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 7/14/26

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Gatekeeper Systems, Inc. names Uri Pelli Senior Vice President, Business Operations & Transformation

Gatekeeper Systems is excited to name Uri Pelli as the new Senior Vice President, Business Operations & Transformation.

Uri joins Gatekeeper from McKinsey & Company, where he spent over a decade as a Partner leading growth transformation across industrial and technology businesses. He holds an MBA from Harvard Business School.

At Gatekeeper, Uri will drive the execution of strategic priorities and strengthen cross-functional alignment across business units.

Congratulations, Uri!


See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here  |  Submit Your New Corporate Hires/Promotions or New Position

 

 

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Protos Highlights Scale of Security Operations

Protos Security is showcasing the scale of its managed security operations through a series of company metrics that underscore the breadth of its platform and nationwide network.

According to Protos, the company has coordinated nearly 9.9 million hours of service across more than 1.1 million shifts while supporting security operations at 17,061 locations throughout the United States, Puerto Rico and Canada. Its platform has also recorded more than 1.47 million digital punches, reflecting the volume of workforce activity managed through its technology.

The company says its network continues to expand, adding more than 200 vendors while supporting 50,000-plus platform users. Additional operational milestones include 74,556 guard tours completed and 1,297 field operations site visits.

Protos says the figures represent the trust of its clients, the strength of its partner network and the people behind its operations. Together, the metrics provide a snapshot of the company's reach as it continues supporting organizations with technology-enabled security management and a broad network of security service providers across North America.

Click here to learn more
 




 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


LPRC Tests Retail Theft Solutions
Inside America’s Shoplifting Lab

In the war on “shrink,” big retailers are turning to one Florida outfit to study shoppers and prevent them from stealing. I went there—and saw far too much.

Dr. Hayes is the executive director of the Loss Prevention Research Council and the steward of America’s leading lab to prevent shoplifting, located in muggy Gainesville, Florida. It’s not just Justin’s, the simulated store, with its unparalleled density of anti-shoplifting technologies. Dr. Hayes has made all of campus’s Innovation Square into a live testing ground. Even the surrounds are landscaped with solar-powered towers running cameras, detectors, and more. Also, there is Spanish moss.

Dr. Hayes is best known as the man who brought the scientific method to shoplifting studies—no ideology, just cold, hard facts and figures. Nowhere is there a higher concentration of theft-thwarting tech and thief-busting research. The LPRC does it all: It gathers the reports, it tests out the technology, it grills the criminals, and it recommends the solutions. It even produces the data that says there’s a problem in the first place.

All this not a moment too soon, because America, as we all know, is in the midst of a shoplifting crisis.

On one wall hung the names of the “Innovate Advisory Panel,” the most active retail participants. On the adjoining wall hung the names of the “solution partners,” the companies that make the loss-prevention tech on display in the lab, the new-age weaponry in the war on “shrink,” the industry’s preferred coinage for the problem. There were 171 of those, also dues-paying. Plus, now, restaurants. At last count, there were over 200,000 stores in the LPRC’s fast-growing private-policing network.

Dr. Hayes walked me through the bow tie model: Shoplifters, on the road to stealing, progress through a color-coded countdown to crime. Zone 5, he told me, the far left of the bow tie, represented “the parking lot, or even online.” That was midnight blue. Zone 4 was in front of the store. It was navy or so. Zone 3 was inside the store. Cerulean, let’s say. Zone 2 was in the aisle, soft blue. And Zone 1, that was crime time. It was gray. It was also called “at bang.” The right side of the bow tie—Reds 2, 3, 4, and 5—were the same stages in reverse, as the criminal takes the item from shelf to aisle to store to the parking lot and home.

5, 4, 3, 2—1, crime, bang—then 2, 3, 4, 5. The left the approach, the right the escape. Nine zones in all. “Affect. Detect. Connect,” read the bow tie sticker.

