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Alba
Montiel named Sr. Manager, Area Loss Prevention Manager (dd’s
Discounts) for Ross Stores Inc.
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Dusko
Tadic named Senior PM, Physical Security Innovation & Solutions
for Amazon
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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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The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
NRF's VP of AP & Retail Operations
Sets the Record Straight on CORCA
Opinion: Congress must ignore fearmongering and pass the ORC bill
By
David Johnston, VP of Asset Protection & Retail Operations, NRF
The positive is that most agree organized retail crime is real.
Where these opposing views fall short is mischaracterizing both the
legislation and the criminal activity it addresses.
Over nearly 40 years, I have seen organized theft groups evolve,
become more sophisticated and brazen, and exploit gaps between
jurisdictions. I understand the impact these crimes have on
retailers, employees, consumers and law enforcement. It is time to
dispel the myths surrounding the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act
and encourage the Senate to evaluate the bill based on facts, not
fiction or fear.
The first myth is that the Combating Organized
Retail Crime Act is about petty theft or federalizing shoplifting.
It is not. Organized retail crime is not a teenager stealing a t-shirt
or an individual acting out of desperation. Retailers and law
enforcement have long handled local shoplifting through existing
partnerships, recognizing the difference between theft driven by need
and theft driven by greed. The bill targets only those orchestrating and
directing large-scale theft operations, buying or fencing stolen goods
and transporting or reselling them across state or national borders.
The legislation does not include the words “petty theft” or
“shoplifting.” This bill is about criminal networks, not local
shoplifters.
Another
myth is that the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act is an unchecked
surveillance bill. For decades, retailers and law enforcement
have shared information tied to criminal investigations. That
information typically includes evidence of theft, images supporting
identification of suspects and data needed by law enforcement and
prosecutors to pursue arrests and prosecutions. What is missing today is
not surveillance authority but the ability to connect investigative
information across cities, counties and states.
A final misconception is that the bill simply
gives more power to the Department of Homeland Security, or more
specifically to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. The bill
does place the Coordination Center within Homeland Security
Investigations, and the agency does sit within ICE under Homeland
Security. But that fact is often presented without necessary context.
Homeland Security Investigations is already the lead investigative
agency for many crimes connected to organized retail theft, including
international organized theft, cargo theft, money laundering and the
illegal movement of goods and contraband across borders.
On behalf of the retail industry and as a consumer, I encourage the
Senate to follow the House’s lead, reject false claims and pass the
Combating Organized Retail Crime Act. Organized retail crime is not
ordinary shoplifting and it cannot be effectively addressed through
isolated local investigations alone. The bill provides the coordination
tools needed to identify, disrupt and dismantle organized criminal
networks. That is the responsible path forward.
thehill.com
Will CORCA Pass the Senate Soon?
RILA Urges Senate to Pass CORCA through NDAA
RILA welcomed Senate inclusion of
the Combatting Organized Retail Crime Act in the NDAA, advancing efforts
to combat theft, cargo crime, and fraud.
The
Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA) applauds the Senate for
including the Combatting Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA) as an
amendment to the 2027 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).
“Leading retailers extend our sincere thanks to Senators Grassley and
Durbin for their leadership and commitment to addressing organized
retail crime and moving the Combatting Organized Retail Crime Act
forward. This bipartisan bill brings together needed resources and
federal coordination that will strengthen collaboration between law
enforcement and industry partners to dismantle the criminal syndicate
networks running cargo theft and gift card schemes and too-often
violent instore theft events,” said Evan Armstrong, senior vice
president of government affairs at RILA.
CORCA has strong bipartisan support from lawmakers, law enforcement and
the retail industry at large. Earlier this year, RILA sent a letter to
senators signed by nearly 200 organizations urging quick passage of this
important bill.
“Holding the individuals and networks behind these crimes accountable
will help make communities, workers, and retail stores safer. We look
forward to working with Senators to see this bill pass the Senate,”
said Armstrong.
RILA has been at the forefront of addressing organized retail crime by
advocating for stronger legislative solutions at the federal and state
level, fostering collaboration between retailers and law enforcement,
leading the fight against gift card fraud and raising public awareness
about the impacts of these crimes.
