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James
Strawn named Asset Protection & Safety Manager for Lowe's
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here | Submit
Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position |
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From case building to patterns—real-time retail security without
infrastructure
 SEATTLE,
WA, UNITED STATES – SAFR
announced new investigation capabilities for SAFR Guard, without the
need for on-site servers.
Retail security has been burdened by costly, infrastructure-heavy
systems that are complex to maintain and slow to scale. SAFR Guard now
changes that, combining real-time proactive alerts with new
investigation capabilities, all without server bloat. With built-in
privacy guardrails, it’s designed for responsible use from day one.
As retail crime becomes increasingly frequent and connected, traditional
systems built around manual case building are struggling to keep up.
Security teams are expected to act faster, manage growing operational
demands, and reduce shrink, all while dealing with the costs and
maintenance of server-dependent infrastructure.
SAFR Guard introduces a modern approach to retail security, helping
retailers move from isolated incidents to actionable patterns. By
combining proactive alerts with smarter investigative insights, SAFR
Guard enables teams to detect repeat activity, surface connections
across events, and respond more effectively in real time. “SAFR Guard’s
ability to investigate and alert on high-harm individuals is key to its
success,” said Chris Ochs, Director of Product at SAFR Guard. “Early
warning directly translates into safer stores,” he added.
Click here to learn more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
'Senate Must Pass CORCA'
This isn’t just shoplifting — it’s organized crime. Time to treat it
that way
Rising
violence associated with organized retail crime demands Senate passage
of the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act.
Organized retail crime is not merely a property crime issue. It is a
growing public safety threat. The House of Representatives
overwhelmingly passed CORCA in May. It is now time for the Senate to
pass CORCA without delay.
Across the country, retail employees, customers, transportation
providers, and law enforcement are facing more aggressive and
sophisticated criminal networks that steal goods, move them across
state and international lines, and resell them for profit. Those profits
from retail theft are used for more nefarious crimes, including drugs,
guns, and human trafficking.
The stolen redistribution of products like medicines and perishable
goods threatens public health and safety. These items may not be
properly stored, and expiration dates may be falsely changed as they
travel through illicit distribution channels.
These are not isolated incidents of shoplifting or individual acts of
opportunistic theft. They are coordinated operations that rely on
intimidation, fraud, and violence. NRF studies have shown that
violence and aggression tied to these crimes have increased since 2022.
That is why CORCA matters. The bill would strengthen federal tools to
investigate and prosecute organized retail and supply chain crime,
improve coordination among federal, state, and local agencies, and
create a dedicated coordination center within the Department of Homeland
Security. CORCA fills a critical need to identify and disrupt
organized theft groups that travel across state lines, operating beyond
the capabilities of local and state agencies. In short, it would help
law enforcement follow the evidence, share intelligence faster, and
dismantle criminal enterprises before more workers and shoppers are
harmed.
Just as organized retail crime networks operate across jurisdictions,
the response must be coordinated across jurisdictions as well.
Federal leadership and information sharing are essential to
identifying patterns, tracking criminal organizations, and bringing
repeat offenders to justice. CORCA provides the framework needed to
support those efforts.
washingtonexaminer.com
Using AI to Analyze Body Cam Footage
'Most body-camera footage is never closely
reviewed'
Millions of hours of Bay Area police body-camera footage go unwatched.
Stanford says AI could change that
New York PD study preceded analysis
of encounters recorded on video by two local departments
The
promise for more than a decade as police departments adopted body
cameras was a new era of accountability, where footage would provide
a clearer record of an interaction between officers and the public.
But in practice, most body-camera footage is never closely reviewed.
The public usually sees it only after the most serious or high-profile
encounters, just a sliver of everyday police interactions.
Researchers with Stanford University’s SPARQ behavioral science team
said they have made a breakthrough in answering that question, with
analysis of police interactions in New York leading to a new program
looking at Bay Area departments. They used artificial intelligence
tools to comb through a sample of nearly 1,800 New York police street
stops recorded on officers’ body cameras to assess whether the
officers were properly seeking consent before searching people, as part
of a 2021 court-ordered study to measure the impact of reforms to the
police department’s “stop and frisk” practices.
