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Dusko Tadic promoted to Senior Physical
Security Program Manager for Amazon
Dusko
has been with Amazon for nearly four years, starting with the company in 2016 as
a Logistics Loss Prevention Manager. Before his promotion to Senior Physical
Security Program Manager, he spent nearly three years as Regional Loss
Prevention Manager. Prior to joining Amazon, he spent almost a decade with Old
Navy in various LP roles, including Regional LP Manager and Market LP Manager,
among other positions. Congratulations, Dusko!
J. Matthew Wolfe named Senior Manager of
Corporate Asset Protection for Chipotle Mexican Grill
Before
being named Senior Manager of Corporate Asset Protection for Chipotle Mexican
Grill, J. Matthew spent more than 19 years at L Brands, starting with the
company in 2001 as Lead LP Officer. With L Brands, he held various LP roles,
including Campus Manager - Loss Prevention/Safety Services (5 years) and
Director, Asset Protection - Campuses (3+ years). Congratulations, J. Matthew! |
See All the Executives 'Moving Up' Here
Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position
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PPS Launches Innovative LP App
Swansboro,
NC, May 26, 2020 – Product Protection Specialists (PPS), an innovative
leader in retail security, is announcing the launch of LP Now, the
first-of-its-kind mobile app specifically for Loss Prevention and Asset
Protection professionals. The LP Now app allows users to quickly
order their product protection supplies using PPS’s patented Scan&Protect
technology. Simply by scanning a product’s UPC, LP/AP professionals gain instant
visibility to the precise protection device they need for that particular
product. The app also allows users to instantly engage PPS to customize a
product protection solution for any high-theft items not yet protected.
In addition to the time-saving benefits of LP Now, users can also
stay updated on security-related news with a simple click of the app’s LP
NEWS button.
PPS continues to stand ready to meet the needs of retailers and restaurants as
we face our new challenges together.
productprotectionsolutions.com
In Case You Missed It
Friday
A New Refreshing Perspective
Some Reflections on Retail Loss Prevention in a Time of COVID-19
From
the author of 'Total
Retail Loss', Adrian Beck,
Emeritus Professor at the University of Leicester, has written a
new paper that offers his perspective on how the COVID-19 Pandemic might be
impacting upon the world of Loss Prevention.
He starts by identifying what he sees as the four phases of the Pandemic - from
the initial Panic Buying period, through the lockdown phase when most retail was
shuttered, on to the current social distancing period, and finally the
post-pandemic phase. At each stage he offers his insights on how retail losses
and their management might be impacted, both negatively and positively.
Professor Beck's paper offers a refreshing counterbalance to some of the more
doom-laden commentaries on the likely consequences of the Pandemic on retail
losses, noting that the unprecedented nature of the event requires a much more
considered and cautious approach to be adopted.
An incredibly instinctive read, well worth your investment. Just our thoughts
Gus Downing
For those who haven't, make sure you also read
Total
Retail Loss.
Coronavirus Tracker: May
26
US: Over 1.7M Cases - 100K Dead - 466K Recovered
Worldwide:
Over 5.6M Cases - 349K Dead - 2.4M Recovered
U.S. Law Enforcement Deaths |
NYPD Deaths:
43
Private Industry Security Guard Deaths:
126+
Fall's Second Wave Closures?
Trump Declares He 'Won't Close Country If Second Wave'
Trump expressed confidence in the country’s ability to contain future
outbreaks, referring to them as “embers.”
“People
say that’s a very distinct possibility. It's standard. And we're going to put
out the fires. We're not going to close the country. We’re going to put out the
fires,” Trump told reporters during a tour of a Ford manufacturing plant in
Ypsilanti, Mich., when asked if he was concerned about a second wave of
COVID-19.
“Whether it’s an ember or a flame, we’re going to put it out. But we’re not
closing our country,” the president continued.
“I hope that if we do have the threat of a second wave we will be able to
deal with it very effectively to prevent it from becoming an outbreak not
only worse than now but much, much less,” Fauci said last Tuesday in virtual
testimony. The top infectious disease expert also warned that reopening
states too quickly would cost lives.
thehill.com
Editor's Note: Regardless of Trump's stance, if the fall brings a huge
up-tick, retailers may be pressured to increase restrictions and possibly even
close stores in high outbreak areas. And the Governors may indeed themselves
return to tighter phases to include shutting down non-essential businesses.
