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Justin Demes, LPC named Divisional Director AP
for Macy's
Before
joining Macy's as Divisional Director Asset Protection, Justin spent a year with
Bath & Body Works as Regional Asset Protection Manager. Prior to that, he served
as Regional Asset Protection Manager at Family Dollar for two years. Earlier in
his career, he held roles with JCPenney, Macy's and 7-Eleven. Congratulations,
Justin! |
See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here
Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position
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Everon receives 2024 HIRE Vets Gold Medallion Award from the U.S.
Department of Labor
Leading, national integrator recognized for hiring veterans,
affirms status as military-effective organization
Boca
Raton, Fla. – November 4, 2024 – U.S. Acting Secretary of Labor
Julie A. Su recognized
Everon
(“Everon, LLC” or “The Company”), a leading security integrator and
premier provider of commercial security, fire and life safety solutions
in the U.S., as one of the 839 recipients of the 2024 HIRE Vets
Medallion Award during a virtual award ceremony presented by U.S.
Department of Labor. Everon earned the gold award after applying earlier
this year. The Honoring Investments in Recruiting and Employing American
Military Veterans Act (HIRE Vets Act) Medallion Program is the only
federal award program that recognizes employers who successfully
recruit, hire, and retain veterans.
“We’re extremely passionate about being a military-effective
organization and showing our nation’s former servicemembers a long-term
path to success as they reenter civilian life,” said Mike McWilliams,
President & Chief Operating Officer for Everon. “Given their unique set
of technical skills, a call to serve others, and valuable leadership
experience, former military servicemembers are some of the best
professionals in the security industry. We’re proud of all the veterans
who’ve joined us at Everon, and whose drive for excellence matches our
own.”
In an effort to foster an environment that would attract former
servicemembers to a civilian career in the security industry, Everon has
championed a number of veteran integration assistance programs to ensure
the inclusion and success of military employees within the organization.
This includes dedicated mentorship and peer-to-peer communications
channels, the opportunity to participate in service projects that
benefit nonprofit organizations whose missions support veteran and
military member communities, and inclusive company events to honor
service members and their families.
Read more
here
Election 2024: Unrest Coming?
Businesses Brace for Nationwide Unrest
Trump vs. Harris: Cities across US board up ahead of election
Business owners from Washington, DC, to Portland, Oregon, are
taking extra security measures in fear of post-election riots and chaos
Business owners across the United States are boarding up their
windows in preparation for potential post-election fallout.
Before
voters head to the polls Tuesday with Donald Trump and Kamala Harris
vying for the presidency, several businesses in Washington, D.C.,
were boarded up last week near the intersection of 17th Street NW
and H Street NW, Fox 5 D.C. reported – a short walk from the White
House.
On the other side of the country, business owners in Portland,
Oregon, who were hit hard by violence following the 2016 election and
protests sparked by the death of George Floyd in 2020, are also
preparing for potential riots.
"It is completely ridiculous that we have to do this," downtown
Portland employee Ebony Boger told ABC 7 News. "It's very precautionary,
and I see why because I was here four years ago, and it was crazy down
here. It's not shocking. I'm kind of used to it. I think they should do
it."
U.S. Capitol Police will switch to what they call "enhanced posture,"
which will include additional officers and "bike rack" fencing around
the White House.
Some Portland business owners told KOIN 6 News that they were adding
extra security in preparation, while others said that they were
carrying on business as usual.
Retail store owners told the outlet that they
may pull expensive items off the shelves, and that they were hiring
overnight security on Nov. 5 for election night. Some of them
said they were not worried about the prospect of unrest until they heard
about ballot box fires set this year.
foxnews.com
No Credible Threats in D.C. But Stores
Not Taking Chances
Stores near White House board up ahead of election
DC Police Chief Pamela Smith says so far there is no credible
threat to the nation's capital ahead of the election.
With just days ahead of the election, some buildings within blocks
from the White House have boarded up their store fronts.
During a public safety meeting last week, Ward 2 Councilmember Brooke
Pinto brought up the concern of residents and businesses owners
to DC Mayor Muriel Bowser.
"We are already getting requests from businesses if they should board
up. We are getting requests about people moving trash cans inside,"
Pinto said.
"I don't think they should be boarding up their buildings,"
Bowser responded ahead of a public safety briefing focused on the weeks
from the election to the inauguration.
Bowser said her administration is holding weekly meetings leading up
the inauguration to brief District businesses about potential
threats and advise them on any additional safety precautions they should
take.
Despite the Mayor's advice, businesses along 17th Street Northwest
and Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest have decided to board up.
wusa9.com
High fences, boarded-up businesses: DC security raised for Election Day
Washington DC gears up for possible election chaos with metal fencing
around VP’s home and business boarded up
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
It's Not Just Organized Criminals -
It's Everyday Americans
The rise of the Middle-Class Shoplifter
Middle-class Americans are shoplifting everything from tape
measures to blocks of cheese.
