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The D&D Daily Mobile Edition
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'Live in
NYC' at The NRF Big Show 2019
Opening Comments
Today's Leaders Teaching
Tomorrow's
Introduction with Gus Downing, Publisher &
Editor, The D&D Daily and LPNN
LPNN’s 11th LIVE Season - filmed on Jan. 14, 2019 at the NRF Big Show in New
York City - kicks off with another
jampacked schedule featuring today’s LP/AP leaders teaching tomorrow’s.
Follow along in the coming weeks as we bring you the LP industry’s only LIVE
digital conference, designed to help you increase your knowledge, broaden
your vision, and deliver better results in today’s rapidly changing retail
world.
What's In Store For the Day
Quick Take Opening with MCs:
Joe LaRocca, VP & Senior Advisor, Loss Prevention,
RetaiLPartners
Amber Bradley, Owner & Brand Strategist, Calibration Group, LLC
LPNN’s dynamic duo Joe LaRocca (@laroccaj)
and Amber Bradley (@mycalibration)
are back at it again, kicking off the fun with a preview of what’s to come in
our latest marathon 8-hour LIVE broadcast. Tune in for their “Quick Take” videos
with special guests throughout the day, as they bring their signature blend of laughs, facts, and
everything in between. |
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Top Industry News
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Retail Fatalities
Follow National Trends
in Increased Violence & Murders
Retail Fatalities Up 30% Over Three Years
Leading Retail-Specific Industry Trends Continue Unabated
488 Retail
Fatalities in 2018 - Up 15% Over 2017
Q4 Up 8.7% Over 2017
2017 FL/TX Hurricanes - Drove Q4 2018's Increase
The 15 percent increase goes above the 7
percent rise in violent crime trends, and very close to the 21 percent
murder spike from 2014 to 2016, which was
reported by DOJ earlier this month at the National Sheriffs' Association
Winter Conference. The D&D Daily has validated 488 publicly reported violent
deaths that took place in Retail America in 2018, reflecting a 15 percent
increase in 2018 over 2017 and a 30 percent increase from 2016's 374 violent
deaths.
A number of trends continue to dominate the numbers: From more victims killed
than suspects by two to one, with men shooting their victims, to
Saturday, Sunday, and Monday being the most violent days of the week.
Homicides outnumber actual retail crime deaths and outside the store is more
akin to the killing fields, with armed men usually being the most prevalent
perpetrators.
The dominant locations remain the same year after year: C-stores, Gas
stations and grocery stores represent 43 percent of all violent deaths
running parallel to armed robberies, from the quick in and outs to the most cash
closest to the door.
Texas, California and Florida remain the most violent states year after
year, once again running parallel to robberies and ORC activity. Interestingly
enough, these three states - the highest crime states in the U.S. - do
not participate in the
FBI's NIBRS crime data
report and
therefore are not included in the DOJ's data either.
Of special note here is that while most surveys and news outlets reported
somewhat flat numbers in 2017 in all three of these categories and were quick to
call it out, and in a few cases take credit, they failed to consider or
mention Houston and Florida being shut down for almost the entire fourth
quarter, the busiest of the year, due to the hurricanes and how those two
locations alone, being the highest in virtually every category, impacted the
overall numbers. With Houston leading the way year after year in violent
deaths and armed robberies.
The bottom line is that the 15 percent increase for the year is probably more
realistic and may still be a little inflated because of last year's anomaly
- the hurricanes shutting down hundreds if not thousands of stores for months.
-Gus Downing
Full Report: 2018 Retail Violent Death Report
Retail America: The Silent Victims
The Reasons - The Impact - The Nation
The Opioid
Epidemic & Crackdown - The Ferguson Effect - Mass Shootings & Active
Shooters |
The Opioid Impact - Epidemic & Crackdown:
With virtually every law enforcement agency across the country
documenting and reporting the impact the opioid epidemic and crackdown is
having on armed robberies, organized retail crime and overall violence, the
intersection of which to violent deaths is only natural to assume. Although no
one is collecting or reporting this data publicly.
However this report we feel ties these factors together, which clearly points to
"the nations retailers becoming the silent victims of this overall epidemic and
crackdown." With sharp increases in violent deaths running parallel to the
opioid crackdown which started around 2015. When we started seeing huge and
sustained spikes in pharmacy robberies and armed robberies.
