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Michael Monaghan, LPQ named Senior Director
Asset Protection-Herald Square/NYC Division for Macy's
Before
joining Macy's as Senior Director Asset Protection-Herald Square/NYC Division,
Michael spent three years with Steve Madden as Corporate Loss Prevention
Manager. Prior to that, he spent two years with Toys 'R' Us as Regional Asset
Protection Manager. Earlier in his career, he spent nearly 14 years with Sports
Authority in various AP roles. He has also held positions with Walmart and
Target. Congratulations, Michael! |
See All the Executives 'Moving Up' Here
Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position
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Checkpoint's Global Source Tagging Conference
June 15-16,
2021 | 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. ET
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Violence & Protests
38+ wounded, 6 dead in shootings across US over weekend
There have been 270 mass shootings so far in 2021,
according to a Gun Violence Archive report.
4 mass shootings in 6 hours leave 38 wounded, 6 dead across US
At
least four major U.S. cities were reeling from an onslaught of mass shootings
over the weekend that left at least 38 people wounded, six dead and police
officials alarmed that the surge in gun violence is a prelude to
a bloody summer as the nation emerges from the pandemic.
Police in Austin, Cleveland, Chicago and Savannah were all investigating
on Sunday mass shootings that erupted over a six-hour streak that began
around 9 p.m. on Friday and spilled over into Saturday morning.
"It’s very disturbing what we’re seeing across the country and the level
of gun violence that we’re seeing across the country. It’s disturbing and it’s
senseless," Savannah Police Chief Roy Minter, Jr. said at a weekend news
conference after one person was killed and eight others, including an
18-month-old baby and two teenagers, were wounded.
Austin Mayor Steve Adler tweeted that the
mass-casualty shooting occurred even as police initiated multiple
violence prevention programs intended to combat a recent increase in
shootings in the Texas capital city.
"But this crisis requires a broader, coordinated response from all levels of
government," Adler said. "One thing is clear - greater access to firearms
does not equal greater public safety."
The Austin mass shooting was quickly followed by one that erupted on a sidewalk
on the South Side of Chicago that left a woman dead and nine people injured,
according to police. Chicago police officials said investigators are searching
for two suspects who walked up to a crowd gathered on the sidewalk in a
business district in Chicago's Chatham neighborhood and opened fire just
after 2 a.m. on Saturday, according to a police department online incident
report.
The Gun Violence Archive, an online site that tracks shootings across the
country, reports that there have been 270 mass shootings in 2021. The
site defines mass shootings as single incidents in which four or more people are
shot, regardless of whether anyone dies.
yahoo.com
abcnews.go.com
NYC’s spike in grand larcenies is a sign crime will rise as we reopen
New York City’s
recent spike in grand larcenies proves yet again that Mayor Bill de Blasio
has been dead wrong to blame soaring crime on the pandemic. Indeed, it
suggests the violence will grow as the city reopens.
Police citywide fielded 2,683 complaints for grand larceny — thefts exceeding
$1,000 — in the four weeks ending June 6, NYPD figures show.
That’s a 36.9 percent spike from the 1,960 such calls in the same stretch
last year, when much of New York was locked down — driving the city’s grand
larceny numbers to a low not seen in decades. For all of 2020, the NYPD counted
35,505 grand larcenies, the lowest total of the 21st century by more than 2,300,
according to
department stats.
And the uptick is sure to continue, As one cop said: “It was only going to be
a matter of time before grand larcenies went up. Things are starting to open."
That loosening will also offer more targets for the gangbangers and other
thugs behind the rise in shootings and other violent crime. Don’t bet on
things improving until and unless the city has a mayor who puts public safety
first — rather than taking refuge in denial.
nypost.com
Update Article from Friday - Baltimore States Attorney
Marilyn Mosby’s experiment in ‘progressive prosecution’ calls for patience
Ask San Francisco or Chicago How's That working for
Them
Something in short supply in crime-and-grime-weary Baltimore | COMMENTARY
Throughout
the many years since it became a destination for revelers, Fells Point was known
for barrooms and drinking (and heavy drinking and even heavier drinking) and
sometimes a brawl. It was not known for gunfire. So when shots rang out last
weekend and three people ended up wounded,
business owners raised hell — 30 of them threatened to
withhold taxes unless the city stops the midnight mayhem that led to
gunfire — and three law enforcement agencies flooded the zone to restore
order.
That’s the way things work in this town: Places that are stable and relatively
affluent, the parts that attract tourists, the areas with engaged citizens and
business owners who make campaign contributions — those places know how to make
noise and get what amounts to an emergency response from City Hall.
This old-school strategy might make sense in the short term. But it doesn’t get
to the underlying problems unless the law enforcement response is combined
with, even surpassed by, social services.
Continue Reading
Policing in the 21st Century - The Evolution - Role - Profile & Challenge
Police Chiefs and Research Firm Study Clearly Point
Out What Realistic Reform Looks Like
Law enforcement struggles to recruit since killing of George Floyd
Law enforcement agencies across the country experienced a wave of retirements
and departures and are struggling to recruit the next generation of police
officers in the year since
George
Floyd was killed by a cop.
And amid the national reckoning on policing, communities are questioning who
should become a police officer today.
Mass protests and calls for reforming or
defunding the police, as well as
the
coronavirus pandemic, took their toll on officer morale. The
rate of retirements at some departments rose 45% compared with the previous
year. At the same time, hiring slowed by 5%, according to new research on nearly
200 law enforcement agencies conducted by the Washington-based
Police Executive Research Forum and provided to The Associated Press.
The wave comes as local lawmakers have
pledged to enact reforms — such as ending the policies that give
officers immunity for their actions while on-duty — and say they’re
committed to reshaping policing in the 21st century. And recruiters are
increasingly looking for a different kind of recruit to join embattled
departments.
Years ago, a candidate’s qualifications might be centered around his — yes, his
— brawn. Now, police departments say they are seeking recruits who can use their
brain. And they want those future officers to represent their communities.