As
much as retailers are quick to point the finger at organized operators
for their theft problems, there's another group that gets a lot less lip
service: the opportunists, like Carson, who are pocketing things from
time to time because they feel like it. These shoplifters have
existed forever — adults with decent jobs who are firmly in the
middle class. And they're everywhere.
"It's your normal, everyday person, doesn't matter sex, gender, age,
whatever, it's just people that see an opportunity and go, 'Huh, I
bet I could steal that and nobody would know,'" said Joshua Jacobson, a
loss-prevention professional in California who's worked for half a dozen
major retailers over the past decade. "They're like a giant organized
mob, they just don't know each other."
Shoplifting is illegal, and there are costs to it, even if you don't
love the company that's bearing them. Many people find this sort of
behavior objectionable and unethical. But after chatting with members of
the smallest-time thieves brigade, it was clear that they generally
aren't concerned about the moral weight of their actions — they choose
to ignore it, or they don't really consider what they're doing as
wrong.
In recent weeks, I spoke with nearly a dozen of these non-organized
middle-class retail thieves to get a sense of why and how they do it. I
also talked to loss-prevention professionals and retail industry
analysts about what they're seeing. The takeaway: A lot of people
steal, from small-stakes stuff at the drugstore to larger items worth
hundreds of dollars at hardware chains. Their motivations are
generally not the direct result of economic need, but instead, people
make a moral (or amoral) judgment about what goods are unjustly
expensive, especially as they deal with the recent bout of inflation.
They view it as a way to get back at The Man
— many have concocted a code of conduct that amounted to pilfering only
from big, evil retailers (and, in one case, overpriced corporate ski
resorts).
Case in point: A lot of the one-off shoplifters I talked to steal
from Whole Foods with a very clean conscience. "No, I don't feel bad
about stealing from Jeff Bezos," one 20-something occasional
shoplifter in Washington, DC, told me. Her loot of choice is passion
fruit, which she rings up as a cheaper item — bananas. She's even
memorized the code: 4011. Another shoplifter, a 30-something man in New
York who asked to be referred to as the "Parmesan cheese bandit," echoed
the anti-Bezos sentiment. The only people who know about his habit of
stuffing a block of Whole Foods cheese into his sweatpants pocket after
hitting the gym (which he developed after seeing some TikTok videos
about Parmesan's high protein content) are his brother — and, he said,
"maybe the fucking surveillance people, I don't know."
businessinsider.com
Can 'Invisible Barcodes' Eliminate
Self-Checkout Theft?
Goodbye to Walmart thieves forever – a new security system has been
developed that will change everything
Walmart, the retail giant, has taken a significant step to combat one
of its biggest challenges: theft at self-checkout kiosks. In
partnership with Digimarc, Walmart is introducing
a revolutionary invisible barcode technology designed to
enhance security while improving the customer experience. This new
system aims to reduce the billions of dollars lost to theft every year
and promises to change how we shop forever.
How does Walmart’s new security system work?
The innovative technology at the heart of this new initiative uses
invisible barcodes that are imperceptible to the human eye. Unlike
traditional barcodes, these codes cover the entire surface of a product,
making it possible to scan an item from any angle. This advancement,
developed by Digimarc, ensures that products
cannot be bypassed at the checkout, reducing the chances of theft.
Walmart’s self-checkout machines, equipped with advanced scanners,
can detect these invisible codes even if a customer tries to hide an
item. The machines are also capable of scanning multiple products at
once, allowing for faster and more efficient transactions. With this
system in place, Walmart no longer relies solely on customers to scan
every product correctly, closing a significant loophole that has been
exploited by shoplifters.
A revolution in retail
Walmart’s adoption of Digimarc’s invisible barcode technology represents
a major shift in the way retailers approach both security and
customer service. The days of relying on traditional barcodes may
soon be over, as more retailers realize the potential of this advanced
system. Companies like Wegmans have already begun implementing similar
technology, and Walmart’s involvement could drive wider adoption across
the industry.
This shift won’t happen overnight, as the process of replacing
traditional barcodes with invisible ones requires time and adaptation.
However, as more stores introduce these codes, we can expect to see a
significant impact on both inventory management and theft prevention.
eladelantado.com
'Remarkable' Decline in Murders
Murders Surged in the Pandemic. Now in Many Cities That Surge Is Gone.
A huge drop in 2023 has been followed by an even greater
improvement so far this year.
Murders declined at a remarkable rate in America in 2023, with official
statistics showing the largest one-year drop in more than half a
century. Even more remarkable: This year
looks on track for an even greater improvement.