As the
CDC noted just this past Friday that opioid prescribing peaked at 81.3
prescriptions per 100 people in 2012, and by 2017 it had fallen to 58.5
prescriptions per 100 people. Proving the crackdown is having its desired
medical impact at least from the legal market prospective. However as the
Society for Human Resource Management pointed out last week the crackdown led
some patients to
turn to the black market to get the pain medications on which they'd come to
rely. Which intern drives crime up and becomes a major contributor to the
increase in robberies.
Furthering this finding the National Safety Council
latest report analyzing 2017 data on accidental deaths found for the first
time in history your chances of dying in a car crash are 1 in 103. Your chances
of dying from an opioid overdose? One in 96. Opioid overdoses have surpassed
vehicle crashes as one of the leading causes of death in the country. With this
fact alone its only natural once again to assume its intersection and impact on
retail crime and violent deaths as well.
Lastly in this category is the increased strength and supply of opioids on the
streets. As more and more states legalized marijuana and the DEA cracked down on
Doctors and pharmacy's the cartels were quick to increase supply, lower costs
and introduce Fentenal to the black market, which drove half of all reported
opioid overdose
deaths in 2016.
shrm.org
Recent U.S. Congressional
Research Service Report: The “Ferguson Effect”
"The Ferguson Effect" is one of the more widely discussed, and controversial,
explanations for the recent increases in violent crime. It refers to the
assertion that crime has increased recently because police are avoiding
proactive policing tactics out of fear of repercussions for the use of
aggressive tactics. There is a small but growing body of literature on the
Ferguson effect, and the evidence is mixed. For example, recent research
conducted by a Johns Hopkins University sociologist found some evidence of a
post-Ferguson decrease in arrests and a post-Ferguson increase in crime in
Baltimore. However, the research did not reveal a causal link between the
decreasing arrests and increasing crime.
Some of the largest cities in the United States saw increases in violent
crime rates, homicide rates, or both from 2014 to 2015 and/or 2015 to 2016.
For some of these cities, violent crime or homicide rates were the highest
they have been in the past 20 years.
Recent increases in violent crime and homicide in large cities have
received a great deal of attention, but in smaller communities violent crime
and homicide rates also increased from 2014 to 2015 and again from 2015 to
2016, although not as much as in the largest cities.
shrm.org
Mass Shootings & Active Shooters -
Numbers Confirm The Daily's 3 Year 30% Increase
Retail Establishments in Top Two Locations: Shootings in schools and
houses of worship tend to stand out in our minds, but they make up a relatively
small portion of public mass shootings. More common are those in offices
and retail establishments such as restaurants and stores. California has
had more of these public
mass
shootings than any other state, with 25.
Incidents: In 2017 there were 30 separate active shooting incidents in
the U.S., the largest number ever recorded by the FBI during a one-year
period. In 2016 20 were recorded. Representing a 33 percent increase
year over year. This 33 percent increase has remained steady for three years
according to the FBI. Virtually matching The Daily's 30 percent finding.
Between 2000 and 2017 there were 250 active shooter incidents in the U.S. as
defined by the FBI.
fbi.gov
Hawaii grocery chain deters 3,000 scan
avoidance incidents in 1 year with StopLift
Groceries at the six Down to Earth Organic & Natural
Stores on Maui and Oahu used to go through the checkouts without the
customer paying for them. And that took a toll on the supermarket
chain’s bottom line.
But that was before technology was installed to detect every item that
the cashier failed to scan.
Cliff Hillier, COO of Down to Earth Organic & Natural Stores, has been
relying on StopLift Checkout Vision Systems for the past two years to
monitor the cameras over the checkouts. StopLift’s Artificial
Intelligence (AI) video analytics software automatically analyzes
security video to detect theft and improve operational efficiency at all
the checkouts at the six supermarkets.
In a recent month, StopLift’s ScanItAll detected 316 incidents, with
previous months averaging about 250 incidents. That would be in excess
of 3,000 incidents per year, some of which were accidentally unscanned
items. Many were false alarms, while others were accidentally missed
items which Hillier discussed with the team members.
Read more in today's Vendor Spotlight column below.
3SI
Security's GPS Tracking Technology Helps Put Away Nearly 900 Criminals, Recover
$8 Million in 2018
In 2018 3SI Security Systems, with the help of our Law Enforcement partners, put
away nearly 900 criminals and recovered close to $8M in cash and stolen assets!
We think these numbers are worth mentioning.
