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| Scott Crawford named Director, Asset 
Protection for DTLR, Inc.
 
  Before 
joining DTLR, Inc. as Director, Asset Protection, Scott served as Regional Loss 
Prevention Manager at GameStop for nearly seven years. Prior to that, he spent 
over seven years as Regional Loss Prevention Manager for General Nutrition 
Center. Earlier in his career, he held LP roles with Lowe's, Dick's Sporting 
Goods, and Kmart. Congratulations, Scott! 
 Robert Hernandez promoted to Director of Risk 
Management for Goodwill Industries of San Antonio
 
  Robert 
has been with Goodwill Industries of San Antonio for more than seven years, 
starting with the company in 2017 as Asset Protection Operations Manager. Before 
his promotion to Director of Risk Management, he served as Loss Prevention and 
Safety Manager for over a year. Earlier in his career, he held LP/AP roles with 
Macy's, National Stores Inc., Gap Inc./Old Navy, and HEB. Congratulations, 
Robert! | 
| See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here
 
 Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position
 
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In Case You Missed It
 
 
  
 
 Retail 
Violent Fatalities Still Up 36.7% Over Pre-Pandemic 2019
 
 681 Retail Fatalities 
in 2023 - Down 1.9% From 2022
 
 155 Q4 2023 Fatalities - Down 10% From Q4 2022
 
 
 Yearly Comparison | 2017-2023
 
 
  
 See the full report here
 
 
 Sponsored by:
 
  
 
 
 
The U.S. Crime Surge
 The Retail Impact
 
Alliances Between Retail, Law Enforcement & 
Prosecutors Key to Stopping ORC
 Without support through this “last mile” of asset protection strategies, lock 
boxes and ink tags are only addressing the problem at the surface, not the root.
 
 Deterring Retail Crime: From the storefront to the backend
 
 By Cristian Lopez, CEO,
Alto
 
 
  As 
retail crime becomes more prevalent, so do discussions about solutions, from 
physical security and operational measures to technology and policy. However, 
what’s less frequently discussed is arguably the
most effective component — 
collaboration and information sharing between retailers, law enforcement, state 
& district attorneys and community organizations to ensure that the proverbial 
baton is being passed to meet the end goal of lasting crime reduction and safer 
communities. Without dedicated teamwork and an effort to connect the 
dots, more retail crimes will slip through the cracks and the cycle of behavior 
will continue. 
 Resolving retail crimes is tricky because often the cost of the item or items 
stolen is less than the resources required to hold a criminal accountable.
Only 5% 
of retail crime cases navigate through the judicial system. If an 
incident occurs, it is rarely reported to the police because, when it is, it’s 
often deprioritized. If reported, several challenges can prevent a case from 
being resolved.
 
 These include a lack of 
evidence, failure to coordinate witnesses or victims (retailers), a lack of case 
tracking, technicalities and the widespread misconception that retail theft is a 
victimless crime can all lead to a dropped case and lack of consequences 
that allow the criminal to continue offending. Without support through this
“last 
mile” of asset protection strategies, lock boxes and ink tags are 
only addressing the problem at the surface, not the root.
 
 A promising development is the success of
new ORC laws introduced with 
the help of retail stakeholders and policymakers in states like Oregon, 
Minnesota, Florida and New Mexico. However, according to
ICSC, they are among only 16 states where lawmakers are currently addressing 
retail crime with newly introduced legislation, and only 13 states have 
dedicated ORC taskforces.
 
 Drafting policies on organized retail crime is certainly an important step 
toward fixing the issue, but 
without the effort and collaboration from stakeholders, they will not be 
implemented, and the same gaps that have fed the ORC cycle will continue 
to grow and be exploited.
 
 Establishing an alliance between retailers, law enforcement, prosecutors, 
nonprofit organizations, and government officials is a proven strategy to effect 
real, long-term change. It’s time to organize more task forces, 
coordinate meetings, reallocate resources and take better advantage of the 
systems in place to deter criminal behavior from the backend as much as from 
storefronts. The future of brick-and-mortar retail depends on it.
chainstoreage.com
 
 
 Another State Battles Retail Theft With New Bill
 Property 
crime spiked 142% from 2016 to 2023 in Oklahoma
 
 Oklahoma's Senate Bill 1450 lowers felony threshold
 Protecting businesses from retail theft. The state is making efforts to address 
retail theft, by establishing 
penalties for the crime based upon the value of the property stolen.
 
 Senate Bill 1450 would create 
a task force to investigate organized retail crimes so criminal charges 
can be filed quicker and after a recent amendment, it would also
change the felony threshold 
level for retail theft.
 
 According to OSBI, Oklahoma 
had over 55,000 property crime cases in 2016. In 2023, that number jumped to 
more than 133,000 -- that's a 142% increase.
 
 Representative John George says this jump in property crime happened after the 
felony threshold level for retail theft was raised to $1,000. "You 
have to steal $1,000 or more to be a felony," said Representative John 
George.
 
