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George Lembessis named Divisional Vice President, Asset Protection for Hudson's
Bay Company
Before
joining Hudson's Bay Company as Divisional Vice President, Asset Protection,
George spent a short period of time with Holt Renfrew in Loss Prevention & Risk
Management. Prior to that, he spent nearly four years with Ascena Retail Group
as Regional Asset Protection Manager. Earlier in his career, he held LP roles
with The Body Shop, Gap Inc./Old Navy, and Guess. Congratulations, George!
Bernard Brown named National Accounts Program Manager for ADT Commercial
Before
joining ADT Commercial
as NAI Program Manager, Bernard spent more than 18 years with Belk, most
recently serving as the Director, Asset Protection - Stores. During his time
with Belk, he served as Sr. Director, Asset Protection West Division, Director
of Loss Prevention Southern Division, and Regional LP & Operations Manager
Atlanta, among other roles. Earlier in his career, he spent six years with
Lowe's. Congratulations, Bernard!
Colin Gubernick named Corporate Investigations
Coordinator for Burlington Stores
Before
joining Burlington as Corporate Investigations Coordinator, Colin spent nearly
eight years with ShopRite as District Risk Management Supervisor (2 years),
Senior Investigator, Risk Management (4 years) and Loss Prevention Detective (2
years). Prior to that, he spent a year with Kohl's as a Loss Prevention Officer.
Earlier in his career, he held LP/security roles with Kmart and Securitas.
Congratulations, Colin! |
See All the Executives 'Moving Up' Here
Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position
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Learn Daily, Practical Solutions for Health & Wellness with PPS
PPS
teams up with the Loss Prevention Foundation
& Movement Rx to offer 2 free webinars!
Product Protection Solutions' (PPS) is partnering with the Loss Prevention
Foundation (LPF) and Movement Rx to give back to the loss prevention community.
Attend this 2-part webinar series on Thursday, February 25, and Thursday, March
4, at 1:00 P.M. EST. Learn new ways to improve and maintain your health and
wellness by registering for LPF's live webinar sponsored by PPS.
The webinars will:
• Provide everyday tools and knowledge on living a healthier, better life.
• Help uncover the cause of lower back, shoulder, and knee pain.
• Create a safe and progressive do-it-yourself program to help resolve physical
pain.
Register for 2/25 webinar
on 'Working From Home: How to Get Employees Happier & Healthier'
Register for 3/4 webinar on 'Happy Retail: Simple Tools to Improve Employee
Physical & Emotional Health'
Tim Gates, Senior Vice President in Business Development at PPS, said,
"One part of PPS's mission is to protect our customer's bottom line, and that
extends to their employees. The health and wellness of the loss prevention team
can impact how well and effective jobs are performed. By providing the LP team
with solutions for physical ailments will have a positive impact on their mental
wellbeing."
Read More Here
Read more in today's Vendor
Spotlight below
Protests & Violence
Security industry sees 32 deaths in first five weeks of 2021
24 Covid-Related Deaths, 6 Homicides, 2
Fatal Accidents
Just five weeks into the new year, and the private security industry has already
seen 32 security officer deaths. Of these, 6 have been reported to be homicides
with four of them still unsolved.
Once again, a large number of deaths continue to be identified as Covid-19
related. As of today, 24 deaths have been counted a such.
Two other security officers have also died in accidents.
privateofficer.com
Sacramento mayor condemns protesters who vandalized his Pocket neighborhood home
Sacramento Mayor Darrell Steinberg on Monday condemned a group of left-wing
protesters who threw rocks at his house in the Pocket neighborhood.
More than 80
Sacramento Police Department officers monitored about 50 protesters who
participated in the protest
criticizing the city’s handling of homelessness amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Officers did not make any arrests during the protest.
sacbee.com
COVID Update
US: Over 27.7M Cases - 476K Dead - 17.5M Recovered
Worldwide:
Over 107M Cases - 2.3M Dead - 79M Recovered
Former Senior Loss Prevention Executive
Know of any fallen LP exec? Let's remember &
recognize.
Private Industry Security Guard Deaths:
274
Law Enforcement Officer Deaths:
235
*Red indicates change in total
deaths
Coronavirus
in the U.S. - Latest Case Count
ASIS Foundation Awards More Than 100 COVID-19 Support Grants
ASIS
International, the world's largest association for security management
professionals, today announced that since the launch of the program in November
2020, the ASIS Foundation has awarded more than 120 COVID-19 Support Grants to
its global membership. The ASIS Foundation Board of Trustees approved
$100,000 in grants to be awarded to ASIS
members in need, encouraging individuals
who had been financially impacted by the pandemic to apply for a grant to renew
their ASIS membership free of charge or to receive a complimentary online
certification study program. This program will continue through March 2021.
asisonline.org
CDC Urges States Not to Ease Up on Precautions
Because of New Variant
New variants threaten to reverse progress against COVID-19
The rise of more contagious variants of the coronavirus are threatening an
encouraging trend of falling COVID-19 cases across the country.
New U.S. cases of COVID-19 on Sunday dropped below 100,000 for the first time
since November, a hopeful sign after a brutal post-Thanksgiving period that
saw cases, hospitalizations and deaths spike.
Health officials are urging the public and governors not to ease up on
precautions despite the somewhat improved situation, given that measures
like wearing a mask and distancing from others are even more important when the
virus is more contagious.
In addition, while the trend is going in a positive direction, the levels of
cases, hospitalizations and deaths are still much higher than either of the
previous peaks in the spring and summer of last year.
There were 96,000 new cases on Sunday, according to the COVID Tracking Project,
down from a peak of almost 300,000 in early January. But that is still far above
any level experts would consider a goal. It is still higher than the peak of
cases over the summer, for example, which was about 75,000 cases per day.