That decline, visible in more recent crime data than what is
published annually by the F.B.I., is at odds with how Donald J.
Trump has broadly framed crime as rising “through the roof.”
Murders surged at record rates early in the pandemic (starting in
2020 when Mr. Trump was still president). But many cities are now
poised in 2024 to fully reverse that rise — a recovery that would be
as swift and surprising as the initial nationwide spike in murder rates.
“We are seeing the fastest decline ever
recorded,” said Jeff Asher, a crime analyst with AH
Datalytics and a former Upshot contributor, who runs the Real-Time Crime
Index that tracks local police data. “Oftentimes, we’re squishy and
there’s doubt, or there’s uncertainty. And there’s no uncertainty with
this.”
Our understanding of crime data can be clouded by the long lag in
official statistics, the fact that many crimes aren’t reported to
police, and differences in the multiple methods the federal government
uses to track crime (the early pandemic era was also fraught for data
collection of all kinds). But murders are
different: Nearly every one is counted, and today we have
relatively up-to-date counts in many cities and states.
The drop in murder through August this year has been widespread —
occurring across the vast majority of the country’s largest cities, and
appearing even in places like Washington and Kansas City, Mo., that
notably didn’t improve last year.
nytimes.com
Is There Really a Migrant Crime Wave?
Trump’s fear of a ‘migrant crime wave’ plays well, but there’s little
evidence it exists
With the 2024 presidential election coming to a close, Donald Trump and
other Republican candidates are upping the volume as they hammer away at
one of their central messages: The influx of migrants from the
southern border has put Americans in danger.
An “army of migrant gangs who are waging a campaign of violence and
terror against our citizens” are coming into the country, Trump
claimed last week at his Madison Square Garden rally. Incessant TV ads
echo the same theme.
But most of the horror stories setting a foreboding and ominous tone are
anecdotal episodes — not evidence of any sort of widespread migrant
crime wave. In fact, experts and data say there really is little
evidence of any such trend.
In New York City, where over 210,000 migrants have arrived since Spring
2022, there’s been no associated spike in crime. Despite oft-repeated
claims about a “migrant crime wave,” there is no available data that
shows any evidence of a migrant-driven increase in crime in the city.
Regardless of the truth of the claims, the points seem to be landing
with some voters who fear the impact of the newcomers on their lives,
jobs and safety. Trump, who has made slowing immigration a central
pillar of his campaign, talked at length about the issue at his rally
last Sunday at the Garden.
“They’re allowing criminals from all over the world to enter our
country,” the GOP nominee said to a crowd of thousands, saying a
beat later that migrants have “even taken over Times Square.”
nydailynews.com
Property Crime Decreased in 13 of 17
years Between 2007 & 2023
“Incarceration, violent crime, and property crime rates lower than they
were 30 years ago”
LESS CRIME:
Property crime decreased in 13 of the 17 years between 2007 and 2023;
it is now 44% lower than in 2007 and 55% lower than it was 30 years ago.
California’s violent crime rate decreased in 9 of the 17 years; it is
now 4% lower than it was in 2007 and slightly less than half of what it
was 30 years ago.
MORE SAVINGS: The dramatic decrease
in California’s incarcerated population has led to significant
savings to the state and county governments. Spending on the state
correctional system dropped notably, from 9.4% of the state’s General
Fund in 2007 (when the federal three-judge panel was appointed) to 6.7%
in 2024.
Additionally, the California Highway Patrol just received additional
funding to continue their efforts to combat sideshows.
Today’s PPIC analysis and CHP investment comes as Governor Newsom
announced a CHP partnership with San Bernardino and more than 10,000
arrests have come from the state’s Organized Retail Theft grants.
gov.ca.gov
Retailers Battle Surging Lego Thefts
Lego Lockup: Thefts of the popular toy leads to price impact
Stores are now being forced to lock up items like medications and
toothpaste, even popular toys such as Legos. Campbell uncovered
multiple thefts of Lego sets at retailers in Kettering, Sugarcreek
Township, and Centerville.
Mason told News Center 7 that many of the thieves are bold with Lego
thefts because “They’re pretty big at least the bigger dollar ones."
According to Mason, his department’s investigators see stolen Legos
on sale, online as thieves try to make a quick buck.
Kettering Police said thieves sell stolen Lego sets on Amazon and
other sites, but they also sell them to pawn shops as well.
Officers are working with both groups to make it much tougher to re-sell
without leaving lots of information to help police track down stolen
goods and thieves. We’ve learned that a Dayton-area Meijer, Kroger,
Walmart, and Target stores have all been hit by Lego thieves.
So far, 32 states have passed laws to toughen
organized retail crime. Federal law enforcement agencies
estimated that retail crime drives up prices so much it forces the
average American family to pay an extra $500 a year in costs.
yahoo.com
Crime Has Been a Big Talking Point. How Does It Look in Battleground
States?