 George wrote an amendment to Senate Bill 1450 that would
bring that threshold down to 
five hundred dollars. "I put the amendment in to lower it back to the 
$500 to see if we can curtail some of that crime," said George.
 
 One shop owner said that he could see where lowering the threshold to $500 could 
deter someone who’s new to committing retail crime and make them think twice 
before stealing, but he says that
a lot of these reported crimes 
are of repeat offenders, and he doesn’t think that lowering the threshold 
will keep those people from doing it again.
ktul.com
 
 
 Michigan's 'First-in-the-Nation' ORC-Fighting 
Unit
 New State Partnership Aims To Combat Organized Retail Crime
 Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel recently announced a 
partnership between the FORCE 
Team and the United States Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) to tackle organized 
retail crimes that leverage the postal system to conduct illegal 
enterprises.
 
 Nessel said “This 
groundbreaking partnership with the United States Postal Inspection 
Service comes as recognition of our efforts in the State and also significantly 
expands our capacity to combat organized retail crime here in Michigan. The 
addition of a U.S. postal inspector to the FORCE Team
allows us to quickly analyze 
how the postal service is exploited as a supply chain for black-market and 
counterfeit products across the country. The FORCE Team continues to 
blaze a path of success in this burgeoning criminal field, and we are proud to 
set an example for retail crime units nationwide.”
 
 The FORCE Team now includes a U.S. postal inspector alongside two assistant 
attorneys general, Michigan State Police detectives, special agents from the 
Department of Attorney General’s Criminal Investigations Division, and a special 
agent from the FBI’s Detroit Fraud and Financial Crimes Task Force.
 
 The FORCE Team and the Organized Retail Crime Unit were
established in 2023 by the 
Attorney General to target criminal organizations that steal products from 
retailers to repackage and sell for a profit.
 
 Nessel says this is a 
first-in-the-nation unit, unique in the 50 states as being the first such 
unit with embedded, dedicated staff from the Department of Attorney General.
whmi.com
 
 
 UK Wages War on ORC with Opal Team
 The UK Government Cracks Down on Organized Retail Crime
 Organized retail crime (ORC) has become a widely reported issue within the 
beauty industry, with cases increasing rapidly worldwide.
In the UK, incidents of ORC climbed from an average of 827 in 2022 to an 
average of 1,300 in 2023, with over £953 million ($1.2 million) worth of 
products stolen during this period. Of these crimes, the
police failed to respond to 
60% of those reported, with 44% of retailers reporting police urgency as 
"poor" or "very poor."
 
 
  Last 
year, 88 retailers in the UK—including 
Superdrug, Boots, Sephora, and SpaceNK—signed 
a letter to then-Home Secretary Suella Braverman
demanding action be 
taken against the rising statistics of retail theft. 
 Recently, it was announced that a response to the spearheading retailer's letter 
had been granted. Opal, a team 
within the UK’s national police's intelligence unit, is set to begin compiling 
information on ORC groups as part of the government's plan to tackle 
shoplifting.
 
 Opal will implement training 
programs for retailers and the police force, teaching them how to 
correctly gather information and present data surrounding stores' criminal 
activity. Opal will provide 
the police with the resources to properly investigate each incident, 
ensuring no time is wasted.
 
 Opal will help build industry-wide knowledge on the complexities of retail 
crime, including how to report 
it and notice the difference between shoplifting and ORC groups.
 
 The UK's Opal approach will likely help retailers and the police come together 
effectively to gain this understanding and tackle ORC so that no case goes under 
the radar. While such a program is tougher to organize in the US because many 
states hold their own laws on ORC and how it is reported, conversations 
surrounding the technicalities of data collection and industry unification give 
hope that the industry is 
moving closer to a cohesive understanding of ORC. Ideally, this would 
lead to a similar unified database in the US, making it easier to stand up 
against crime.
beautymatter.com
 
 
 The Great Debate Over Plummeting Homicide 
Rates Across U.S.
 Why homicide rates are falling across the country
 A data analysis released last week shows that the number of
homicides in cities like Boston, Philadelphia, 
Washington, D.C., and Chicago, are dropping.
 
 While many major cities, especially those run by Democrats with liberal-leaning 
policies and populations, have received backlash from Republicans for being 
inundated with violent crime, the 
new data paints a picture of an improving situation.
 
 Experts, though, aren’t agreed on exactly why the number of homicides has 
fallen so far, so fast.
 
 Boston saw the sharpest decline from 2023 to 
2024, with homicides dropping by 82 percent. In Philadelphia, 
homicides dropped by 37 percent; in Dallas, homicides dropped by 27 
percent; and in Chicago, homicides dropped by 6 percent, according to 
estimates from city police department reports compiled by AH Datalytics.
 
 Jeffrey Fagan, professor of law and epidemiology at Columbia University, 
attributes the improvements to a typical crime cycle.
 
 Alex Piquero, former director of the Bureau of Justice Statistics under 
President Biden, outlined the factors he argues caused the spike in homicides:
Community prevention programs were put on hold during the COVID-19 
pandemic, and law enforcement pulled back due to the 2020 murder of George Floyd 
by a Minneapolis police officer and because of pandemic staffing issues.
 