Advancing CORCA is an important next step in our mission to restore
vibrancy to local communities. The threat posed by organized retail
crime networks requires stronger coordination and information-sharing
across public and private partners. CORCA provides the tools necessary
for coordinated action, ensuring that law enforcement and industry
partners can prosecute and dismantle the criminal enterprises
orchestrating these sophisticated schemes.
rila.org
Emergency Exits, Hidden Theft Risk
The Forgotten Door: Why Emergency Exits Are Becoming a Retail Security
Priority
By
the D&D Daily staff
Most retail security strategies focus on what happens at the front of
the store—customer entrances, checkout lanes, self-checkout areas and
high-value merchandise displays. But loss prevention professionals
are increasingly recognizing that one of the most important security
considerations may be located along the building's perimeter.
In some organized retail theft cases, emergency exits become
carefully planned escape routes rather than emergency-only doors.
Offenders may enter through the front of the store like any other
shopper, gather merchandise over several minutes and then leave through
a rear or side emergency exit where an accomplice is waiting outside.
Unlike a traditional push-out theft through the main entrance, these
incidents can unfold away from employees, customers and front-facing
cameras. The shortened escape route may also reduce opportunities
for observation and delay awareness until after the suspects have left
the property.
Because emergency exits are governed by fire and life-safety codes,
retailers cannot simply increase physical security by restricting their
use. Instead, many organizations rely on layered security measures
designed to improve awareness without compromising emergency egress.
Those measures can include exit-door alarms, door-position sensors,
integrated video surveillance, analytics that identify repeated
emergency-exit activity and camera coverage extending into loading
docks, service corridors and parking areas. Reviewing alarm data
over time may also help identify recurring patterns tied to specific
days, shifts or locations.
Employee awareness remains another important component.
Associates should understand that an emergency-exit alarm may indicate
more than an accidental opening and know how to report suspicious
activity through established procedures while avoiding physical
confrontation.
For retailers, emergency exits present a unique security challenge.
They must always remain available for their intended life-safety
purpose, yet they can also create opportunities for organized theft when
left outside a broader security strategy. As retailers continue refining
their loss prevention programs, monitoring these often-overlooked access
points can provide another layer of visibility into organized theft
activity while helping support safer stores for employees and customers
alike.
Crime-Fighting Police Tech Making
Headlines
Are Flock cameras next? Supreme Court rules against police using
sprawling cell phone location data
The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision restricting law enforcement’s
ability to use sprawling cell phone location data is bringing to
light questions about the legitimacy of Flock Safety cameras used by
police in Ohio and elsewhere.
Police use “geofence warrants” to get location data of suspects’
electronic devices. “We just hope that it is not a tool that is removed
from our tool belt,” Ohio Fraternal Order of Police President Jay
McDonald said.
These can help solve crimes when police run out of options, he
added. A new U.S. Supreme Court decision is shining a spotlight on
police technology.
“We need to make apprehensions in those (cases) as quickly as possible
to prevent other violent crimes from occurring,” he said.
But this ruling worries law enforcement for another reason: Flock camera
surveillance. “Flock cameras are extremely important,” McDonald
said. “I certainly hope that this does not have an impact on that.”
The cameras, typically used as license plate readers, have popped up all
over the state and country. They are facing increasing pushback,
especially online and at city council meetings.
ohiocapitaljournal.com
Overall crime down in Milwaukee, officials release quarterly data
New ranking says this is Mississippi's most dangerous city
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Making Retail Security Data Actionable
Turning Security Data into Better Retail Decisions
By
the D&D Daily staff
Retail loss prevention has never had access to more information.
Cameras, electronic article surveillance (EAS), access control systems,
inventory platforms and point-of-sale data all generate valuable
insights every day. The challenge is no longer collecting data—it's
determining which information is actually useful and turning it into
better business decisions.
Many retailers are shifting away from viewing loss prevention
technology as standalone security tools. Instead, they are
integrating multiple systems to create a broader picture of what's
happening across stores. When inventory discrepancies, transaction
exceptions, customer traffic and security events can be viewed together,
patterns often emerge that would have otherwise gone unnoticed.
This integrated approach can help identify operational issues just as
effectively as security concerns. Repeated inventory variances may
point to receiving problems rather than theft. Frequent register
overrides could signal a need for additional employee training. High
traffic combined with long checkout times may indicate staffing
challenges that affect both customer experience and shrink.
Data quality is equally important. Collecting large amounts of
information has limited value if reports are inconsistent, incomplete or
difficult to interpret. Many organizations are focusing on standardized
reporting, cleaner data collection practices and dashboards that allow
field leaders to quickly identify trends without sorting through dozens
of separate reports.