The best plan would be to anticipate closures in epicenters and maintain a high
degree of vigilance on monitoring outbreaks across the country. As there's just
too much public pressure and potential negative consumer criticism and the
overall health of the individual communities.
U.S. & Canadian Retailers Facing Potential Competing
Rights Issue
No mask, no service? Businesses have the right to require masks on customers
Face mask requirements are growing in popularity as retailers beginning to
re-open.
Experts agree with remarks Ontario Premier Doug Ford made on Friday, reminding
Canadians that companies have the right to ask you to slip on a face covering
or seek products and services elsewhere.
"Any business has the right to refuse anyone." Richard Powers says the policy
is well within a company's rights.
"The safety of retail workers and staff trumps the customers right to refuse
wearing a mask," he said.
Continue reading
Should Apple and other stores require shopper temperature checks?
A number of retailers have begun checking the temperatures of employees before
shifts. Apple last week, however, became the first major retailer to require
customers to have their temperature checked before entry.
Requiring customer checks is still rare but is being considered by retailers and
food establishments as a safety step as the country reopens. Stores are using a
non-contact forehead thermometer similar to testing that has been adopted in
some Asian countries.
Checking employees’ temperatures has become more common but is not standard
practice. Walmart, Amazon and Kroger check employees at the start of each shift.
Starbucks’ stores have been equipped with thermometers so employees can monitor
themselves and Home Depot is providing staffers thermometers to take their
temperatures at home before reporting to work. In most cases, any employee with
a temperature over 100 degrees is sent home.
The American Civil Liberties Union issued a report warning that screenings
could pave the way for new permanent forms of surveillance and social control.
A regional German data protection office has already launched a probe into
whether customer temperature checks at Apple Stores “violates EU privacy rules.”
Temperature checks would also come at a time when requests to wear masks
have led to altercations over personal freedoms in the U.S.
retailwire.com
Top Retailers Putting Health & Safety at
Forefront
Amazon, Costco, Walmart, Publix and Kroger Top Retailers in ‘most favorable’
COVID-19 response, shoppers say
Five
other retailers had a more favorable differential of 19% for their coronavirus
measures, including BJ’s Wholesale Club, Meijer, Whole Foods Market, Target and
Trader Joe’s.
Respondents in Magid’s latest tracker, who were surveyed in early May, were
asked how well retailers selling groceries and/or household supplies adapted to
higher demand, busier stores and health concerns since the COVID-19 outbreak.
These retailers are putting the health and safety of their shoppers at the
forefront and are doing their best to keep items in stock. They have
effectively managed busier shopping times in stores, often designating special
shopping hours for the elderly, and have limited the amount of people that can
be in a store at a time,”
supermarketnews.com
Washington State "The Concealment Bill" Would Prevent
These Lawsuits?
Why shoplifters are often not pursued by retail staff
Injured Bystander Lawsuit Exemplifies Why Retailers Don't Chase
Shoplifters
85
year-old woman knocked down by Staples employee who was pursueing a shoplifter
and sustained a broken hip which forced her to move into assisted living
facility. An attorney representing her is researching the industry and now
wondering why Staples employees chased his client.
With most retailers have a “strictly hands-off, non-pursuit” policy is “very
common” at many retail stores.
Tom Geiger, communications director at UFCW 21 – which represents many union
retail workers – told KIRO 7 that “all the employees, at least at the grocery
stores that we represent, the big grocery stores as well as a lot of the
independents, the policies are generally do not intervene. Do not become the
security cop.”
This hands-off approach is helping to fuel crime throughout Western
Washington, according to Mark Johnson of the Washington Retail Association,
who says shoplifters know it's often company policy to not pursue.
“Retailers have to balance convenience to consumers and customers, and the theft
and loss that they undergo,” Johnson said. “A lot of the people, unfortunately,
who are committing these crimes are either mentally ill or have a substance
abuse addiction, or both.”
The Washington Retail Association advocated for a bill this past legislative
session that would have allowed employees to detain suspects inside stores,
rather than wait for them to leave the premises -- as state law now dictates.
Called "The Concealment Bill," it would have allowed employees to detain
anyone once they see them conceal an item.