Take a look at our
January
Successes
Synthetic Identity Fraud Increasing
Confronting the Harsh Realities of ‘Cross-Industry’ Fraud
New research from LexisNexis Risk Solutions confirms that the pace of so-called
“cross-industry fraud” is accelerating and becoming costlier for organizations
of all kinds.
Cross-industry fraud occurs when bad actors who commit fraud against companies
in one industry are emboldened to exploit other industries with the same
fraudulent credentials.
The most egregious fraud activity is perpetrated by sophisticated, organized
rings or individuals that make their living from fraud. While these professional
thieves don’t have a particular bias for a given industry or sector,
cross-industry fraud is particularly prevalent across financial services, health
care, insurance, communications,
retail, and government entities.
For example, a perpetrator of a typical insurance fraud scheme, staging an auto
accident, could expand into exploiting system gaps to fraudulently claim
government benefits or participate in telecommunications, retail, or credit card
fraud.
For the first time since the inception of the
LexisNexis Fraud Mitigation Study four years ago, the latest survey shows a
significant increase in the number of organizations (89%) reporting cases of
cross-industry fraud. A quarter of the surveyed fraud mitigation professionals
said they see evidence of cross-industry fraud in more than half of fraud cases
they have investigated.
The severity of the financial impact of fraud is increasing as well.
Cross-industry fraud cases have become significantly more expensive for
organizations than fraud cases stemming from isolated events. Approximately 80%
of study respondents said that these fraud events exacted at least a moderate
toll on their organizations, with more than half of cases causing extreme
financial harm.
Synthetic Identities Add New Complications
One reason fraud mitigation is becoming the purview of CFO organizations is the
emergence of a new variant called “synthetic identity fraud.”
New-application and account-takeover fraud each account for
20% of all fraud losses within the financial services industry.
While combatting fraud is typically the domain of chief information security
officers, the CFO department should establish closer working connections with
the company’s special investigative units or fraud team. Some organizations have
gone so far as to move the fraud team into the CFO organization.
cfo.com
Supreme Court Fails to Explain How Courts Decide
Excessive Fines of Forfeiture
In a
blockbuster decision on Timbs’ case, the nation’s highest court declared
Wednesday that the constitutional ban on excessive fines applies to state and
local governments.
“In other words, the court has said that the rule applies but it hasn’t
clearly articulated what that rule is.”
At the core of the case was the practice of civil asset forfeiture, increasingly
used by police and prosecutors to seize property believed to be used in crimes.
In 2017, the federal Asset Forfeiture Fund took in about $1.6 billion in gross
forfeiture revenue, including both cash and proceeds from the sale of seized
cars and other property, according to a U.S. Department of Justice inspector
general audit. That's down from $1.9 billion in 2016, the report said.
Judges across the country will grapple with the question. Hottot said they may
eventually find that “the next step is to end civil forfeiture.” law360.com
Unstable retail schedules are bad for workers'
health
Retail workers' have better health with more stable work schedules,
according to a study of Gap employees by the University of California
Hastings Center for WorkLife Law, University of Chicago and the University of
North Carolina. The stress of unstable work schedules, which include working
erratic hours, waiting to see if a call to work comes in and rearranging
personal activities around work, can rob retail workers of much-needed sleep and
create adverse health outcomes, the study noted. retaildive.com
Senior Vice President Asset Protection Posted for
Burlington Stores
in Burlington, N.J.
Responsible for management and oversight of all Asset Protection and Loss
Prevention functions including shrink, safety, business continuity, shortage
control, investigations, field team leadership, and corporate security. Your
business acumen and forward-thinking, strategic mindset will help cultivate an
agile team focused on driving solutions and delivering results in a fast-paced,
challenging environment to reduce shrink, drive sales, and provide a safe,
secure customer and associate experience.
burlingtonstores.jobs
We operate more than 670 stores in 48 states and Puerto Rico. Over the
past 5 years, we have added more than 20 stores each year and are on our way to
1000+ stores. Revenues exceeding $6 billion in 2017. Q3 reported 11-28-18 comp's
up 4.4%, sales up 13.7%.
burlingtonstores.com
Reposted Friday: VP Loss Prevention for Fred's in
Dallas, TX. - 600 Stores
HBC Expects to Close 20 Saks Off Fifth Stores in
U.S.