 Piquero, a professor of sociology and criminology at the University of Miami, 
said those conditions have been reset. “Their staffing levels are going up, 
police are around the community more, they’re targeting violent places and 
violent people using appropriate statistical methodology.”
 
 Piquero looks at crime as a local level issue and noted it’s hard to tell yet if 
the funding from the Department of Justice (DOJ) under the Biden 
administration to combat crime is helping.  
thehill.com
 
 
 Retailers Struggle to Hire Amid Soaring Theft
 ‘Employees don’t feel safe,’ says business pro as theft prompts store closures 
with locked-up items and hiring struggle
 
 Businesses have revealed 
that 'employees don't feel safe' after soaring theft triggered a spate of store 
closures.
 
 Shoplifting in New York State's Long Island spiked by 20% - 
leaving workers reeling from brazen attempts by thugs, Newsday reported.
 
 "I've actually witnessed some thefts sometimes when I have been in the local 
supermarket. So I know the impact in the community is that it's hard, especially 
for the small business owners, because they're losing inventory," said LaShawn 
Lukes, president of the Hempstead Chamber of Commerce. "Also, it's a two-sided 
situation because now it's 
hard to [hire] employees because they do not feel safe."
 
 Law enforcement and retail analysts have pointed to
a lack of staff supervising 
the shop floor, an increase in self-service checkouts and a soaring cost of 
living for widespread theft.
 
 2023 saw a number of retailers 
close down, often citing losses from theft. In part fueled by the rise of 
online shopping and ongoing inflation, many stores have not been able to remain 
open. 
the-sun.com
 
 
 Concord, CA: Shoplifting leads the way as Concord chief details 2023 crime
 
 Tennessee mass shootings: Here’s how many have happened in the state this year
 
 
 
 
ORC, Omnichannel Fraud, & Cybersecurity 
Breaches: Retail's Top Threats?
 Strengthening retail risk management and resilience through collaboration
 In recent years, organized retail crime, omnichannel 
fraud and cybersecurity breaches have emerged as mammoth threats to 
retailers worldwide, with far-reaching consequences that extend beyond the 
immediate loss of merchandise.
 
 
  As 
criminal syndicates become increasingly sophisticated in their methods, the 
downstream effects of modern-day risks pose complex challenges for retailers. 
Achieving success in the midst of these challenges demands seamless 
collaboration for retail legal, risk management and security teams. That’s 
why NRF is bringing together retail leaders across functions to exchange 
insights and discuss the latest retail law and risk management strategies at its 
second annual Retail Law & Risk Workshop at NRF PROTECT, June 6 at the Long 
Beach Convention Center in Long Beach, Calif. 
 NRF PROTECT is the retail industry’s marquis event for exploring everything 
related to loss and fraud, so it makes sense that NRF is capitalizing on this 
convening by hosting its Retail Law & Risk Workshop in tandem. The workshop 
will include three interactive, expert-led sessions and roundtable discussions 
covering insider threats, strategies for safely collecting and sharing loss 
prevention data with solution providers and law enforcement, and risk and 
liability surrounding artificial intelligence.
 
 During the insider threats session, seasoned professionals in incident response 
will guide workshop participants through a realistic scenario explaining the 
potential ramifications of insider threats on a retail enterprise.
 
 In a second session of the NRF Retail Law & Risk Workshop, privacy and data 
security experts will offer practical insights on how loss prevention 
departments can securely collect and disseminate organizational LP data.
 
 In addition to threat-focused and data-driven sessions, workshop attendees will 
explore a compelling tech-focused case study centered on a national retailer’s 
initial collaboration with an AI vendor specializing in retail analytics.
 
 Learn more here:
nrf.com
 
 
 Unions, Not Theft, Is Costco's Biggest Concern
 Costco faces a problem bigger than retail theft and inflation
 Costco has an "A" rating on Comparably's tracking of companies' retention 
of workers. That has not protected the chain from a movement to unionize.
 
 "Costco workers in Norfolk, Va., voted overwhelmingly yesterday to join 
Teamsters Local 822, marking the union's first organizing victory at the 
wholesale retailer in two decades," according to a statement from the Teamsters 
union. "The 238-worker group seeks strong representation to address years of 
concerns and improve working conditions."
 
 That was an isolated case when it happened in January, but now another Costco 
location has joined the Teamsters. Adding a union to the mix could 
increase costs for Costco. The company now has a another location that has 
joined the Teamsters union.
 
 The union took significant shots at the company in sharing the news that another 
location has joined.
 