Dr. Hayes helped found the LPRC in 2000 to attempt to solve many problems afflicting loss prevention. One such problem was the lack of distinction in the space. While the top criminologists were being spirited away by the allure of cracking white-collar crime, which paid more, no one wanted to do the yeoman’s work of stopping boosters, which, at least at the entry level, married life-threatening risk with near-minimum-wage pay. slate.com
 

Australia's Retail Crime Wave
Retail crime is now estimated to cost Australian businesses $9 billion each year
Retailers across Australia are facing an escalating wave of crime, with industry estimates suggesting theft, property damage and associated security costs now exceed $9 billion annually. What was once considered an occasional operational issue has today become an economic and public safety concern, affecting retailers of every size across the country.

While some industries are hit more than others, businesses across the board are reporting higher levels of shoplifting, organised theft, aggressive customer behaviour and violence against staff. As a result, retailers are investing more heavily in technology, training and security services in Melbourne and other major Australian cities to better protect people and inventory.

Alongside this, as retail crime continues to rise locally and across the state, governments, industry groups and retailers are working to identify practical solutions that improve safety while reducing the growing economic burden on Australian businesses. Let’s take a look at the issue and potential solutions.

Retail Crime Continues to Rise Across Australia

Recent industry data and government crime statistics indicate that retail theft has increased significantly since the COVID-19 pandemic. Many retailers have reported more frequent incidents involving repeat offenders, organised retail crime groups and increasingly confrontational behaviour toward retail employees.

Industry organisations have warned that the problem extends beyond opportunistic shoplifting, too. Organised criminal groups are increasingly targeting high-value products including cosmetics, alcohol, electronics, luxury goods, baby formula and over-the-counter medications, often stealing large quantities for resale through online marketplaces or illicit distribution networks. Alongside this, frontline retail workers are experiencing greater levels of verbal abuse, intimidation and physical assault when attempting to intervene. kyfreepress.com.au


Is Shame an Effective Shoplifting Deterrent?
Harger: Washington leads the nation in shoplifting. A 33-officer department in Bonney Lake is trying to do something about it
Washington state now we leads the nation in shoplifting. Washington sees 48% more retail theft than you’d expect from a state our size. That’s the Forbes Advisor analysis that ranked us worst in the country.

Worst. Ahead of every other state. The Washington Retail Association puts the haul in a single recent year at $2.7 billion. Hundreds of millions in sales tax never collected, never paid for anything. Every one of those dollars finds its way back to you. As a price tag. As a locked cabinet. As a store that quietly stops restocking what keeps walking out the door.

But a 33-officer police department in Bonney Lake decided to stop just accepting it. What they’re doing costs nothing, it’s working, and almost nobody else in the state is bothering. They run a Facebook page called Can You ID Crime. Surveillance stills of people they haven’t identified yet, with the date, what got taken, and a tip line.

It works. It costs nothing. It asks nothing of the community except a pair of eyes. Shame only works if the word stings. We spent a decade making sure it doesn’t.

Washington even has a statewide site built for this, called CanYouID.me, where investigators can post photos of people caught on camera they can’t identify. The tool exists. Most departments barely touch it. Meanwhile, we’re the worst in the country for shoplifting, and we have fewer officers per capita than any state in the nation.

Every department in this state has surveillance footage sitting on a hard drive. Every department has a Facebook page. The tool is free. The audience is already there. Bonney Lake is doing it with 33 officers and a tip line. What’s everybody else’s excuse? mynorthwest.com


Theft & Violence Shutters Another Store
Neighborhood grocery store that ended food desert closing; owners cite theft, rising costs
The Country Meat Co. Marketplace, the only full-service grocery store in Avondale, is closing after less than two years in business.

Owners Chanel and Tennel Bryant announced the decision in a social media post, citing rising operating costs, theft, violence in the surrounding area, unmet financial commitments and other financial challenges.

The market opened in February 2025 at Avondale Town Center on Reading Road, becoming the neighborhood's first full-service grocery store since 2008 and helping address a long-standing food desert. The Black-owned business offered fresh produce, meat, take-home meals, a coffee bar and other grocery staples while emphasizing locally sourced products and community engagement. local12.com
 

Federal Way reports total crime down 21% in first half of 2026, murder down 43%

Ohio Crime Statistics Dashboard showcases 10 years of crime data
 



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Building Tomorrow's LP Leaders
Developing the Next Generation of LP Leaders


By the D&D Daily staff

Retail loss prevention has become increasingly complex, requiring professionals to understand far more than investigations and physical security. Today's teams are expected to navigate technology, data analytics, workplace safety, compliance, cybersecurity, operations and cross-functional collaboration. As those responsibilities continue to grow, investing in training and career development has become more important than ever.