Johnson believes the law would have decreased shoplifting throughout
Washington State. However the bill failed to progress.
kiro7.com
Background Co., Infomart Account Supervisor Charged With Felony Theft of
$600,000 Over 2 Yrs.
Joshua A. Knight of Kennesaw is charged with felony theft by conversion,
according to his May 18 arrest warrant. Knight worked as an account supervisor
for Infomart, a Marietta company that specializes in corporate background
checks. He wasn’t authorized to write checks to himself, his arrest warrant
states. But according to the Cobb County Sheriff’s Office, Knight wrote
himself 130 checks worth $587.926.10 between January 2018 and September
2019. Knight was not in custody Friday, jail records show.
wspa.com
People Analytics Guide Return-to-Work Choices
Human resources leaders are turning to people analytics tools to help make
difficult decisions as their staffs return to the workplace and face a
damaged economy. Whether it's figuring out how to keep workers safe, making
decisions on furloughs and layoffs, or ensuring the right number of employees
are in the right roles, these technologies collect, blend and analyze people
data to guide HR leaders in their "what if" scenario planning.
Research shows the use of people analytics software was on the rise even
before the coronavirus crisis hit. Now experts say many HR leaders are
doubling down on the use of those tools.
COVID-Specific Employee Health and Safety Tracking
Platforms Integrate Data - Employee Coaching Analytics - Measuring Inclusion
During Remote Work - Employee Surveying & Sentiment Analysis
shrm.org
America's Malls Dependent on Struggling Retailers
14 of the 20 largest mall tenants are either apparel retailers or department
stores
Department store operators Macy’s, J.C. Penney and Dillard's take up the
largest share of mall space in the U.S. And Sears is 5th largest still.
And this could prove to be an even bigger issue for mall owners as the rate of
retail store closures accelerates rapidly because of the coronavirus pandemic.
Under such intense pressure, some malls could go dark forever.
“If you are well located, chances are you come out of this just fine,” Joe
Coradino, CEO of mall owner PREIT, said in an interview.
“Some people sit here and believe we are going to spend the rest of our lives
sitting at home in our pajamas and ordering everything online,” he said.
“That’s not it.”
cnbc.com
United Airlines debuts cleaning protocols with Clorox to lure back flyers
United Airlines
unveiled new cleaning protocols and travel safety measures in a move to
rebuild trust in flying, the company announced in a press release.
The airline partnered with Procter & Gamble's Clorox and medical experts at
Cleveland Clinic to develop its new
United CleanPlus program. The platform will serve as a guide for
United's new cleaning, safety and social distancing measures.
marketingdive.com
Northgate Mall in Durham, N.C. Closes Due to COVID-19
Will anyone save Stage Stores From Liquidation?
Bed Bath & Beyond to reopen 600 stores by June 13; expanding contactless
curbside pickup
Last week's #1 article --
Bad Guys Using the 'Old West' Masked Bandits
For Hold-Ups
The coronavirus pandemic is making things easier for thieves in masks
There's a troubling new reality for law enforcement: Masks that have made
criminals stand apart long before bandanna-wearing robbers knocked over
stagecoaches in the Old West and ski-masked bandits held up banks now allow them
to blend in like concerned accountants, nurses and store clerks trying to avoid
a deadly virus.
Across the United States, masks have become more and more prevalent, first as a
voluntary precaution and then as a requirement imposed by governmental agencies
and businesses. And people with masks - as well as latex gloves - have found
their way into more and more crime reports.
businessinsider.com
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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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As you prepare to reopen your business, you’ll
need to keep your customers and employees safe by adjusting your security
measures to adhere to occupancy regulations. These guidelines can vary from a
maximum threshold to the number of people per square foot. To enforce this,
you’ll need to know how many people are on your premises at any given moment
then continuously monitor the data and act when thresholds are met.
Register for the Leverage your security system to comply with occupancy
regulations webinar to learn how the Genetec Occupancy Management Package
can help you count people, visualize data, and manage occupancy density to stay
compliant.
What you'll learn:
-
How you can leverage Security Center to count
people, visualize data, and respond to alerts
-
Understand which people counting analytics and
visualization is best for you
-
Prepare your staff to better manage occupancy
by reacting to threshold alerts and document compliance with audit reports.
Presenters
Presented by our Retail & Banking Practice Lead Rob Borsch, and our
Retail & Banking Global Director of Market Development Scott Thomas.
