? When people go missing, 
their families and friends may suffer great distress, but does that suffering 
outweigh the individual's freedom not to be found? 
 
There is no single responsible use of facial recognition that is applicable to 
all circumstances. Rather, this technology's suitability depends on the 
prevailing culture, ethics, legislation and practices. As a result, there is no 
globally applicable set of right and wrong deployment contexts. IT leaders 
must instead ensure that they are adhering to digital ethics in order to use 
facial recognition technology responsibly. Here are four actions that they 
should take to do so: 
 
1. Battle issues of bias and false positives 
2. Establish proportional use of facial recognition 
3. Explicitly determine purpose boundaries for collected data 
4. Expand the rights of people identified in images 
informationweek.com 
 
Treasury Dept. Advisory Shines Spotlight on Ransomware Negotiators 
 
With attacks showing no signs of abating, 
some companies have begun offering services to help reduce ransom demands, buy 
more time, and arrange payments. 
 
The emerging ransomware negotiator industry has come into the spotlight recently 
following an advisory from the US Department of the Treasury for companies that 
facilitate ransom payments to threat actors on behalf of victims. 
 
The advisory, from the department's Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), 
warned of potential regulatory trouble that such organizations could face if 
ransom payments ended up in the hands of adversaries on OFAC's Specially 
Designated Nationals and Blocked Persons List (SDN). US persons and entities are 
prohibited from conducting transactions with anyone on the SDN list or with any 
individual or organizations from countries that OFAC has officially sanctioned, 
such as North Korea, Iran, Ukraine, and Syria. 
 
OFAC's advisory did not introduce any specific new limitations for 
organizations willing to pay threat actors a ransom to get back access to their 
data after a ransomware attack. It mostly reminded organizations of potential 
violations of existing US policy they would trigger if they - or anyone acting 
on their behalf - made the payment to individuals or entities on OFAC's 
sanctions list. OFAC currently has numerous threat actors on its cyber-related 
sanctions list, including ransomware operators such as North Korea's Lazarus 
group and those behind the SamSam, Dridex, and CryptoLocker campaigns.
darkreading.com 
 
Free Pass: ICS Cyber Security Conference - Register Now 
 
The virtual event takes place October 19-22 
 
 SecurityWeek's 
2020 ICS Cyber Security Conference kicks off on October 19th with a fully 
immersive virtual experience for stakeholders to discuss innovative industrial 
cybersecurity and risk management strategies.  
 
SecurityWeek has opened access to the fully virtual event at no charge for 2020.
Register now and join thousands of the industry's top security leaders for 
important conversations and insights. 
 
Compliance activities and fines cost organizations nearly $4m per year 
 
Meet FIN11, a financially-motivated hacker group 
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Legalization on the Ballot in Five States 
How the 2020 Election Impacts Growing Cannabis Companies 
 
2020 election season is in full swing, and 
cannabis legalization is once again on the ballot. 
 
This year, an increasing number of states are either considering full-scale 
recreational legalization or focusing on medical cannabis, with a whopping 18 
states expecting to loosen their marijuana laws either through their 
legislatures or via ballot measure. But like most things in 2020, those 
endeavors did not all go according to plan. The spread of COVID-19 stifled 
legalization efforts in numerous states where ballot measure campaigns reliant 
on gathering signatures were forced to shut down because of public health 
concerns and social distancing guidelines. 
 
 Despite 
these challenges, five 
states will still be voting on legalization measures on Election Day: 
Arizona, Montana, New Jersey and South Dakota (recreational adult use) and 
Mississippi and South Dakota (medical). 
 
Cannabis and the Presidential 
Race 
 
In September, Democratic vice presidential nominee and California Sen. Kamala 
Harris promised, at an ABC virtual town hall, that she and former Vice President 
Joe Biden would 
decriminalize cannabis. 
 
The Trump administration, on the other hand, has taken several hostile 
anti-marijuana actions since the president took office in 2017. Despite 
indicating during his 2016 campaign that he favored leaving the issue of 
legalization of marijuana to the states, his administration 
rescinded Obama-era guidance 
on cannabis prosecutions 
and implemented policies 
making immigrants ineligible for citizenship if they consume marijuana or work 
in the cannabis industry. Plus, Trump's 2021 fiscal budget proposal 
removed protections for state 
medical marijuana laws. 
 
Interstate Compact Deals - Banking and the Removal of 280E Provisions
cannabisbusinessexecutive.com 
 
 
RELATED: How the Election will Effect Cannabis 
Businesses & Legalizations 
 
Cannabis Security Firm Must Pay Overtime After Supreme Court Rejects Case 
The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear a case alleging that a 
Colorado cannabis company 
failed to pay some security employees overtime they were owed,
Law360 reports. Helix, the employer, has argued unsuccessfully in lower 
courts that because cannabis is outlawed under federal law, employees are not 
protected under the federal Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). 
 