Roughly 3,000 people are dying every day from the virus, and about 80,000
are in the hospital with COVID-19.
The governor of Iowa lifted coronavirus restrictions. These cities are keeping
them anyway.
Asked about Iowa’s decision, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
Director
Rochelle Walensky on Monday urged states not to lift precautions, in
part citing the rise of new variants of the virus.
A study released Sunday found that the variant is doubling every 10 days in
the U.S. and will likely become the dominant strain in many states by March.
thehill.com
Biden Administration Focused on Testing & Vaccinations
Not to say anything about more regulations
Employers Should Monitor Changes to COVID-19 Testing Guidelines
Employers may struggle to keep up with evolving COVID-19 testing and safety
guidelines as the pandemic persists. So it's a good idea to check frequently
for updates at the federal, state and local levels. Here are some key compliance
tips for employers.
Look for New Federal and State Directives
In a
recent executive order, Biden established the COVID-19 Pandemic Testing
Board and a Public Health Workforce Program. Among other objectives, the order
aims to "expand equitable access to COVID-19 testing" and "identify barriers to
access and use of testing," particularly for health care and other essential
workers, and in at-risk settings such as schools, long-term-care facilities and
food-processing plants.
The order suggests that tests should be provided free of charge to certain
populations, and that employer-sponsored health insurance plans should be
reviewed to clarify COVID-19 testing coverage requirements.
However, the new directives don't make many changes to how employers should
manage their COVID-19 testing programs. So
anti-discrimination guidelines from the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
(EEOC) and
testing protocols from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
will remain in place.
Create a COVID-19 Testing Program
"Employers should think through the mechanics of how the testing is going to
take place," Diamond said. Are they going to send employees test kits, perform
nasal swabs onsite or at approved testing centers, or ask workers to arrange the
testing on their own and provide the results?
Employers should review their contracts with testing partners to ensure that
they include
strong information-security standards and address the risks associated with
a security breach, Gordon said. Editors Note:
Don't forget cybersecurity here!
Looking Ahead
The Biden administration is focused on rapid tests, which may provide a faster
and less expensive alternative to molecular tests (such as the RT-PCR tests)
that are sent to a lab. But the accuracy of rapid tests is still under review.
Additionally, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA)
is likely to issue an emergency temporary standard on COVID-19 and the
workplace.
shrm.org See Below Article
New Emergency Standards Coming March 15th?
Workers' group slams OSHA, demands tougher COVID-19 standards
A national worker safety organization criticized the federal government
yesterday for not protecting workers from the spread of COVID-19 on the job, and
demanded the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) implement
an emergency temporary standard to combat the problem.
"The sad truth is that during the COVID-19 pandemic, OSHA and our federal
government has failed us," said Jessica Martinez, co-executive director of the
National Council for Occupational Safety and Health, on a Zoom call with
reporters where she unveiled an eight-part
agenda to keep workers safe.
The call came just four days after OSHA, under President Joe Biden’s new
administration,
issued clarified guidance to combat COVID-19 in the workplace. The president
also directed the agency to reconsider its earlier decision to forgo emergency
temporary standards — which would provide uniform, enforceable mandates for all
workplaces nationally — and if it decides to such issue standards, to implement
them by March 15.
hrdive.com
10K National Guard - 200 Teams - Mass
Vaccination Sites - 6,500 Pharmacies
The Vaccination Plan Continues to Evolve
Florida announced last week that it is expanding its program through more
Publix locations as well as those operated by Fresco y Mas, Walmart and
Winn-Dixie. A total of 6,500 pharmacies across the U.S., including those
operated by Costco, CVS, Jewel-Osco, Kroger, Meijer, Rite Aid, Safeway and
Walgreens, will get vaccines to immunize customers in groups prioritized by
individual state governments.
The Biden administration’s
plan being debated in Congress would allocate funds to vaccinate individuals
in traditionally underserved communities, organizing partnerships with
community-based groups and local healthcare providers and deploying the Federal
Emergency Management Administration (FEMA) to work with the National Guard and
state and local teams. Mobile vaccination centers are also part of the plan
to make sure that underserved urban and rural communities are not left high and
dry.
retailwire.com
Uber will offer free rides to Walgreens to expand Covid vaccine access
in underserved communities
NYC Starting to Wake Up As Employees Begin to
Trickle Back
LVMH Tells Tiffany Staff to Return to Office Two Days a Week - Hybrid Schedule
Luxury giant wants New York City employees
in office starting March 1 as it starts to integrate U.S. jeweler
Tiffany
will join a small list of large New York companies that have
required employees to return to the office, including JPMorgan Chase &
Co. In Houston, Shell Oil Co. and some other energy companies brought back
workers as early as May or June, only to
send them home again amid coronavirus outbreaks.
Some companies that had hoped to bring employees back this spring are moving
that target to late summer and beyond as
Covid-19 case counts remain elevated. About 14% of New York City workers
have returned, according to data from Kastle Systems, a security firm that has
been tracking access-card swipes at offices.
The seven-day average of the percent of New York City Covid-19 tests that come
back positive is 5%, according to state data, down from a recent high of 6.4% in
early January. The World Health Organization recommends that positivity rates
stay below 5% for at least two weeks before easing shutdown restrictions.
LVMH is taking workers concerns (Day-care issues, public transportation
transmission concerns) into consideration and the safety of staff into account
as it rolls out the hybrid policy, and
employees will have the option of arriving late and leaving early, according
to the memo.
Safety Rules: Employees will have their temperature checked upon entering
the building, hand sanitizer will be placed throughout, masks are required and
will be provided and social-distancing rules will be in effect. Conference rooms
will be at half capacity and only two people will be allowed in elevators at the
same time, according to the memo.