Many organizations are expanding onboarding programs to give new team members a broader understanding of retail operations before introducing specialized responsibilities. Exposure to store operations, supply chain processes and customer service can help LP professionals better understand the environments they support and strengthen relationships with other departments.

Ongoing education is equally valuable for experienced professionals. New technologies, evolving retail strategies and changing business priorities mean that learning cannot stop after initial training. Regular workshops, webinars, industry conferences and certification programs provide opportunities to build new skills while sharing best practices with peers across the industry.

Leadership development is also becoming a greater priority. Strong communication, coaching and project management skills are increasingly important as LP professionals lead cross-functional initiatives and work closely with executive leadership. Organizations that identify future leaders early and provide mentorship opportunities can help create a stronger pipeline of talent while improving retention.

Hands-on experience remains one of the most effective learning tools. Job shadowing, temporary assignments and cross-functional projects allow employees to gain practical knowledge while preparing for broader responsibilities. These experiences also help teams better understand the challenges faced by store operations, merchandising, human resources and information technology.

A culture of continuous learning benefits both employees and organizations. Team members who are encouraged to develop new skills often become more engaged, adaptable and prepared to support changing business needs. At the same time, retailers gain professionals who can contribute beyond traditional LP responsibilities and help drive operational improvements across the business.

As retail continues to evolve, successful loss prevention organizations will increasingly be defined not only by the technologies they deploy, but by the knowledge, adaptability and leadership capabilities of the people behind them.


Safety Is More Than Meeting the Minimum
Workplace Safety Requires More Than Following the Rules

Fatigue contributes to thousands of workplace injuries each year

Workplace safety requires more than simply meeting minimum requirements when providing personal protective equipment (PPE) to workers.

For many employers, workplace safety starts with a straightforward goal: comply with regulations, provide appropriate PPE, and train workers to use it properly. Those fundamentals matter and always will.

But workplace safety is about more than meeting minimum requirements. New hazards emerge, technology advances, and lessons learned from workplace incidents continue to shape how workers can be better protected. At the same time, factors such as fatigue can undermine even the strongest safety programs.

As a result, employers can be fully compliant while still missing opportunities to improve protection and reduce risk. Even the most advanced PPE depends on workers using it correctly.

Fatigue contributes to thousands of workplace injuries each year. Long shifts, physically demanding work, extreme temperatures, staffing shortages, and repetitive tasks can all affect a worker’s ability to stay focused and make sound decisions.

In these situations, the equipment itself has not failed. The challenge is that fatigue makes it harder for workers to consistently follow the practices designed to protect them. cmmonline.com


Strong Start to Summer Shopping Season
Sales rise in June for ninth straight month amid sales events
The summer shopping season got off to a solid start in June as shoppers took advantage of special seasonal sales events by Amazon and other retailers.

Core retail sales rose 0.36% month over month in June — and were up 10.08% year over year, according to the CNBC/NRF Retail Monitor, released by the National Retail Federation. That compared with increases of 0.39% month over month and 6.98% year over year in May. (Core retail sales exclude restaurants, auto dealers and gasoline stations.)

Total retail sales (including restaurants but excluding automobile dealers and gas stations) rose 0.33% seasonally adjusted month over month and were up 9.41% year over year. That compared with increases of 0.42% month over month and 7.19% year over year in May. June marked the ninth consecutive month of sales gains.

The unusually large year-over-year increases were because of the comparison against slow sales in June 2025, noted the NRF. Calculated on a seasonally adjusted basis to compensate, total sales were up 4.26% and core sales were up 4.23%. chainstoreage.com


More Tariff Headwinds Ahead for Retailers?
Retailers stock up ahead of expected tariff changes

Import volume at major ports is surging as companies look to avoid a new tranche of tariffs, per a report from the NRF and Hackett Associates.