Robert Kenney, the former security employee for Helix, brought the suit against 
the company in 2017, claiming that the employer misclassified him and his fellow 
security guards as exempt employees, failing to pay them legally required 
overtime, the report says. 
 
Helix appealed to the Tenth Circuit, which affirmed the previous ruling and 
declined to dismiss the case in September 2019,
according to Law360. The rejection by the Supreme Court means the previous 
decisions will stand. 
ganjapreneur.com 
 
3 Reasons Why Cannabis Kiosks are Here to Stay 
While vending machines themselves are not anything new or exciting, vending 
machines for cannabis are another story. They are innovative for the cannabis 
industry and will 
likely become a new normal 
due to the benefits they offer dispensaries, budtenders and customers alike. 
 
● Kiosks Make Dispensaries 
Safer 
● Kiosks Increase Sales 
● Kiosks Improve 
Customer Relationships
sapphirerisk.com 
 
COVID-19's Prolonged Impact on the Cannabis Industry  | 
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Portland, OR: Former postal worker who stole more than 400 cellphones from 
Portland sorting station must pay $253,550 in Restitution 
Rico Alvarez carried razor blades with his U.S. Postal Service lanyard and used 
them to carefully open certain packages that passed through the Portland mail 
processing and distribution center where he worked, prosecutors said. He'd place 
a "blocking package" to conceal his handiwork as he sliced through a box and 
stole the cellphone inside. He'd then put the empty box right back on the 
conveyer belt for sorting and shipping to the intended recipient, federal 
investigators said.
He took many of the 
newer model iPhone 11s that had a retail value of $699 and sold them for $100 to 
$150, according to Harrington. He used the money to buy $790 sneakers and a 2011 
BMW, Harrington said.
oregonlive.com 
 
 Kingsbury, 
NY: Arrests made in August chainsaw larcenies 
The Washington County Sheriff's Office has arrested two people in connection 
with the larcenies of several chainsaws in August.
The arrests follow a 
joint investigation with the Saratoga County Sheriff's Office and the Queensbury 
barracks of the New York State Police. 
The investigation found that Leslie F. Allen Jr., 38, and Krista S. Jenkins, 25, 
stole several chainsaws from Falls Farm and Garden on Dix Avenue in Kingsbury in 
August of this year.
cbs6albany.com 
 
 Academy 
Sports Employee Assaulted During Shoplifters' Getaway 
Franklin Police want to identify these women, wanted in an assault and attempted 
shoplifting at the Mallory Lane Academy Sports. The suspects seen here had 
armfuls of clothing they were attempting to leave the store with via an 
emergency exit. After the alarm sounded, the suspects dropped the clothing and 
ran to the front door where one of them struck an employee in the face during 
their getaway.
williamsonsource.com 
 
Portland, OR: Bicycle Shop Owner reports over $20,000 burglary  
 
Edinburgh, Scotland: Burglars steal over $25,000 of bicycles from local shop  | 
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Shootings & Deaths 
Detroit, MI: Man shot, killed at gas station after argument with clerk 
 A 
Detroit gas station clerk is accused of killing a customer after the two get 
into an argument inside the store over an alleged theft. That customer was 
recently released from jail because of COVID-19. The deadly shooting happened 
just after 10:30 p.m. Monday in the 10000 block of Gratiot Avenue. Now, 
community activists are calling for change, believing African Americans are 
often criminalized by the very businesses they support. "So this young 18-year 
old shot through the bulletproof glass with an AK 47. That's a weapon of war," 
said Teferi Brent, who's with Dignity for Detroit. The clerk was arrested and 
the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office says it received the warrant package on 
Wednesday, which is under review for possible charges. "Clearly, in our 
investigation, we see there was no imminent threat to that clerk's life. He was 
behind a protected screen. This person was engaging in a property crime and the 
best course for this clerk should have been contact the police," James Craig 
said.
fox2detroit.com 
 
Update: Helena-West Helena, AR: $1.5 bond set for Ark. man charged with 
first-degree murder in grocery store shooting 
  
 
 
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts 
Chase sparked by Portage Walmart theft ends in fiery crash; police rescue 
suspect from burning wreck 
 A 
pursuit ended with officers pulling the unconscious suspect out of a burning 
vehicle Wednesday morning. At 9:15 a.m. police were called to a theft from 
Walmart said Portage police Sgt. Rob Maynard. The Walmart loss prevention 
employee told police the suspect stole alcohol and housewares and then fled. 
Portage officers saw the described vehicle and tried to stop the Lexus. During 
the chase , the suspect hit a curb/ guardrail and flattened a tire. The suspect 
continued fleeing, going west on Interstate 94. The suspect then hit the middle 
concrete barrier and came to a stop.  
 