The back-to-work edict is in keeping with LVMH’s policies for its other
companies, which include Louis Vuitton and Dior, and its staff in France. LVMH’s
U.S. employees have been working with this hybrid model since September. The
two-day-a-week hybrid schedule has been common in
France.
wsj.com
U.K. variant of the coronavirus spreads in California, sparking new concern
There are at least 693 cases in
33 states, with the highest numbers in Florida (201) and California
(153).
The U.K. variant has been identified in
San Diego, Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino, Alameda, San Mateo and Yolo
counties.
Neither the South African variant nor a closely related variant first identified
in Brazil, P.1, have been identified thus far in California. The P.1 variant has
been identified in two people in Minnesota and one person in Oklahoma.
The currently available vaccines are believed to be highly effective against
both the conventional variety of the coronavirus and the U.K. strain.
A travel advisory remains in effect in L.A. County, recommending against any
nonessential travel 120 miles outside the county, especially for travel
considered tourism or recreational in nature. Anyone arriving in L.A. County
from other states or countries for non-essential travel
must self-quarantine for 10 days after arrival.
latimes.com
What to Expect From Travel in 2021
Grounded fliers should see plenty of change this year on prices, mask rules
and rewards programs—if pandemic conditions improve
1. Get Ready for Prices to Zigzag
Airlines will respond to increases in demand for seats with higher prices much
faster than they can get more flights into schedules. There’s tons of pent-up
demand, and when it spills out into bookings, prices in some markets will surge.
Downtown luxury business hotels will stay especially cheap, since their
core business travelers won’t be coming back in droves yet.
Summer Surge
Airlines are anticipating stronger demand for summer travel, but so far prices
are pretty cheap.
2. Health Records Become a Standard Part of Flying
Expect health records to become mandatory for international air travel, just
like passports.
3. The Frequent-Flier Free-For-All
There will be a mad scramble for top-level frequent-flier status in the second
half of 2021. Expect airlines to offer expensive ways to purchase your status if
you don’t requalify.
4. The Mask Mandate Arrives
5. Recovery Starts Closer to Home
Domestic travel will be where airlines see some recovery this year.
International travel will remain deeply depressed.
wsj.com
McDonald's will pay employees to get vaccinated
As alcohol abuse rises amid pandemic, LA hospitals see a wave of deadly liver
disease
Detroit expands COVID vaccine eligibility to include food workers &
security guards
A Must Read: Great Story & History
NYC's Compstat & Predictive Policing - Transformed American Policing
The Story - The Impact - How Prevention Became the
Driving Force
The black box of justice: How secret algorithms have changed policing
Crime prevention efforts increasingly depend on data analysis about
neighborhoods. But there’s a lot we don’t know—and vast opportunities for bias.
The
story of predictive policing begins in the 1990s with a process developed by the
New York Police Department. Today New York is one of the safest big cities in
America. In 2018, 289 people were murdered in the five boroughs. The city’s
murder rate—3.31 per 100,000 people—was the lowest measured in 50 years.
In 1990, it was a different city: 2,245 people were murdered, a rate of around
31 per 100,000. The city knew it had to get crime under control, but the police
didn’t have the right information.
In 1993, New York elected its first Republican mayor in almost 30 years—an
ambitious former federal prosecutor named Rudy Giuliani. He ran a law-and-order
campaign, and soon after taking office appointed Bill Bratton, formerly Boston’s
police commissioner, then head of New York City’s Transit Police, to head the
NYPD.
Bratton soon ran into a problem: he found that his new department had no focus
on preventing crime.
Read the whole story
Commissioner Bratton spoke to the LP community at the Daily's 'Live in NYC
at the NRF Big Show' event in 2016.
One for the Anti-Progressives Prosecutor Movement
Wonder if you get my drift here - Not everybody will
Court blocks some of Los Angeles DA’s progressive policies
Los
Angeles County prosecutors took the progressive new district attorney to
court and won a ruling Monday blocking some criminal justice reforms he
instituted to reduce prison sentences.
Superior Court Judge James Chalfant issued a preliminary injunction blocking
some directives District Attorney George Gascon issued to end enhancements that
can add years to prison sentences.
Gascon said he would appeal.
Gascon took office in December and immediately put in place reforms that he
campaigned on, such as vowing not to seek the death penalty, not prosecute
juveniles as adults and ending the use of sentencing enhancements that trigger
stiffer sentences for certain elements of crimes, repeat offenses or being a
gang member. Gascon has argued that enhancements don’t make communities safer.
Career prosecutors took the unusual step of suing their new boss. They
claimed the directives violated state law, their oath of office and ethical and
professional obligations.
“The court ruled as we expected in holding that the district attorney cannot
order his prosecutors to ignore laws that protect the public from repeat
offenders,” the union said in a statement. “The court ruled that the district
attorney’s policy violated the law to benefit criminal defendants and ordered
him to comply with the law. This ruling protects the communities which are
disproportionately affected by higher crime rates and those who are victimized.”
fox40.com
BOPIS Fraud Crimewave
Time for retailers to focus on the digital-physical curbside crimewave
Reports of the retail industry's death have been greatly exaggerated. While
COVID-19 ravaged the hospitality, travel and leisure industries, retail has
escaped total calamity through plucky entrepreneurialism and the ability to
adapt. But with new innovation comes fresh vulnerability. It might have dodged
death by pandemic, but now retail faces assault from a virtual curbside crimewave.
Barred from browsing and disappointed by delays in home delivery, shoppers have
flocked to curbside pickup. Nearly 70 percent of American consumers made
click-and-collect purchases in the past six months according to Business
Insider Intelligence. But fraudsters are lining up at the curb just like the
rest of us.
