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Exclusive New Report


Click here to read the full
report
Sponsored by


The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
Exterior Security Takes Priority
Making the case for exterior prevention in retail security
By Steve Womer,
Interface
Systems
According to the NRF’s Impact of Retail Theft and Violence 2025 report,
61% of retailers increased perimeter and exterior security measures
last year, more than any other loss prevention category surveyed.
Another 57% plan to increase those measures further in the next
18 months. The investment signals a clear shift in priorities, elevating
the parking lot from an afterthought to a critical part of a retailer’s
security strategy.
Why cameras alone are not enough
This is the gap many retailers are now working to close: the period
between the moment a camera detects activity and the moment that
activity becomes a loss event, a safety incident, or both. Detection
without response leaves a critical gap during unstaffed hours, when
store teams are off-site and incidents are most likely to escalate.
Parking lots, loading areas, and building perimeters often go
unmonitored during their most vulnerable hours.
What effective intervention looks like
A different model is now emerging in retail security: calibrated
escalation. AI-powered cameras detect activity on the perimeter and
classify it by risk level. When the system identifies a genuine concern,
it triggers a sequence of automated responses.
Pre-recorded audio deterrents, delivered through outdoor speakers at
increasing intensity, instruct the individual to leave the area.
High-intensity strobe lighting activates in parallel. Each step is
designed to resolve the situation before human involvement becomes
necessary.
If the activity persists despite automated deterrence, the system
escalates to a live intervention specialist at a monitoring center. The
specialist assesses the scene through live video, delivers a direct
verbal warning, and coordinates with law enforcement only when the
situation genuinely requires it.
This approach addresses two challenges at once. It resolves most
perimeter threats before a human operator is ever needed, and it
reserves police dispatch for situations that truly require it,
rather than treating dispatch as the default response to every alert.
The results are measurable. According to
Interface’s 2026 Retail Loss Prevention Benchmark Report,
96.1% of perimeter threats were resolved before escalation through
AI-enabled deterrence. Among incidents that did reach a live
operator, 99.7% were resolved through voice-down intervention without
law enforcement involvement.
Read full article:
chainstoreage.com
Rethinking Retail Crime Trends
Running The Numbers On Rising Retail Crime
A 30-year veteran in retail
technology, Sensormatic Solutions President Tony D’Onofrio is leading
the charge to redefine retail.
Retailers have made significant strides in their efforts to combat
growing losses. Investments in emerging technology have helped
leaders get a handle on the issue at hand, but these insights have
uncovered new facets of an old challenge. While the continued—and
seemingly growing—prevalence of organized retail crime (ORC) and theft
may feel discouraging, there’s an opportunity to move forward with
precision, for those willing to see it.
Recent retail data does show that crime-related losses are growing.
However, it also shows that the nature of the threat is fundamentally
different from what retail leaders once believed. In short, as
analytics tools have gotten more sophisticated, so has loss prevention
teams’ understanding of the landscape and the strategies ORC groups
favor.
And in that newfound knowledge, there is an opportunity to learn, both
about how theft operates in omnichannel environments and about the role
digital tools will play as the fight against ORC continues.
Making Sense Of Modern Shrink
The
National Retail Federation’s (NRF’s) 2025 Impact of Theft & Violence
report asserts that retail criminals have become increasingly
"brazen and dangerous" in recent years. The average number of
shoplifting incidents increased by 18% from 2023 to 2024, while the
number of threats or violent incidents increased by 17% during the same
time frame.
The study found that retailers are experiencing increases in activity
across virtually all theft categories. Roughly half (52%) of
retailers reported increases in shoplifting and merchandise theft,
with the average number of annual incidents
rising 93% from 2019 to 2023. During the same period, the
financial impact also saw a similar increase, with dollars lost to
shoplifting rising by 90%.
At the same time, ORC networks are growing in scale and scope.
The NRF’s data notes that, in 2025, two-thirds (67%) of retailers
reported being targeted by transnational ORC outfits. So, yes, at
face value? The landscape feels unprecedented. But that might not be as
true as it feels.
What we’re seeing is as much a shift in ORC tactics as one in
understanding, and that does not mean the technologies implemented over
the past decade or so are failing. In fact, they’re working exactly
as intended.
forbes.com
Addressing Violence in Retail
New guidance on violence and aggression in retail
The Thomas Ashton Institute's Violence and Aggression Research
Network (VARN) has contributed to the development of new
evidence-informed guidance aimed at helping retailers better prevent and
manage work-related violence and aggression.