The findings point to possible noncompliance, underreporting and racial
disparities. But they may end up being secondary to the broader
potential the study represents. Millions of hours of officer
body-camera footage — audited via relatively tiny samples until now —
could be meaningfully analyzed, providing entirely new levels of
insight into how officers are abiding by constitutional obligations in
their everyday work.
“I feel like for the first time, we can use AI to analyze millions of
police interactions at scale,” said Jennifer Eberhardt, a Stanford
psychology professor and faculty co-director of the SPARQ team. “This
knowledge offers an unprecedented opportunity to understand and also
to improve policing not just in one department, but across the
country … It’s a game changer in that way.”
mercurynews.com
Misusing Crime-Fighting Tech?
San Francisco Police Audit Shows Feds ‘Improperly’ Accessed License
Plate Data Hundreds of Times
The revelations are likely to
intensify criticism of San Francisco’s partnership with Flock Safety, a
leading company behind the surveillance technology used nationwide to
stop crime.
San Francisco’s license plate reader data has been improperly
accessed hundreds of times by out-of-state and federal agencies
since last May, police officials said Wednesday.
The San Francisco Police Department said that an audit of the
controversial surveillance technology — which some Bay Area cities have
abandoned over data-sharing concerns — revealed that the Northern
California Regional Intelligence Center, or NCRIC, an anti-crime
organization that shares information between law enforcement agencies,
repeatedly queried SFPD and more than 500 law enforcement agencies
statewide.
San Francisco introduced automated license plate readers operated by
Flock Safety in 2024, and the department has credited the technology
with “revolutionizing” the way it solves crimes and identifies suspects.
kqed.org
Retail Crime Prevention
Businesses are investing more in prevention as retail crime evolves
Businesses are investing more in prevention as retail crime
evolves because the financial and operational costs of theft, fraud,
vandalism, and security incidents extend far beyond the value of stolen
merchandise.
Have businesses changed the way they think about retail crime?
The answer appears to be yes. While researchers continue to debate
whether retail theft is rising uniformly across the country, one thing
is clear: retailers are spending more time and money on prevention
than they did a decade ago.
wsoctv.com
Costa Mesa could end license plate reader contract amid concerns
Mexico: Violent Business Robberies rise across Puerto Vallarta area
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Power Outages & LP Risks
When the Lights Go Out: Retail's Operational Security Challenge
By
the D&D Daily staff
Power outages are often viewed as a facilities or operations issue, but
for retailers, they can quickly become a loss prevention challenge as
well.
Modern stores rely on a wide range of interconnected technologies to
support daily operations, including video surveillance systems,
point-of-sale terminals, electronic article surveillance, access control
systems and inventory management platforms. While many retailers have
backup power capabilities in place, not every system or location is
protected to the same degree.
When an outage occurs, the immediate focus is often on serving
customers, protecting perishable inventory and restoring operations.
At the same time, however, disruptions to security and monitoring
systems can create vulnerabilities that may increase the risk of theft,
fraud or inventory discrepancies.
Even short-term outages can affect transaction processing, visibility
into store activity and communication between stores and corporate teams.
In larger events involving severe weather or regional power disruptions,
retailers may also face staffing challenges, delivery delays and
difficulties maintaining normal operational controls.
That is why power resilience is increasingly becoming a
cross-functional responsibility. Facilities, operations, information
technology and loss prevention teams all have a role to play in outage
preparedness and response.
For loss prevention leaders, preparedness may include reviewing which
security systems are connected to backup power, understanding how long
critical systems can remain operational during an outage and ensuring
employees are trained on emergency procedures. Regular testing of
backup systems and clearly documented response plans can help reduce
confusion when disruptions occur.
While power outages may be relatively infrequent, their impact can
extend well beyond temporary inconvenience. As retailers continue to
rely on technology to support both operations and security, planning for
power disruptions is becoming an important part of protecting people,
assets and business continuity.
The next major outage may begin as an operational problem, but its
consequences can quickly reach far beyond facilities management.
Don't Overlook Mental Health in the
Workplace
How to Make Measurable Improvements in Workers’ Mental Health
Mental health impacts how employees show up to work and perform
their job, so employers must treat mental health as any other safety
concern.