“Days of old, you wanted someone who actually had the strength to be
more physical,” Atlanta Police Chief Rodney Bryant said. “Today’s police
officers, that’s not what we’re looking for. We’re looking for someone who
can actually relate to the community but also think like the community thinks.”
But the climate today, coupled with increases in crime in some cities, is
creating what Chuck Wexler, the head of the
Police Executive Research
Forum, called a “combustible mixture.”
It’s creating “a crisis on the horizon for police chiefs when they look
at the resources they need, especially during a period when we’re seeing an
increase in murders and shootings,” Wexler said. “It’s a wake-up call.”
nypost.com
Gun Control & Violence Will Be Defining Issues in Midterm Elections
Be sensitive to the corporate position yourself
Rising crime rejuvenates gun control debate on campaign trail
According to data compiled by the Gun Violence Archive for NBC News, firearm
deaths increased by 15 percent last month compared to the same period in 2019.
Republicans have attributed the rise in violence to progressive efforts to
reform and in some cases direct funds away from police departments. But
Democrats say gun policies are at the heart of the issue.
The issue has already permeated the campaign trail ahead of the 2022 midterms.
Experts say that gun control and crime will be defining issues going into the
midterms, and both have the potential to sink candidates.
thehill.com
ATF: "Straw Purchasing" Rising in Tandem with
'Crime Wave'
She bought 47 guns last month. Police are already finding them in shooting
investigations
ATF says more people legally purchase
weapons, then sell on illegal market.
Elwood is not a hunter or collector. The 33-year-old from Crystal was living in
her car. She and her fiancé, Jeffrey Paul Jackson, were purchasing firearms from
shops around the Twin Cities and selling them on the illegal market, federal
prosecutors say.
By the end of the month, three of the guns had already been confiscated by
police in connection with shooting investigations, according to an affidavit
underlying the felony federal charges.
Straw purchases are illegal under Minnesota and federal law, but
investigators say they can be difficult to identify while balancing the
rights of legal gun owners.
Gun legislation, such as requiring owners to promptly report a stolen gun, can
make it more difficult for straw buyers to plead ignorance when their weapons
turn up in a shooting,
Researchers have also seen positive trends in states that required prospective
handgun owners to apply for a license, which mandates the person be
fingerprinted, vetted by law enforcement and required to take a gun safety
course.
Rep. Jeremy Munson, R-Lake Crystal, "I would never support a bill like that,
because that is a gun registry," said Munson. "Every gun registry in history has
been followed by mass gun confiscation. Once the government knows where the guns
are, then they can start taking them away." And gun rights advocates say these
restrictions risk penalizing legal owners as well.
Another avenue of cutting down straw purchases is to focus on the sellers,
Garen Wintemute, the director of the Violence Prevention Research Program at
University of California, said data show certain shops sell a
disproportionately high share of guns that end up on the streets. Law
enforcement paying special attention to these sellers can pressure them to be
more vigilant, he said.
Munson believes this strategy may also have unintended consequences. He said
asking gun dealers to crack down could lead to racial profiling of legal buyers.
startribune.com
'Daylight Doesn't Scare the Bad Guys'
Violence and chaos continues to overrun Washington Square Park
Violence
continued to spiral out of control on Saturday in and around Washington Square
Park, where anti-cop graffiti was scrawled on its arch, a man was
beaten and robbed of his cellphone, two others knifed in a wild brawl and
an elderly cook left bloodied after a vicious morning attack at a
neighborhood diner.
The chaos around the Greenwich Village park left at least six injured and a
27-year-old charged with felony assault, as residents and law enforcement
alike pleaded for an end to the anarchy.
“The perps run this town,” one disgusted NYPD source told The Post in the
wake of the latest madness. “It is scary to walk around New York City streets.
It has gotten so bad that daylight doesn’t scare the bad guys.”
A party promoter
behind the raucous raves in Washington Square Park shrugged off resident
complaints about the landmark’s descent into lawlessness, defiantly telling The
Post this week that if “Karens and Kevins” don’t like it — they should move.
“This is my response to the residents,” said David “Shaman” Ortiz, 28. “If you
have an issue with amplified sound and you live in the downtown area, you
live in the Washington Square Park area, then you should move.
According to a report from Saturday, Washington Square Park’s 10 p.m.
weekend curfew has officially ended.
nypost.com
Woman killed after car drives into protesters in Minneapolis
The area where the incident took place was the scene of protests after
U.S. Marshals shot dead a Black man, Winston Boogie Smith Jr., this month.
A
woman was killed and another person was injured after a car drove into
protesters in Minneapolis late Sunday night, according to police.
Minneapolis Police said in a statement that the driver, who protesters pulled
from the car after the collision, was taken into police custody. He also
received treatment at an area hospital. The police said their preliminary
investigation indicated that the use of drugs or alcohol by the driver may
have contributed to the crash.
The Uptown neighborhood where the incident took place has been the scene of
protests after U.S. Marshals shot dead a Black man, Winston Boogie Smith Jr.,
earlier this month.
nbcnews.com
Man Pleads Guilty to Using Explosive Device in Attempt To Damage Suburban
Chicago Restaurant
On June 1, 2021, DIEGO VARGAS threw a lit explosive device through the window of
Egg Harbor Cafe in Naperville, Ill., resulting in two explosions. Vargas, 26, of
Aurora, pleaded guilty Thursday to one count of maliciously attempting to damage
and destroy a building by means of an explosive device. The charge is punishable
by a minimum sentence of five years in federal prison and a maximum of 20 years.
U.S. District Judge Elaine E. Bucklo set sentencing for Sept. 2, 2021.
justice.gov
Cleveland Man Charged with Starting Fire in Restaurant During May 30
Demonstrations in Downtown Cleveland
Federal grand jury returned an indictment charging Michael Sloan, 26, of
Cleveland, with explosive destruction of property. on May 30, 2020, it is
alleged that the Defendant maliciously began a fire inside Rebol Restaurant,
located on 101 West Superior Ave in Cleveland.
justice.gov
COVID Update
309.2M Vaccinations Given
US: 34.3M Cases - 615K Dead - 28.4M Recovered
Worldwide:
176.7M Cases - 3.8M Dead - 160.8M Recovered
Former Senior Loss Prevention Executive
Know of any fallen LP exec? Let's remember &
recognize.