Developed in collaboration with the Retail Trust and researchers at
Alliance Manchester Business School (AMBS), the guidance—Managing
violence and aggression in retail—provides practical strategies to
support organizations in protecting their workforce and improving
workplace safety.
Addressing a growing challenge
Work-related violence and aggression is an increasing concern across
the retail sector, with staff frequently exposed to verbal abuse,
threats, and physical harm in the course of their work. Recent research
underpinning the guidance highlights the scale of the issue, with many
incidents going unreported and a significant impact on staff well-being,
safety, and retention across the industry.
Evidence from the Retail Trust's Let's Respect Retail campaign shows
that the problem is widespread, with a substantial proportion of
retail workers reporting experiences of abuse, stress, and anxiety
linked to their work.
Evidence-based solutions for employers
The new guidance brings together academic research and industry insight
to provide retailers with practical, flexible approaches to tackling WVA.
It focuses on areas including:
-
Improving
reporting systems and encouraging staff to report incidents
-
Strengthening
training and prevention strategies
-
Supporting
colleagues affected by abuse
-
Fostering a
culture of respect and safety in retail environments
By equipping employers with actionable recommendations, the guidance
aims to help organizations create safer workplaces while
improving staff well-being and organizational resilience.
phys.org
World Cup Crime Crackdown
Crime down 9% in Atlanta during first week of World Cup, data shows
Crime was down by 9% during the first week of the FIFA World Cup in
Atlanta, according to data from the city’s police department. From
June 14-20, 330 incidents were reported, down from 362 the previous
week. Crimes involving people, such as homicide, rape and aggravated
assault, did increase by 18%, but crimes
involving property decreased by 14%.
Police have been out in full force as hundreds of thousands of people
visit Atlanta for the World Cup. Mercedes-Benz Stadium, currently
called Atlanta Stadium due to FIFA branding rules, is set to host eight
matches, including a semifinal.
Atlanta police said most officers are working 12-hour shifts six days
a week during the cup. About 170 special officers from other law
enforcement agencies across Georgia have also been sworn in to help
with operations downtown, Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum said
during a news conference shortly before the sports event started.
Downtown isn’t only home to Atlanta Stadium. Centennial Olympic Park is
also hosting FIFA Fan Festival Atlanta. The event pulled in nearly
275,000 attendees in its first 10 days, making it the best-attended
fan festival in any American host city.
atlantanewsfirst.com
Jeff-alytics: Announcing The Real Time Crime Index
Crime In CT Decreased Again In 2025, Led By Drops In Property And
Violent Crime
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Preventing Small Operational Losses
Silent Failures: The Risks Retailers Don't See
By
the D&D Daily staff
When retailers evaluate operational risk, attention often focuses on
major incidents such as organized retail crime, severe weather or
cybersecurity attacks. Yet many losses begin with something much
smaller: a process that slowly stops working as intended.
These "silent failures" rarely trigger immediate alarms. A
receiving procedure that is skipped during busy periods, an inventory
audit that becomes less consistent over time, or a store team that
develops workarounds to save time may seem insignificant on its own.
Collectively, however, these small deviations can create measurable
financial and operational consequences.
For loss prevention teams, identifying these gradual changes can be
just as important as responding to high-profile incidents. Many
inventory discrepancies, compliance issues and operational errors can
develop over weeks or months rather than appearing overnight.
The challenge is that successful processes often receive less
attention than failed ones. Once a procedure becomes routine,
organizations may assume it continues to function effectively. In
reality, staffing changes, new technology, evolving customer
expectations and shifting workloads can gradually alter how work is
actually performed.
Routine operational reviews can help identify these gaps before
they become larger problems. Rather than focusing solely on whether a
policy exists, many retailers are placing greater emphasis on whether
frontline execution still matches the original intent.
Data can also play an important role. Trends such as increasing
inventory adjustments, higher exception reporting, repeated
point-of-sale overrides or growing fulfillment errors may indicate
operational drift and warrant closer review before they contribute to
larger issues.
Cross-functional collaboration is equally valuable. Store
operations, merchandising, supply chain, finance and loss prevention
often view the same issue from different perspectives. Bringing those
viewpoints together can reveal patterns that individual departments
might overlook.
Retail loss prevention has expanded well beyond traditional
investigations. Increasingly, many organizations view the function as
an operational partner focused on identifying risks before they become
costly events. While major incidents will always demand attention,
preventing small problems from quietly growing into larger ones may
deliver some of the greatest long-term value.