Luxury bag retailer Rebag raises $25 million for more tech, talent and stores
David Lund, VP of LP for Dick’s Sporting Goods, named Vice Chairman
for Goodwill of Southwestern Pennsylvania
Last week's #1 article --
Payless Shoe Source Bombshell
New bombshell accusations surface nearly 1 year after toddler's death at Payless
"Remove
the mirrors and destroy them so the little girl's family/attorney could not get
them"
CLAYTON COUNTY, Ga. - A local contractor told Channel 2 Action News
that his company was ordered by a vendor to destroy metro Atlanta-area Payless
store mirrors soon after a Riverdale toddler was killed in one of its stores.
An attorney for Payless denies allegations that the now-bankrupt chain tried to
cover up any signs of negligence, noting the actual evidence from the store
where the child died has been preserved for trial. The vendor accused of issuing
the instructions also denies the claims as the contractor seeks payment for
services.
wsbtv.com
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time The D&D Daily respects
your time
and doesn't filter retail's reality
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eBay Global Asset Protection
Partnerning with Retailers Offensively Against Crime and
Theft (PROACT), since 2007
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eBay's Connect & Collaborate
Conference
Wednesday, April 10th, 2019 in Draper, Utah
Please
join eBay's Global Asset Protection team for Connect & Collaborate 2019,
our biennial opportunity to host some of the nation's leaders in combatting
organized retail crime at the eBay facility in Draper, Utah, just fifteen
minutes south of Salt Lake City. The event provides retailers, law enforcement,
and eBay an opportunity to "Connect and Collaborate" on challenges, strategies,
tools, and solutions related to organized retail crime.
More details to follow, including an agenda and suggestions for travel
accommodation.
Please feel free to send the invitation
to any Law Enforcement or Retail Investigator that would be interested in
attending!
Please send your RSVP by April 1st, with number
and names of attendees, to:
proact@ebay.com
Below you will find hotel information and the directions to our campus.
Please contact proact@ebay.com if you have
any questions.
Hotels nearby:
Our address:
583 W eBay Way
Draper, UT 84020
Click here for directions and parking instructions.
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Spotlight on StopLift
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Hawaii grocery chain deters 3,000 scan avoidance incidents in one year
with StopLift
Groceries at the six Down to Earth Organic & Natural
Stores on Maui and Oahu used to go through the checkouts without the
customer paying for them. And that took a toll on the supermarket
chain’s bottom line.
But that was before technology was installed to detect every item that
the cashier failed to scan.
Cliff Hillier, COO of Down to Earth Organic & Natural Stores, has been
relying on StopLift Checkout Vision Systems for the past two years to
monitor the cameras over the checkouts. StopLift’s Artificial
Intelligence (AI) video analytics software automatically analyzes
security video to detect theft and improve operational efficiency at all
the checkouts at the six supermarkets.
“It’s a viable deterrent from stealing,” Hillier said. “The cashiers
know they’re being watched, and they’re careful. We show them the video
incident of them giving an item away, and it doesn’t happen again.
“Four cashiers were caught stealing, and we fired them,” he said. “We
have zero tolerance for theft.”
In a recent month, StopLift’s ScanItAll detected 316 incidents, with
previous months averaging about 250 incidents. That would be in excess
of 3,000 incidents per year, some of which were accidentally unscanned
items. Many were false alarms, while others were accidentally missed
items which Hillier discussed with the team members.
StopLift’s Scan-It-All determines what occurs during each transaction at
the supermarket checkout to immediately distinguish between legitimate
and fraudulent behavior. As soon as a scan avoidance incident occurs,
StopLift, which constantly monitors 100% of the security video, flags
the transaction as suspicious. It quickly reports the incident,
identifying the cashier and the date and time of the theft.
This includes “sweethearting”, when cashiers pretend to scan merchandise
but deliberately bypass the scanner, thus not charging the customer for
the merchandise. The customer is often a friend, family member or fellow
employee working in tandem with the cashier. Incidents include items
left in the shopping cart, by accident of deliberately.
Hillier does not want to install self-checkouts, because he believes
they detract from customer service. With Hawaii’s unemployment the
lowest in the U.S., he also wants to protect his cashiers’ jobs, which
self-checkout would eliminate. Cashiers appreciate the added job
security, he said.
“No one is watching the overhead cameras, so there’s no point in having
them without StopLift monitoring the video,” he said.