Private Industry Security Guard Deaths: 279
Law
Enforcement Officer Deaths: 308
*Red indicates change in total deaths
Employers may relax COVID-19 measures in fully vaccinated workplaces,
OSHA says
●
Most employers "no longer need to take steps to protect their workers from
COVID-19 exposure in any workplace, or well-defined portions of a workplace,
where all employees are fully vaccinated," the Occupational Safety and Health
Administration
said in
guidance updated Thursday.
The agency also published
an emergency temporary standard for U.S. healthcare employers. Employers
included in the emergency temporary standard's definition must develop and
implement a plan to protect employees from COVID-19 in the workplace, and they
must designate one or more workplace COVID-19 safety coordinators to implement
and monitor their plans. The document also lays out requirements for patient
screening and management, personal protective equipment and physical distancing,
among other subjects.
- OSHA's updated guidance for all industries, meanwhile, encourages employers to
grant paid time off for employees to get vaccinated. Employers also should
implement physical distancing for unvaccinated and other at-risk workers in
communal work areas, including limiting the number of such workers in one place
at any given time.
The updated guidance may help to resolve some of the questions employers had
following a May update from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
that, with some restrictions, fully masked individuals could resume activities
without wearing a mask. Last month, OSHA directed employers to
follow CDC's guidance on mask use and social distancing for fully vaccinated
workers.
hrdive.com
30% More Hours - Boss Micro-Managing - 20%
Decrease in Output
Remote workers put in longer hours but were less efficient, study says
Employees are beginning to
trickle back into their offices just in time — after a new study found that
remote work reduces productivity.
The study, which surveyed the remote work habits of 10,000 employees at an Asian
technology company between April 2019 and August 2020, found a 20 percent
decrease in output, according to a
recent report.
Although the workers in “Work from home & productivity: evidence from personnel
& analytics data on IT professionals”, by Michael Gibbs, Friederike Mengel and
Christoph Siemroth seemed to work longer hours, they were not as efficient as
they would be in a structured workplace.
The study found that although the workers spent 30 percent more time working
from home, their productivity fell as they spent more time in meetings
with their bosses to constantly outline their responsibilities.
The subjects of the study were highly trained and their work involved
“significant cognitive work, developing new software or hardware applications or
solutions, collaborating with teams of professionals, working with clients, and
engaging in innovation and continuous improvement.”
nypost.com
Retail Leads in Employees Quitting
Four million Americans quit their jobs in April – the highest in two decades
Four million Americans quit their jobs during the month of April, smashing a
20-year record, the US department of labour has said.
In a
release on Tuesday, the department confirmed that the number of those who
had quit jobs across the month increased to a series high of 4 million.
The department said that increases were seen across a number of industries.
The retail sector saw the largest number of job-leavers.
In the retail sector, there were 965,000 open jobs by the month’s end, more
than double the 446,000 jobs on offer in the sector in the same month in 2020.
news.yahoo.com
American workers are quitting at the highest rate in decades
There’s something unusual going on in the labor market: US workers are gaining
leverage over employers. Recovery from the pandemic has been weird, the result
of a collision between public health measures, economic relief provided by
governments and central banks, and social changes inspired by the experience of
enduring coronavirus. This has resulted in a labor market that seems at once too
hot and too cold: The high number of long-term unemployed, for example, suggests
a very loose labor market, while the number of firms who say they can't fill
jobs suggests a tight one.
finance.yahoo.com
TSA screens 2 million people Friday for first time since coronavirus lockdowns
began
Early in the pandemic, passenger numbers fell by as much as 95 percent from
normal levels
The symbolic achievement underscores how air travel is rebounding as Americans
have been vaccinated against the virus.
Many of TSA’s 50,000 officers continued to work during the pandemic, and
8,119 tested positive for the virus. Sixteen officers have died of covid-19,
along with a screening contractor.
Before the pandemic began, 2.5 million people a day would regularly pass
through TSA’s gates, and Friday’s figures represent just three quarters of the
volume on the same day in 2019.
Federal aid and banning layoffs protections are due to end in September.
On Friday, United Airlines said it did not expect to conduct any furloughs when
they do, a step a major flight attendants’ union said demonstrated that the
government aid had worked.
washingtonpost.com
18 Incidents a Day
Delta Off-Duty Flight Attendant Became an 'Unruly
Passenger Who Forced Delta Flight to Divert
Why the explosion in unruly air passengers?
It feels as if every day we read about another disorderly passenger on a
commercial flight. But in reality, the numbers are even worse than that.
Since January, the Federal Aviation Administration recorded approximately
2,900 reports of “unruly
behavior by passengers” — which comes out to almost 18 incidents per day.
For perspective, this is
nearly 20 times higher than what’s normally recorded in an entire year.
As the head of one of the flight attendants unions recently
explained, there has been a “constant combative attitude” by some
passengers that has alarmingly led to flight attendants being attacked and
injured. Just last month, a passenger
punched a Southwest flight attendant in the face, knocking out two of her
teeth.
As the FAA has reported, of the 2,900 incidents of unruliness,
about 2,200 of those reports involved passengers “refusing to comply with
the federal facemask mandate.”
These mask haters should know that the penalty for those who engage in unruly
behavior could be far more than being just escorted off a flight. The FAA’s
“zero-tolerance” policy for such conduct has resulted in the agency
seeking fines of $9,000 to $15,000 against individual passengers.
keyt.com
Editor's Note: Does corporate America need a written code of conduct
for business travelers?