South Carolina Executes Black Man For Shooting Store Clerk
Fast Food Chains Struggling
TGI Fridays files for bankruptcy protection as other fast food chains struggle
TGI Fridays has filed for bankruptcy protection to “position [its]
restaurants for long-term success,” the casual-dining restaurant chain announced
Saturday. The self-described “birthplace of fun, freedom and celebration” filed
for Chapter 11 protections in a federal court in Texas early on Saturday in a
bid to allow the company to “explore strategic alternatives in order to ensure
the long-term viability of the brand.”
The bankruptcy will only affect the 39 restaurants owned and operated by TGI
Fridays Inc. All franchised stores operating in 41 countries will continue
to serve customers as usual. The “difficult and necessary actions” announced by
the Dallas-headquartered company on Saturday are designed to protect the
interest of franchisees, both in the U.S. and abroad, said Rohit Manocha, the
company’s executive chairman.
Saturday’s announcement comes as a growing number of high-profile
casual-dining restaurant chains in the U.S. struggle to adjust to what appears
to be a new landscape in the service industry in the US, as rising menu
prices continue to turn off customers.
nydailynews.com
Target's Holiday Transformation
Target holiday plans include pop-ups, in-store shops, ‘fantastical’ creatures
Target Corp. is looking to dial up the magic for customers shopping
in-store this holiday season.
The retailer is transforming its stores into a white-and-red holiday
wonderland, with a ceiling banner — styled to resemble swirling peppermint
ribbons — and peppermint signage. The peppermint pattern will be seen not only
throughout Target stores but also extended to its marketing billboards and
packaging for its Favorite Day private label line of sweets and savories.
The ribbon will lead customers to a host of special holiday shops, including
a “Merry Cherry Chalet” for gifts, a London station for Marks & Spencer holiday
items and “Candy Cane Corner, which features more than 50 new Favorite Day
items. Holiday home décor items are featured in the “Trim the Tree Lot.”
chainstoreage.com
Stop & Shop Closes ‘Underperforming’ Stores. Here’s Who’s Affected
Wendy’s Closing 140 Underperforming Stores Amidst Future Growth Plans
Last week's #1 article --
California's Disappearing Theft
Suspects
Ahead of Proposition 36 vote, state data show California is not tracking
retail theft suspects after arrests
Governor Gavin Newsom announced last month that California's
Organized Retail Crime Task Force (ORCT) had made more than 1,000
arrests in 2024. For more than a month, CBS News California has been
trying to find out what happened to those people after their arrests.
No one - not the Governor's Office, the attorney general, nor the
California Highway Patrol (CHP), which runs California's task force -
could tell us how many of the people arrested for retail theft were
sentenced, let alone how many showed up to court, went to jail, received
treatment, or re-offended. None of the agencies
could even provide the names of those 1000+ people, so we could not
independently track them down.
The CHP did provide arrest statistics, which reveal that out of the
1,126 arrests made by the Organized Retail Crime Task Force as of early
October, more than half (684) were cite-and-releases, which means
those offenders received the equivalent of the ticket and a notice to
appear in court. District Attorneys say many of those people never show
up in court.
A week before California voters decide on the tougher-on-crime
Proposition 36, Gov. Newsom held a virtual news conference Monday to
announce that more than 10,000 arrests over the past year by local
law enforcement agencies statewide. These arrests were for various
crimes, but he attributed them to the hundreds of millions of dollars
California invested in cracking down on organized retail theft (ORT)
last year.
Newsom awarded approximately $267 million worth of grants to 55
California cities and counties in October 2023. The governor said
that money "has generated 10,128 arrests and counting just from the
local law enforcement efforts." Of those arrests there were "nearly
8,000 for organized retail theft," according to the governor's office.
cbsnews.com
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New Tag Recirculation Program Launched by Prosegur and Pact Retail Accessories,
Promising to Make EAS Programs More Efficient and Help Retailers Reach their ESG
Goals
DEERFIELD BEACH, Fla. (October 21, 2024) –
Prosegur Security, a global leader in security technology, has formed a new
partnership with
Pact Retail Accessories, a global leader in sustainability solutions, to
launch a
new EAS tag recirculation program for U.S. retailers. The program aims to
help retailers make their electronic article surveillance (EAS) program more
efficient, protect more merchandise from shoplifting, reduce plastic waste, and
help retailers achieve their ESG (Environmental, Social and corporate
Governance) goals more easily.
“Our new EAS recirculation program will enable retailers to reuse their EAS tags
more easily and efficiently by having them quickly move used tags from the point
of sale at the retail store back to the point of manufacture overseas or
distribution center in the U.S.,” said Matt Sack, CEO of
Prosegur’s global retail business unit. “This next-level source tagging will
enable retailers to extend the lifespan of their tags, maximizing their
investment into EAS and reducing costs as well as reducing plastic waste.”