 "Costco isn't the company it once was. The culture has shifted dramatically 
the past few years. Management told us they heard our concerns, but they 
weren't listening. We were tired of being ignored," said Paul Lowrie, a 
three-year driver at Costco and new Teamster. "My fellow drivers and I knew that 
the only way to reclaim control of our future and make things better was by 
joining the Teamsters."
thestreet.com
 
 
 Will Selling More Stores Save 
Kroger-Albertsons Merger?
 Kroger, Albertsons look to save merger deal by selling more stores
 
  The 
Kroger Co. and Albertsons Cos. are expanding the number of stores they plan 
to sell in a bid to gain regulatory approval for their long-delayed $25 
billion merger. 
 The two grocers have added 166 more stores to the list of 413 locations to be 
sold to C&S Wholesale Grocers. The addition means that 579 stores will be 
sold to — and continue operating as they do now — by the new owner, C&S. 
Under the new agreement, C&S will pay Kroger about $2.9 billion in cash for the 
stores, up from the previous $1.9 billion under the original plan.
 
 In addition to maintaining the the sale of Kroger’s QFC, Mariano's and Carrs 
banners to C&S, the amended agreement includes the sale of the Haggen banner 
to C&S as well.
 
 Also, under the updated plan, C&S will license the Albertsons banner in 
California and Wyoming and the Safeway banner in Arizona and Colorado. In 
these states, Kroger will re-banner the retained Albertsons and Safeway bannered 
stores following the closing of the merger. Kroger will maintain the Albertsons 
and Safeway banners in the remaining states.
chainstoreage.com
 
 
 Second phase of Nike layoffs to hit Oregon headquarters this summer
 After the job cuts, effective June 28, about 740 
employees will have been impacted in the retailer’s home state.
 
 Lowe’s taps DoorDash for on-demand deliveries
 
 The companies with the best customer service are...
 
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
 
 Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well please. If 
it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
 
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Shut Out Threats with Detex Main Entry Lockdown 
  
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Breaches Leading to More Down Time & Data 
Exposure
 51% of enterprises experienced a breach despite large security stacks
 Threat actors are continuing to successfully breach across the entire attack 
surface and the stakes are only getting higher: 93% of enterprises who 
admitted a breach reported unplanned downtime, data exposure, or financial loss 
as a result, according to Pentera.
 
 60% of enterprises report a weekly minimum of 500 security events that require 
remediation. Becoming “patch perfect” is an unfeasible, if not impossible, 
target for organizations. What’s more, organizations are even more resource 
constrained than before. In 2023, only 21% of respondents reported a lack of 
internal resources for remediation as a barrier to pentesting, while this 
year the number has leaped to 36%.
 
 Organizations are adopting a greater number of 
cybersecurity solutions to manage their risk. On average, enterprises 
already have 53 security solutions in use across their organization, however, 
despite large security stacks, 51% of enterprises reported a breach over the 
past 24 months.
 
 Security leaders are cautious around pentesting as many have experienced network 
downtime due to pentesting in the past. CISOs want to work with the most 
experienced pentesters who provide the highest level of validation to their 
security, while also posing the least risk to operations.
 
 “The results of our latest report are indicative of the increasing 
infrastructure complexity of organizations today and the rising challenges that 
security teams face along with it. Close to a third of CISOs who cited a 
breach reported financial loss and data exposure, while 43% reported unplanned 
downtime as a result of the breach,” said Jason Mar-Tang, Field CISO at 
Pentera.
 
 “Attack surfaces are more dynamic than ever and resources are limited, 
making it even more critical for organizations to proactively validate their 
risk exposure with accuracy and pinpoint exploitable gaps across the complete 
attack surface.” 
helpnetsecurity.com
 
 
 80% of Companies Hit By Cyberattack That 
Insurance Didn't Cover
 Cyber insurance gaps stick firms with millions in uncovered losses
 
 A CYE analysis of 101 breaches across various sectors revealed insurance 
gaps resulting in an average of $27.3 million in uncovered losses per incident.
 
 The majority of companies, 4 in 5, have suffered a 
cyberattack that wasn’t fully covered under their cyber insurance policy, 
according to an analysis by cyber risk quantification firm CYE.
 
 On average, each insurance gap left more than three-quarters of a breach 
uncovered, CYE said in a report released Wednesday. The research, which 
analyzed 101 breaches across various sectors, revealed an average of $27.3 
million in uncovered losses per incident.
 
 “This study underscores how many companies rely on cyber insurance to cover the 
losses incurred as a result of cyber incidents and are then taken by surprise 
when they find that their insurance only covers a small portion,” Nimrod 
Partush, vice president of data science at CYE, said in a press release.
 
 Direct written premiums for cyber insurance worldwide could rise to $23 
billion by 2025, with U.S. businesses paying about 56% of the total, 
according to a February report from the Insurance Information Institute, an 
industry association.
cybersecuritydive.com
 
 
 Cybercrime Group Hits Telecom Provider
 Frontier Communications hit by cyberattack, IT systems impacted
 
 The telecom provider said a cybercrime group intruded its IT 
infrastructure and gained access to PII. The operational disruption following 
its containment “could be considered material.”
 