Maryland COVID hospitalizations drop to March 2020 level, while state records
lowest positivity rate
Dallas County lowers COVID-19 threat level for unvaccinated
Apple to go maskless in many of its stores from Tuesday
Home Depot vs. Global Shipping Crisis
Home Depot has contracted its own container ship to sidestep global shipping
crisis
Home Depot, hoping to sidestep a global shipping crisis, has contracted its
own ship to transport its goods.
The
home-improvement store is one of many retailers grappling with shipping
delays and rising costs caused by supply-chain problems. According to
data from the Journal of Commerce,
cited by
CNBC, Home Depot is the third-largest importer by sea freight in the US.
"We have a ship that's solely going to be ours," Home Depot COO Ted
Decker said in an interview with CNBC. "It's just going to go back and forth
with 100% dedicated to Home Depot."
A breakdown in the freight supply chain, created by falling demand in the first
half of 2020 followed by a surge at the end of the year, has led to delays, port
traffic jams, and blockages. A lack of containers and dock workers is making
this worse.
For retailers, this means a risk of low stock, especially as we approach the
holiday season.
businessinsider.com
Get Ready for Holiday Delays
A COVID-19 outbreak at a major Chinese port is worsening the global shipping
crisis
Global shipping disruptions could trigger delays in goods in this year's
holiday season, industry experts say. Shipping disruptions around the world
could lead to a shortage of goods for the holiday season, according to industry
experts.
A recent coronavirus outbreak in the province of Guangdong, South China,
prompted authorities to introduce strict COVID-19 measures, causing congestion
at four major ports, Reuters reported on Friday.
This is worsening the existing worldwide shipping crisis that has hiked
costs and led to a shortage of popular goods, from chicken and semiconductors,
as reported by Insider's Rachel Premack.
The new Chinese port restrictions, which include disinfection checks and
limits on the vessel numbers, have triggered a backlog in shipments in ports
including Yantian, Shekou, Chiwan, and Nansha.
businessinsider.com
NYC’s next mayor will struggle to overturn hard-left criminal-justice ‘reforms’
Violent crime in New York City is soaring: Murder is up 11.7 percent over
last year; shootings, a staggering 68 percent. And it’s likely here to stay
Not so fast. De Blasio has been a terrible mayor, having wrecked a safe and
prosperous city. But he didn’t act alone. His cronies and comrades in the City
Council and state Legislature have substantially and systematically refashioned
the law to ensure that criminals will have the upper hand, while law enforcers
are hobbled.
These legal changes won’t soon or easily be undone.
In 2014, de Blasio dropped the city’s appeal against several spurious,
anti-anti-crime suits pertaining to patrolling and instead submitted to the
supervision of an outside “NYPD Monitor.” The monitor oversees training and
procedures, audits the NYPD’s patrol practices and reports to the federal court
on progress toward its goals.
nypost.com
Former 'Stone Care of Texas' Retail Manager Gets 49 Months Fed. Prison for
Stealing Over $470,000
On July 30, 2020, 48-year-old Deanna Bates Wehde of San Antonio, pleaded guilty
to one count of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. By
pleading guilty, Wehde admitted that while employed by Stone Care of Texas
between May 2016 and September 2018, she defrauded the company by using
company credit cards issued in the names of former employees for
business-related travel to make unauthorized purchases and cash withdrawals for
her own personal use and benefit.
justice.gov
Digital Consumption Keeps the Lead & Keeps
Growing
Last year US adults spent double the time on digital media vs. traditional media
Last year, the average US adult spent more time per day with most media formats
and devices, including TV. Although adults will spend nearly as much time with
media this year, their TV viewing time will drop below pre-pandemic levels.
Mall REIT Washington Prime Group lands in bankruptcy court
Last week's #1 article --
FBI releases report looking at 20 years of active shooter incidents
In
a study looking at 20 years of active shooter incidents in this country, the FBI
found California had more incidents than any other state. The report
comes out just a few days after a man opened fire at a Northern California rail
yard, killing nine coworkers and then himself.
The agency
looked at data from 333 incidents between 2000 and 2019. In those
incidents, a total of 2,851 people died or were wounded, excluding the
shooters.
Of the 345 shooters involved in the incidents, the FBI says 119 took their
own life and 150 were arrested by police; other outcomes include the
shooter(s) being killed by police, killed by a citizen or not arrested at this
time.
About 29% of the incidents happened at businesses that are open to
pedestrian traffic; this includes places like retail stores or strip malls,
office buildings, restaurants, etc. About 15% of the incidents happened in open
spaces and 13% happened at a K-12 school.
The
report doesn't look into the motives or reasons for the shootings, rather,
it charts where these incidents happened and how they ended.
thedenverchannel.com
FBI - Active Shooter Incidents 20-Year Review, 2000-2019
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Russia, U.S. and other countries reach new agreement against cyber hacking, even
as attacks continue
Russia and the United States — along with 23 other countries —
recently reaffirmed that states should not hack each other’s critical
infrastructure in peacetime or shelter cyber criminals who conduct attacks on
other countries.
But Russia, which was among the states originally agreeing to the norms at the
United Nations, has violated them repeatedly over the years. Experts are
skeptical those violations will halt unless the United States and its allies
impose far more serious consequences.
President Biden is on an eight-day trip to Europe that will culminate in a
meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday. He will raise issues
of cybersecurity, including his concern that Moscow is harboring hackers who
have carried out damaging ransomware attacks against some of the United States’
most critical sectors. An attack last month led to
a days-long shutdown of the country’s largest refined fuel pipeline,
followed by an attack that disrupted the world’s largest meat processor.
National security adviser Jake Sullivan said Wednesday; “We do not judge that
the Russian government has been behind these recent ransomware attacks, but we
do judge that actors in Russia have. And we believe that Russia can take and
must take steps to deal with it.”
The question now is whether Russia, and other countries such as China, which
affirmed the cyber norms in May, can or will be held accountable.
Current and former officials say the global norms provide a foundation for
accountability by explaining the bounds of acceptable conduct in cyberspace and
by creating an expectation of good behavior. The
guidelines were hammered out by the U.N. Group of Governmental Experts on
Advancing Responsible State Behavior in Cyberspace. In March, the
2015 norms were endorsed by all 193 members of the United Nations.