Companies are stocking up ahead of expected tariff increases in August. Import volume at major container ports in the U.S. is expected to hit an all-time record this month driven by that behavior, according to a forecast in the Global Port Tracker report released Wednesday from the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates.

The temporary Section 122 global tariff at 10% that began in February will expire July 24, but a new round of tariffs regarding forced labor are expected to be imposed by the Trump administration as early as August, per the industry group’s report.

Ports haven’t reported final June numbers yet, but the Global Port Tracker projects a nearly 19% year-over-year jump in 20-foot containers or their equivalent. July is forecast to increase 3.3%, but August is expected to drop 4.5% from 2025. retaildive.com


EHS Remains Strong in M&A Market
"Investors flocked to companies with steady demand not impacted by tariff noise or global geopolitical events," said Chris Cardinale of Capstone Partners.

Top 10 Stressed Cities Revealed

Trump says US will reinstate blockade of Iranian ships in Strait of Hormuz

Study: KFC closed 300-plus U.S. stores in past year
 



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"AI" is the most overused word in loss prevention right now. Here's a framework that cuts through it.

Many vendors are making claims about AI. Few agree on what it means, and fewer still can tell you where your own program actually stands. The Loss Prevention Maturity Model is a vendor-neutral framework that maps the evolution of LP technology across four stages (Devices, Analytics, AI, and Agentic AI), with clear criteria for each and an honest take on what's genuinely deployed today versus what's still marketing.

If you haven't yet, take the free self-assessment to benchmark your program against the model, or read the full whitepaper for the complete framework.

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Prefer the full read? Get the whitepaper

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Cyber Threats Escalate Across Retail
Retail Cyberattacks Double in Three Years: Kaspersky

Retail cybersecurity incidents have increased by more than 100% over the past three years, according to Kaspersky, as attackers increasingly target payment systems, customer data, employees, and supply chains. The company says retailers must prioritize data protection, workforce awareness, payment security, third-party risk management, and cyber resilience.

Cybersecurity incidents targeting the retail sector have more than doubled over the past three years. According to the latest Kaspersky’s cybersecurity in retail report, attacks are no longer limited to data theft but now threaten payment systems, business operations, supply chains and customer trust.

As retailers continue to rely on digital platforms, AI, connected ecosystems and personalized customer experiences, the amount of sensitive information they manage has grown significantly. Payment credentials, loyalty program data and customer profiles have become valuable assets for cybercriminals seeking financial fraud, identity theft and information that can be sold on the dark web.

"The retail sector has reached a stage where cybersecurity can no longer be viewed as technical support but as a condition for operating, selling and maintaining consumer trust," says Claudio Martinelli, General Manager for the Americas, Kaspersky.

Martinelli says digitalization has connected every part of retail operations, allowing a seemingly minor security breach to escalate into a large-scale commercial disruption. He notes that organizations should begin by identifying the business processes that cannot be interrupted and implementing the controls required to anticipate, reduce, and manage cyber risks before they affect operations or customer relationships.

Data and Payments Become Prime Targets

Kaspersky’s Cybersecurity as a Competitive Advantage in Retail report identifies data protection as one of the sector's most urgent priorities. Retailers increasingly depend on customer information to support personalized offers, dynamic pricing, artificial intelligence initiatives, and automated logistics. While these capabilities improve competitiveness, they also concentrate valuable data across connected platforms and third-party systems that present attractive targets for attackers.

Beyond the immediate operational impact, a major data breach can generate regulatory penalties, legal expenses, contractual liabilities and recovery costs that may reach as much as US$91 million for large retail organizations. Consumers demand both personalized experiences and stronger privacy protections, so companies face growing pressure to embed security and privacy into their data strategies from the outset.

Payment systems have also become a primary target because they represent the point where purchasing intent becomes revenue. The report warns that attackers increasingly seek to manipulate online transactions, steal credentials or intercept financial information during legitimate customer purchases.