 Frontier Communications is recovering from a cyberattack that caused the 
telecom provider to shut down some of its systems, the company said Thursday 
in a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
 
 The company said it detected an intrusion on its IT infrastructure on Sunday and 
quickly took measures to contain the incident. “As part of this process, the 
containment measures, which included shutting down certain of the company’s 
systems, resulted in an operational disruption that could be considered 
material,” Frontier said in the regulatory filing.
 
 Frontier did not specify which systems were compromised or impacted by its 
response, but a notice on its website warns that technical issues with its 
internal support systems are ongoing. “Our customers’ internet service is up 
and running and not affected by this issue,” the company said on its site.
cybersecuritydive.com
 
 
 ‘Large volume’ of data stolen from UN agency after ransomware attack
 
 MITRE breached by nation-state threat actor via Ivanti zero-days
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			Tip #5:
 
 ChatGPT for Concise Insights
 
			Reports can hold valuable information, but your team may not have 
			time to read through them in their entirety. Leverage the power of 
			AI for rapid report analysis, extracting vital insights and trends, 
			and generating succinct summaries that highlight key findings and 
			performance metrics. Here is a sample ChatGPT prompt that you can 
			use in conjunction with the information from your latest sales 
			report, “Generate a summary from this sales report to provide 
			stakeholders with comprehensive yet digestible updates on our sales 
			performance.”
 
 
			Watch this space on 
			Tuesdays for more of'Tom's Tek Tips - AI & ChatGPT Prompts'
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Internet Shops Flooded with JunkE-Commerce and the Influencer Economy
 
 How internet shopping became choked with junk.
 
 People are bombarded online each day with ads for newfangled products that 
promise dramatic life improvements. Modish tumblers. Sleek pans. Miraculous 
cleaning solutions. Overblown air purifiers. Just click this link and — voilà! 
Productivity. Happiness. Nirvana.
 
 Don’t buy it.
 
 Wirecutter, The Times’s product recommendation service, tests many of the wares 
that clog Americans’ social media feeds. And while our testers do like some, 
these products are often built on empty promises. In today’s newsletter, I’ll 
explain how e-commerce, a $6 trillion global industry, became choked with 
junk.
 
 Paid to sell
 
 Online shopping can expose people to a greasy influencer economy. 
Influencers often join affiliate-revenue networks, such as Amazon’s. When an 
influencer’s follower clicks a link and buys something, the influencer makes 
money. That’s why people on your social media feed are crowing about their 10 
favorite Amazon finds or talking about how an expensive gizmo has changed their 
life.
 
 Many influencers have another incentive: Brands pay them to hawk stuff. 
Some people with large followings make deals for tens of thousands of dollars 
per post. Then, when enough people like or share a post, TikTok, Instagram and 
YouTube algorithms push it to more people. The result is a blizzard of 
gadgets.
 
 Avoid getting duped
 
 Not all influencers are scurrilous peddlers. Some creators use their expertise 
to vet products and give reliable advice. But it’s important to spot the 
difference.
nytimes.com
 
 
 Record-Breaking Online Retail Sales in 2023
 comScore: Online retail sales break record with $1.3 trillion in 2023
 
 U.S. consumers continue to spend more online, via both desktop and mobile.
 
 U.S. consumers spent $1.3 trillion in 2023 — or about 
$1 trillion more than they did in 2013, when spending totaled $235 
billion, according to the comScore “State of Digital Commerce” study,
 
 This made 2023 the highest-spending online retail year ever and the fourth 
quarter of 2023 the highest-spending quarter in online retail history. comScore 
data indicates U.S. consumers broke the
$1 trillion online spending mark for the first time in 2022.
 
 By quarter, comScore tracked the following digital sales figures, with 
year-over-year growth percentage and broken down by desktop and mobile results:
 
 •
Q1 2023: $293 billion +22%, $189.7 
billion desktop and $103.4 billion mobile.
 •
Q2 2023 $305.5 billion +19%, $206.5 
billion desktop and $99.5 billion mobile.
 •
Q3 2023: $306.8 billion +18%, $202.8 
billion desktop and $104.1 billion mobile.
 •
Q4 2023: $389.2 billion +17%, $247.8 
billion desktop and $141.4 billion mobile.
chainstoreage.com
 
 
 China e-commerce exports, unreliable Red Sea shipping boost air cargo
 
 5 scams to avoid on the popular online shopping platform Temu
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Los Angeles County, CA: Serial robbery crew arrested, accused of stealing 
California Lottery Scratchers worth $250,000
 Detectives recently arrested a crew suspected of robbing 45 convenience stores 
in Los Angeles County of over $250,000 worth of California Lottery Scratcher 
tickets during a two-month period. The crew struck 43 7-Eleven stores plus two 
Circle K stores, according to Deputy Alejandra Parra, a spokeswoman for the Los 
Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. The suspects cashed about $91,000 worth of 
the Scratcher tickets, she said. Most of the stores were in Los Angeles, she 
said, adding other stores were in Torrance, Gardena, Lakewood, Maywood, South 
Gate, Compton, Inglewood, Bell Gardens, Hawthorne and Huntington Park. Nobody 
was injured during the robberies, Parra said. The crew threatened to use force 
in most of the robberies. One of the suspects pretended to have a gun during one 
heist while one suspect had a knife at another robbery, she said. The robberies 
started in February and ended last week. 
eastbaytimes.com
 