White House officials have downplayed expectations from the summit given
the tense relationship between Washington and Moscow.
washingtonpost.com
From Faster Cars in the 1920's to Encrypted Messaging in 2020 - The Crooks Stay
One Step Ahead
Bitcoin and Encryption: A Race Between Criminals and the F.B.I.
Criminals have perennially exploited
technology to stay a step ahead of law enforcement.
The
F.B.I. struck back in the past week with a pair of victories: a seizure of
most of the $4 million ransom in Bitcoin that Russian hackers extorted from
an American pipeline operator, and the announcement of a yearslong sting where
thousands of suspects were duped into using a messaging app secretly
controlled by the authorities. More than 800 people were arrested in more than a
dozen countries.
The breakthroughs came in part because law enforcement officials learned how to
leverage two rapidly advancing technologies — encryption and cryptocurrencies —
that had previously been a boon for criminals.
Yet the events did little to fundamentally alter the challenges for the
authorities in an increasingly digital world, according to former law
enforcement officials, prosecutors, historians and technology experts. The
global sting is highly unlikely to keep criminals from using encryption and
could encourage them to go even further underground, former and experts
officials said. And while the F.B.I. has shown that it can recover stolen
cryptocurrencies, doing so requires resources beyond the reach of most law
enforcement agencies.
Ultimately, the cases were the latest iteration in the decades-long back and
forth between lawbreakers and the F.B.I. in which both sides have seized on
technological advances, whether it is criminals hiding behind encryption or
investigators exploiting
facial recognition,
drones and other mechanisms.
“Police today are facing a situation of an explosion of data,” said Yossi Carmil,
the chief executive of Cellebrite, an Israeli company that has sold data
extraction tools to more than 5,000 law enforcement agencies, including hundreds
of small police departments across the United States. “The solutions are there.
There is no real challenge to accessing the data.”
Challenge of Encryption & Operation Trojan Shield -
Continue Reading
You Don't Want to Let Your CEO Walk Into
This - Control the Narrative
Congress Grills Colonial Pipeline's CEO & Takes Him to Task Last Week
For Basically No Security Plan & For Not Communicating Before Paying Ransom
Recommended Reading For Your CEO Before Testifying
on Cyber Security and Data Breach
Colonial Pipeline may use recovered ransomware attack funds to boost
cybersecurity
Editor:
Both houses basically rip into this CEO and questions his decision making and
position on cybersecurity. He wasn't prepared.
Senate Hearing: During a sometimes-tense Senate Homeland Security and
Governmental Affairs Committee hearing, Blount indicated that the company
did not consult with the FBI and other agencies before it paid the equivalent of
$4.4 million in bitcoin to regain control of its systems.
Yes, and: Blount also testified that multifactor authentication was
not used to secure the account suspected to have been exploited by hackers
to gain access to company systems and that there was no plan in place to
respond specifically to a ransomware attack.
Senators on both sides of the aisle criticized Blount, pointing out that
the FBI and other agencies recommend against paying a ransom as it can encourage
criminals to carry out future attacks and the funds could be used for criminal
activities.
“My concern is how unprepared Colonial Pipeline was,” Sen. Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.)
told reporters following the hearing. “I have small school districts in New
Hampshire that are more prepared than Colonial Pipeline appeared to be, and
that’s really concerning.”
House Hearing: Colonial Pipeline may use the recovered funds paid out to
cyber criminals as part of a ransomware attack last month to increase
cybersecurity, Joseph Blount, the company's president and CEO, said Wednesday.
“We are always in the process of hardening our systems and making investments in
IT and cybersecurity at Colonial, so your request today, and putting an
additional $2.2 million into hardening our systems further, is not a difficult
one to address and agree to,” Blount testified in response to a question
from House Homeland Security Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) on
whether the ransom funds would be used to shore up security.
Recommended Reading
Trickbot Investigation Shows Details of Massive Cybercrime Effort
Nearly a score of cybercriminals allegedly worked together to create the
Trickbot malware and deploy it against more than a million users, an unsealed
indictment claims.
The group behind the Trickbot malware operation, which infected more than a
million systems in nearly a dozen countries, includes malware experts, freelance
developers, and pay-as-you-go money mules, among other participants, according
to an indictment against one developer unsealed this week.
Details from the
indictment against Latvian national Alla Witte — charged with being a
developer with the group — paints a picture of a sprawling, and largely ad hoc,
organization that expanded its operations to include almost 20 different
participants, and probably more. The group gave programming problems to
potential developers, discussed which programmers suited their needs, and used a
variety of cybercrime services to improve their operations.
darkreading.com
CISA Expanding Mandatory Vulnerability Disclosure Program
Security Agency Will Use
Bugcrowd, EnDyna for Platform
The
U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency is preparing to expand
its vulnerability research and disclosure program, which is now mandatory
for nearly all executive branch agencies within the federal government.
On Tuesday, CISA announced that it would establish a vulnerability disclosure
policy platform for ethical hackers and security researchers to use to
officially report bugs and flaws in applications and websites used by about 150
government agencies that fall under the umbrella of the federal civilian
executive branch.
The cybersecurity agency is launching the disclosure platform in conjunction
with Bugcrowd, which CISA will use to host the vulnerability disclosure
platform, and EnDyna, a government IT contractor that will provide a SaaS
component to the bug disclosure platform, according to the joint announcement
(see:
The Economics of Software Flaw Discoveries, Exploits).
bankinfosecurity.com
NIST Releases Tips & Tactics for Control System Cybersecurity
NIST
has developed an infographic,
Tips and Tactics for Control Systems Cybersecurity, with quick steps
control system owners/operators can take now to get started or refreshed on
their cybersecurity journey and to help manage their control system
cybersecurity risks. We also coordinated with the Cybersecurity &
Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) to find out what resources they may
recommend and included them below for you as well.
nist.gov |
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Lying and Legislation
A major
change in the rules regarding confession evidence is starting to gain traction
in the United States. A United States Supreme Court case, Frazier v. Cupp (1969)
allows investigators to use deceptive interrogation tactics in effort to get to
the truth – but this is changing. The legislature in Illinois, with bipartisan
support, has just voted to pass SB 2122 which outlaws the practice of using
deception about evidence or the consequences of the crime to youthful offenders
during an interrogation. Truth be told, it is unbelievable that this hasn’t been
the law the entire time. WZ was proud to have been consulted on this bill and
help lead the charge for change across the US.