Malay Kundu, Founder and CEO of StopLift, said that his AI video
technology identifies dishonest associates the first time they conduct a
fraudulent transaction, rather than months or even years down the road,
significantly reducing inventory shrinkage, deterring future theft, and
boosting profitability. StopLift has already identified more than 3.1
million scan avoidance incidents around the world.
If you would like a demo of StopLift to see how it detects unscanned
items at the checkout, visit:
www.stoplift.com/contact |
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Enduring Brands Require Analytics To Grow - Interview With Tony D’Onofrio
Featuring
in over a half dozen global retail influencers lists, Tony D’Onofrio leverages
his extensive in global retail technology to research, write, consult and speak
about the disruption of multiple industries. We caught up with Tony to learn
more about his thoughts on how technology is shaking up the retail world.
What are some of the big changes you see taking place in retail
today?
TONY: The smartphone I identified early on as the 3rd megatrend reshaping
the future of retail. Because of this smart device, consumers are able to walk
into a store and instantly decide whether to buy in the physical location or buy
the same identical product from a competitor online. This mobile trend is global
and in the long run provides substantial opportunities for the growth of the
retail industry.
As I stated in one of my
blogs, with more than 5 billion unique mobile subscribers worldwide at the
end of 2017, mobile has a greater reach than any other technology. By 2025,
mobile internet penetration will reach 61% of the global population and 86% of
unique subscribers.
The smartphone ushered the need to digitize the store and engage with a much
more knowledgeable consumer. Those retailers that got ahead of this curve and
for example empowered associates to have a meaningful digital conversation with
their consumer are among the brands succeeding today.
Do you feel retailers are now more eager to apply advanced
analytics to their decision-making, than before?
TONY: If retailers are still asking this question, in my view they
are in trouble and in catch up mode to their stronger competitors.
The challenges emerging out of the digitized store and a data rich retail
enterprise is that we have too much information. Advanced analytics is critical
to distill the valuable nuggets to get to a faster decision process.
Too much data is an across industries challenge. There are 2.5 quintillion bytes
of data created each day. Over the last two years alone, 90% of the data in the
world was generated.
As Peter Sondergaard said, “information (data) is the oil of the 21st century,
and analytics is the combustion engine.” Retailers need not be afraid of too
much data. They need to continuously fine tune the engine through advanced
analytics to differentiate their business model from their competitors.
A strong enduring brand requires continuous advanced analytics to maintain /
grow the loyalty of digitally empowered consumers (that continuously generates
new data).
Read the full interview here.
Wendy's Reaches $50 Million Data Breach
Settlement From 2015 & 2016 Breaches - With Banks
18 Million Payment Cards From 7,500 Financial Firms Compromised in Data
Breach
The consumer class-action lawsuit - Torres v. Wendy's International - was filed
in February 2016. Wendy's settled that lawsuit In October 2018 for $3.4 million.
Subsequently, consumers and financial institutions filed class action lawsuits
against Wendy's, alleging that it had failed to properly secure its systems or
notify customers and institutions that it had been breached (see:
Suit Against Wendy's Cites Lack of EMV).
databreachtoday.com
New LinkedIn Malware Campaign Targets Job Seekers
The criminal (or criminals) conducting these campaigns seems patient and
persistent. The person targets the potential victim through LinkedIn direct
messaging, builds rapport, and then begins follow-up through fake websites
stuffed with malicious links, email with malware payloads, or both.
LinkedIn profiles provide the threat actor with the information required to
craft spear-phishing messages. The malicious payloads are not unique to the
campaign: More_eggs is a JScript downloader, while VenomKit and Taurus Builder
are malware builders that have been made available for purchase by their
developers.
darkreading.com
What Is Beacon Technology and How Does it Relate
to IoT?
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e-commerce
Sponsored by The Zellman Group
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How Does Friendly Fraud Impact False
Declines?
Friendly fraud—when cardholders dispute purchases they or someone else
in their household actually made—has fueled another costly problem for the
payments industry: a sharp rise in false declines. The two may not seem
connected, but machine learning and artificial intelligence, both used
increasingly in fraud-detection systems, are each highly susceptible to GIGO
(garbage in, garbage out).
False declines (also called false positives) are valid transactions that are
incorrectly rejected by issuers and merchants as fraudulent. They’re an
unintended consequence of the struggle for equilibrium that exists when
managing good and fraudulent behaviors at scale. But on Main Street, it’s a
frustrating experience for those trustworthy cardholders, and it can take a
serious toll on the bottom line for merchants and issuers.