Taking advantage of buy online, pick-up in store (BOPIS), these scam artists
impersonate customers with stolen account information to make a purchase online,
then step out from behind the screen and into the actual pickup line to complete
the con. By hopping between the digital and physical worlds, they abuse
flaws in newfound fulfillment methods to cause severe financial and reputational
risk. And the criminals are just getting started.
With the third wave of COVID-19 running rampant, most people will avoid
in-person shopping for the next few months. Doorbusters will make way for Curb
Busters, causing account takeovers (ATO) and associated BOPIS attacks to surge.
The confluence of fresh and increased opportunity means retail will need to
adapt yet again to prevent fraudsters from walking away with a
buy-one-get-one-free on merchandise and customer data.
scmagazine.com
Not every retailer is sold on curbside pickup
At RetailROI SuperFriday just before the NRF Big Show, a retailer roundtable
hosted by Aptos discussed some of the trends that emerged in retail in 2020 and
which ones appear to have staying power. Retailers had mixed opinions on
curbside beyond the pandemic. For some, curbside and BOPIS helped increase
average order value and prevent issues with delivery. For others, it was not a
huge draw for customers or was too complicated to coordinate with closed stores.
retailwire.com
Misdirecting $1.4M in
Rebates to Her Personal Accounts
Financial Analyst Charged With $1.4 Million Fraud Against C-Store CoOp in
Northern Texas
Tammy Walden Thomas, 60, charged with nine counts of wire fraud. From March 2016
through October 2019, Ms. Thomas served as a financial analyst for NTBA, a
cooperative association of hundreds of North Texas convenience stores and
gasoline station owners that negotiated discounts with multinational food
and beverage companies on behalf of its members.
As a financial analyst, Ms. Thomas was charged with passing these discounts,
as rebates, on to NTBA members via automatic clearinghouse transfers.
However, she allegedly misdirected more than $1.4 million in rebate funds
into her own bank accounts, lying to NTBA’s executives and accountants in
the process. If convicted, she faces up to 20 years in federal prison.
justice.gov
DOJ Files First-Ever Criminal No-Poaching Charges
Company charged with
conspiring with competitors not to hire senior talent
The
U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) filed its first-ever
criminal charges alleging a group of employers agreed not to hire away
each other's senior-level employees.
No-poaching agreements-when employers agree not to hire workers from one
another-make it harder for workers to be recruited by their employer's
competitors or negotiate better terms of employment.
"The Department of Justice is carrying out its promise to prosecute illegal
no-poaching agreements between companies," said David Reichenberg, an attorney
in the New York City office of Cozen O'Connor and co-chair of the firm's
antitrust practice. "Until [this case], DOJ had brought only civil
enforcement actions against companies that have allegedly entered into
agreements not to hire or solicit talent from one another. This prosecution
signals that DOJ is moving to criminal prosecutions to regulate these
problematic practices."
The focus on labor collusion will likely only
increase under the Biden administration, as the new president has
indicated that he would be more aggressive in minimizing employers' use of
noncompetition clauses in employment contracts.
shrm.org
Bill would ban reliance on salary history, mandate pay data reporting
● Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives again introduced the
Paycheck Fairness Act (H.R. 7), a bill that would make several changes
aimed at closing the gender wage gap.
● Among other things, the bill would prohibit employers from relying on a
worker’s salary history when setting pay. It also would require employers
with 100 or more employees to submit pay data with demographic information to
the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) — something EEOC has
attempted in recent years with mixed success.
● President Joe Biden urged Congress to pass H.R. 7 in a Jan. 29 statement,
saying it would "take critical steps to end pay discrimination and increase
transparency" while also providing tools to hold employers accountable for
engaging in systemic discrimination.
hrdive.com
Let's Take the Kids to the New Theme Park with
Hundreds of Other Kids
Yea right - Talk about bad timing - With Billions in
Debt
Malls Spent Billions on Theme Parks to Woo Shoppers. It Made Matters Worse
Destiny USA is New York’s largest shopping mall, a six-story structure by
Onondaga Lake. Its feature attraction is WonderWorks, a 40,000-square-foot theme
park where children can experience a simulated earthquake, learn about space
travel wearing an astronaut suit or play laser tag.
They
could, that is, until the state made the mall close many of the attractions in
November for the second time last year to counter Covid-19. Only 18% of the
space leased to entertainment tenants is open currently.
Adding
theme-park-like attractions was a strategy that Pyramid viewed as
crucial to drawing foot traffic and reversing the years long struggles of mall
operators battling
online shopping. Now, the strategy looks less like a lifeline and more
like a millstone.
Triple Five Group: It
owns Mall of America in Minnesota and the New Jersey mall, American
Dream, that have invested heavily in attractions.
Pyramid and Triple Five have gone much further than other mall owners,
racking up debt they are now having trouble repaying. Last year,
three of their four big U.S.
malls defaulted on some CMBS debt; the fourth mall is delinquent on some
local-government bills.
Triple Five’s American Dream, in East Rutherford, N.J., became one of the first
U.S. malls to devote more space to entertainment, restaurants and theme-park
rides than to traditional retail when the $5.7 billion project opened—the
costliest U.S. mall ever. Triple Five missed multiple Mall of America
mortgage payments on its $1.4 billion loan last year.
Triple Five is on the hook for $2.7 billion in loans. American Dream is
delinquent on payments of $1 million in 2019 and $2 million in 2020 in a
payment-in-lieu-of-taxes deal with East Rutherford.
wsj.com
Philadelphia maintains ordinances restricting employers' use of criminal record
& credit histories in employment screening
On Jan. 20, Mayor Jim Kenney signed three bills amending Philadelphia's Fair
Criminal Record Screening Standards (FCRSS) and credit ban ordinances. Taken
together, the bills: (1) expand coverage; (2) eliminate exceptions; and (3)
change certain procedures required by the ordinances. The amendments become
effective March 21 and April 1.
shrm.org
What recovery? Clothes retailers cut orders while factories fight to survive
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Interface Helps El Pollo Loco Slash False Alarm Costs by 95%
Leading restaurant chain relies on Interface's managed video
verified alarm services to cut false alarm costs and deter crime.