Read more here |
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Amazon Lobbies Against INFORM Act
Amazon is fighting against laws that could force it to verify third-party
sellers' identities and give out their contact information
These acts would force e-commerce sites to verify third-party sellers'
identities and provide contact information to customers.
Amazon
has lobbied against new laws that would force it to investigate third-party
sellers' identities more thoroughly, and share contact details for them with
customers, Axios reports.
Amazon is fighting against a specific type of new legislation called INFORM
acts, which have been proposed both at state and Congressional levels, per
Axios.
These acts have been supported by retailers including Home Depot and
Walgreens, and if passed they would require online retailers to verify the
identity of third-party sellers and provide customers with contact details for
the sellers. Amazon, along with fellow e-retailers Etsy and eBay, argues that
the legislation endangers the privacy of third-party sellers.
" The INFORM Act favors large brick-and-mortar retailers, at the expense
of small businesses that sell online, while doing nothing to prevent fraud and
abuse or hold bad actors accountable," an Amazon spokesperson told Axios.
This week Amazon achieved a partial victory — the legislation was not
attached to a sweeping tech and science funding bill that passed the Senate.
The new US Innovation and Competition Act is aimed at keeping the US tech sector
competitive with China. It still has to pass the House, and Axios notes that
amendments that include INFORM legislation are still possible.
businessinsider.com
The Same-Day Delivery Explosion
UPS Explores Same-Day Delivery Option
CEO says United Parcel is looking at same-day service employed by
gig-economy players
United
Parcel Service Inc. is exploring a same-day option, a delivery model that has
been employed by gig-economy players, as the pandemic has accelerated the
shift to e-commerce.
“We don’t have a same-day product today, as you know, and so we’re looking at
it,” Chief Executive Carol Tomé said in response to a question on an
investor-day webcast Wednesday. “We don’t have this all the way figured out, but
we’ve got a team of people looking at it.”
She said the company is testing the concept and didn’t offer other
details. A UPS spokesman said the company doesn’t comment on its pilot programs.
The idea comes as the acceleration of e-commerce has pushed retailers to add
more curbside and same-day delivery options.
Amazon.com Inc., one of UPS’s biggest customers, and Instacart Inc. are among
the current providers of same-day delivery. Target owns Shipt, which does
same-day deliveries from its stores as well as from chains like CVS and
Petco. Food-delivery services such as DoorDash Inc. and Uber Technologies Inc.
have expanded into groceries during the pandemic, though profits have been
elusive.
UPS and rival FedEx Corp. have long provided overnight services but they
generally don’t deliver packages on the same day they receive them. Both
companies have begun offering services where they pick up parcels from some
stores in evenings and deliver them the next day. FedEx offers same-day services
in limited markets. It has also been testing robots that could make
deliveries of medicine, pizzas and other items to consumers’ homes.
wsj.com
GameStop unveils new CEO, CFO leading e-commerce transformation |
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Jersey City, NJ: $40K in cash, merchandise stolen from high-end sneaker store
Thousands of dollars in cash and merchandise was stolen from a high-end sneaker
and apparel store in Jersey City, police said in radio transmissions. Jersey
City police responded to Soled Out, on Newark Avenue, Friday morning and were
told by employees that a break-in occurred sometime between 8 p.m. Thursday and
10 a.m. Friday, police said in radio transmissions. Police were told that one
safe was stolen and another safe was broken into at the store, and $15,000 to
$20,000 in cash, as well as $20,000 in merchandise was missing, according to the
transmissions.
nj.com
Santa Cruz, CA: Police in California recover 9 stolen vintage guitars valued at
$225,000
Authorities recovered nine vintage guitars stolen by a $ 2 million robbery in
Southern California almost a year ago. The San Francisco Chronicle reported late
Saturday that the Santa Cruz police found the guitar after providing search
warrants in three different locations in the city following hints from the Los
Angeles Police Department. The instrument is worth a total of $ 225,0000. They
were part of about $ 2 million in music equipment stolen from a Los Angeles
County storage unit in July. Southern California police have made several
arrests in connection with last year’s case. Authorities later discovered that
guitars were sold online through the Santa Cruz address.
californianewstimes.com
DOJ Dallas: SENTENCING – ESLEVY VARGAS-AVILA - 22 Yrs Prison for Violently
Robbing Two Traveling Diamond Salesmen
On June 7, Eslevy Vargas-Avila, 31, was sentenced to 22 years in federal
prison for two counts of interference with commerce by robbery and two
counts of using or brandishing a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence.
In June 2016, Vargas-Avila and other co-conspirators conducted surveillance
of jewelry stores to identify traveling jewelry salesmen. Vargas-Avila and the
co-conspirators violently robbed two traveling salesmen at gunpoint in Tarrant
County. This case was investigated by the FBI, Dallas Police Department,
Garland Police Department, Arlington Police Department, and DFW Airport
Department of Public Safety. Assistant U.S. Attorney Keith Robinson prosecuted
the case.
justice.gov
Two Dominican Republic Citizens Plead Guilty to Mail Fraud and Aggravated
Identity Theft Scheme
Toledo, OH: Woman, man charged with attempting to steal nearly $3,500 in JC
Penney merch
West Monroe, LA: Man armed with Knife steals nearly $400 of merchandise
(including Air-soft Rifle) from Academy Sports
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Shootings & Deaths
One of 14 people hurt in Austin mass shooting dies; 1 arrested
One
of 14 people injured in a mass shooting in downtown Austin, Texas, has
died, police say. Douglas John Kantor, 25, died from his injures around noon
local time Sunday, Austin Police said in a release. Authorities have arrested
one person in connection with the shooting early Saturday morning, Mayor Steve
Adler's office said earlier. Officials released no information about the arrest.