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The Reality of IT Security
6 hard truths security pros must learn to live with
Crafty hackers, unwitting users, a relentless workload — working in IT
security is all about accepting this as business as usual and pushing forward
anyway.
You’re on the front lines, fighting the good fight against a patient, smart,
determined enemy that always seems to be one step ahead. Here are 6 hard truths
that security practitioners must learn to accept and deal with.
Hackers are probably inside your network right now
We’ve all heard the old adage that there are two types of companies, those that
have been hacked and those that have been hacked and don’t know it yet. There’s
a grain of truth to that.
Nearly 70% of CISOs reported that they discovered
malware hidden on their networks for an unknown period of time — in some
cases over a year, according to a survey.
What you can do: Consider deploying threat hunting tools that create
honeypots and use other advanced techniques to catch attackers before they
can do damage.
You can do everything right and a careless end user can
ruin everything
This is a tough one to swallow. You conduct extensive end user training; on a
regular basis, you even send out fake phishes and then follow up by notifying
the offenders that they clicked on a bad link in the hopes that they will learn
from their mistakes.
What you can do: There are third-party anti-phishing services that try to
stay one step ahead of the latest phishing tricks.
You face critical staffing and skills shortages
What you can do: Experts recommend that companies relax their sometimes
rigid requirements that an applicant have specific certifications or years of
experience. Organizations should also try to recruit and train employees from
other parts of the company. Cross-training is important, as is the integration
of security teams with other groups, such as DevOps or networking. If security
becomes part of everyone’s job, that takes some of the burden off of the
designed security professionals.
IoT creates new and unforeseen security problems
What you can do: Security pros should focus on gaining visibility into
the existence of unauthorized IoT devices that are already inside the network (Shodan
can help here), putting IoT devices on a separate network, restricting access to
the IoT device from external networks, changing default credentials, requiring
strong passwords, and applying regular security and firmware updates.
You sometimes feel misunderstood and underappreciated
What you can do: Security pros should make a concerted effort to reach
out to every corner of the business, building bridges, creating
cross-disciplinary teams and pounding home the message that security is
everyone’s responsibility and should be embedded in every business process.
Stress, anxiety and burnout come with the territory
What you can do: There’s no easy answer for this one, but security
practitioners need to open up and talk about stress with their colleagues and
make a determined effort to improve their work-life balance.
csoonline.com
Vendor Community is as Shaky as the Retailers - Have a
Plan
Managing vendor and supply chain risk in a recession
The COVID-19 crisis is putting security vendors, especially startups, under
severe pressure. Here's how to vet their financial stability and prepare
for the worst.
CISOs might struggle to understand the vendors and third-party contractors and
the access points they have to an organization. “If you think about some part of
the supply chain falling off, what if you didn't disable that
connectivity? What if you didn't offboard those resources who now may
still continue to have access into your environment?”
Contingency planning for a third-party crisis
The best way to avoid a crisis is to understand your ecosystem. The more mature
an organization’s vendor risk management program is, the easier it is to adapt
and incorporate additional risk factors around a recession into your
business continuity planning.
Reach out to the most critical vendors and partners first to assess their
stability. Don’t rely on existing audits or assessment surveys. What was true
for your vendors last year might not tally up with today’s reality. “If a
vendor suddenly goes out of business and they're critical to your
operations, it will be a scramble,”
Questions to ask supply chain providers
For publicly listed companies, earnings statements can provide indicators such
as cash flow, profitability, and outlook that give a reasonable picture of a
company’s health. Detailed accounts of cashflow or financial health are not
likely available for privately held companies. Industry and equity analysts may
publish insights within research recommendations.
Terry Ray, senior vice president and fellow at Imperva, adds that organizations
should look at wider indicators around a startup’s maturity: How many
customers do they have? Are your peers using the technology? What is the media
saying about that sector of security?
Offboarding vendors needs attention
Organizations such as the NCSC and NIST provide guides to help mitigate ongoing
risk around the supply chain. Offboarding practices might not be so
well-established. When removing a vendor or third party
CISOs need to work with the business
CISOs will need to work with other areas of the business to assess vendors’
financial stability, understand the contractual obligations, and quantify the
risk. Hickman says he rarely comes across a business where there's too much
coordination among procurement, legal and the CISO.
csoonline.com
Thousands of enterprise systems infected by new Blue Mockingbird malware gang
Exploiting a dangerous and hard to patch vulnerability to go after
enterprise servers.