 
 Hopkinsville, KY: Two Clarksville Men Charged In Shoplifting at Lowe’s
 Two Clarksville men were charged in connection to merchandise being taken from 
Lowe’s in Hopkinsville Friday afternoon. Hopkinsville Police say 37-year-old 
Trevor Hawkins and 38-year-old Kevin Baker were charged after they took $1,550 
worth of merchandise from Lowe’s. Hawkins who was previously given a trespass 
warning for the store was charged with third-degree burglary and arrested on a 
warrant for third-degree burglary and two counts of theft by unlawful taking 
shoplifting. Baker was also arrested and charged with theft by unlawful taking 
shoplifting. 
wkdzradio.com
 
 
 Covington, TN: Shoplifters busted after running red light in U-Haul carrying 
loot from Lowes
 Three Memphians have been arrested and charged after they allegedly ran a red 
light in Covington, Tennessee, while carrying loot from a home improvement store 
they stole from an hour prior. Covington police say the trio was arrested on 
Monday, April 15, after officers pulled over a U-Haul truck with Arizona tags 
after it ran the light at the intersection of Highway 51 and Holly Grove Road. 
Police say the driver, later identified as Crutcher, had a suspended license and 
an active warrant out of Shelby County for merchandise theft. Crutcher was 
placed under arrest for the outstanding warrant and the traffic violations. 
While officers were patting Crutcher down, police say they found a powder 
suspected to be fentanyl and $60 in cash in his pocket. A search of the U-Haul 
uncovered a brand-new lawnmower, weedeater, trash bags, a gallon of Oxi Clean, 
and a gallon of Pine-Sol — all totaling $831 in value. Investigators later 
learned that the items were stolen from the Lowes in Millington one hour before 
the traffic stop. When officers questioned the trio on their load and 
destination, one of the suspects allegedly said, “We was coming to the Home 
Depot in Covington to steal stuff.” 
actionnews5.com
 
 
 Milpitas, CA: SoCal couple arrested for organized retail theft after stealing 
item from store at Great Mall
 Police in Milpitas arrested a young couple from the Southern California town of 
Glendale Sunday after they were found with a large quantity of fake jewelry used 
in scams after a reported theft at a store in the Great Mall. Police reported 
the arrests in a Monday morning social media round-up of arrest activity over 
the weekend. According to the post, officers responded to the Great Mall on 
Sunday shortly after 1 p.m. following a report of a theft from a store. While 
police did not provide details regarding what store at the Great Mall was 
targeted or what was stolen in the theft, but noted that officers found a large 
amount of fake jewelry similar to the type frequently used in jewelry swap scams 
during their investigation. Both suspects, an 18 and 20-year-old married couple 
from Glendale, were arrested for organized retail theft. Police did not identify 
the suspects. 
cbsnews.com
 
 
 Bellmead, TX: Women stole more than $3,000 in merchandise at Bellmead H-E-B
 
 Champaign County, IL: Shoplifters steal $700 in dog food from Meijers
 
 Mechanicsburg , PA: Man walks out of Walmart with bin full of stolen baby 
formula
 
 
 
 
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Shootings & Deaths
 
Pleasanton, CA: Update: 2 plead guilty in trial over deadly shooting of Home 
Depot Loss Prevention agent
 
  A 
year after Pleasanton security guard Blake Mohs was fatally shot while trying to 
stop a shoplifter, the two suspected of his killing are admitting to the crime. 
That admission was part of a plea deal — a deal the Mohs' family tells NBC Bay 
Area they had asked for. They said it was a hard decision, but the right one to 
make for their family. “It’s us taking back something they stole. Because now 
with a plea deal, there is no appeal,” said Mohs' mother, Lorie Mohs. “There is 
no years back in court. It’s done.” The parents of the 26-year-old Home Depot 
security guard returned to his workplace Monday. They went there to tell his 
coworkers they wouldn’t have to relieve his killing in court. “We decided we 
couldn’t put our family through the chaos, so release them and get some final 
closure is more important than a few extra years,” said Mohs' father, Eric Mohs. 
 Mohs' parents asked for a plea deal, but say it wasn’t because of a lack of 
evidence. “He knew, even in his death, how to preserve evidence and he did that 
for us,” Lorie Mohs said. “He made such a beautiful case that we could do this 
to honor of him and we could do this in honor of our faith.” Under the 
agreement, the suspected shooter Benicia Knapps will serve 19 years to life 
for second degree murder and enhancements as opposed to 25 years to life. David 
Guillory, the suspected getaway driver who fled with Knapps’ 2-year-old in 
the car, will serve seven years and four months on child endangerment and 
accessory charges instead of a possible 16 years. Both pleaded guilty in court 
on Monday. Lorie Mohs hopes they will spend the time rehabilitating their lives. 
nbcbayarea.com
 