Rather than having the retail associates sort, inspect and reapply tags to new
merchandise in the store, the new program will allow store associates to simply
place removed tags, pins and lanyards in a box without the need to sort them,
and ship the box back to Prosegur and Pact’s sorting facilities. The tags, pins
and lanyards are sorted, inspected, cleaned, and repackaged, then shipped
quickly to the manufacturer (or the retailer’s distribution facility) anywhere
in the world to be reapplied on new merchandise. When the new merchandise
arrives at the retail location, the tags are already on and can be placed on the
sales floor more quickly.
“The EAS tag recirculation program eliminates the need for store associates to
sort and reapply tags, thus freeing up their time for more productive tasks like
serving shoppers,” said Nancy Justice, SVP, North America, Pact Retail
Accessories. “The program also helps to extend the life of EAS tags, reducing
the need to buy new tags. And, because new merchandise then arrives to stores
already tagged at the source, this can ensure that all stores have properly
protected merchandise, reducing the problems that can stem from non-compliance
by individual stores with the LP rules and guidelines.”
According to Sack and Justice, by extending the lifespan of an average EAS tag,
Prosegur and Pact Retail Accessories will help retailers reduce the amount of
plastics ending up in landfills. This also helps retailers achieve their ESG
goals.
More information about this new program can be obtained at both
Prosegur’s &
Pact Retail Accessories websites respectively.
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Modernization Efforts Falling Short?
Executives worry over aging IT systems
Despite ongoing modernization efforts, tech debt is still hindering
mission-critical infrastructure, according to Kyndryl.
Enterprise modernization initiatives are too often threatened by aging
infrastructure and systems that have run out of technical support, according
to
a recent Kyndryl report. The IT services firm surveyed 3,200 C-suite
executives and collected anonymized customer data from its Kyndryl Bridge
platform.
While 9 in 10 executives said their company’s technology is best-in-class,
nearly two-thirds acknowledged that outdated systems
present a major concern. Data indicating 44% of mission-critical
enterprise IT infrastructure is approaching or at end-of-life confirmed the
apparent paradox.
If a company lacks comprehensive IT asset and configuration management, locating
tech debt is a challenge, according to Michael Bradshaw, Kyndryl’s SVP and
global practice leader for applications, data and AI. “It’s almost like an
archaeological dig,” he said. “You don’t know where the problems are unless you
stub your toe on something that’s reached end-of-support.”
Executives are bullish on additive digital transformations that enable smarter
chatbots, sleeker dashboards and more user-friendly interfaces. But drumming up
enthusiasm for the everyday grunt work that keeps the IT machine humming can be
a challenge.
“It’s hard for companies to strike that balance between investment in the new
and making sure that you’re tending to and you’re being a good steward for those
things that have been around for a period of time,” Bradshaw said.
cybersecuritydive.com
100 Organizations Targeted
CISA warns of foreign threat group launching spearphishing campaign using
malicious RDP files
Midnight Blizzard has targeted more than 100 organizations across
government, IT and academia, in some cases impersonating Microsoft employees.
The
Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency on Thursday said it has
received multiple reports of a foreign threat actor targeting government and
IT companies in a widescale spear-phishing campaign using malicious remote
desktop protocol files.
Microsoft Threat Intelligence linked the spear-phishing campaign to Midnight
Blizzard in a Tuesday report, warning that emails were sent to thousands of
targets. The emails were sent to more than 100 organizations in government,
defense and academia, among others, and in some cases impersonated Microsoft
employees to lend credibility.
AWS identified internet domains abused by the threat group, which is also known
as APT29 and affiliated with Russia’s Foreign Intelligence Service, CJ Moses,
CISO and VP of security engineering at Amazon
wrote in a post last week. The phishing campaign was launched in Ukraine and
design to steal credentials from Russian adversaries, Moses said.
cybersecuritydive.com
Cybersecurity Hiring Prep
Hiring guide: Key skills for cybersecurity researchers
In this Help Net Security interview, Rachel Barouch, an Organizational Coach for
VCs and startups
and a former VP HR in both a VC and a Cybersecurity startup, discusses the
dynamics of cybersecurity researchers and team-building strategies. She
highlights that these researchers, often brilliant and introverted, come with
distinctive working styles, making it challenging to foster collaboration.
However, with the right approach to assessing, managing, retaining and
developing them, organizations can unlock their potential and drive
high-performance teams, ultimately boosting the startup’s market value,
especially in the context of mergers and acquisitions (M&As).
What should organizations focus on when preparing to
interview cybersecurity researchers?