Thousands of enterprise systems are believed to have been infected with a
cryptocurrency-mining malware operated by a group tracked under the codename of
Blue Mockingbird.
Discovered earlier this month by malware analysts from cloud security firm Red
Canary, the Blue Mockingbird group is believed to have been active since
December 2019.
Researchers say Blue Mockingbird attacks public-facing servers running ASP.NET
apps that use the Telerik framework for their user interface (UI) component.
Red Canary experts say that if the public-facing IIS servers are connected to a
company's internal network, the group also attempts to spread internally via
weakly-secured RDP (Remote Desktop Protocol) or SMB (Server Message Block)
connections.
zdnet.com
UK Q1 Data Breach Reports Decline 19%
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Use Only Devices Approved by Your Organization
Try to avoid using personal computers, tablets,
and cell phones for work related matters. If you have children, do your best to
not share devices and do not download movies, music, and other non-essential
software on you work computer. These simple steps may help you avoid unwanted
malware.
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'Prime Day' Date A Problem For Competitors
Don't Expect Much Notice in September For Actual 'Prime Day' Date
Amazon Loves to Put Competitors on their
Back Heels
Don’t expect Amazon to provide much notice of a change. Last year's mid-July
Prime Day dates were announced on July 1, which creates a new type of
Prime Day problem for competitors.
How Would a Delayed Prime Day Impact Retail?
Prime Day 2020 reportedly will take place in September. Last year, Prime Day
took place on July 15 and brought in more than $7 billion in sales. Prime Day
launched in 2015.
The move to September promises to influence holiday shopping plans for
many consumers, especially those struggling with loss of income and seeking to
make their holiday dollars stretch further.
Will also force Amazon’s retail competitors to rethink some of their own
promotional events designed as what amounts to Prime Day counter-programming.
According to
RetailMeNot, in fact, more than 300 retailers last year offered their own
promotions to counter Prime Day and take advantage of the shopping mindset
Amazon’s event encourages.
retailleader.com
An eighth Amazon warehouse employee has died from COVID-19
According to the company, the worker in North Randall, a village outside of
Cleveland, was sent home from work on April 30. She received a positive test
a little over a week later, on May 8. Amazon says it notified fellow employees
of the death and has provided counseling to colleagues.
The overall number of Amazon workers who have tested positive for the virus
remains a mystery. The company stands by its decision not to disclose
such information. “We don’t think that number is super valuable,” it has
said previously.
techcrunch.com
Deploying A Multilayered Fraud Prevention System During The COVID-19 Pandemic
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Antioch, CA: Police make arrest in $50,000 burglary of JC Penney jewelry
department
One
man was arrested and at least two more are sought in connection with a break-in
burglary early Friday morning at the JC Penney store in far southeast Antioch,
police said. Police were called at 6:05 a.m. Friday by a silent alarm to the
temporarily closed JC Penney store. Police said several further reports of
activated alarms came in, and the alarm company said surveillance cameras were
being deactivated from inside the store. A search team including a police dog
and aided a drone and pole cameras, and by thermal imaging equipment from the
Contra Costa Fire Protection District searched the store for hours before
finding one suspect hiding behind a small wall above the ceiling tiles. Police
said the man was in possession of several pieces of jewelry from inside the
store. Further investigation revealed at least two other suspects entered the
store, smashed the jewelry cases and tried to steal approximately $50,000 worth
of jewelry. Antioch officers found and recovered all of the stolen jewelry,
inside a duffel bag in the store. The two additional suspects escaped.
ktvu.com
Olympia, WA: Police track strong-armed AT&T store robbery suspects; 3 arrested
in $40,000 theft
About 8:30 p.m. Thursday, police responded to the AT&T store. A sales clerk
working at the store told police a man pretended to be a customer, using a ruse
to get the clerk to go to a back office. Once he was in the office, the man and
two others followed him, Police said. The men held the clerk against a wall and
struck him, stealing what the store estimates was $40,000 to $50,000 worth of
electronics, such as cell phones and tablets. AT&T Security began helping
detectives track the stolen property via GPS, according to Police. The
signal was traced to an apartment complex in north Seattle. Detectives parked
across from the apartment and saw a car that matched a description given by the
store clerk, with stolen property visible in the back seat. A witness told
detectives they had seen three men in the apartment building. They called
Seattle Police for assistance and applied for warrants to search the car and
apartment. In the apartment, Olympia Police arrested the three men, on suspicion
of second-degree robbery. The department believes it recovered all the stolen
equipment.