 
 Woodbury, MN: Police shoot man at Woodbury Target after parking lot standoff
 A busy shopping center in Woodbury became the scene of a standoff Monday 
morning, where police say a man pointed a gun at law enforcement and officers 
shot him. The shooting happened around 10:30 a.m. Monday in the parking lot of 
the Target in Woodbury Village. A man, believed to be around 50 years old, was 
transported to Regions Hospital in St. Paul with gunshot wounds and is receiving 
treatment, officials said. Woodbury
  Public 
Safety Director Jason Posel said he didn’t have an update Monday afternoon about 
the man’s condition. “It was a scary scene with shoppers either evacuated or 
forced to shelter in place,” Posel said. “I want to highlight the bravery of our 
officers and the deputies under extremely difficult circumstances. Their 
courageous actions helped keep the community safe today.” 
 What police say happened Officers were alerted to a vehicle with stolen license 
plates parked in the Target lot. They found no one in the vehicle and, as they 
were investigating, a man returned to the vehicle. He “fought with officers when 
they attempted to arrest him,” Posel said. The officers saw the man had a 
handgun and they “disengaged,” at which point the man barricaded himself in the 
vehicle, Posel said. Officers called for negotiators and the department’s 
embedded social worker, along with the SWAT team.
 
 “They attempted to negotiate and deescalate the individual for an extended 
period of time,” Posel said. “Less than lethal options were deployed, but he 
would not comply. He later exited the vehicle, brandishing a handgun.” He 
pointed the gun “in the direction of the responding officers” and they fired, 
Posel continued. A Woodbury police officer and a Washington County Sheriff’s 
Office deputy — a member of the Washington County SWAT team — were involved in 
the shooting. Both have been placed on standard administrative leave. 
cbsnews.com
 
 
 Washington, DC: Special Police Officer sentenced to 3 years for shooting woman 
during fight while on duty at 7-Eleven
 An armed Special Police Officer was sentenced Monday to three years in prison 
after she shot a woman after an altercation at a convenience store in Northeast 
D.C., according to the Department of Justice. According to court documents, 
Chanel Clinton, 27, of Alexandria, Va. was working as an armed Special Police 
Officer on January 18, 2024, and was assigned to a 7-Eleven at 4854 Nannie Helen 
Burroughs Avenue, Northeast. Clinton and a former acquaintance got into an 
argument when the woman recorded her in a taunting manner, court documents show. 
The two continued a verbal altercation in the parking lot. An off-duty 
Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Sergeant happened to be inside the 7-Eleven 
when he heard the argument in the parking lot, according to court records. 
wjla.com
 
 
 Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
 
 
 Omaha, NE: Man falls from roof of Omaha Target store
 A man fell from the roof of a Target store in Omaha on Monday night. Starting at 
around 8 p.m. Monday, Omaha Police began telling customers to leave the Target 
location on 72nd and Dodge Street as they handled the situation outside. 6 News 
spoke with OPD Sgt. Nick Mueller at the scene, who confirmed the man was injured 
in the fall and transported to the hospital for treatment. 
wowt.com
 
 
 Philadelphia, PA: $30,000 Worth Of Crab Stolen From Philly Truck
 A truck driver in Philadelphia was awoken from sleep early Friday morning to 
find a dozen thieves stealing around $30,000 worth of snow crab from his 
refrigerated vehicle, according to police and media reports. The driver tried to 
stop the heist — which occurred around 5:30 a.m. in the Walmart parking lot in 
the 4300 block of Byberry Road — but ended up "banged up a little bit" and 
missing 100 boxes of Grampa Harvey's snow crabs, NBC10 Philadelphia reported. 
patch.com
 
 
 Bowie, MD: Thieves drive car into gas station, make off with ATM
 Police in Bowie, Maryland are searching for who used a car to bust into a gas 
station and steal an ATM from inside. Police say no one was inside the building 
at the time. Prince George's County detectives are conducting an investigation 
after the burglary was first reported around 3:45 a.m. at the Shell gas station 
and convenience store at the 16500 block of Ballpark Road. 
wusa9.com
 
 Fort Myers, FL: Florida man runs from deputies inside Walmart after allegedly 
exposing himself
 
  Deputies 
arrested a Florida man who tried to run from them inside a Walmart after 
allegedly exposing himself in the store. Jawahn Jennings, 35, is charged with 
indecent exposure. The incident happened last Thursday at a Walmart in Fort 
Myers. Lee County deputies were called for a man exposing himself inside the 
store. "Deputies met with the store’s loss prevention officer who confirmed 
Jennings had been seen following adult female customers while inappropriately 
touching himself," the sheriff's office says in a release. "No children were 
present in the vicinity." As deputies made their way through the store, they 
came into contact with Jennings near a clothing rack. "Jennings immediately 
began running away from deputies attempting to exit the store," the release 
states. "He was no match for the speed and strategic placement of other 
responding deputies. Deputies utilized their training to efficiently apprehend 
Jennings." 
weartv.com 
 