Retail Fraud Costs Keep Rising
Study: Total cost of fraud now exceeds $5 for every $1 of direct loss
The cost of fraud is mounting for
North American retailers and merchants.
A study from LexisNexis Risk Solutions found that the total cost of
fraud now exceeds $5 for every $1 of direct loss in both the United
States and Canada, reaching approximately $5.13 in the U.S. and
$5.23 in Canada. This marks the first time LexisNexis Fraud Multiplier
has crossed the $5 threshold in both markets.
Online and mobile channels now account for most fraud costs,
representing up to 83% for e-commerce merchants. Common fraud types
include chargeback fraud, lost or stolen merchandise and fraudulent
returns, reflecting the breadth of threats facing merchants today.
LexisNexis found that nearly four-in-10 (37%) retail and e-commerce
organizations reported significant revenue losses tied to fraud over the
past year. At the same time, efforts to strengthen fraud controls
are contributing to customer friction, with more than half (56%) of US
retailers e-commerce merchants (54%) reporting increased customer churn
linked to anti-fraud measures.
Notably, more than two thirds of U.S. merchants reported concern
about the fraud risks associated with transactions placed by
AI-powered agents on behalf of consumers.
The study found that organizations with more developed fraud prevention
strategies are achieving stronger outcomes. For example, 20% of
high-maturity organizations reported decreased customer churn
because of fraud prevention efforts, compared with 9% of low-maturity
organizations.
High-maturity organizations are also more effective at preventing
fraud at scale, according to LexisNexis, with 19% stopping 1,000 or
more fraudulent transactions per month compared with 4% of low-maturity
businesses.
chainstoreage.com
Safety Requires Strategic Thinking
Stop Looking for the Next Tool, and Start Rethinking How You Think
Moving from programmatic to systems
thinking ensures safety efforts are sustainable and adaptable to
changing conditions.
Safety should evolve from a compliance-focused activity to a
strategic, resilience-building discipline that emphasizes recovery
and adaptability. Leadership must shift from supporting safety
initiatives to owning safety outcomes through active engagement and
diagnostic questioning.
Moving from programmatic approaches to systems thinking ensures
safety practices are sustainable and adaptable to changing conditions.
Organizations need to redefine safety as a core leadership
responsibility, fostering shared ownership and accountability at all
levels.
The next leap in safety performance requires a philosophical change—questioning
assumptions and embracing complexity rather than seeking quick fixes.
The real issue runs deeper than metaphor. The safety profession has a
pattern. Every few years, a new framework emerges. A new model, a new
certification, a new acronym, and organizations adopt it with
enthusiasm, implement it with discipline, and measure it with precision,
only to find, a few years later, that not much has fundamentally
changed. Injury rates may fluctuate, audit scores may improve, but
the underlying capacity to prevent and recover from serious events
remains largely unchanged.
Activity feels productive; strategy requires confrontation. Activity can
be measured; strategy must be reasoned. Activity protects us from
uncertainty; strategy demands we sit with it. That distinction
matters more now than ever.
ehstoday.com
OSHA Updates Voluntary Safety Program
OSHA Realigns VPP Core Elements
VPPPA will continue providing
resources and mentoring to help sites achieve safety excellence.
OSHA recently announced updates to its Voluntary Protection Programs
Policies and Procedures Manual effective June 16, 2026.
Sites participating in OSHA’s VPP will be required to follow the
seven core elements outlined in OSHA’s Recommended Practices for Safety
and Health Programs.
Changes to the program, including updates to language for Medical Access
Orders, and the creation of both VPP Elite and VPP Emeritus levels, are
outlined in OSHA Directive CSP 03-01-005.
“VPPPA recognizes that, as part of our collective goal to raise the
standard for workplace safety across the United States, the programs we
utilize to achieve this must continually evolve,” said VPPPA
Chairperson Terry J. Schulte in a statement. “OSHA’s announcement that
its Voluntary Protection Program (VPP) will now align with the agency’s
'Recommended Practices for Safety and Health Programs' represents
another step forward for VPP and VPPPA members.”
ehstoday.com
Casey's aims to open 'at least' 400 new stores over next three years
Survey: Top drivers of C-store loyalty include...
Core inflation rate hit 3.4% in May, highest since October 2023
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Repeat
offenders and escalating violence are a daily reality for retail
teams. The ones staying ahead aren't reacting faster, they're
identifying risk earlier.
Our guide covers how facial recognition works in retail, what
responsible deployment requires, and the practical path from
evaluation to implementation.