In order to meaningfully improve employees' mental health, managers must
be trained and proactive in their outreach, and employees must be
knowledgeable of and comfortable seeking whatever support they need.
We spend a significant amount of time discussing physical hazards, such
as fall protection, energized work, personal protective equipment (PPE)
and operational risk management (ORM), in construction and other
high-risk industries—and for good reason. Those factors directly affect
whether someone goes home safely at the end of the day.
What safety teams do not always talk about enough is what’s happening
underneath the hard hat. Mental fatigue, stress, burnout, anxiety and
personal struggles all impact how people perform on the job. Those
factors may not present the same way as a physical hazard, but they
still influence safety performance.
That’s why more companies are starting to move mental health out of
the category of standalone wellness initiatives and into everyday safety
conversations. Many safety leaders already understand that mental
health is important. The bigger challenge is finding ways to integrate
those conversations into existing safety systems and measure whether
support efforts are creating meaningful change.
One of the biggest mistakes companies make is only talking about
mental health during awareness months or after a crisis happens. If
safety is important every day, then mental health needs to be part of
those same daily conversations.
ehstoday.com
AI is Transforming EHS
Safety Leaders Say They Trust AI-generated Insights
Leaders' attitudes toward EHS have
become more strategic during the last 24 months says VelocityEHS.
Human trusting information from machines isn't new, but the level of
trust that safety leaders have to AI-generated insights has grown to
75%.
This is according to a new survey, 2026 EHS 360 Benchmark Report: In
Transition: The New Reality of EHS, from VelocityEHS.
The report found that executive leadership attitudes toward EHS have
become more strategic during the last 24 months, indicating EHS is
increasingly viewed as a driver of operational resilience, workforce
protection, and enterprise risk management.
It seems that as companies face a number of pressures, including
expanding regulatory complexity, staffing and budget constraints, and
heightened expectations from executive leadership, AI can help to
improve visibility, strengthen decision-making, and reduce
administrative burden.
The report also reveals that AI and automation are now viewed as the
most transformative forces shaping the future of EHS. Organizations
increasingly see AI as a tool for reducing administrative burden,
improving data quality, accelerating compliance activities, and
strengthening proactive risk prevention. The findings suggest AI is
moving beyond experimentation and beginning to deliver measurable value
across EHS programs.
ehstoday.com
Retailers Lean Into America 250
How Much Opportunity Is There for Brands and Retailers As America 250
Draws Near?
With the U.S. set to celebrate its 250th birthday on July 4, 2026,
retailers and brands are launching a variety of products designed to
satisfy shoppers hungry to show off their patriotism — and celebrate
both comfortably and in style.
In a recent report penned by Gabriela Barkho for Modern Retail, she
noted that retailers and brands — from larger players such as
Coca-Cola, Walmart, Anheuser-Busch, and General Mills to slightly
smaller entities such as La Colombe and Chobani — are keen to get
into the mix when it comes to celebrating America 250. Despite a
backdrop of economic and sociopolitical uncertainty, shoppers’ spirits
(and spending intent) appeared healthy.
“Still, the occasion comes at a challenging time for the retail
industry. The country faces political division and a volatile
economy, as gas prices remain high,” Barkho wrote.
“But surveys indicate that Americans are showing early signs of
excitement for the anniversary. According to an M Booth survey, 62%
of Americans say the 250th anniversary is personally important to them,
with eight out of 10 saying it’s a moment to celebrate the country’s
history, achievements and values. Moreover, a new CivicScience survey
shows that two-thirds of American adults from across the political
spectrum are at least “somewhat” open to purchasing from brands that are
activating campaigns around America 250,” she added.
retailwire.com
Under Armour to close Oregon office
Abercrombie & Fitch Co. brings Hollister to Target, expanding US
wholesale operation
Last week's #1 article --
Has Shoplifting Become Normalized?
As retail crime rises, 7 in 10 shoppers see shoplifting as “normal”
behaviour, says new research from SAI
68% of shoppers say theft has become
a “normalised” behaviour, with customers now expecting shoplifting to
take place in-store
Such is the prevalence of rising retail crime that shoppers are
becoming increasingly desensitised to shoplifting, viewing incidents
of theft in-store as “normal” shopping behaviour, according to new
research from SAI, the leading active intelligence solution for stores.