Cross-functional collaboration also plays an increasingly important
role. Loss prevention teams are sharing data with operations,
merchandising, finance and supply chain departments to address issues
that extend beyond traditional security responsibilities. As a result,
decisions about staffing, store layouts, product placement and inventory
processes can be supported by measurable information rather than
assumptions.
Technology will continue to expand the amount of data available to
retailers, but successful programs will depend on how effectively
that information is analyzed and applied. Rather than chasing every
metric, organizations are finding greater value in identifying the
indicators that align with their business objectives and using them to
guide practical, measurable improvements.
Maintaining Workplace Safety During
Heat Waves
Cal/OSHA advises employers to prevent heat illness as temperatures
increase in Southern California
As temperatures continue to rise this week, Cal/OSHA reminds all
employers to protect their employees and prevent heat illness at
indoor and outdoor workplaces by providing water, shade and rest breaks.
As summer temperatures rise, employers must remain vigilant and ensure
that workers have access to water, shade or cool-down areas, and
adequate rest breaks.
Heat illness is a serious and potentially fatal workplace hazard. Under
Cal/OSHA’s Heat Illness Prevention Standards, employers are legally
required to protect workers from heat-related illness in both indoor and
outdoor workplaces. Employers may be covered under both the indoor
and outdoor regulations if they have workers in each setting. See the
Comparison Chart of Indoor and Outdoor Heat Illness Prevention Standards
for more information.
Cal/OSHA’s Heat Illness Prevention in Indoor Places of Employment
regulation applies to most indoor workplaces, such as restaurants,
warehouses, and manufacturing facilities. For indoor workplaces
where the temperature reaches 82 degrees, employers must take steps to
protect workers from heat illness. Some of the requirements include
providing water, rest, cool-down areas, and training.
dir.ca.gov
Serving Shoppers With Disabilities
Are Retailers Doing Enough To Serve the Needs and Desires of Shoppers
Facing Disabilities?
Retailers have, over the years, improved their operations to make
things easier (and more attractive) for U.S. consumers facing
disabilities to shop with them. Historically speaking, as Fable
noted, in 1984 Jane Snowball — an elderly woman with mobility concerns —
was able to place the first-ever online order, including eggs, corn
flakes, and margarine.
Now, in a recent research paper produced by Disability:IN in conjunction
with the American Institutes for Research (AIR), the topic of how
retailers might better serve the needs and desires of American consumers
with disabilities was thoroughly examined. For starters, the reports
author’s suggested that the disability consumer market is currently
worth an estimated $675 billion — a significant uptick from the $490
billion in valuation less than a decade ago, in 2018.
“People with disabilities represent a powerful segment of the
marketplace, with significant opportunity for business performance,”
AIR’s Kathleen Murphy, lead author and Managing Researcher, said in a
press release.
retailwire.com
2026 Store Closures
Major retailers plan widespread store closures in 2026
Who is closing?: Foot Locker,
GameStop, Saks Off 5th, Pizza Hut, Walgreens, Kroger, Macy's, and
Francesca's will shut down locations in 2026.
Why now?: Closures stem from
bankruptcies, declining foot traffic, rising costs, and strategic
turnarounds aimed at boosting profitability.
Impact ahead: Communities may lose
local shopping options, while the retail sector faces intensified
pressure from online and discount competitors.
msn.com
Family Dollar is Permanently Closing 350+ Stores — Here’s What Comes
Next
UK John Lewis to cut 200 roles as it axes in-store services
Podcast: How to Stay Cool on the Job as Temperatures Soar
Store brands continue growth as national brands stall
Oil prices rise, and stocks fall worldwide after Trump says ceasefire
with Iran is ‘over’
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All the News - One Place - One Source - One Time
Thanks to our sponsors/partners - Take the time to thank them as well
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If it wasn't for them The Daily wouldn't be here every day for you.
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Retail Breach Costs Keep Rising
The Hidden Price of Retail Data Breaches
By
the D&D Daily staff
When retailers experience a cybersecurity breach, headlines often focus
on stolen payment cards or compromised customer information. But for
many organizations, the most significant costs emerge long after the
initial intrusion has been contained.
Modern retail operations depend on interconnected systems that manage
everything from e-commerce transactions and loyalty programs to
inventory, distribution and supplier communications. A successful
cyberattack can disrupt multiple parts of the business simultaneously,
creating operational and financial consequences that extend well beyond
regulatory notifications or forensic investigations.
According to industry research, business interruption has become one
of the largest expenses associated with major retail breaches.