Read the guide |
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Managing Third-Party Cyber Risk
The Hidden Cyber Risk in Retail
Partnerships
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retailers are spending billions to strengthen physical security, but
one of the fastest-growing cyber risks often arrives through trusted
business relationships rather than direct attacks. As stores become
increasingly connected through cloud software, payment platforms,
inventory systems and third-party vendors, the challenge is expanding
beyond protecting a single network to managing an entire digital
ecosystem.
Retailers depend on a growing network of technology providers to keep
stores operating. Point-of-sale systems, workforce management
platforms, inventory software, payment processors, delivery partners and
connected devices all play an important role in daily operations. Each
connection improves efficiency, but it also creates another potential
pathway for cyber threats.
Cybersecurity experts increasingly describe this as supply chain or
third-party cyber risk. Rather than targeting a retailer directly,
attackers may target a vendor that provides services to multiple
customers. Depending on the nature of the compromise, attackers may gain
access through trusted software updates, remote management tools or
compromised credentials.
The challenge is particularly relevant for retailers because many
organizations rely on numerous outside technology providers. Even
retailers with strong internal security practices remain dependent on
the cybersecurity posture of their partners.
Managing that risk has become an ongoing process rather than a
one-time vendor review. Many retailers conduct cybersecurity
assessments before onboarding new vendors and establish minimum security
expectations for partners. Multi-factor authentication, incident
response planning, data encryption and vulnerability management have
become common topics during vendor evaluations.
Visibility also plays an important role. Security and IT teams
are placing greater emphasis on understanding which vendors have access
to sensitive systems, what data they can reach and whether that access
remains necessary over time. Regular reviews of privileged accounts and
remote connections can help reduce unnecessary exposure.
For loss prevention and asset protection leaders, cyber resilience
increasingly extends beyond the data center. Store operations,
inventory visibility, payment processing and customer service all depend
on technology that often reaches well outside a retailer's own walls.
As retail technology continues to evolve, organizations are finding
that cybersecurity is no longer defined solely by the strength of their
own defenses. It is also shaped by the resilience of the partners,
platforms and connected services that support everyday operations.
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Cyber Insurance Standards Tighten
As cyber risk evolves, the insurance industry tightens guardrails
C-suite executives are concerned
about resilience, but claims are increasingly tied to strict
underwriting standards.
As the risk of cyberattacks has increased in recent years, the
long-term financial consequences of such attacks have become a top
concern for large enterprises, small to medium-sized businesses and
even national governments.
Cyberattacks can have devastating consequences on businesses,
resulting in data loss, weeks of downtime and millions of dollars in
lost sales.
The cyber insurance market has matured as a tool to help protect
against these risks, growing into a global $15 billion industry. But
the insurance industry has major concerns about systemic cyber risk and
will not function as a blank check to secure organizations from
malicious attacks.
“A single vulnerability or attack can generate simultaneous claims
across an insurer’s entire portfolio, making it structurally
impossible for private markets to diversify away systemic cyber risk,”
according to a report by the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies.
The insurance industry is holding policyholders increasingly
accountable for maintaining strict oversight over their IT
environments.
cybersecuritydive.com
Stealthy Backdoor Targets Multiple
Sectors
Stealthy new backdoor surfaces in attacks on multiple sectors
A relatively new backdoor called Mistic has been deployed in multiple
attacks since April 2026 targeting organizations in the insurance,
education, IT, and professional services sectors, according to
Symantec.
The malware appears to be associated with Woodgnat, also known as
KongTuke, a financially motivated initial access broker (IAB) active
since at least May 2024 that has been connected to ransomware
operations including Qilin, Interlock, Rhysida, Akira, 8Base, and Black
Basta.
“Woodgnat reportedly functions primarily as an IAB. Its goal is not
to deliver the final payload, but to establish highly durable remote
access within an enterprise and sell this high-level access to
ransomware affiliates and other attackers for a fee,” the researchers
said.
helpnetsecurity.com
Hacker gets 18 months for attack that compromised 60,000 betting
accounts
NIST offers security guidance for water utilities using remote-access
tools |
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Delivery Workers Replaced By Robots?
Robots will replace 700K delivery workers, warns head of e-commerce
giant
The founder of JD.com expects it to
happen 'sooner or later.'
China’s e-commerce giant JD.com is preparing for a future where packages
are delivered by robots instead of people. The company’s founder and
chairman, Richard Liu, expects robots will “sooner or later” take
over deliveries from the company’s roughly 700,000 couriers.