The High Costs of False Declines
Aite Group estimates that issuers falsely rejected $264 billion in U.S.
transactions in 2016, forecasting that the amount would grow to $331 billion
in 2018. Another study conducted by Ethoca found that upwards of 52 percent
of orders that merchants thought were fraudulent turned out to be good
orders that could have been fulfilled. That’s a lot of money being left on
the table.
Let’s look at how the growing number of false declines hurts all parties
involved:
cardnotpresent.com
Lackluster 2018 Holiday Sales Numbers
Surprise,
But Online Still Growing Quickly: Report
Despite an unprecedented government shutdown and political feuds over trade
policies, American consumers continued to shop during the 2018 holiday
season, which saw a 2.9 percent growth overall and an 11.5 percent increase
in online sales, according to the National Retail Federation (NRF).
Overall growth, however, was less than anticipated by the NRF, which
projected that holiday sales from November 1 through December 31 would grow
between 4.3 percent and 4.8 percent. Included in the total $707.5 billion in
overall sales is $146.8 billion in online and other non-store sales. It was
expected that the online sector of retail would increase between an 11
percent and 15 percent, and the sector just squeaked over the threshold with
an 11.5 percent increase.
cardnotpresent.com
Wayfair posts 44% revenue growth in 2018
India To Tighten eCommerce Data Rules
The Inverted Approach To Tackling Fraud
Asda named worst supermarket for online
delivery
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"Fraud is not a person - it is a dynamic grouping of statistics that deviate
from the norm."
Stuart B. Levine, CFI, CFCI
CEO, The Zellman Group & Zelligent |
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ORC News
Sponsored by
Auror
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Miami County, OH: Alleged theft ring puts two
behind bars
A Miami County grand jury has indicted five people involved in multiple business
break-ins, including a local jewelry store in 2017. Two of the five subjects,
Michele Gue, 46, of Dayton, and Kevin Ashley, 45, address unknown, are currently
incarcerated at the Miami County Jail. According to Troy Police Department Capt.
Jeff Kunkleman, two businesses in Troy were involved, including Harris Jewelers
and Check Into Cash. The suspects allegedly stole $150,000 worth of jewelry,
watches and equipment from Harris Jewelers in a break-in reported in October
2017. The suspects in that incident gained entry through the roof to the jewelry
store. Other jewelry stores and businesses in the Miami Valley were also
targeted in the multi-county theft ring. Kunkleman said Detective Matt Moiser,
along with detectives Jason Threlkeld of Miamisburg Police and Steve Hoy of the
City of Montgomery (Ohio) Police Department, worked on the case along with
nearly a dozen agencies, including the FBI.
tdn-net.com
Oak Brook, IL: Hub Group employee manipulates
rewards program to steal $38,000 in gift cards
An employee manipulated employee accounts in a rewards program and fraudulently
obtained more than $38,000 in gift cards and electronic gift cards, as reported
at 9:55 a.m. Feb. 19 by the chief financial officer of Hub Group.
chicagotribune.com
Fort Myers, FL: Man caught on camera stealing
$30,000 of tools and van from a Tire shop
A man pretending to be a customer stole over $30,000 worth of items at M&A Plus
Tire Shop on Saturday in Fort Myers. The man came into the shop earlier in the
afternoon looking for a hitch. When the store closed around 6 p.m., security
cameras show the man returned and broke into the store stealing tools and a
worker van.
fox4now.com
Horry County, SC: Suspects stole close to $6,000
in Victoria’s Secret merchandise
Police are asking for the public’s help identifying a group of suspects accused
of shoplifting from an Horry County retail store. Horry County Police posted
security pictures on social media Saturday, of a group accused of stealing
approximately $6,000 worth of merchandise from the Victoria’s Secret store on
North Kings Highway in Horry County.
wmbfnews.com
SAVE
THE DATE
Ohio Regional Organized Crime Coalition (OROCC) Conference
June 20, 2019 in Grove City, Ohio
OROCC will be hosting its conference in Grove City, Ohio on June 20, 2019 at
the Eagle Pavilion - 3670 Discover Dr. All Law Enforcement and retail
members are welcome to attend. Finalized information will be sent out soon with
an agenda and times.
Learn more about OROCC here.