Pre-interview preparation is essential for evaluating potential candidates.
Organizations should thoroughly review candidates’ technical contributions,
including their publications, vulnerability disclosures, and open-source work.
Conference presentations provide insight into their ability to communicate
complex ideas.
Their participation in competitions like Capture The Flag events and platforms
such as TryHackMe and HackTheBox can demonstrate practical skills. Understanding
that many researchers perform their best work during non-traditional hours,
sometimes flourishing at 2 AM, can help organizations adapt their expectations
accordingly.
helpnetsecurity.com
Cybersecurity in crisis: Are we ready for what’s coming?
Why cyber tools fail SOC teams |
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Voice-Activated Forecasts:
Weather Updates with Smart Home Devices
Utilize smart home devices like Amazon Echo or Google Home to set up
routines for daily weather briefings to keep you informed as you
start your day. Or for on demand information, simply ask, "Alexa,
what's the weather today?" or "Hey Google, will it rain tomorrow?"
Watch this space on
Tuesdays for more of
'Tom's Tek Tips' |
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E-Commerce 'Safe Zones'
Central Iowa authorities encourage residents to use safe zones for e-commerce
transactions
Windsor Heights police continue an investigation to find a person of interest in
a robbery inside the Walmart on 73rd Street. Police say the victim did all the
right things: meet during the day, in public and with a lot of people around.
There is one more step law enforcement is urging people to take in that
situation: arrange that meet-up at a place like an e-commerce safe zone,
such as the one at the Johnston Police Department. There is 24-hour
surveillance, and cameras have a clear view of the safe zone.
"To be able to have an environment where you can kinda say, 'OK. You know what,
I feel pretty good to be in this little spot like this.' So I might feel
comfortable to do that situation," said Josh Kennedy, community affairs
coordinator at the Johnston Police Department.
Altoona also has a safe exchange zone in its police department parking lot.
"I think that's a really good idea," said Jaclyn Franchetti, an Altoona
resident.
Franchetti said that unless you personally know the buyer, you never truly
know who you are dealing with in an e-commerce situation. Feeling safe in
that type of transaction is her top priority.
"Because if something happened, there would be people right inside that
could help me too, and that it was under watch," Franchetti said.
Franchetti said she will use the safe exchange zone from now on when involved
in e-commerce transactions. She hopes everyone follows suit.
kcci.com
Amazon Data Center Agreement Rejected
US regulators reject amended interconnect agreement for Amazon data center
U.S. energy regulators rejected an amended interconnection agreement for an
Amazon data center connected directly to a nuclear power plant in Pennsylvania,
a filing showed on Friday. Members of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission
said the agreement to increase the capacity of the data center located on the
site of Talen Energy's Susquehanna nuclear generating facility could raise power
bills for the public and affect the grid's reliability.
As Big Tech races to grow its data centers needed to expand technologies like
generative artificial intelligence, locating centers directly on power plant
sites has become an attractive option to power up quickly.
"Co-location arrangements of the type presented here present an array of
complicated, nuanced and multifaceted issues, which collectively could have
huge ramifications for both grid reliability and consumer costs," FERC
Commissioner Mark Christie said in the order.
reuters.com
Amazon, Google show profit growth can quiet fears over heavy AI spending |
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Alameda County, CA: D.A. Price Charges Coliseum Flea Market Vendors in
Organized Retail Theft Case
Alameda County District Attorney Pamela Price announced today that her
office charged three people in connection with multiple organized retail
theft crimes stemming from a sophisticated criminal enterprise operating
at the Oakland Coliseum Flea Market from March 26, 2023, through April
17, 2024. The charges against Octavio Ambriz Valle, 52, Devora Ambriz
Valle, 49, and Felipe Del Toro Trejo, 54, include multiple felony counts
of possessing stolen property and organized retail theft in concert. It
is alleged that the trio of vendors possessed stolen property valued at
$348,466 from nine different retailers, including Kohl’s, Macy’s,
PetSmart, Sephora, Sunglass Hut, TJX, Target, Walgreens, and Walmart.
Last year, the District Attorney’s Office successfully competed and
received a $2 million grant from the California Department of Justice to
combat organized retail theft. Price added another $2 million to bolster
the Organized Retail Crime Alameda (ORCA) unit which is fully
operational and collaborating with numerous law enforcement agencies.
postnewsgroup.com
San Francisco, CA: 7 arrested, cited in SFPD retail theft operation
Seven individuals were arrested, cited and released after a retail theft
police operation, said the San Francisco Police Department. SFPD said
the department conducts operations where uniformed officers are
stationed in retail businesses to mitigate theft. The department chose
to carry out the operation in a store in the 3300 block of Mission
Street due to the high amount of shoplifting activity. On Oct. 15, SFPD
officers arrested seven suspects for shoplifting. More than $400 worth
of merchandise was returned to the store, according to the police.