As officers approached, smoke began pouring from the engine compartment and 
filling the vehicle. The driver was not wearing a seat belt and police found him 
unconscious in the wreckage, Maynard said. 
Officers pulled the man out of the smoking vehicle and began to administer 
medical aid a safe distance from the crash. 
The man, age 37, suffered serious internal injuries and had to be airlifted to a 
trauma center. Further investigations discovered
the vehicle was 
reported stolen on 
Saturday to the Gary Police Department and
police found multiple 
stolen items from previous thefts, 
Maynard said. 
nwitimes.com 
 
Portland, OR: Two men accused of looting during downtown riot on May 30 
 Two 
men are facing burglary and theft charges, accused of looting Portland 
businesses during a riot downtown several months ago. The Multnomah County 
District Attorney's Office said both Richard Cavanaugh and Shane Anderson are 
facing one count each of first-degree burglary and first-degree theft. According 
to court documents, there was a smash-and-grab theft on May 30 at a store called 
BAIT, which sells footwear, apparel, and high-end collectibles at their shop in 
the 800 block of Southwest Broadway Street. When officers got to the store, they 
said they found Cavanaugh trying to leave while carrying merchandise. They also 
identified Anderson as another person who was still inside the store.
katu.com 
 
Lackawanna County, PA: Heavily-intoxicated man attempts to enter Brinks Armored 
vehicle 
On Monday afternoon, police were dispatched to the Pennsylvania Fine Wine and 
Good Spirits Store in Taylor for an alleged intoxicated male attempting to enter 
a Brinks Armored vehicle. The armored car driver and the liquor store security 
guard allegedly tried to stop 50-year-old Aleksandr Shafir from entering the 
passenger side door of the Brinks vehicle, when they were repeatedly head butted 
and kicked in the groin area. 
When police arrived, the security guard had already handcuffed and restrained 
Shafir.
pahomepage.com 
 
Spencer, IA: 2 arrested for staging robbery at Casey's store 
According to court documents, Wolthuis admitted that a few days prior to the 
staged robbery, she had taken home approximately $2,000 from the store rather 
than depositing it in the bank. She told police she had planned to replace the 
money with her paycheck, but was unable to do so, leading her to plan the fake 
robbery with Archer to cover up the theft.
siouxcityjournal.com 
 
Bellingham, WA: Walmart Shoplifter allegedly uses taser on employee 
Bellingham police used tasers and fired bean bags to subdue and arrest a man 
suspected of using his own taser on a Walmart employee while stealing 
merchandise from the store on Sunday. Gavin Zane Ruckle, 20, was booked into 
Whatcom County Jail Oct. 11 on suspicion of first-degree robbery and resisting 
arrest Ruckle left the store with a cart full of unpaid merchandise without 
attempting to pay. An employee tried to bring the merchandise and Ruckle back 
into the store, according to Murphy, but Ruckle pulled out his taser and 
activated it when the employee reached for the cart. The employee "body checked" 
Ruckle, Murphy wrote, and Ruckle turned the taser on them, using it "multiple 
times" on the employee.
bellinghamherald.com 
 
Salt Lake City, UT: Las Vegas man indicted for illegally buying hundreds of guns 
in Utah 
Federal prosecutors in Utah indict a Las Vegas man who reportedly lied to buy 
guns by the hundreds. Investigators say those guns are connected to illegal 
drugs and murders in other states. John Huber, the US Attorney for Utah says 
Gregory Nelson was actually a straw buyer who would then resell the guns to 
other people. Nelson reportedly bought 283 weapons in 2020, with 171 of them 
being purchased just between July and August.
Investigators say 
Nelson spent roughly $176, 000 on these weapons, and they believe that's a 
conservative estimate.
kslnewsradio.com 
 
Monroeville, PA: ATF searching for person who stole shotguns, rifle from 
Dunham's 
 
Ocala, FL: Wallet left a crime scene leads officers to suspects in burglaries of 
businesses 
 
Austin, TX: Police search for 4 suspects in string of 7-Eleven robberies 
 
Hampton, VA: Police investigate string of 'smash and grab' burglaries targeting 
Hampton businesses 
 
Hot Springs, AR: Lowe's associate pleads guilty to $1,600 felony embezzling
 
 
Fairview, TN: City Mayor arrested for allegedly shoplifting $300 worth of Target 
merchandise 
  