Physical point-of-sale systems also remain vulnerable, particularly when integrated with customer platforms, loyalty programs, and broader corporate networks. mexicobusiness.news


German Supermarket Chain Hit By Hackers
Hackers breach Lidl’s IT service provider, steal customer data
German discount supermarket chain Lidl has notified customers in Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands that customer data was stolen after attackers breached one of its IT service providers.

In notices published on its support websites in Belgium and the Netherlands, Lidl said it was informed of the incident last week.

“Despite high IT security standards, unidentified individuals were briefly able to access a separately stored file containing customer data and steal some of it. The online shop system itself was not affected,” the company wrote.

According to Lidl, the stolen data includes customers’ names, telephone numbers, email addresses, dates of birth, customer numbers, and salutations.

Lidl warned that passwords, billing and delivery addresses, bank details, and other payment information may also have been compromised, although it stressed that customer accounts were not affected.

“Although we currently have no concrete evidence of data misuse, we are warning you as a precaution against possible phishing attempts or identity fraud,” it added.

Lidl said the affected IT service provider restored the security of its IT systems, filed a police report, and engaged IT forensic experts to investigate the incident. The company also notified the relevant data protection authority.

There are currently no additional details about who may be behind the attack. helpnetsecurity.com


Apple Alleges AI Trade Theft
Apple sues OpenAI, former employees over alleged trade secret theft tied to AI hardware
Apple Inc has filed a lawsuit in the US District Court for the Northern District of California accusing OpenAI, its hardware subsidiary io Products, and two former Apple employees of misappropriating trade secrets related to the development of OpenAI's planned consumer AI hardware.

The complaint alleges OpenAI engaged in a coordinated effort to obtain Apple's confidential information as it accelerated work on its hardware ambitions following its acquisition of Jony Ive's startup io Products for approximately $6.5 billion.

Apple named the OpenAI Foundation, OpenAI Group PBC and io Products as defendants, along with OpenAI Chief Hardware Officer Tang Tan and former Apple engineer Chang Liu.

In the filing, Apple alleged that OpenAI and its employees took "illegal shortcuts" to develop AI hardware. "This much is clear, however: at every level, from members of its Technical Staff to its Chief Hardware Officer, and in coordination with business partners, OpenAI has been stealing Apple's trade secrets and confidential information," the company said in the filing.

The lawsuit claims Liu failed to return a company-issued MacBook after leaving Apple and exploited an authentication flaw to regain access to Apple's internal cloud storage, where he allegedly downloaded thousands of confidential hardware documents.

Apple further alleged that Tang Tan, who spent 24 years at Apple before joining OpenAI, instructed Apple employees interviewing with OpenAI to bring unreleased Apple components and prototypes to interviews for "show and tell" sessions. ca.finance.yahoo.com


EU and UK blacklist Russia’s cyber operators over efforts to destabilize Europe

‘HalluSquatting’ Compromises AI Coding Agents to Install Malware, Create Botnets


 




Online Scams Becoming Harder to Spot
Scams are getting harder for consumers to detect – here’s why it matters
Most consumers agree that it is becoming more difficult to recognize online scams, with consequences for marketers.

More than seven-in-10 (72%) of 5,600 consumers across Europe, the U.S. and Latin America recently surveyed by ClarityCheck said scams have become harder to spot because they look more professional. Close to two-thirds (63%) said poor grammar, cheap design or strange formatting no longer feel like reliable warning signs and 58% said they had received a message, link, offer or account notification that looked legitimate but still felt suspicious.

Scam fears affect consumer behavior

The survey shows that this erosion in consumer trust in messages and notifications they receive is changing how they respond to marketing. Six-in-10 (61%) respondents said they now hesitate before clicking links from brands, delivery services, banks, event platforms or online marketplaces, even when the message looks normal.

Almost half (49%) said they had ignored a legitimate-looking message because they could not tell whether it was real and 45% said they now verify more digital interactions than they did several years ago.

In addition, 52% of respondents said they would now want another form of confirmation before acting on an urgent request, even if it came through voice or video. And 47% said they would be more likely to verify a person through another channel before sending money, sharing documents, clicking a link or continuing a high-stakes conversation.