kron4.com
Novato, CA: 4 Arrests For Organized Retail Theft
Four suspects were arrested after suspicions of retail theft, Novato
police said. Alexander Armenta, 42, Donnalee Encinas, 41, Sameria Lee,
49, and Willie Johnson Jr., 50, were arrested following reports of
alleged theft in progress by the DSW store employees in Vintage Oaks
area on Wednesday, police said. Investigation revealed the four suspects
were reportedly working together to steal merchandise from DSW. Johnson
was also arrested for unlawful possession of pepper spray, switchblade
knife, and drugs, according to the police.
patch.com
Boston MA: Woman charged after alleged theft of $4800 in merchandise at
Lululemon
Murfreesboro, TN: Man Snags $1,700 in High-End Hiking Gear
Lake Grove, NY: Man wanted for stealing over $1K in sunglasses from
store inside Macy's
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Shootings & Deaths
Monkey Junction, NC: Walmart employee identified, suspect charged in fatal
Monkey Junction Walmart shooting
A man is facing a first-degree murder charge after an employee at the Walmart in
Monkey Junction was shot and killed during a shoplifting attempt Saturday
evening. Dean Michael Newman, 35, has been arrested and charged in the death of
Mark Thomas Paz, according to District Attorney Rebecca Zimmer Donaldson.
According to the New Hanover County Sheriff's Office, around 6 p.m. Saturday
several Walmart employees tried to stop a suspect from shoplifting at the store
located at 5135 Carolina Beach Road. A fight occurred and "the suspect
brandished a firearm and fired one shot hitting a Walmart employee,"
according to the sheriff's office. It is unclear what Newman was allegedly
trying to steal. Newman fled, but was confronted by a sheriff's deputy in the
parking lot and was taken into custody, according to the sheriff's office.
starnewsonline.com
Zubulon, NC: 1 person shot, killed at Zebulon convenience store
The Johnston County Sheriff's Office is investigating after one person was shot
and killed at a convenience store in Zebulon. The incident happened at the
Shop-N-Go convenience store at 13597 NC-39. Deputies said the shooter was
identified and is being questioned. Authorities said there is no threat to the
public.
abc11.com
Accomack County, VA: 1 dead after shooting in Dollar General parking lot
A man has died after being shot in a Dollar General parking lot, according to
the Accomack County Sheriff’s Office. Around 7:30 p.m. Friday, deputies were
called to the Dollar General at 14093 Lankford Highway for the report of a
shooting. Upon arrival, they found an unresponsive man suffering from gunshot
wounds. Investigators obtained warrants against Jamal Anthony Samuel, 45, of New
Church, Virginia for second degree murder, use of a firearm in the commission of
a felony and possession of a firearm by a felon. On Saturday, Samuel was taken
into custody without incident, according the sheriff’s office.
wavy.com
Gardena, CA: Man shot to death at restaurant in Gardena
A man was shot to death by another man while at a restaurant in Gardena,
authorities said Sunday. The shooting occurred about 8 p.m. Saturday at a
restaurant in the 18100 block of Vermont Avenue, according to the Los Angeles
Police Department’s Media Relations Division. The victim, a man about 35 years
old, was seated at the restaurant when the suspect, a man about 35 to 40 years
old, who was also at the restaurant walked up and fired a shot at the man.
2urbangirls.com
Warning: Graphic Video
(Update) Man killed by Police after stealing from Food Lion
New
video shows the moments 46-year-old Dennis Bodden was killed by police after
stealing groceries from the Food Lion on Johnston Road Charlotte, NC. Dennis
was shot on May 14, 2024 by a Pineville police officer. The situation began
when Dennis entered the Food Lion. Dennis was stealing food and groceries, so
employees called police. A cop working security at Food Lion was notified.
Dennis attempted to walk out of the store, and the cop followed him trying to
stop him. A fight began, and Dennis was able to escape the officer's grasp.
Dennis bit the officer on the arm during the fight. Dennis then was shot with a
taser gun, but the electrical volts did not stop Dennis. Dennis was able to get
up and run across the street to apartments. Dennis then lunged at one of the
cops and tried to take the officer's gun. One of the officers then shot and
killed Dennis. The suspect goes down and is heard saying he cant breathe. Cops
try to hold a chest bandage on Dennis until paramedics arrived, but Dennis died
on scene.
charlottealertsnews.com
Canton, OH: Employee Shot in Canton Dollar General Store Robbery
Canton police were not providing much information on an armed robbery from
Friday evening with one person shot. The Repository says an employee at the
Dollar General store on West Tusc at Fulton Road was shot at about 8:30 p.m. on
Friday. Condition of the worker was not known.