Online storefronts may be taken offline, fulfillment systems temporarily
disabled and customer service operations overwhelmed as companies work
to investigate incidents and restore normal operations. Even brief
disruptions during peak shopping periods can translate into substantial
lost revenue.
Recovery efforts also require significant internal resources. IT
teams must identify the source of the compromise, remove malicious
software, rebuild affected systems and verify that attackers no longer
have access. Legal, compliance, communications and customer support
departments often become heavily involved as organizations respond to
regulatory requirements and customer inquiries.
Retailers are also placing greater emphasis on supply chain
resilience. Third-party vendors, managed service providers and
software platforms increasingly represent potential entry points for
attackers. As a result, many organizations are expanding vendor risk
assessments, requiring stronger cybersecurity controls from partners and
implementing continuous monitoring of external connections.
Preparation before an incident remains one of the most effective ways
to reduce disruption. Regular security assessments, employee
phishing awareness training, multi-factor authentication, network
segmentation and tested incident response plans can help organizations
detect threats earlier and recover more efficiently when attacks occur.
As cyber threats continue to evolve, retailers are recognizing that
the true impact of a breach is measured not only by the data that is
stolen, but by how quickly operations can be restored, customer
confidence maintained and business continuity preserved. Building
resilience has become as important as preventing attacks in the first
place.
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Malicious AI
Thousands of malicious AI skills found capable of stealing data, running
malware
AI agents can browse the web, use external tools, execute commands, and
perform tasks on behalf of users. Many rely on skills that define how
they interact with services and data. Malicious skills can abuse
those capabilities to steal data, execute malware, or manipulate an
agent’s behavior, according to the H1 2026 ESET Threat Report.
Malicious AI skills expand the attack surface
An analysis of nearly 900,000 AI skills identified more than 25,000
suspicious skills and over 3,000 malicious ones. Between March and
May 2026, the number of unique skills scanned increased from 60,000 to
almost 900,000. Suspicious skills grew from around 10,000 to more than
25,000. Malicious skills increased from about 600 to over 3,000.
Researchers identified capabilities including command execution, file
access, downloading third-party tools, credential loading, code
injection, and obfuscation. These capabilities can support
legitimate tasks. They can be used to steal data, execute malware,
manipulate AI agents, or gain unauthorized access to systems.
The analysis also identified red-team, self-modifying, and online
purchasing skills. Some security scanner skills performed only basic
checks, giving users a false sense of protection.
“AI skills can enable a wide range of agentic AI abuses, from automated
reconnaissance and red-team-style attacks to spam generation, malware
modification, and distribution. Adversaries will likely keep testing
these approaches to bypass controls, including by obfuscating intent or
using region-specific, niche, or constructed languages,” said Anton
Mäčko, ESET Malware Analyst.
helpnetsecurity.com
Cybersecurity & AI Action Plan
EU unveils cyber plan to reduce reliance on foreign AI systems
The European Commission published on Tuesday an action plan on
cybersecurity and artificial intelligence, committing to nine
measures on model evaluation, access to frontier systems and
vulnerability management, amid the concern that its access to frontier
models depends entirely on foreign powers.
The communication, adopted in Strasbourg on July 7, is built around
three pillars: making frontier AI “safe, accessible and deployable” for
European cybersecurity, preparing the EU’s cyber ecosystem and scaling
European AI capabilities.
Henna Virkkunen, the Commission’s executive for technology, told
reporters the plan would not be accompanied by any new legislation, with
the focus instead being on enforcing existing rules.
The lack of legislation will mean the action plan carries no legal
force, with the document highlighting how existing European laws —
particularly NIS2 and the Cyber Resilience Act — must be adopted and
implemented by member states “as a matter of urgency.”
Its most significant measure is a “European Blueprint for structured
access to advanced AI capabilities for cybersecurity purposes,”
which the document says will be drafted by the Commission and the EU
Agency for Cybersecurity (ENISA) by the end of this year.
therecord.media
20 open-source cybersecurity tools to keep your team ready for anything
macOS is becoming a proving ground for AI agents |
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Don't Be the Victim of Online Shopping
Scams
Summer sale scams: How to spot fake deals before you buy
Summer is the perfect time for scammers because shoppers expect deep
discounts. A retailer offering 60% or even 80% off selected items
doesn't immediately raise suspicion during end-of-season sales.
Scammers exploit that expectation by creating fake online stores,
impersonating well-known brands, and promoting counterfeit sales
across social media, search engines, and messaging apps.