With ONS data showing that retailers reported 509,566 shoplifting
offences in the past year, original research of 1,000 UK shoppers by
SAI reveals that seven in ten (68%) now view theft as a “normalised”
behaviour and expect shoplifting to take place in-store.
And, as retail’s shoplifting scourge shows no sign of easing, more than
one in ten (12%) shoppers now feel “indifferent” to witnessing crime
when shopping in bricks-and-mortar locations.
Convenience and grocery remain top targets for
theft
With the average shopper witnessing four incidents of theft in-store
each year, six in ten (61%) shoppers polled by SAI have noticed more
incidents of crime in-store in the last 12 months, rising to 72% of Gen
Z.
Convenience and grocery stores are where customers now notice the most
incidents of theft, averaging 5 instances in the last 12 months. Gen Z
shoppers witnessed even more shoplifting incidents than the average
shopper (7 vs 5 instances), as did higher earners, who reported seeing
more than double number of crime incidents compared to the average
shopper (10 vs 5) over the past year.
Shoplifting of everyday essentials and theft to
order on the rise
As cost-of-living pressures continue, over a quarter (28%) of UK
shoppers say they have witnessed theft of everyday essentials, such
as groceries, baby supplies and basic healthcare items, while over a
fifth (21%) have witnessed big-ticket items being stolen.
Organised crime is also becoming more prevalent and visible to a
growing number of customers who have witnessed ‘theft to order’.
Two thirds (65%) of consumers say organised retail crime has worsened
in the last year, and almost half (45%) say they have witnessed
goods seemingly being stolen to order in-store, rising to 58% among Gen
Zs and Millennials.
internationalsupermarketnews.com
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Exodus in the Cybersecurity Sector
AI isn’t solving cybersecurity workforce woes
More than half of cybersecurity
professionals say they’re thinking about leaving the industry, according
to a new report.
AI isn’t making cybersecurity professionals’ jobs much easier, and
businesses aren’t always pairing AI spending with clear AI strategies, a
new report finds.
In addition, nearly seven in 10 cyber workers say their jobs have
become more difficult over the past two years, despite the AI
automation boon, according to the latest edition of a cybersecurity
workforce survey by the Information Systems Security Association and
Omdia.
One-quarter of respondents said their companies had increased AI
spending without clearly defining how they would integrate those AI
tools into their existing processes.
More than eight in 10 organizations are using AI for cybersecurity
tasks or plan to do so soon, according to the report, with half of
users deploying it for penetration testing and vulnerability scanning,
nearly half using it to predict risks and 38% using it to detect
threats.
But those tools cannot fully replace skilled cybersecurity
professionals, and the workforce that is still primarily responsible for
defending enterprises is struggling with burnout and demoralization as
the threat environment intensifies.
Nearly half of cyber workers are considering leaving their job,
ISSA and Omdia found, with 17% saying they think about it regularly and
30% saying they think about it occasionally. More than half say they’re
thinking about leaving the industry altogether, with 20% saying they
think about it regularly.
The top reasons cited for burnout were high stress (53%), a lack of
career advancement (37%), a bad work-life balance (34%) and a lack of
leadership commitment to organizational cybersecurity (33%).
cybersecuritydive.com
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AI Settles Into Security Operations
Centers
The SOC’s visibility gap comes down to staffing
AI has settled into security operations centers faster than any
earlier wave of technology. Around four in five practitioners report
reaching for AI or machine learning tools in their daily work. The catch
shows up one layer down. Roughly a third of those same teams have built
these tools into a defined workflow with structure, governance, and
consistent validation. The rest pick up AI on their own, case by case,
with no shared playbook for how it gets used or checked.
That splits the AI story in the latest SANS SOC Survey into two parts.
Adoption is widespread. Integration trails behind it. The survey,
now in its tenth year, draws on 444 responses from people working in
monitoring and security operations roles, with a separate set of
questions answered by senior executives.
AI tools can produce confident, well-formatted answers, and an
analyst who trusts that output without the skill to question it becomes
the weak point. Several SANS instructors land on the same
observation. The danger sits with the person who accepts the result, and
with a tool that looks authoritative even when it is wrong.