Split response to video messages

More than half (56%) of respondents said artificial intelligence-generated or manipulated video makes them less confident that seeing a person on screen proves they are real. However, 48% of respondents said video-based scams would be harder to question because seeing someone feels more convincing than reading a message. chainstoreage.com
 

Luxury Shoppers Lean on AI
Who Is Using AI Assistants for Luxury Shopping?

Algorithms are increasingly shaping how luxury clients shop, redefining their relationships with brands, according to BoF Insights and McKinsey’s report ‘Face to Face With Luxury Clients.’

Luxury clients use AI to shop a wide range of luxury categories. In the US, use is highest among top-spending established clients, while in China it is highest among occasional luxury clients.

In the US, use of AI to shop luxury increases with spend. The more American clients spend on luxury per year, the more they are using AI to shop.

In China, AI use is more functional as it is adopted for tasks such as understanding product quality and specifications. businessoffashion.com


Walmart makes the case for a Bloomfield e-commerce depot against neighborhood opposition

Amazon supports water non-profit with ‘Get Blue’ initiative, storefront


 


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Morristown, NJ: Update: Eight Suspects Sought After Brazen Robbery at Morristown Luxury Handbag Boutique
A Morristown boutique owner says thieves stole about $40,000 worth of luxury handbags during a brazen break-in. The owner of C’est La Bella says at least five masked suspects targeted the store Sunday. Surveillance video shows the group grabbing armfuls of vintage designer handbags and fleeing within seconds. The owner says about 30 handbags were stolen, including brands such as Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Chanel and Celine. “It’s devastating, it’s tough,” owner Chuck Spinella said. Spinella says his dog, Gia, even chased after the suspects as they ran from the store. “As they started running out, she went right out with them, chased them down the street,” Spinella said. Fortunately, the dog returned safely.  bronx.news12.com


Palm Beach Gardens, FL: Brothers accused of stealing more than $36K in electronics from Palm Beach Gardens Best Buy
Two brothers are accused of stealing more than $36,000 worth of electronics from a Palm Beach Gardens Best Buy before leading authorities on a pursuit that ended on Florida's Turnpike, according to police. Palm Beach Gardens police said Noah Khalif Jones and his brother, Nykee Jones, entered the Best Buy on Legacy Avenue on July 11 and removed high-end cameras, camera lenses and cell phones from display areas. Investigators said the pair used cutting tools to remove security tethers before fleeing the store. Surveillance video and witness accounts helped investigators identify a Ford Bronco rental vehicle connected to the theft, according to the arrest affidavit. Police said the vehicle later fled from officers before Florida Highway Patrol troopers stopped it on the Turnpike using a PIT maneuver. Both suspects were taken into custody.  wpbf.com


Montgomery County, OH: Update: Woman gets probation, restitution payments in organized retail theft case
A Reynoldsburg woman who was one of the first people charged connected to a new organized retail theft task force was sentenced to probation and ordered to pay restitution to the store she stole from. Jacqueline L. Tackett, 39, was sentenced by Montgomery County Common Pleas Court Judge Mary E. Montgomery to up to five years of probation on a single count of complicity to commit organized retail theft. As part of her probation, she was required not to contact her co-defendant Seth Davison and pay $2,033.77 in restitution to Meijer. Tackett was one of five people that the Ohio Attorney General’s Office said were indicted in December 2025 connected to the newly created Tactical Crime Suppression Unit Organized Retail Crime Task Force, which is led by the Kettering Police Department.  daytondailynews.com


Scranton, PA: Man hid stolen gold chain from Viewmont Mall in Brisk iced tea can
A 19-year-old Ohio man stuffed a gold chain inside a full Brisk iced tea can after stealing the jewelry valued at $7,526 from a store at the Viewmont Mall, police said. Souleyman Bah of Reynoldsburg and two other men face charges related to the theft from the Gold N Diamond store on Saturday, according to a criminal complaint.  thetimes-tribune.com