The result? You think you're buying a bargain. Instead, you lose your
money, receive counterfeit products, or hand your payment details
directly to criminals.
Some scammers create entire shopping websites that look like
legitimate online stores. Bitdefender Labs recently identified
fake-shop campaigns impersonating brands including Samsung, Nike,
Adidas, Zara, H&M, Amazon, Lidl, and SHEIN. They may advertise a summer
clearance, store-closing sale, warehouse liquidation, or claim to be the
official outlet for a well-known brand.
The websites often use professional product photos, realistic prices,
and familiar branding to convince shoppers they're buying from the
real retailer.
If one fake website is taken down, another often appears in its place.
Many scammers continuously register new domains and reuse the same
tactics under different names.
You might find these fake stores through a Facebook or Instagram ad,
a sponsored Google result, an email, a WhatsApp message, or an SMS.
Just because an ad appears on a trusted platform, or at the top of
Google search results, doesn't mean the store is legitimate.
Flash sales are common during the summer, but scammers also use fake
countdown timers and false scarcity to pressure shoppers into buying
quickly. Some timers restart every time you refresh the page, while
others claim stock is almost gone even when the products aren't selling
at all.
bitdefender.com
More Shoppers Accept Online
Marketplaces
Consumer acceptance of online marketplaces grows
Online marketplaces are becoming
increasingly important to retailers as customers utilize them more.
More than four-in-10 consumers (44%) first buy from a new brand on
marketplaces like Amazon or Walmart, compared to 10% who shop on an
online retail website like Target or Macy’s and 3% who visit social
shopping channels like TikTok Shop.
In addition, 38% of U.S. consumers recently surveyed by Dynata on
behalf of Radial Inc. said they are shopping online marketplaces more
often than in 2025, led by millennials (45%) and Gen Z (44%). In
contrast, 19% of respondents said said they shop more on retailer
websites year over year and 13% said the same for social commerce.
Nearly four-in-10 (39%) of all respondents – and 56% of Gen Z – say
they trust a brand more when it becomes available across multiple
shopping destinations, while only 5% say they trust a brand less.
chainstoreage.com
Opinion: You bought something online? Prepare for an avalanche.
Is shipping to the EU now more expensive for consumers? |
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Mississauga, Ontario, Canada: Update: Nearly $1M in stolen property
recovered after break-in at Holt Renfrew in Mississauga, 1 charged
A 41-year-old Mississauga man has been arrested and charged after police
recovered nearly $1 million in stolen property following a break-in at a
high end store in a Mississauga mall. Peel Regional Police said on
Friday that a masked suspect used tools to enter the Holt Renfrew
department store inside Square One Shopping Centre on April 30 shortly
after 1 a.m. and pried open a security gate to gain access to the store.
Inside, he smashed glass cases and walked off with high-priced jewelry
and clothing from several displays.
cbc.ca
Nashville, TN: Cops Say Nashville Inmate Orchestrated Home Depot
Power-Tool Heists From Behind Bars
A Nashville man now faces 33 shoplifting counts after arrest paperwork
accused him of running a retail-theft operation that zeroed in on Home
Depot stores across the city. Authorities say the ring focused on
power tools, with stolen merchandise totaling $28,558, and that the
group used online listings and pawn shops to move the goods. According
to police documents, arrest warrants identify 25-year-old Charles
Lindsey and state the thefts took place between Jan. 13 and May 18.
While he was in custody in Brentwood, Lindsey allegedly directed his
girlfriend, 40-year-old Emily Gilbert, along with another woman, to
steal tools from Home Depot stores. Arrest records say Gilbert admitted
to the thefts and told investigators she took the items to pawn shops
around Nashville. Lindsey is charged with 33 counts, including an
organized retail crime supervisor count, and police say he listed stolen
tools for sale on Facebook, as reported by FOX17. Detectives with Metro
Nashville's Organized Retail Crime unit typically pull together
surveillance footage, receipts, and resale data to link thefts across
multiple locations and build up total loss figures that can support
felony charges. The unit has been active in recent years, and local
reporting noted the ORC team made 265 arrests in 2025 as part of a
broader crackdown on serial shoplifting. That collaboration between
detectives and store loss-prevention staff, combined with tracking
pawn-shop activity and online sales, is what investigators say helps
them spot repeat offenders and alleged supervisors, according to WSMV.
hoodline.com
Hays, KS: Four arrested after alleged attempted Walmart theft in Hays
An alleged theft attempt at the Hays Walmart ended with four arrests
after quick communication between Walmart employees, the Hays Police
Department and the Kansas Highway Patrol. Deputy Chief Tim Greenwood
said Walmart's asset protection team received information through an
internal network that an alleged suspect was allegedly attempting to
fraudulently purchase almost $2,000 worth of electronics using what
Greenwood described as a "Spark" app.
hayspost.com
Calgary, AB, Canada: Four family members charged after alleged jewelry
store theft at Calgary’s Market Mall
Calgary police say several members of the same family are facing charges
after an alleged coordinated theft from a jewelry store at Market Mall.