Earth City, MO (February 09, 2021) -
Interface Security Systems, a leading managed service provider delivering
business security, managed network, UCaaS and business intelligence solutions to
distributed enterprises, today announced that
El Pollo Loco, one of the nation’s fastest growing restaurant chains that
specializes in fire-grilled chicken, is relying on Interface's managed video
verified alarms and intrusion alarm monitoring to reliably detect intrusions and
minimize false alarms. With Interface, El Pollo Loco saves several thousand
dollars in annual false alarm penalties across 198 restaurants.
When Louis Burke, Senior Manager, Safety & Loss
Prevention, joined El Pollo Loco, he had to contend with numerous
alarm management protocols as El Pollo Loco had half a dozen vendors for
intrusion alarms. Every vendor had different terms of engagement and there was
no way to hold anyone responsible even when the alarm systems failed.
“When I first started, I received a call from a restaurant about their missing
safe. When I called the large well-known alarm company, I was told that they had
stopped receiving signals from the alarm system at the location for over
6-months! Apparently, we had not signed up for a separate add-on service that
would have ensured the communication channel between the alarm and the
monitoring center was working. All along, we were paying service charges with no
one monitoring our location and no communication from the alarm company.”
This
incident marked a turning point in El Pollo Loco’s approach to loss prevention
and paved the way for a complete review of how intrusion monitoring was
implemented.
“We decided to untangle ourselves from the maze of alarm vendors and work with a
company that understood our needs and was willing to take ownership for the
service. That’s why we decided to hire Interface,” said Burke.
The service scope included replacing outdated alarm systems with
state-of-the-art new system along with Interface’s 360 Alarm Maintenance Service
that ensured all maintenance issues with duress buttons, connectivity, and the
alarm panels were proactively addressed along with a comprehensive yearly
technical inspection to ensure the alarm systems remain operational at all
times. The revamped managed alarm service by Interface became the gold standard
for El Pollo Loco, as Burkes team insisted on following a similar engagement
model and protocol with other service providers as well.
Read the full press release
here.
Click
here for a more detailed case study.
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RH-ISAC Launches 2021 Call for Speakers for RH-ISAC
Cyber
Intelligence Summit
WASHINGTON,
D.C., February 9, 2021 – The Retail & Hospitality Information Sharing and
Analysis Center (RH-ISAC), today announced its
Call for Speakers for the 2021
RH-ISAC Cyber Intelligence Summit, a prominent cybersecurity
conference for retail and hospitality security professionals. The 2021 RH-ISAC
Summit will take place in-person at the Lansdowne Resort and Spa on September
28-29, 2021.
Last year, RH-ISAC had more than 400 attendees from retail, hospitality, and
travel organizations participate in panels, attend insightful presentations from
industry thought leaders, network, and build new relationships to help our
industry protect as one. The 2020
virtual RH-ISAC Cyber Intelligence Summit
featured 59 speakers, 7 keynotes, and 24 breakout sessions, with different
tracks tailored to all levels of an organization – from CISO to analyst –
allowing each attendee to gain helpful insights relevant to their profession.
The 2021 RH-ISAC Summit will be in-person, allowing members to connect
face-to-face for the first time in over a year in a half! This two-day program
will showcase inspirational, engaging, and actionable presentations delivered by
industry-leading thought leaders and experts in the solution provider community
who are passionate about cybersecurity and information sharing.
Interested parties may submit a formal proposal to speak
here. Submissions will be accepted until
April 30, 2021.
Make sure to
register today for the 2021 RH-ISAC Summit. If
you’re not a member, use the code
EARLYBIRD75 for 75% off the ticket price before
March 15, or become a member by contacting
membership@rhisac.org.
Read full press release here
Cybercrime Goes Mainstream
Organized cybercrime is global in scale and
the second-greatest risk over
the next decade.
The World Economic Forum's 2020 "Global
Risks 2020" report notes that the digital space is characterized by
growing geopolitical tensions and meddling, a lack of technology governance, and
a greater overall reliance on technology. Further,
more than half of the world is connected to the Internet, and the
number grows by a stunning 1 million people a day. As a result,
cybercrime has become the second-greatest risk that business will face over the
next 10 years.
Public and private sector organizations are also frequent targets of
cybercriminals, who can easily purchase various types of sophisticated
cyberattack tools and services on the Dark Web for next to nothing.
Not Your Typical Street Gang
The cybercrime universe is not a monolith but, rather, an interconnected network
of different attacker groups. Together, they have evolved into a genuinely
disruptive force whose practitioners are just as organized, clever, and nimble
as the hottest new tech startup. This reality is key to understanding global
cybercrime and how it affects companies.
By working as a network, cybercriminals can do their jobs better. Each group
specializes in a particular discipline, and different groups often work together
to take advantage of each other's know-how. This is what makes them more
effective and enables them to focus on technical and financial success in a
given attack.
darkreading.com
The Role of Security in a Future Full of Cloud Services
The future of work will revolve around effectively using cloud technologies
to conduct business. Security plays a critical role in that future.
One of the positive outcomes of COVID-19 is it has helped organizations
understand how they can do business more effectively and efficiently with
technology. Overall, this has made most companies more robust and resilient to
future disruptions. What has enabled this change? Cloud.
The cloud revolution has enabled a mindset shift where physical location, or
even the device used to access business-critical data, no longer matters.