Fox Township, PA: Woman steals $1,455 in items from
Walmart
Geneva, IL: Woman charged with retail theft at 4 stores;
totaling nearly $500 |
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Retail Crime News
Sponsored by Security Resources
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Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Roseburg, OR: Suspects in multi-state Armed
Robbery spree that began
in Colorado arrested in Oregon
Two
men wanted for robberies in Wyoming and Utah, one of whom was connected to a
deadly shooting in Denver and another shooting at a strip club in Colorado
Springs, have been arrested in Oregon. According to a release from Oregon State
Police, officers were called to a Red Robin restaurant in Roseburg on a report
of an attempted carjacking at around 5:30 p.m. Saturday. One of the suspects had
driven off before officers arrived, while the other was left behind. The one who
was left behind, 31-year-old Jose Lopez-Jovel of El Salvador (on the right in
the above photo), was arrested by Roseburg police at the scene. After a pursuit
during which Fanelli fired at an Oregon State Police patrol car and two other
vehicles and critically injured a man while attempting another carjacking, the
release states, Fanelli was arrested.
9news.com
Greenville,
SC: Knife wielding man robbed Haywood Mall store
Police said a man forcibly robbed a clothing store at Haywood Mall around 11:30
a.m. Sunday. Police said when the shoplifter was confronted by loss prevention
personnel, the man showed a knife and threatened them. Police said the man then
ran towards the mall parking lot.
wyff4.com
UK: West Bromwich, England: Store Employee hit
with a baseball bat 12 times
in Gang Robbery
This is the terrifying moment a female shop worker was hit with a baseball bat
12 times during a brutal raid. A cowardly gang of three burst into her shop, JS
Convenience Store in Church Lane, West Bromwich, on Friday. One of the masked
group jumped over the counter while the other two blocked the defenseless woman
in from the other side.
metro.co.uk
Franklin Lakes, NJ: Teen suspect, cashier tried to work
together during grocery store robbery
Zapata County, TX: Suspected Mexican Mafia member arrested
for C- Store Robbery/Assault
Beavercreek, OH: Legal bill $600K for deadly Walmart
shooting
Bangkok, Thailand: Police Launch Manhunt After $230,000
Robbed from Brinks Armored Truck outside Grocery Store
Altrincham, England: Arrest made after $52,000 of designer
handbags and Canadian Goose coats stolen in a smash & grab
Russia: Interior Ministry to review violent arrest of
shoplifters
Arson
Erie, PA: Trial date set in the 2016 Fred’s Beds Federal
Arson case
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Robberies and Burglaries
Sponsored by
Scarsdale Security Systems
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Auto Parts – Fort Myers, FL – Burglary
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C-Store – Iron Mountain, MI – Armed Robbery / Clerk
stabbed
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C- Store – Zapata County, TX – Robbery
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C-Store – Boston, MA – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Manchester, NH – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Meridian, MS – Armed Robbery
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C – Store – Meridian, MS – Burglary
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C-Store - Moreno Valley, CA - Robbery/ Assault
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C-Store – Los Angeles, CA – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Los Angeles, CA – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Waynesboro, VA – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Palestine, TX – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Tracy, CA – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – Start, LA – Armed Robbery
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C-Store – San Mateo, CA - Robbery
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C-Store – Tulsa, OK – Robbery (Highway75)
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C-Store – Tulsa, OK – Robbery (Highway 97)
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CVS – Hopewell, VA – Armed Robbery
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Clothing – Greenville, SC – Armed Robbery
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Dollar General – Newark, DE – Armed Robbery / clerk
stabbed
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Dollar General – Redding, PA – Robbery
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Family Dollar – Jonesboro, AR – Armed Robbery
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Grocery – Franklin Lakes, NJ – Armed Robbery
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Grocery – Havertown, PA – Robbery (Bank inside)
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Liquor – Nashville, TN – Armed Robbery
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Pet Store – Topeka, KS - Robbery
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Restaurant – Indianapolis, IN – Armed Robbery
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Restaurant – Anne Arundel County, MD – Robbery
(McDonald’s)
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Restaurant – Duluth, MN – Armed Robbery (Domino’s)
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Restaurant – Meridian, MS – Burglary (Subway)