Police were called to the Hillberg & Berk store at the northwest Calgary
shopping centre on June 17 following reports of a theft. Officers spoke
with an employee and reviewed security footage, which led them to
determine that six family members had entered the store together during
the incident.
redfm.ca
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Shootings & Deaths
Houston, TX: Man shot in the head at southeast Houston corner store
Houston police with the Southeast Patrol Division responded to a reported
shooting around 11:30 p.m. Friday at a corner store in the 8900 block of Cullen
Boulevard.. When officers got to the scene, they found an adult man suffering
from a gunshot wound to the head, authorities said. He was taken to a nearby
hospital and was believed to be in critical condition. Police said it’s not yet
clear what led up to the shooting. Investigators are working to gather
information, including reviewing surveillance footage, as they try to determine
what happened. The suspect or suspects left the area before officers arrived.
click2houston.com
St Louis, MO: Update: Victim’s family left with many questions after fatal South
City convenience store shooting
The family of Marcus Ehlers is searching for answers, identifying him as the
22-year-old who was shot and killed inside a QuikTrip on Gravois in South City
late Saturday night. St. Louis Metropolitan Police (SLMPD) said Ehlers was found
shot near the counter and died on the scene. One other person was injured, and a
man who called police said he was involved in the shooting was detained for
further investigation.
firstalert4.com
Kansas City, MO: Grand jury indicts man for deadly shooting at c-store
A Jackson County grand jury indicted a Kansas City man for a deadly shooting at
a convenience store last month. The indictment filed on Friday, July 2, is for
the same charges Jackson County prosecutors filed on June 12. Timothy McClenton,
36, is facing a second-degree murder charge, as well as unlawful use of a weapon
and two counts of armed criminal action.
fox4kc.com
Downey, CA: DOJ: Gunman in Downey armed robbery faces federal sentencing
An ex-con from Long Beach faces sentencing Wednesday for his role in the armed
robberies of a liquor store, gas station, and convenience store -- a crime spree
that ended in the death of an innocent bystander and the injury of another in a
car accident while the defendants fled from police. Kaelenn Maea, 29, pleaded
guilty in Los Angeles federal court in April 2025 to three counts: conspiracy to
interfere with commerce by robbery, interference with commerce by robbery, and
possession, brandishing and discharging a short-barreled rifle during a violent
crime. Prosecutors are requesting a prison sentence of 17 years and six
months. During the armed robbery spree, the defendant "pointed a short-
barreled rifle at store employees and customers while he robbed three different
stores with his co-conspirators, even once needlessly and intentionally
shooting the rifle into the air," federal prosecutors wrote in sentencing
papers.
thedowneypatriot.com
Oklahoma City, OK: OKC man sentenced to 71 months after convenience store
shooting, prior convictions
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
Indianapolis, IN: 3 men sentenced for string of July 2024 armed robberies at gas
stations, stores across Indianapolis
Clarksville, TN: Suspect arrested in machete attack, robbery of C-store clerk
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•
Antique - Osceola, MO
– Armed Robbery
•
Auto – Woodbridge, VA
- Robbery
•
C-Store – Ozark
County, MO – Burglary
•
C-Store – Cypress
Lake, FL – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Livermore
Falls, ME - Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Forsyth
County, GA – Robbery
•
C-Store – St Louis, MO
– Armed Robbery
•
Cellphone – Staten
Island, NY – Burglary
•
Dollar - St Louis, MO
– Robbery
•
Hardware – Midwest
City. OK - Robbery
•
Restaurant –
Schenectady, NY – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Chicago,
IL – Burglary
•
Restaurant –
Springfield, IL – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Tupelo,
MS – Burglary
•
Restaurant – Oakland,
CA – Burglary |
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Daily Totals:
• 8 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |
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Click map to enlarge
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Featured Job Spotlights
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Help Your Colleagues - Your Industry - Build a
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District Asset Protection & Safety Manager
South San Francisco
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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