theolympian.com
Update: Bullhead City, AZ: Lowe’s, Ace Hardware Thief rejects plea deal; could
face 200 years
A Bullhead City man charged with a dozen counts across five separate cases
rejected a plea offer Thursday while also asking for a new attorney. For the
second week in a row, Austin Richard Peacock, 25, was expected to plead guilty.
But his attorney, Jon Gillenwater, said his client rejected a plea offer that
stipulated a 13-year prison sentence. Instead, Superior Court Judge Derek
Carlisle explained the sentencing ranges in all five cases where Peacock could
face up to 200 years if he is convicted of all 12 charges. The sentences
could run consecutively to each other since the alleged crimes took place on
separate occasions. Carlisle also rejected, for now, Peacock’s request for a new
attorney. In the other 2019 case, Peacock is charged with trafficking in stolen
property, which allegedly occurred April 28, 2019. Peacock is also charged in
three 2020 cases, including being felony forgery and misdemeanor theft in one
case, organized retail theft in a second case, and trafficking in stolen
property and two counts of organized retail theft in a third case.
mohavedailynews.com
Johnson, RI: Police identify suspect accused of stealing $10K worth of
eyeglasses
Santa Clarita Valley, CA: 4 Detained After Alleged $2,000 Grand Theft At Canyon
Country Costco
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Shootings & Deaths
Minneapolis, MN: ‘I cannot breathe!’: FBI investigates death of black man
outside Cup Foods grocery store; Video shows police officer kneeling on his neck
As
additional information has been made available, it has been determined that the
Federal Bureau of Investigations will be a part of this investigation. On Monday
evening, shortly after 8:00 pm, officers from the Minneapolis Police Department
responded to the 3700 block of Chicago Avenue South on a report of a forgery
in progress. Officers were advised that the suspect was sitting on top of a
blue car and appeared to be under the influence.
Two officers arrived and located the suspect, a male believed to be in his 40s,
in his car. He was ordered to step from his car. After he got out, he physically
resisted officers. Officers were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and
noted he appeared to be suffering medical distress. Officers called for an
ambulance. He was transported to Hennepin County Medical Center by ambulance
where he died a short time later. At no time were weapons of any type used by
anyone involved in this incident.
washingtonpost.com
insidempd.com
Houston, TX: Police shoot and killed Armed Robber after stabbing an 80 year old
woman outside Walgreens; the woman later died
Houston police officer shot and killed a man who had fatally stabbed a woman in
a store parking lot Saturday and was threatening the officer with a knife,
police say. It was the fifth fatal shooting by a Houston police officer within
the last month. It happened after a woman in her 80s was stabbed while returning
to her car around 10 a.m. after shopping at a Walgreens, said Houston police
Chief Art Acevedo. An officer found the stabbing suspect armed with a knife
inside the woman’s car and ordered him to get out, Acevedo said. The officer
opened fire after the suspect lunged at him, Acevedo said. The suspect’s name
has not been released. He was pronounced dead at the scene. The woman died at a
hospital.
en.brinkwire.com
South Union Township, PA: Restaurant employee arrested for shooting, killing
another man outside Long John Silvers
A 39-year-old man was shot multiple times and died outside a Fayette County Long
John Silvers restaurant, police said. Investigators said Justin Rittacco, 21,
was identified as the shooter. He was arrested and charged with criminal
homicide.
wpxi.com
Brooklyn, NY: C-store employee arrested after Armed Robber with knife is shot
and killed; unlicensed firearm
Kansas City, MO: Man killed in shooting outside C- store
Daytona Beach, FL: Police Officers shoot, injured man who pointed rifle at them
outside C-Store/ Restaurant
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Arvada, CO: ‘This Is Me And My Crew, Bro’: Accused Felon Admits Stealing Guns To
Undercover Agent
Four
men were caught by federal agents in an undercover operation Tuesday in Arvada.