Leaders and their teams describe different
organizations
The survey includes a section answered by CISOs and VP-level leaders,
and their answers complicate the main findings. Executives and
practitioners describe the same organization and reach different
conclusions about how well it works.
The sharpest example sits in staffing. A majority of cyber leaders
say management pays close attention to SOC hiring and retention needs.
About a third of practitioners agree. That 27-point spread has held
across every year the question has been asked. Executives describe their
intent. Practitioners describe their experience. Both accounts are
accurate, and the distance between them is where retention problems
begin.
The effect reaches past morale. When the people who run the SOC feel
that leadership overlooks their staffing needs, the team loses the
ability to build institutional knowledge and grow junior analysts
into senior ones. That continuity is what a serious threat environment
demands.
helpnetsecurity.com
Business Leaders Must Be Vigilant
Nation-state rivals linked to majority of consequential attacks
targeting critical UK sites
The nation’s top cybersecurity
official warned that business leaders, authorities need to rethink how
they protect critical infrastructure from state-sponsored adversaries.
The United Kingdom’s top cybersecurity official warned that nation-state
adversaries are believed to be behind the vast majority of the
nation’s most serious attacks targeting critical infrastructure over
the past year.
In a speech Wednesday, Richard Horne, CEO of the U.K.’s National Cyber
Security Centre, said state actors were suspected in about 75% of the
200 attacks against critical sites that it responded to over a 12-month
period ending in May.
Horne said the U.K. needs to rethink cybersecurity in a way that
moves it from a risk that can be managed to more of a contest that needs
to be fought toward victory.
The U.K. has made significant changes in how it views cyber risk over
the past year. The country went through a series of catastrophic attacks
in 2025, most notably the multi-week disruption of Jaguar Land Rover.
The attack cost the U.K. economy about $2.5 billion as the
automaker was forced to pause manufacturing for several weeks and send
home thousands of workers from companies in JLR’s extensive supply
chain.
U.K. authorities in January warned that pro-Russia groups were
targeting critical infrastructure providers and local government
entities over the war in Ukraine.
cybersecuritydive.com
Major critical infrastructure disruptions are inevitable, acting CISA
chief says
Navigating SEC, NIS2, and DORA incident disclosure timelines under
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AI Fueling Online Shopping
Adobe: AI online retail traffic surges in May
Artificial intelligence continues
growing as a source of visitors to e-commerce sites.
In data emailed to Chain Store Age, Adobe revealed that traffic from
AI sources to U.S. retail sites rose a significant 138% year over
year in May 2026 and has exploded 1,324% since October 2024, marking
another record high.
AI-driven online retail traffic reached a new peak in May 2026,
surpassing every month in 2025 and signaling what Adobe calls a
“sustained change in how consumers discover and engage with brands.”
Other findings
AI online traffic converted 54% better than non-AI sources, a
sharp reversal from 2025 when conversion rates were nearly half as high.
Eight in 10 consumers who use AI for shopping surveyed by Adobe say they
use it more than they used to, and 79% feel more confident in purchases
made with AI assistance.
Once on site, AI-referred shoppers are 15% more engaged, the
strongest advantage recorded since Adobe began tracking AI online
traffic in October 2024. These shoppers also spend more time on the
website (53% longer per visit), browse more pages (23% more pages per
visit, nearly double March 2026 levels), and are significantly less
likely to leave immediately (-36% bounce rate, a record low).
AI visits are now worth 53% more than non-AI visits, another
record high (up from 37% in March 2026). This marks a turnaround from
May 2025, when non-AI visits were worth 128% more than AI visits.
“Overall, Adobe’s latest data shows that AI traffic to U.S. retail
sites continues to grow, both in volume and value,” Adobe said in
emailed commentary. “(But) even top-performing sectors have high-value
pages where 30 to 40% of content is still overlooked or uncaptured by
AI.”
chainstoreage.com
Amazon Looks Beyond AI
Amazon quietly building a moat to outlast the AI boom
Amazon always has its eye on the
future.
The AI surge has already transformed the way investors see Amazon.
The company was no longer an e-commerce powerhouse with a cloud business
attached. For many investors, Amazon’s earnings engine is Amazon Web
Services, and that business still has some upside.