Employees can be productive, effective, and efficient, regardless of location.
Businesses can now effectively conduct critical operations in a virtual
workplace using powerful cloud applications and platforms. This involves using
cloud Software-as-a-Service (SaaS) environments (such as Google Workspace,
formerly G Suite, and Microsoft 365, formerly Office 365), cloud data storage,
file sharing, cloud mobility and access solutions, and embedded video
collaboration.
But what security challenges has this tremendous shift to cloud and remote work
caused? And how does this affect the future of work?
Security’s critical role in the cloud-based future of work
networkcomputing.com
Request for Comments: PTS HSM Security Requirements v4.0
PTS
Vendors who are
Participating Organizations and PCI Recognized labs are invited to review
and provide feedback on the draft PCI PIN Transaction Security (PTS) Hardware
Security Module (HSM) Modular Security Requirements during a 30 day
request for comments (RFC) period running from 9 February 2021 through 11
March. This is the first of two RFCs for v4.0 of the requirements. A second RFC
is planned in Q3 and will be open to all PCI SSC Participating Organizations and
Assessors.
The RFC will be available to primary contacts through the
PCI SSC portal,
including instructions on how to access the document and submit feedback.
Eligible stakeholders will also receive instructions via email. As a reminder,
participants are required to accept a Non-Disclosure Agreement (NDA) to download
the document. Please review the
RFC Process Guide for more information.
Please note that PCI SSC can only accept comments that are submitted via
the PCI SSC portal and received within the defined RFC period.
blog.pcisecuritystandards.org
Senior Job
Executive Director, Application Security & Vulnerability Management
-
NYC Cyber Command
New York City Cyber Command (NYC3) is committed to protecting City systems that
provide vital services to New Yorkers from cyber threats, and helping residents
become safer in their digital lives.
As the organization defending the largest municipality in the country, NYC3 is
charged with directing citywide incident response, setting citywide
cybersecurity policies and standards and working with city agencies to
strengthen their cyber defenses.
nyc.gov |
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Did you Know Your iPhone has a Secret “Button”
The
Apple logo on the back of your iPhone has a secret function if you’re using iOS
14. iOS 14 allows you tap the back of your iPhone to launch apps, snap screen
shots, and a whole lot more. The new back tap feature can be found in the
Accessibility settings. You can perform quick actions by double- or
triple-tapping the *back of your iPhone*. After setup all you have to do is
quick taps on the back and it works with or without a case. |
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Online Return Rates Hit 30% - Returned
Packages Spike 70% in 2020
Stores Have a Mission: Getting You to Keep That Thing You Bought Online
With more shopping moving online for good, retailers introduce new tools
to rein in costly returns; 3-D body scans
Companies such as Walmart Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. are
telling customers to keep unwanted items. Some retailers are introducing
virtual dressing rooms and made-to-measure clothing so that shoppers keep more
of what they buy. Others are scoring shoppers based on their return rates, much
the way credit-ratings firms tally consumers’ creditworthiness.
Behind the push is a painful economic reality of e-commerce. The share of online
purchases that are returned averages 30% or higher, depending on the
category, three times the rate in physical stores.
In a recent survey by technology company Pitney Bowes, 42% of consumers said
they plan to shop even more online once the pandemic ends than they do now.
The number of e-commerce packages returned in 2020 rose 70% from 2019,
according to Narvar Inc., which processes retail returns. One of the top
reasons is improper fit, the executives said.
For a typical retailer, every $1 million reduction in returns can translate to
$500,000 added to the bottom line.
There are signs that virtual try-ons are gaining traction.
wsj.com
Fighting Online Counterfeits Before, During &
After the Super Bowl
National IPR Center & Amazon’s ‘Operation Fulfilled Action’ Target Super Bowl LV
Counterfeits
Amazon’s Counterfeit Crimes Unit and the U.S. government’s National Intellectual
Property Rights Coordination Center announced they are expanding the joint
Operation Fulfilled Action partnership to fight counterfeit Super Bowl
merchandise. The IPR Center and Amazon’s CCU will work together in real time to
identify counterfeiters wherever they operate: in Tampa, in online stores,
and as their goods come through the nation’s ports. Operation Fulfilled Action
is an on-going effort between Amazon and the IPR Center to protect
American consumers by preventing counterfeit goods from entering the U.S.
As counterfeiters attempt to take advantage of this major sporting event,
Amazon’s CCU and the IPR Center are sharing information about counterfeits in
real time before, during, and after the Super Bowl. This includes historical
information about counterfeiters and real time intelligence as law enforcement
agencies conduct on-the-ground inspections and raids. By sharing information
such as physical addresses, supply routes, shippers, consignees, and other
potential fraud identifiers, Amazon and the IPR Center can more quickly and
effectively stop and prevent counterfeits from reaching consumers.
oaoa.com
Amazon set to open six more D-FW ‘last-mile’ delivery centers
Amazon Warehouse Workers Set to Vote on Unionizing: What We Know |
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Honolulu, HI: Suspect allegedly used pepper spray during robbery
at Walmart and Target
New
court documents allege the woman accused of pepper spraying a Walmart employee
did the same thing the day before at Target. Danielle Kaneao, 35, allegedly
rammed an Ala Moana Target employee with a dolly on Jan. 29, then pepper sprayed
him and got away with a TV. Investigators say the next day, she and Heather Tull,
29, tried to exchange stolen TV’s at the Keeaumoku Walmart, but couldn’t provide
the receipts. That’s when prosecutors say Kaneao allegedly pepper sprayed a
security guard before fleeing. She and Tull are charged with second-degree
robbery.