“It will definitely be robots delivering packages. But I really
don’t want our 700,000 brothers to go without food and without jobs,”
Liu said at the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation CEO Forum, according
to the Financial Times.
He did not provide a more specific timeframe for the change. As part of
the transition, Liu said JD.com has entered into agreements with
about 120 schools to retrain couriers for new professions, including
the repair and maintenance of robots.
The number of gig workers in China — including delivery drivers,
chauffeurs, and factory workers on temporary contracts — is expected
to reach about 320 million this year, according to Chinese researchers.
At the same time, the youth unemployment rate stands at over 16%.
computerworld.com
Social Media Engagement is Key
Survey: Social media responsiveness from brands key for consumers
Brands and retailers that respond to social media are seen in a positive
light by consumers.
The vast majority (86%) of shoppers say they are more likely to
purchase from brands that are responsive on social media, according
to a new report from autonomous customer experience platform Emplifi.
That's a significant increase from 58% in the company's 2025 research.
Nearly six-in-10 (57%) consumers have contacted a brand via its
social media account for customer service. During busy shopping
seasons, consumers’ standards rise. Nearly nine-in-10 (88%) consumers
expect brands to respond within 24 hours during peak season.
A majority (62%) of consumers report making a purchase directly
within a social media app, up from approximately half of frequent
social media users in 2025.
"While shoppers are planning ahead and looking carefully at how they
spend, they're also rewarding brands that make them feel heard,
supported, and confident in their choices,” said Susan Ganeshan,
chief marketing officer at Emplifi. “The fact that 86% of consumers say
they're more likely to purchase from brands that respond on social media
shows that meaningful engagement can have a direct impact on revenue.”
chainstoreage.com
Numerator: Amazon Prime Day continues trailing 2025 performance
As AI Companies Race for Power, Amazon and Google Have the Lead
Thousands of coffee makers sold by Amazon and Walmart recalled |
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Gainesville, FL: Orlando man arrested for using stolen credit cards to
buy over $25,000 in merchandise from Gainesville Target
Rico Martino Michel, 35, of Orlando, is facing nine felony charges after
allegedly using stolen credit cards to purchase over $25,000 in iPads,
Nintendo Switches, and other merchandise from the Gainesville Target and
other stores. Target’s Loss Prevention Officers (LPO) notified a
Gainesville Police Department officer on June 15 that Michel had come
into the store several times and purchased “stacks of iPads,” numerous
Nintendo Switches, and other Apple and Nintendo products over a two-day
period. They believed the purchases were likely fraudulent because
Michel bought far more than the typical amount of these products and
only purchased two items at a time, although he brought “stacks” of
iPads and Switches to the checkout counter; however, he used the same
credit card every time, and the name on the card was a female name. The
LPOs noted that the technique of keeping purchases under a certain
dollar amount is often used in an attempt to avoid the threshold for
fraud notifications to the cardholder.
alachuachronicle.com
Memphis, TN: 4 men cut hole in store’s roof to steal cigarettes, vapes,
MPD says
The Memphis Police Department is searching for four suspects after a
business burglary. On June 15 around 9 a.m., officers responded to a
burglary call at the Memphis Cash and Carry on Carolina Avenue. Police
say four masked suspects cut a hole in the roof to get inside. Several
cartons of cigarettes and boxes of vape pens were stolen. The suspects
are described as four masked men wearing all black.
actionnews5.com
Memphis, TN: Suspect in $5,000 Academy Sports theft arrested
A man accused of stealing over $5000 worth of merchandise from Academy
Sports and Outdoors over a span of two days earlier this month is now in
jail. Carltrell Taylor, 39, is charged with theft of merchandise
$2,500-$10,000, two counts of burglary of a building, and organized
retail crime prevention act. Police say both men stuffed clothes into
the bag before leaving the store without paying. The Academy Sports
manager says the clothes were worth $3,600.
wreg.com
Chubbuck, ID: Man faces 10 theft charges after stealing nearly $1,400 in
sports cards
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Shootings & Deaths
Phoenix, AZ: 15-year-old indicted for murder in Desert Sky Mall shooting
A 15-year-old has been indicted on multiple felony charges in relation to a
deadly shooting reported at Desert Sky Mall earlier this month. Guillermo Guzman
has been charged with second-degree murder, four counts of aggravated assault
and one count of disorderly conduct for the shooting at the west Phoenix mall on
June 2, according to the Maricopa County Attorney's Office. he shooting killed a
17-year-old and wounded a 16-year-old. MCAO said the victims were working at a
kiosk inside the mall when Guzman became "aggressive" and then started firing a
gun at a group. Guzman is being held in custody on a $1 million bond.