Prince George, BC, Canada: 0 arrested in Prince George retail theft crackdown
Dozens of people were arrested and more than $3,400 in merchandise was recovered during a retail theft blitz in Prince George. The enforcement operation began at the beginning of July and was part of the Prince George RCMP’s “Boost and Bust” initiative targeting property crime in the city. The detachment’s Problem Oriented Policing team partnered with retailers at Pine Centre Mall, Parkwood Mall, Walmart and Superstore. Mounties said in total the team arrested 40 people and recovered thousands of dollars worth of stolen goods.  ctvnews.ca


Brookfield, WI: Brookfield credit card fraud, $4,400 purchase at Best Buy; suspect sought

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Cleveland, TN: 12-year-old girl killed, two others wounded in Cleveland shopping center shooting
The Cleveland Police Department responded to multiple calls Sunday, July 12, reporting shots fired near Shopping City on South Street. When officers arrived, they found three people had been shot, including a 12-year-old girl who died at the scene. Investigators say shots were fired after a verbal argument between two men that escalated into a fistfight and then gunfire. Tiajon Butler, 28, of Cleveland, was arrested in connection with the incident. He was charged with aggravated assault and discharging a firearm within city limits. A Cleveland Municipal Court judge denied bond, saying Butler was a flight risk and a continuing danger to the community. Ricky Williams, 30, of Cleveland, who was also shot during the incident, will be charged with murder, aggravated assault and discharging a firearm within city limits according to police. He is expected to be extradited on those charges when he is released from a hospital in Memphis, Tennessee.  wlbt.com


Jefferson Parish, LA: 22-year-old identified as man shot and killed inside Harvey convenience store
The Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Coroner's Office identified a man killed in a homicide at a Harvey convenience store on Sunday morning. Donte Vallee, 22, of Marrero, was pronounced dead after he was shot inside the business, on Woodmere Boulevard. Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office investigators arrested a suspect, Desmond Bergeron, 26, of Harvey, and booked him with second-degree murder and aggravated assault with a firearm, according to Sgt. Brandon Veal, spokesperson for the department.  nola.com


Racine, WI: Racine Police searching for suspects in gas station shooting
Racine Police are searching for suspects in an attempted homicide after two men were shot at a gas station on Friday night. Officers were called to the Amoco near Layard Avenue and Douglas Avenue at 10:30 p.m. on July 10, where two men from Racine in their early 20s were shot inside the store. Police say a vehicle pulled up to the gas station and unknown suspects fired multiple shots into the store, striking the two men inside. Multiple patrons and employees were inside and outside of the store during the gunfire.  wtmj.com


Dekalb County, GA: 1 seriously injured in shooting at Lithonia barbershop
One person was seriously injured following a reported shooting Monday afternoon at a Lithonia strip mall. DeKalb County police officers converged on the commercial property after receiving emergency calls about gunfire. No arrests have been made in the shooting.  fox5atlanta.com


Los Angeles, CA: Shooting at South Park Liquor Store
A 22-year-old man was wounded in a drive-by shooting in front of a liquor store in the South Park area of South Los Angeles, authorities said Monday. The shooting was reported at 11:22 p.m. Sunday at South Central Avenue and East 48th Street, according to the Los Angeles Police Department. The victim was standing in the area when the suspect drove up and fired rounds at him, then drove away, police said.  mynewsla.com
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Wayne, NJ: Third suspect arrested in Wayne jewelry store robbery
Police said Boyd had recently been identified as a suspect in the June 16 robbery at Massola Jewelers through the ongoing investigation in Wayne.

Wheaton, IL: Man Who Robbed T-Mobile At Gunpoint In Wheaton Sentenced To 28 Years


 


 

C-Store – Swiftwater, PA - Armed Robbery
C-Store – Waterbury, CT – Armed Robbery
C-Store - Denton, TX – Robbery
C-Store – Savannah, GA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – East Hartford, CT – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Chicago, IL – Burglary
C-Store – Houston, TX – Robbery
C-Store – Macon, Ga – Armed Robbery
Hardware – Glynn County, GA - Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Chicago, IL – Armed Robbery
Restaurant – Chambersburg, PA - Armed Robbery                
 

Daily Totals:
• 10 robberies
• 1 burglary
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed



Click map to enlarge


 


 

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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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