The four were charged Thursday with the theft of firearms from gun store in late
April and the sale of those weapons. Twenty-one guns were stolen from Eagles
Nest Armory at 3:45 a.m. that day. Surveillance video released by the Arvada
Police Department showed four individuals pulling up to the business in a black
SUV, breaking into the store’s back door with a pry tool, and running back to
the vehicle and driving off four minutes after arriving.
9news.com
Jennings, LA: Man pulled gun on KFC employee over wait time, fled scene
Southwick, MA: Police arrest 5 Chicopee men in connection with theft of guns,
cash and tools from construction company
Manchester, NH: 17 cars stolen worth $700K: Police investigating rental car
theft scheme out of Manchester Airport
Anchorage, AK: Home Depot Shoplifter Charged with Robbery after Pulling Ax on
Loss Prevention
UK: London: Police hunt man after Smash and Grab at Shepherd’s Bush jewellers
Melbourne, AU: Miss Louise robbery: YSL designer goods stolen from Melbourne CBD
store on Collins Street
Sentencings
Laurel County, Belk Shoplifter with prior conviction sentenced to 10 years for
Robbery, employee injured during apprehension
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•
AT&T – Olympia, WA –
Robbery / Assault
•
Auto Parts – Tucson,
AZ – Burglary
•
Bicycle – Chino, CA –
Burglary
•
C-Store - Duluth, MN -
Burglary
•
C-Store – Ashville, NC
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Vernon
Hills, IL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Troy, NY –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Greensboro,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Grand
Haven, MI – Robbery
•
Flowers – Brick, NJ –
Burglary
•
Gas Station –
Chesterfield, VA – Armed Robbery
•
Grocery – Chicago, IL
– Robbery
•
Home Depot -
Anchorage, AK - Robbery
•
JC Penney – Antioch,
CA – Burglary
•
Jewelry – Macon, GA – Robbery
•
Liquor - Bourne, MA –
Armed Robbery
•
Liquor – Pueblo, CO -
Armed Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Milford, CT
– Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Atascadero, CA – Robbery (Subway)
•
Restaurant – Toledo,
OH – Armed Robbery (McDonalds)
•
Sally Beauty – Boynton
Beach, FL - Armed Robbery
•
Tobacco – Duluth, MN –
Burglary
•
Video Games -
Hawthorne, FL – Burglary
•
7-Eleven - Suffolk
County, NY – Armed Robbery
Daily Totals:
• 17 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
Click to enlarge map
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Rory Rutherford-Gordon promoted to Zone Loss Prevention Manager for
Bealls |
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David Hucks named Zone Loss Prevention Specialist for Bealls |
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Featured Job Spotlights
District Loss Prevention Manager
Cressona, PA Area
The District Loss Prevention Manager ensures shrinkage control and
improves safety in the stores through proper investigation and training. This
position is responsible to provide feedback, guidance and protection for our
Team Leaders and Associates. This role has oversight and responsibility for
approximately 8 to 10 store locations...
District Loss Prevention Manager
Birmingham/Montgomery/Tuscaloosa, AL
The District Loss Prevention Manager ensures shrinkage control and
improves safety in the stores through proper investigation and training. This
position is responsible to provide feedback, guidance and protection for our
Team Leaders and Associates. This role has oversight and responsibility for
approximately 8 to 10 store locations...
District Loss Prevention Manager
Roanoke, VA/ Martinsville, VA/ Winston Salem, NC
area
The District Loss Prevention Manager ensures shrinkage control and improves
safety in the stores through proper investigation and training. This position is
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and Associates. This role has oversight and responsibility for approximately 8
to 10 store locations...
Physical Security Leader
Corte Madera, CA
Responsible for leading and execution of the Protection and Prevention tiers of
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Campus in Corte Madera, CA - PROTECTION - Access Control | Alarms | CCTV |
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Featured Jobs
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ADDED |
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SVP, Chief Safety & Risk Officer |
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Jan. 6 |
VP, Profit Improvement |
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Dir. Asset Protection SE |
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Change is the only constant. Embracing it and dealing with it, while absolutely
necessary, can be a daunting task that is difficult for everyone. Psychologists
believe that humans strive to eliminate fear by avoiding change when, in fact,
change can be the best thing for us. Those that run to it usually are in front
and those that avoid it, most of the time end up in the rear.
Just a Thought, Gus
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