 St Louis County, MO: Man charged in connection with St. Louis County Dollar Tree 
armed robbery
 
 Washington, DC: Metro Police seek suspects accused of gunpoint theft and assault 
in Northeast store incident
 
 York, Ontario, Canada: Police arrest suspect in armed robbery of currency 
exchange business in Richmond Hill, 2 remain at large
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•
C-Store – Toledo, OH – 
Robbery / Cashier assaulted•
C-Store – Greensboro, 
NC – Armed Robbery
 •
C-Store – Arlington 
County, MD – Armed Robbery
 •
C-Store – 
Murfreesboro, TN – Armed Robbery
 •
C-Store – Manhattan, 
KS – Robbery
 •
C-Store – Rome, GA – 
Robbery
 •
CVS – Washington, DC – 
Armed Robbery
 •
Clothing – Clovis, CA 
– Robbery
 •
Dollar – St Louis 
County, MO – Armed Robbery
 •
Gas Station – Bowie, 
MD – Burglary
 •
Grocery – Butler 
County, KY – Robbery
 •
Grocery – Denton, TX – 
Robbery
 •
Grocery - Bellmead, TX 
- Robbery
 •
Hardware – 
Hopkinsville, KY - Robbery
 •
Hotel – San Bernardino 
County, CA – Armed Robbery
 •
Jewelry - Houston, TX - Robbery
 •
Jewelry - Charlotte, NC - Robbery
 •
Jewelry - Oklahoma City, OK - Robbery
 •
Jewelry - Killeen, TX – Burglary
 •
Jewelry - Horseheads, NY - Robbery
 •
Jewelry - Columbus, OH - Robbery
 •
Restaurant – 
Henderson, TN – Armed Robbery
 •
Restaurant – 
Providence, RI – Armed Robbery
 •
Restaurant – Glasgow, 
KY – Burglary
 •
Restaurant – Glasgow, 
KY – Burglary
 •
Restaurant – 
Albuquerque, NM – Armed Robbery
 •
Restaurant – 
Lexington, KY – Armed Robbery
 •
Vape – Haw River, NC – 
Armed Robbery
 •
Walmart – Marshall, TX 
– Robbery
 •
Walmart – 
Mechanicsburg, PA – Robbery
 
| 
Daily Totals:• 26 robberies
 • 4 burglaries
 • 0 shootings
 • 0 killed
 |    
 
 Click map to enlarge
 
 
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Submit Your New Hires/Promotions or New 
Position
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| Featured Job Spotlights 
An Industry Obligation - Staffing'Best in Class' Teams
 
 Every one has a role to play in 
building an industry.
 Filled your job? Any good candidates left over?
 Help Your 
Colleagues - Your Industry - Build 
a 'Best in Class' Community
 
 Refer the Best & Build the Best
 Quality - Diversity - Industry Obligation
 
 
 
  
 Dir. Security & Interactive Video Support
 Plano, TX - 
Posted 
April 18
 
The Director of Security and Interactive Video Support is responsible for 
leading a team of security support personnel that provide end/end support for 
managed Intrusion and Video services offerings.  This position is responsible 
for managing & leading a team that owns all aspects of the restoration and 
support processes required for the customers that Interface provides a broad set 
of asset protection services to... 
.png) 
 Multi-Store Detective (Pittsburgh Operating Market)
 Pittsburgh, PA - 
Posted 
April 9
 
Job Summary: Store Detectives are key players in serving their assigned 
locations in the detection and apprehension of shoplifters. Job 
Responsibilities: Detect and apprehend shoplifters with the use of standard 
visual practice and CCTV in multi-store environment; Utilize CCTV to create 
video records of incidents requested by law enforcement and internal 
departments...  
.png) 
 Multi-Store Detective (Cleveland Operating Market)
 Cleveland, OH - 
Posted 
April 9
 
Job Summary: Store Detectives are key players in serving their assigned 
locations in the detection and apprehension of shoplifters. Job 
Responsibilities: Detect and apprehend shoplifters with the use of standard 
visual practice and CCTV in multi-store environment; Utilize CCTV to create 
video records of incidents requested by law enforcement and internal 
departments...  
.png) 
 Multi-Store Detective (Akron/Canton Operating Market)
 Akron/Canton, OH - 
Posted 
April 9
 
Job Summary: Store Detectives are key players in serving their assigned 
locations in the detection and apprehension of shoplifters. Job 
Responsibilities: Detect and apprehend shoplifters with the use of standard 
visual practice and CCTV in multi-store environment; Utilize CCTV to create 
video records of incidents requested by law enforcement and internal 
departments...  
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Success can not happen without conflict. Because success always challenges the 
status quo, regardless, and mandates change. And in order for change to be 
successful you need commitment - you need everyone to buy in totally. It's not 
good enough for everyone to merely agree and move forward because they'll be 
those that merely go thru the motions and don't believe. One can disagree and 
still commit but for those who don't engage - commitment is a mere phrase not 
reinforced by actions.
 
 
 Just a Thought,
 Gus
 
 
  
 
  
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