On Saturday, Austin Interim Police Chief Joseph Chacon told a press briefing
that two of the injured were in critical condition.
Chacon said authorities had identified two male suspects, and added that it
appeared this was an isolated incident between the two parties. The scene of the
shooting in downtown Austin. Almost all of those injured were "innocent
bystanders," the chief added.
Austin police got their first 911 call shortly before 1:30 a.m., followed by
several more calls of shots fired, Chacon said. As shots rang out, officers on
the block were able to immediately respond, he said. "They were there within
seconds," the chief said. "And quickly identified several shooting victims that
were in distress. They began immediate life-saving measures." He credits their
speedy action, in part, for the lack of fatalities in the shooting. An 'uptick
in gun violence'
Chacon said investigators are reviewing video footage from multiple sources,
including the city's system of video surveillance cameras, to determine what
happened. "Officers have their body-worn cameras, we have the public safety,
HALO camera system which we have had for a number of years, which did capture
parts of this incident," Chacon said. "And of course the local businesses
themselves have security footage that we are reviewing for evidence." An ATF K9
unit surveys the area near the scene of the shooting.
cnn.com
Atlanta, GA: Lenox Square Security Guard critically injured in shooting; 2 in
custody
Atlanta
police are investigating after a security guard was held at gunpoint and then
shot during a robbery attempt at Lenox Square Mall Sunday night. According to
witnesses, around 8:30 p.m. two masked gunmen appeared to attempt to enter the
mall after it was closed. One suspect took off and ran across the street
into the Westin reception area, a hotel employee said. Investigators say two
suspects were taken into custody Sunday. The front of the Apple store at
Lenox Square was damaged during the incident. According to officials, the
security guard was taken to a nearby hospital and is listed in critical
condition. An investigation continues.
fox5atlanta.com
Concord, NC: Altercation in Concord Mall’s parking lot near Charlotte preceded
shooting, police say
Concord police said late Sunday that an afternoon altercation in the parking lot
outside of the AMC 24 movie theater in Concord Mills mall left one person
injured. Police initially said in a tweet at 4:15 p.m. that a suspect was in
custody. He later was identified by police in a news release as Renzo Gabriel
Carnevalini Medina, of Charlotte.
heraldonline.com
Arizona Burger King erupts in gunfire during violent dispute, video shows
Surveillance
footage sheds new light on a dispute inside an Arizona Burger King that ended in
gunfire in March. The suspected shooter, Dakota Kern, was in a car with three
other people as the driver tried to pick up a Postmates order in the drive-thru,
according to an arrest warrant. Confusion about the order ensued, leading to
Kern and other occupants parking the car and going into the Burger King, video
obtained by FOX 10 Phoenix shows. Kern accused the employees of using a racial
slur, so she allegedly started grabbing items and throwing them at the employees
inside the restaurant.
Eventually, Kern and the other people left the Burger King, at which point an
employee went outside to take pictures of the car's license plate with a camera
phone. That's when Kern allegedly grabbed a 9MM handgun and chased one victim
down, firing multiple shots at the employee. The employees ran back inside the
store for their safety. One of the bullets traveled through the rear windshield
of a car across the street and came to a stop in the driver's seat headrest, in
the direction of the driver's head. Another stray round also struck an
unoccupied vehicle in a parking lot. Kern, who was on probation at the time of
the shooting for burglary, was arrested in April on three counts of aggravated
assault with a deadly weapon and five other charges.
foxnews.com
Gary, IN: Security Guard shot, killed during bank robbery; 1 suspect in custody
Tucson, AZ: Man turns himself in after deadly shooting outside C-Store
North Nashville, TN: Man charged in fatal stabbing of woman inside liquor store
Baton Rouge, LA: Man shot to death while sitting in vehicle outside convenience
store
Yonkers, NY: 3 Charged With Attempted Murder in Daytime Drive-by Shooting
outside C-Store
Wellington, FL: Sheriff's deputies cleared in 2018 The Mall at Wellington Green
Christmas Eve shooting
Robberies,
Incidents & Thefts
Griffin, GA: CVS Surveillance video captures reported pharmacy burglary
City
of Griffin detectives are working to track down thieves who allegedly broke into
a drug store. The reported burglary happened in the overnight hours between June
6 and June 7 at the Hospital Discount Drugs on South 8th Street. According to a
Facebook post, surveillance video captured two men entering the pharmacy area
where the medication is stored. Police did not say how much medication was taken
during the theft. A police spokesperson said the suspects had on gloves and ski
masks. “The only thing that stands out on either individual is the white tennis
shoe with the black (Nike) swoosh,” according to police. Pharmacy robberies and
burglaries appear to be a growing concern for metro Atlanta police departments.