hawaiinewsnow.com
Huston Township, PA: 3 charged, large amount of stolen electronics, jewelry
recovered in Centre County
Three people were arrested in a theft case spanning multiple counties in which
more than 50 cell phones, laptops, tablets, jewelry and other electronic devices
were recovered, according to state police. State police say the arrests came
after troopers executed a search warrant Saturday at the 4700 block of South
Eagle Valley Road in Huston Township on suspicion of drug activity. While
executing the warrant, troopers say they discovered the electronic items along
with multiple high dollar watches, and a gold ring. The troopers’ search also
yielded marijuana, methamphetamine, suspected heroin and thousands of drug
paraphernalia.
wjactv.com
Goffstown, NH: Man scammed self-checkout with 33-cent Kool-Aid package;
28 times in a month
A
Hannaford supermarket lost thousands of dollars worth of groceries to a man who
used the universal price code from a 33-cent package of Kool-Aid to scan
purchases in the self-checkout line, according to recent indictments. Goffstown
resident Jeffrey Tower, 53, was caught on security cameras 28 times this past
May allegedly making the bogus purchases at the Hannaford in Goffstown,
according to police affidavits filed in connection to the case. In all, the take
amounted to more than $2,300 worth of items, police wrote. The individual
transactions involved anywhere from three to 13 items, and nearly all included
meat: Angus eye round, Angus T-bone, beef loin tips, tenderloin and Angus filet
mignon, as well as cooked shrimp.
unionleader.com
Pleasant Hills, CA: Police Arrest Pair Suspected In Cellphone Store Burglary
Police arrested the two burglary suspects who got inside a cell phone store
in Pleasant Hill by sawing the door off its hinges. Officers responded after
the store alarm went off and discovered the suspects in a nearby vehicle.
sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com
Great Falls, MT: Man who stole 27 Guns from ‘North 40 Outfitters’ gets Six Years
Merrillville, IN: Police seek to identify Costco theft suspect
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Shootings & Deaths
Update: Mountain Iron, MN: Man's fatal shooting by police justified,
county attorney rules
A county attorney has ruled that the force used by police in Mountain Iron that
left a 19-year-old man dead was justified. The St. Louis County
Attorney's Office, when deciding whether any charges would be brought in the
Dec. 5 death of Estavon Elioff, ruled that the officers who fatally shot the
teen did so in self-defense. In a report presented to the county attorney, the
deputies who opened fire said they had felt in imminent danger of their lives,
saying they saw Elioff turn towards them with what they believed to be a gun in
his hand. After Elioff was shot dead, it was discovered that what he had
actually been holding was a folding knife.
What happened? Elioff, of Virginia, Minnesota, came to the attention of the
police after a report of shoplifting from the L&M Supply Store in
Mountain Iron. A St. Louis County deputy approached the suspect as he walked
away from the store, and when the deputy got out of her squad vehicle, the
suspect "placed his right hand in his jacket pocket" before fleeing into a
nearby wooded area. Suspecting Elioff had a firearm, the deputy called for
backup and didn't follow him. Radio dispatch then developed that stated the man
resembled a suspect in a shooting the day before in Virginia, with the suspect
"tentatively identified as Estavon Elioff." That shooting saw someone fire at
least four rounds from a ghandgun at the occupant of a house.
bringmethenews.com
Jackson Township, OH: Dollar General Armed Robber shoots at a Customer’s Car who
is following and waiting for Police
"He’s
got a gun! He’s got a gun," said Tina Spencer to a 911 dispatcher Saturday
afternoon. Spencer said she never thought her Saturday shopping spree would end
with a high-speed chase and gunfire. “He's shooting me! He's shooting me! He's
shooting me,” she yelled to the operator. Spencer said it all started when she
witnessed a man rob Jackson Township’s Dollar General, it struck a nerve.
news.yahoo.com
San Francisco, CA: Police arrest 2 in connection with Bayview shooting that
damaged grocery store
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
The Jewelry District Takes Measures to Fight Break-in
During a protest in downtown Los Angeles over the brutal killing of Gorge Floyd
in June of 2020, one diamond dealer named Sanat Shah stood and pointed at
buildings that held the
biggest diamond stores in the west of Manhattan, New York. The windows of
the jewelry businesses that once had displayed stunning gems had been boarded
up. Shah notes that this is a first in his long career as a jeweler dealer, a
trade he started in 1983. The cause of this was buglers that took advantage of
the protests to break into the jewelry stores at night, breaking the windows,
metal security gates, and plundering the precious gems. Those most affected were
the storefront business in the Three-Block Jewelry District. These, however,
were just a small fraction of the total number of storefronts, most of which had
their diamonds and jewelry stored in security backed private offices. They also
had insurance to help cushion an industry that is used to dealing with
sophisticated thieves.
While retail businesses are always vigilant to attacks, including armed robbery,
the wave of smash and grab robbers caught the businesses by surprise. Most are
especially careful during the COVID 19 pandemic as the lockdown meant that there
were no people in the streets, which left the businesses vulnerable to attacks.
One of the most significant threats to the jewelry business is the organized
robbers referred by the FBI as the South American Theft Groups. They have caused
ripples throughout the diamond industry since the early 80s all through to the
2000s. Their main strategy involves targeting jewelry dealers in transit.