But the next AWS story may not be selling more AI capacity.
This raises the question of whether Amazon is stealthily positioning
AWS to own the next generation of powerful computing before the
market realizes it.
“I actually do believe, over the next five-to-seven years, we’re
going to start to see the first commercially useful small-scale quantum
computers,” Amazon AI executive Peter DeSantis told CNBC.
thestreet.com
Online grocery sales sustain strong growth rate in Q1 2026
Popular teething toy sold on Amazon for years recalled over choking
hazard for children |
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Toledo, OH: Dollar General employees accused of stealing $44K from
store, selling items on Facebook
Two Ohio Dollar General employees were arrested and charged in a scheme
that involved stealing thousands of dollars in items from their store
and reselling them. Toledo Police say 44-year-old Marsha Schultz and
46-year-old Stacey Leestema took nearly $44,000 worth of products and
resold them on Facebook Marketplace last year. Per WTVG, the store
manager reportedly saw Schultz and Leestema pretending to scan items
being checked out by co-conspirators posing as customers and then hiding
those items in bins. Schultz and Leestema are charged with grand theft
and appeared in court for a pretrial hearing on Wednesday.
local12.com
Memphis, TN: Memphis man accused in $16,000 Lowe’s theft spree
A Memphis man is accused of spending more than $16,000 at Lowe’s stores
with someone else’s store account number and posting the stolen items
for sale on Facebook. Lugene Moore, 31, was booked in the Shelby County
Jail on Tuesday for Identity Theft, Fraudulent Use of a Credit Card, and
Theft of Property $10,000 to $60,000. Police said that during April, 13
purchases totaling $16,161.23 were made at nine different Lowe’s stores
in Tennessee and Mississippi using the victim’s Lowe’s account number.
Investigators said Lowe’s store footage showed multiple individuals had
been making multiple purchases on the victim’s account using several
different vehicles.
msn.com
Cleveland, OH: North Olmsted Police investigate theft of more than
$1,100 in perfume
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Shootings & Deaths
Kansas City, MO: A man faces murder, 7 other charges in shooting death of
pregnant 19-year-old at Independence Center Mall
A Jackson County grand jury indicted a man this week in the shooting death of a
19-year-old pregnant woman in November 2023 at Independence Center Mall. Leandre
Peterson, Jr., is charged with second-degree murder, four counts of armed
criminal action, two counts of second-degree assault, unlawful use of a weapon
and tampering with physical evidence, according to court records. The gunfire
that killed Karla Brown happened at 2:24 p.m. just inside the north entrance to
the mall, located at 18813 East 39th Street. Brown went to the mall with three
other people and a verbal confrontation broke out with a second group of people
before the shooting started. An off-duty police officer on assignment at the
Dillard's store found Brown, who was four months pregnant, on the floor near the
north entrance with a life-threatening gunshot wound to her head, according to a
court document. She had been sitting on a mall courtesy chair about 30 feet from
a breezeway where the gunfire began.
kshb.com
DeKalb County, GA: Man dies in shooting at Stone Mountain shopping center
A man is dead after a shooting at a Stone Mountain shopping center on Saturday
night. DeKalb police confirmed Sunday afternoon officers found a man in the
parking lot with a gunshot wound when they responded at around 9:02 p.m. He died
at the scene. Police say preliminary investigation suggests an argument led to
the shooting. DeKalb PD didn’t identify the victim.
wsbtv.com
Greenville, SC: Teen brothers arrested and charged following shooting at Haywood
Mall
Two brothers have been arrested and charged after a shooting at the Haywood Mall
on Haywood Road in Greenville, South Carolina, just after 1 p.m. on Saturday,
according to officials. In the latest statement from the Greenville Police
Department, a spokesperson says the brothers, 17-year-old Kamari Walker and
18-year-old Kalief Walker, have been charged in connection with the shooting.