whbc.com
Louisville, KY: Man hospitalized after being shot near White Caste restaurant in
downtown Louisville
A man was taken to the hospital after being shot near a White Castle in downtown
Louisville Sunday evening. Aaron Ellis, a spokesman for Louisville Metro Police,
said officers responded to a reported shooting in the 100 block of East Market
Street around 7:30 p.m. Police found a man outside the White Castle who had been
shot in the leg. He was alert and conscious when taken to UofL Hospital. His
injuries are believed to be non-fatal.
wdrb.com
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•
C-Store – Meridian, MS
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Southington,
CT – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Zebulon, NC
- Armed Robbery / 1 killed
•
C-Store – Suffolk
County, NY – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Lansing, MI
– Armed Robbery
•
Clothing –
Murfreesboro, TN – Robbery
•
Clothing – Boston, MA
- Robbery
•
Dollar – Canton, OH –
Armed Robbery / Clerk wounded
•
Eyewear - Lake Grove,
NY - Robbery
• Jewelry – Oklahoma City, OK – Robbery
• Jewelry – Houston, TX – Robbery
• Jewelry – Waipahu, HI – Burglary
• Jewelry – Santa Monica, CA – Robbery
• Jewelry – Lakewood, CA – Robbery
• Jewelry - Columbia, MD - Robbery
• Jewelry – Northridge, CA – Robbery
•
Liquor – Miami, FL –
Robbery
•
Liquor – Champaign, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
Shoe – Novato, CA –
Armed Robbery
•
Walmart - Monkey
Junction, NC – Armed Robbery / Employee killed
Daily Totals:
• 19 robberies
• 1 burglary
• 3 shootings
• 2 killed |
Click map to enlarge
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None to report.
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Regional Asset Protection Manager
Maryland & West Virginia
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Posted November 1
The AP Manager will be the primary subject matter expert in regards to the
training, auditing, and investigatory needs of Dollar General. Their key efforts
are to reduce shrinkage and increase profitability through proactive training
mediums, standardized audits and the resolution of internal and external
investigations. Management Develop and foster an open line of communication with
Operations to support all levels of business dialogue in order to increase gross
margin efforts and decrease shrink and related risks...
Associate Full Time, Asset Protection, Wayfair Stores
Wilmette, IL
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Posted October 3
As an Asset Protection Host, you will support the Asset Protection and Store
Leadership team by contributing to the overall guest experience by welcoming and
thanking guests and employees into the retail store. This key role will report
to the Asset Protection Lead and Asset Protection Manager. This is a
people-facing role and requires the right candidate to be engaging, charismatic,
and eager to engage regularly with customers and employees...
Corporate Risk Manager
Houston, TX
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Posted September 18
Summary of Role and Responsibilities: Proactive approach to preventing
losses/injuries, whether they are to our employees, third parties, or customers'
valuables. They include cash in transit, auto losses, or injuries; Report all
incidents, claims, and losses that may expose the company to financial losses,
whether they are covered by insurance or not...
District Asset Protection Manager
North Kingstown, RI
-
Posted September 16
The District Asset Protection Manager at OSJL plays a key role in safeguarding
the organization's stores. Through training and program implementation, this
role champions a safe working environment and minimizes loss from shrink, theft,
and fraud. This role conducts regular store visits, leads investigations, and
collaborates with store leadership on best practices for asset protection...
Corporate Risk Manager
Memphis, TN or New
Orleans, LA
-
Posted June 27
Summary of Role and Responsibilities: Proactive approach to preventing
losses/injuries, whether they are to our employees, third parties, or customers'
valuables. They include cash in transit, auto losses, or injuries; Report all
incidents, claims, and losses that may expose the company to financial losses,
whether they are covered by insurance or not...
Loss Prevention Specialist
Temple, TX
-
Posted June 18
The Loss Prevention Specialist identifies various types of losses and thefts,
works cross-functionally in a fast-paced environment providing critical guidance
to Operations on asset protection and profit improvement initiatives. At The
Fikes Companies, our Mission is to build a highly successful company which our
employees are proud of, our customers value, and the communities we serve can
count on...
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...
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...
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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Progress or moving forward has as much to do with which way you're facing as
anything else. If you stay focused on facing your customer and not your internal
team then you might find success is a little closer than you think. This goes
for the vendor and for the retailer, as we all have customers to serve both
internally and externally. And while it's impossible to always stay facing them
the mere thought of it will bring you back a little faster if you just remember
that your ultimate success is driven by your customers whether its individual
stores or companies. Much too often we all tend to get lost in the politics of
our inner group and use it as a means of avoiding having to accomplish difficult
tasks. But all you've got to remember is to turn around and face the customer
and then you'll be back on track getting things done and moving forward.
Just a Thought, Gus
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