cbs46.com
O’Fallon, MO: Nebraska pair sentenced to decades in prison for multiple armed
robberies across the Midwest
Port Charlotte, FL: Sub shop manager caught on camera stealing from cash
register
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●
AT&T – Lansing, MI –
Robbery
●
AT&T - Clearwater, FL
– Robbery
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C-Store – Hubbard, OH
– Armed Robbery
●
C-Store – Salina, KS –
Armed Robbery
●
C-Store – Phoenix, AZ
– Armed Robbery
●
C-Store – Seguin, TX –
Armed Robbery
●
CBD – Ottawa County,
MI - Burglary
●
Dollar General
-Charlotte County, FL – Robbery
●
Gas Station – Silver
Creek, GA – Armed Robbery
●
Grocery – Jonesboro,
AR –Robbery
●
Grocery – Lincoln, NE
– Burglary
●
Guns - Susquehanna
County, PA – Burglary
●
Jewelry – Downey, CA – Robbery
●
Jewelry – Pooler, GA – Robbery
●
Jewelry – National City, CA – Robbery
●
Jewelry – Tulsa, OK – Robbery
●
Jewelry – Auburn Hills, MI - Robbery
●
Mall – Atlanta, GA -
Armed Robbery
●
Restaurant – Jackson
County, GA – Armed Robbery (McDonald’s)
●
Restaurant – Dublin,
OH – Burglary
●
Shoes – Jersey City,
NJ – Burglary
●
Sporting Goods – West
Monroe, LA – Armed Robbery
●
7-Eleven – San
Antonio, TX – Robbery
●
7-Eleven – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
●
7-Eleven – Baltimore,
MD – Armed Robbery
Daily Totals:
• 20 robberies
• 5 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
Click to enlarge map
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Joe Suarez named Regional Loss Prevention Manager for Goodwill Southern
California
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Submit Your New Hires/Promotions or New
Position
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Featured Job Spotlights
Sr. Lead, Organized Retail Crime
Baltimore, MD
- posted May 25
The Sr Lead, Organized Retail
Crime (ORC) is responsible for the direction and support of Organized Retail
Crime (ORC) investigations, strategies and training to ensure the effective
execution of asset protection and retail initiatives...
Field Loss Prevention Manager
Nashville, TN
- posted May 21
Staples is focused on our customer and our community. As a Field Loss Prevention
Manager for Staples, you will manage and coordinate Loss Prevention and Safety
Programs intended to protect Staples assets and ensure a safe work environment
within Staples Retail locations...
LP Auditor & Fraud Detection Analyst
Greater Boston, MA
- posted May 11
As a Loss Prevention Auditor and Fraud Detection Analyst for Staples, you will
conduct LP operational field audits remote, virtual and in person, within a base
of 60 retail stores to ensure compliance to operational standards to drive
operational excellence and preserve profitability...
Regional Asset Protection Manager
Phoenix, Dallas, Denver and Houston
- posted April 22
Victra is the leading exclusive, premium retailer for Verizon with a mission of
connecting technology to life in the most trusting and profitable way. As the
Regional Asset Protection Manager, you will be very logical, efficient, orderly,
and organized in always safeguarding our company assets from losses due to theft
or fraud...
Area Loss Prevention Manager
Pittsburgh, PA
- posted May 11
Our Area Loss Prevention Managers ensure safe and secure stores through the
objective identification of loss and risk opportunities. Our Area Loss
Prevention Managers plan and prioritize to provide an optimal customer
experience to their portfolio of stores. They thrive on supporting and building
high performance teams that execute with excellence...
Area Loss Prevention Manager
Sacramento, CA
- posted April 20
Our Area Loss Prevention Managers ensure safe and secure stores through the
objective identification of loss and risk opportunities. Our Area Loss
Prevention Managers plan and prioritize to provide an optimal customer
experience to their portfolio of stores. They thrive on supporting and building
high performance teams that execute with excellence...
Corporate Security Manager
Calabasas, CA
- posted April 6
The Corporate Security Manager will, among other things, (a) be responsible for
ensuring a safe and secure environment for our employees, vendors, and visitors,
(b) develop, manage, execute and continuously improve corporate security
processes and protocols, and (c) lead a team of security specialists at our
corporate offices...
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Featured Jobs
JOB TITLE |
COMPANY |
CITY/STATE |
DATE
ADDED |
Vice President |
Associate VP, Inventory Control |
Barneys New York |
New York, NY |
May 7 |
Associate VP, AP |
Bath & Body Works |
Columbus, OH |
April 19 |
VP, LP |
Michaels Companies |
Irving, TX |
May 24 |
Director |
Dir. AP |
Bar Louie |
Addison, TX |
June 1 |
Zone AP Dir. |
Family Dollar |
Chicago, IL |
June 10 |
Sr. Dir. Global Security & Business Continuity Planning |
Gap Inc. |
U.S. |
April 30 |
Dir. Business Continuity Planning |
Gap Inc. |
U.S. |
April 30 |
Sr. Dir. Risk Management, LP & Safety |
Goodwill of Central Florida |
Orlando, FL |
April 6 |
Dir. Safety/Risk Mgmt.
|
Goodwill of SE Louisiana |
New Orleans, LA |
April 2 |
Sr. Dir. LP |
Harbor Freight Tools |
Calabasas, CA |
January 28 |
Dir. Store LP |
Michaels Companies |
Irving, TX |
May 24 |
Dir. Global Distribution Safety & Security |
Michael Kors |
Los Angeles, CA |
April 30 |
Dir. of Safety |
Ocean State Job Lot |
North Kingstown, RI |
June 1 |
Executive Dir. AP |
Panda Restaurant Group |
Rosemead, CA |
January 28 |
Director, AP Finance & Analytics |
Rite Aid |
United States |
January 26 |
AVP, Regional Dir. of AP |
Saks Fifth Avenue |
New York, NY |
June 1 |
Corporate/Senior Manager |
Sr. Mgr. AP |
HelloFresh |
Dallas, TX |
May 7 |
Sr. Mgr Environmental Health Safety |
Home Depot |
Atlanta, GA |
May 14 |
Mgr Safety Operations |
Home Depot |
Atlanta, GA |
May 14 |
Head of AP |
Ollie's Bargain Outlet |
Harrisburg, PA |
June 10 |
Divisional LP Manager |
Sherwin-Williams |
Cleveland, OH |
June 10 |
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Preparing for an interview should be exhaustive. However, the day of the
interview you should clear your head and not do any prep at all or look at any
notes other than the well thought out prepared questions you've come up with. A
clear mind performs better than one that's cluttered and trying to remember
everything. And all the prep you've done should be well stored in your mind.
Have faith in it and try to relax the day of the interview and work out if you
can before it. The mind body connection is a powerful thing and your brain
cannot operate at 100% if your body isn't there with it.
Just a Thought, Gus
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