 
 
Cargo Theft 
Salina, KS: Second Beer Trailer stolen in same week; loss of over $100,000 
Another trailer theft has occurred at a Salina alcohol distribution center-the 
second one in the same week-and law enforcement believe that they are related. 
Back on Oct. 10, police says that a distribution truck and trailer were both 
stolen from Pestinger Distributing, resulting in an over $100,000 loss. This was 
reported on this Monday. Salina Police Capt. Paul Forrester said the latest 
theft occurred at Crown Distribution, at 6:20 p.m. on Oct. 9. An enclosed 2000 
ATLS trailer with Coors logos on both sides is reported as stolen from the 
facility. The trailer is valued at $12,500.
ksal.com 
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•
Bikes - Portland, OR - 
Burglary 
•
C-Store - Wadley, AL - 
Armed Robbery 
•
C-Store - Dayton, OH - 
Robbery 
•
C-Store - Spencer, IA 
- Robbery 
•
CVS - Champaign, IL - 
Armed Robbery 
•
Dollar General - Pearl 
River County, MS - Armed Robbery 
•
Jewelry - Portland, ME - Robbery 
•
Jewelry - Milford, CT - Robbery 
•
Jewelry - Kansas City, MO - Robbery 
•
Marijuana - Tulsa, OK 
- Burglary 
•
Marijuana - Broken 
Arrow, OK - Burglary 
•
Medical - St Louis, MO 
- Burglary 
•
Restaurant - Madison, 
WI - Burglary 
•
Restaurant - 
Braintree, MA - Burglary (Burger King) 
•
Restaurant - Hampton, 
VA - Burglary 
•
Sporting Goods - 
Franklin, TN - Robbery 
•
Walmart - Whatcom 
County, WA - Robbery/ Assault  | 
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Daily Totals: 
• 10 robberies 
• 7 burglaries 
• 0 shootings 
• 0 killed  | 
 
 
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Click to enlarge map 
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		Jason Selkirk named Regional Asset Protection Investigator for 
		SpartanNash | 
	 
	 
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Submit Your New Hires/Promotions or New Position
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Featured Job Spotlights 
 
  
  | 
 
Division Safety and Loss Prevention Manager 
Atlanta, GA 
 
- posted October 5 
Under the guidance of the Directors of Loss Prevention (LP) and 
Health, Safety and Environment (HSE), the Loss Prevention & Safety Manager is 
responsible for overseeing and championing initiatives and company programs, 
processes and controls that builds a culture around continuous improvement in 
safety/environment incidents, loss prevention, and security outcomes...  | 
 
 
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Regional Asset Protection Manager 
Emeryville, CA 
 
- posted October 2 
The Regional Asset Protection and Safety Manager will lead the Region in shrink 
reduction and profit maximization efforts. The position will proactively seek to 
bring economic value to the company, promoting profitable sales and world class 
customer service while ensuring a safe place to work and shop...  | 
 
 
  | 
  
Asset & Profit Protection Investigations Analyst 
San Francisco, CA 
- posted September 24 
You should have strong analytical skills, be a quick 
learner, and drive to innovate with both technology and processes. They will be 
personable, open to learning, collaborating with others, and apt to saying "yes" 
or "I'll find a way", rather than "no" or "that's impossible"...
  | 
 
 
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Area Loss Prevention Manager 
Pittsburgh, PA 
- posted September 10 
Our Area Loss Prevention Managers ensure safe and secure stores through the 
objective identification of loss and risk opportunities. Our Area Loss 
Prevention Managers plan and prioritize to provide an optimal customer 
experience to their portfolio of stores. They thrive on supporting and building 
high performance teams that execute with excellence...
  | 
 
 
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Customer Success Specialists 
Multiple Locations - posted October 9 
The 
role of the Customer Success Specialist is to engage, empower, and excite our 
community. As a Customer Success Specialist, your primary responsibility is to 
ensure both retailers and law enforcement, who make up our community, have great 
experiences and achieve real crime reduction outcomes from using our platform.
Apply Here
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Sales Representatives 
NuTech National - posted October 13 
NuTech National, an 
established and rapidly growing 40+ year electronic security company is 
expanding our National Sales Team. Seeking motivated, driven and successful 
sales reps to expand our national retail and governmental vertical markets. Top 
pay, benefits and signing bonus available. Please apply to
melissa@nutechnational.com  | 
 
  
 
 
Featured Jobs 
 
To apply to any of today's Featured Jobs, 
Click Here
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View Featured 
Jobs   |  
Post Your Job  
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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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