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Skateboard Shop – Claremont, CA – Burglary
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Target – Evanston, IL- Armed Robbery
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TJ Maxx – Phoenix, AZ – Armed Robbery
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7-Eleven – Dallas, TX – Armed Robbery
Daily
Totals:
• 30
robberies
•
4 burglaries
•
0 shooting
•
0 killed |
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Featured Job Spotlights
Area Loss Prevention Manager -
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Seattle WA, Portland OR, Salt Lake City UT
Our Area Loss Prevention Managers ensure safe and
secure stores through the objective identification of loss and risk
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York, NY
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Indianapolis, IN
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Vice President Loss Prevention, Dallas, TX
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Director Store Operations - Inventory Management,
Mason, OH
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Director of Asset Protection and Safety,
Flint, MI
• CDW -
Director Security, Safety & Business Continuity,
Vernon Hills, IL
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Director, Asset Protection, Dallas, TX
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Dir, Global Partner & Fraud Ops, Austin, TX
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VP of Loss Prevention, New York, NY
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Senior Director of Global Digital LP & Fraud,
Beaverton, OR
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Director, Internal Audit - IT, New York, NY
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Director Loss Prevention, Moonachie, NJ
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Director of IT Security, Emeryville, CA
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Director Loss Control, El Dorado, AR
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Director of Operations and Loss Prevention,
San Francisco, CA
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Global Safety Director, Chicago, IL
•
Dollar Tree -
Director, Inventory Control,
Virginia
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Director of Loss Prevention and Corporate Security,
New York, NY
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Dublin, CA
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Chesapeake, VA
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TX
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Director of Risk Management, Baton Rouge,
LA
• Netflix -
Director of Data Privacy and Security, Legal
- Los Angeles, CA
• Ahold Delhaize USA -
Manager | Corporate Investigations - Retail Business
Service, Salisbury, NC |
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Daily Jobs
Appearing One Day Only
View our Internet Jobs Archives
here
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JOB TITLE |
COMPANY |
CITY/STATE |
|
|
|
AP Supervisor |
Bloomingdale's |
Livermore, CA |
Manager of Global
Security |
Campbell's |
Camden, NJ |
AP Specialist |
Home Depot |
Clarksville, IN |
AP Specialist |
Home Depot |
Reno, NV |
AP Specialist |
Home Depot |
Anchorage, AK |
AP Specialist |
Home Depot |
Cheyenne, WY |
Manager Information
Security & Compliance |
J. Jill |
Quincy, MA |
AP Manager |
Kmart |
Ramona, CA |
LP Supervisor |
Kohl's |
Flemington, NJ |
LP Supervisor |
Kohl's |
Succasunna, NJ |
LP Assistant
Supervisor |
Kohl's |
Edgewood, MD |
LP Supervisor |
Kohl's |
Hamilton Township, NJ |
AP & Safety Manager |
Lowe's |
Wilmington, DE |
Manager Operations &
AP |
Macy's |
San Rafael, CA |
Manager Operations &
AP |
Macy's |
Citrus Heights, CA |
LP Manager |
MOD Pizza |
Bellevue, WA |
LP Lead |
Old Navy |
Mt Pleasant, SC |
AP Department Manager
- DC |
Rite Aid |
Aberdeen, MD |
District AP Manager |
Smith's Food and Drug |
Sparks, NV |
District AP Manager |
Smith's Food and Drug |
Albuquerque, NM |
Lead Manager II AP |
Stop and Shop |
Connecticut |
Corporate ORC
Supervisor - East Region |
TJX Canada |
St Laurent, QC, CA |
District LP Manager |
TJX Companies |
Owings Mills, MD |
Security Manager |
The+Source Dispensary |
Henderson, NV |
Area Manager AP (All
facilities) |
WalMart |
Harrisonville, MO |
AP ASM |
Walmart |
Rogers, AR |
AP ASM |
Walmart |
Economy, PA |
AP ASM |
Walmart |
Brewton, AL |
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Tip of the Day
Sponsored
by Vector Security Networks
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The drive home can be the longest drive of the day when looking into the
rear-view mirror and seeing nothing but the day's events. It is a great time for
reflection and evaluation of all that transpired over the last 12 hours, often
times allowing you to realize that the briefest interaction with someone may
have been the most important event of the day. Those one line snip-its often
times are where the true feelings and intentions are expressed. Piecing them
together can mean the difference between success and failure of a project, a
program, and even an executive. It is only in reflection that we see the truth
and give ourselves the ability to react to it the right way the next day. Take
the time and look in the rear-view mirror. You may see something you had not
seen.
Just a Thought, Gus
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