Kamari Walker is being identified because he's being charged as an adult,
according to that statement. The Greenville Police Department says Kamari Walker
is facing multiple charges, but since he is a juvenile, the only publicized
charge is assault and battery of a high and aggravated nature. That is the
charge that allows him to be charged as an adult, police say. The statement says
the charges stem from Kamari Walker firing his gun in the mall at another group
of individuals who were also firing a gun. Officers say his brother, Kalief
Walker, after being released from the hospital on Friday, was arrested and
charged with breach of peace of a high and aggravated nature, contributing to
delinquency of a minor, and possession of a stolen pistol. On Saturday, Kalief
Walker was granted a $5,000 bond on each charge for a total of $15,000,
according to the Greenville Detention Center website.
wyff4.com
Milwaukee, WI: 4 hurt in shooting at McDonald's, restaurant window shattered
Milwaukee police say four people are hurt, including a 16-year-old, after a
shooting at a McDonald's restaurant around 8:30 p.m. Friday along Capitol Drive
in Milwaukee. A 12 News photographer captured video of a shattered window inside
the restaurant near Holton Avenue. Police say a 24-year-old was taken to the
hospital and is expected to recover. Three others, a 29-year-old, a 16-year-old
and a 20-year-old, were hurt but refused treatment at the scene. The
circumstances surrounding the shooting are still under investigation, but police
believe it may have stemmed from an argument.
wisn.com
Santa Fe, NM: One person injured after shooting at Santa Fe Place Mall
One person has been injured and two suspects are on the run after a shooting
incident Saturday at Santa Fe Place Mall. A spokesperson for Santa Fe police
says the shooting took place just before 4 p.m. Saturday. It's believed the
shooting took place inside the mall, but in an area that wasn't close to the
general shopping area. The person wounded in the shooting was taken to a local
hospital with a non-life-threatening injury to his left leg. The suspects were
able to leave the mall before police arrived. The shooting suspect was wearing a
black T-shirt with a face imprint along with black shorts. The second suspect
was wearing a red hoodie. Anyone with information on the suspects is asked to
call Santa Fe police at 505-428-3710. The mall has remained open within its
normal operating hours.
koat.com
Petersburg, VA: 5 shot, 1 critically injured, at Petersburg restaurant
Five people were shot, including one person who was critically injured, at a
restaurant in Old Towne Petersburg early Sunday, Crime Insider sources told Jon
Burkett. First responders were called to the 0 block of Bollingbrook Street
around 1:40 a.m. for a report of a person shot, according to online emergency
communications logs Crime Insider sources said five men were shot at the
restaurant. One of the victims suffered injuries that were described as
life-threatening. No details about the circumstances surrounding the shooting
were available at last check.
wtvr.com
Memphis, TN: Man hospitalized after shooting near Southeast Memphis restaurant
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Nappanee, IN: Woman Ran Over In Furniture Store Parking Lot
There is still no word on a woman’s condition after she was run over by a
vehicle. The woman suffered significant injuries after being run over in a
workplace parking lot early Thursday morning in Nappanee. Police say the
incident happened at Williamsburg Furniture on Cheyenne Street as employees were
arriving for work. Investigators say another employee accidentally ran over the
woman in the parking lot. She was airlifted to a hospital with what authorities
described as significant trauma. Her current condition has still not been
released, and the incident is still under investigation.
wowo.com
Prince George’s County: Capitol Heights man arrested, charged in $500,000
armored truck robbery in Prince George's County
A Capitol Heights man was arrested this week and charged in connection with an
armored truck robbery in Prince George's County from last year. Now, police say
they're searching for other suspects. Jerronta Bryant was arrested in
Washington, D.C., on Wednesday. Bryant is facing charges of armed robbery and
related offenses for the Nov. 3, 2025 heist.
aol.com
Philadelphia, PA: Police seek suspects in armed robbery at Popeyes restaurant
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•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Burglary
•
C-Store – Chicago, IL
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Hattiesburg,
MS - Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Kennewick,
WA – Robbery
•
C-Store – Roanoke, VA
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Bernice, OK
– Robbery
•
C-Store - Magnolia, AR
- Robbery
•
Dollar – Queens, NY –
Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Montgomery
County, PA – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – El Paso,
TX – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Philadelphia, PA – Armed Robbery
•
Sports – Harlingen, TX
– Robbery
•
Sport – Gainesville,
FL - Robbery
•
Walmart – Panama City,
FL – Armed Robbery |
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Daily Totals:
• 12 robberies
• 2 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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