12news.com
Cleveland, OH: Victim identified in deadly Euclid Pizza Hut shooting; suspect
charged with murder
Euclid police have provided more details about the deadly shooting of a woman
after an altercation at a Pizza Hut restaurant on Tuesday night, including the
names of the suspect and victim. Keishaun Kellom, 24, was arrested and charged
with murder in the death of Marshay Wilson, 29, according to the Euclid Police
Department. Officers were dispatched around 10:50 p.m. Tuesday to the Pizza Hut
at 22455 Shore Center Drive after receiving multiple reports of shots fired.
While responding, police learned an altercation had occurred inside the
restaurant between a customer and an employee. Investigators said Kellom exited
the business during the incident and fired a handgun at Wilson's vehicle as she
was leaving the area. Wilson, a Euclid resident, was struck in the head by
gunfire. Police said three people were inside the vehicle at the time of the
shooting. Despite her injuries, Wilson and a front-seat passenger drove away
from the area. Dispatchers used information from a 911 call placed by a
passenger to help officers locate the vehicle. Responding officers attempted
lifesaving measures before Wilson was transported to Euclid Hospital, where she
was pronounced dead. Meanwhile, officers who responded to Pizza Hut to meet with
employees identified Kellom as the suspected shooter and took him into custody
without incident. Police also recovered a firearm at the scene.
wkyc.com
Greenville, NC: Victim charged after being shot outside Greenville convenience
store
Marrero, LA: Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office investigating shooting outside
restaurant
Nashville, TN: Man charged after Mapco clerk shot in Donelson, police say
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Covington, KY: Man sets himself on fire at Kroger
Officials said a man set himself on fire at the Kroger on U.S. Highway 278
Tuesday afternoon. Covington Police Capt. Ken Malcom said a white male went into
the store and set himself on fire, burning himself -- he has second-degree burns
and was transported to Newton Medical Center -— and causing minor injuries to
three other police officers. The store was not severely damaged, but was closed
for approximately three hours while it followed certain required protocols,
Kroger Store Manager Horace McCullough said. "He was obviously disturbed. He was
pulling things off the shelves and he was throwing them on the ground. He took
rubbing alcohol from the shelves and drenched himself with it. He lunged at an
officer," Malcom said. "Officers were able to tackle him. He had a lighter on
him and he set himself on fire." Malcom said officers were able to put the fire
out fairly quickly. He said the fire burned two of the officers, one with minor
burns and the other with only blisters, while a third officer was sprayed in the
face with some of the chemicals from the fire extinguisher. "The investigation
is pretty early, but there will be multiple charges on the individual. At this
time, he has been taken to Newton Medical Center for his injuries," Malcom said.
Tim Singleton, 26, of Monroe, was charged with aggravated assault and a number
of other charges. McCullough, the store manager, said the man was walking up
and down the paper aisle while pouring a liquid, and he said Assistant Store
Manager Jeff Corbett was the one who reacted the fire with an extinguisher. "He
probably saved the guy’s life," McCullough said.
covnews.com
Chicago Police warn of Far South Side burglary pattern in which thieves come
through drywall
Austin, TX: Man sentenced to 24 years in prison for 2025 armed robberies in
Austin
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•
C-Store – Stamford, CT
– Burglary
•
C-Store – Donelson, TN
– Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Greenville,
NC – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Delano, CA –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Hall County,
GA – Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Chicago,
IL – Burglary
•
Clothing – Chicago, IL
- Burglary
•
Collectables –
Chubbuck, ID – Burglary
•
Dollar – Reserve, LA –
Burglary
•
Grocery – Concord, NH
- Robbery
•
Hardware –
Countryside, IL – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Monroe, NC – Robbery
•
Motorcycles –
Homewood, AL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Gulfport,
MS – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Charlotte, NC – Burglary
•
Restaurant – St Lois
County, MO – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Countryside, IL – Robbery
•
Sports - Memphis, TN –
Robbery
•
Tobacco – Mahoning
County, OH – Robbery
•
Tobacco - Chicago, IL
– Burglary
•
Vape – Memphis, TN -
Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 12 robberies
• 9 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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District Asset Protection & Safety Manager
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This position provides evaluation, communication, coordination,
recognition, and enforcement in the areas of safety, health, environment, and
asset protection on a district level. This position works with Stores, and
Corporate management to control inventory shrink...
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