laprogressive.com
Bronx, NY: Supermarket Shoplifters Pull Out Box Cutter, Slash Employee Trying To
Stop Them
Fremont, CA: Police arrest 2 in Walmart shoplifting/ assault on associate
Oakland, CA: Police announce arrest of suspect in Chinatown attack; commitment
to increase policing in the area
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●
C-Store –Commerce
City, CO - Burglary
●
C-Store – Henderson,
KY – Burglary
●
C-Store - Schuylkill
County, PA – Burglary
●
Cellphone - Pleasant
Hills, CA – Burglary
●
Dollar General –
Jackson Township, OH – Armed Robbery
●
Dollar Store – Akron,
OH – Burglary
●
Gas Station – Hamden,
CT – Armed Robbery
●
Grocery – Hamden, CT –
Armed Robbery
●
Grocery – Reno, NV –
Robbery
●
Grocery – Bronx, NY –
Armed Robbery
●
Jewelry – Phoenix, AZ - Robbery
●
Jewelry – Orlando, FL – Robbery
●
Jewelry – Norman, OK - Robbery
●
Jewelry - Eureka, CA – Robbery
●
Jewelry – Elizabeth, NJ – Robbery
●
Liquor – Wallingford,
CT – Burglary
●
Restaurant – Akron, OH
-Armed Robbery
●
Target - Honolulu, HI
– Robbery/ Assault on emp
●
Tobacco – Dunlap, TN –
Burglary
●
Walmart – Honolulu, HI
– Robbery/ Assault on emp
●
7-Eleven – Culver
City, CA – Armed Robbery
●
7-Eleven – Oroville,
CA – Armed Robbery
Daily Totals:
• 15 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
Click to enlarge map
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None to report.
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Featured Job Spotlights
Regional LP & Safety Manager
Denver, CO
- posted Feb. 9
The Regional Loss Prevention & Safety Manager implements Risk Management and
Loss Prevention objectives within assigned region. The position will provide
assistance and training to the field operations teams to address specific Risk
Management and Loss Prevention issues within an assigned span of control.
Read job description
here
Manager
of Asset Protection & Safety Operations
Rockaway, NJ
- posted Feb. 4
The Manager of Asset Protection & Safety Operations is responsible for the
control and reduction of shrinkage and safety compliance for Party City
Holdings, by successfully managing Asset Protection (AP) Safety programs and
reporting...
Loss Prevention Auditor and Fraud Detection Analyst
Raleigh, NC
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As a Loss Prevention Auditor and Fraud Detection
Analyst for Staples, you will conduct LP operational field audits remote,
virtual and in person, within a base of 60 retail stores to ensure compliance to
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profitability....
Leader, Asset & Profit Protection
San Fran/Chicago/NY/West Palm
Beach
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As the leader of the Data/Analytics & Investigations
strategy, you should have strong analytical/investigation skills, the drive to
innovate, and the ability to build strong partnerships to lead through the
influence of others. They will be personable, open to learning, collaborating
with others...
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
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
Latest Top Jobs
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Vice President, Loss Prevention
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The
Vice President of Loss Prevention reports to the Company's General
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Executive Director, Asset Protection
Rosemead, CA
The
Executive Director, AP is responsible for the company’s AP function,
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Senior Director, Loss Prevention
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The
Senior Director of Loss Prevention is responsible for setting and
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Responsible
for developing and implementing department strategies and integrating
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Senior Manager, Asset Protection
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The
Sr Manager Asset Protection is responsible for ensuring that Asset
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BJ's Wholesale Regional AP Rollout - 8 New
Positions
The Regional AP
Manager oversees AP,
security, theft, fraud, investigations, and related procedures within the field.
The RAPM supports and continuously interacts with club management to analyze
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company assets.
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Featured Jobs
JOB TITLE |
COMPANY |
CITY/STATE |
DATE
ADDED |
Vice President |
Vice President |
Mobilelink |
Houston, TX |
January 5 |
VP, LP |
Williams Sonoma |
San Francisco, CA |
January 19 |
Director |
Dir., Enterprise Safety & Security (International) |
Adtalem Global Education |
Miami, FL |
January 28 |
Director, Asset & Revenue Management |
Caleres |
St. Louis, MO |
February 3 |
Dir. Field AP |
Chipotle |
Columbus, OH |
January 13 |
Associate Dir. AP & Inventory Control |
Crate & Barrel |
Northbrook, IL |
January 20 |
Dir. Risk & Analysis |
Genesco |
Nashville, TN |
November 17 |
Dir. of Security |
Goodwill Industries Group |
South Bend, IN |
January 29 |
Dir. Safety/Risk Mgmt.
|
Goodwill of SE Louisiana |
New Orleans, LA |
April 2 |
Sr. Dir. LP |
Harbor Freight Tools |
Calabasas, CA |
January 28 |
LP Program Dir., Food Retail Channel |
IntelliShop |
Arlington, VA |
February 5 |
Dir. Global Distribution Safety & Security |
Michael Kors |
Whittier, CA |
January 6 |
National Dir. of Security |
Nature's Medicines |
Phoenix, AZ |
February 8 |
Dir. Physical Security |
Netflix |
Los Angeles, CA |
January 5 |
Executive Dir. AP |
Panda Restaurant Group |
Rosemead, CA |
January 28 |
Dir. of Loss Prevention |
Parker's C-Stores |
Savannah, GA |
June 3 |
Sr. Dir. AP |
Rite Aid |
Camp Hill, PA |
January 21 |
Director, AP Finance & Analytics |
Rite Aid |
United States |
January 26 |
Sr. Dir. Environmental Health & Safety |
Ross Stores |
Dublin, CA |
October 9 |
Dir. Safety & LP |
Trinity Logistics |
Milford, DE |
February 2 |
Dir. Corporate Security |
Veritiv |
Atlanta, GA |
January 7 |
Security Director |
Visa |
New York, NY |
January 22 |
Dir. AP Solutions |
Walgreens |
Deerfield, IL |
January 28 |
Corporate/Senior Manager |
AP Operation Manager |
Follett Corporation |
Westchester, IL |
January 7 |
Sr. Mgr AP |
Home Depot |
Atlanta, GA |
January 28 |
Sr Manager, Security |
JB Hunt |
Lowell, AR |
February 8 |
Group Investigations Manager |
JCPenney |
Plano, TX |
January 19 |
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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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