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Strengthen Retail Security & Enhance Workplace Safety with
Off-Duty Law Enforcement
Discover how off-duty law
enforcement enhances safety and deters crime while protecting employees
and assets.
Retailers
are under more pressure than ever to prevent theft, ensure employee
safety and maintain business continuity across stores. Criminal
activities are on the rise, and they can severely disrupt operations,
leading to financial losses and a tarnished reputation. Workplace
security not only safeguards assets and sensitive information but also
protects employees and visitors, fostering a safe and productive
environment.
Hiring
off-duty law enforcement is a proven way to level up your retail
security strategy. Off-duty personnel are uniquely positioned to deter
criminal activities, respond swiftly in emergencies and provide an added
layer of protection. By integrating off-duty law enforcement into your
security strategy, you can create a safer, more secure workplace
environment.
Protos Security's workplace security blog explores ways that
off-duty law enforcement can benefit retailers and increase workplace
safety.
Read more here

The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
AI vs. Retail Crime
Can AI Help Reduce Retail Crime
and Violence?
By
the D&D Daily staff
As retailers continue to invest in artificial intelligence, many
organizations are exploring whether the technology can help address two
persistent industry challenges: retail crime and workplace violence.
While AI is not a replacement for trained employees, security
personnel or law enforcement, supporters believe it can serve as a
valuable tool for identifying risks, improving situational awareness and
supporting faster responses to incidents.
One area receiving significant attention is video analytics.
Modern AI systems can analyze live and recorded video feeds to identify
unusual activity, detect potential theft patterns and alert personnel to
behaviors that may warrant additional review. Some solutions are
designed to recognize activities such as loitering in restricted areas,
unauthorized access attempts or repeated movements associated with known
theft methods.
Retailers are also evaluating AI's potential role in workplace safety
and violence prevention. Certain technologies can help monitor
crowding, identify escalating disturbances or provide real-time alerts
when incidents occur. By delivering information more quickly, these
systems may help store teams respond sooner and improve communication
during emergencies.
Another emerging application involves data analysis. AI platforms can
review large volumes of incident reports, case information and
operational data to identify trends that might otherwise go unnoticed.
Retailers can use those insights to better allocate resources, adjust
staffing strategies and focus prevention efforts on locations facing
elevated risk.
At the same time, industry experts caution that AI is not a
standalone solution. The effectiveness of any technology depends on
factors such as data quality, employee training, operational procedures
and appropriate oversight. Privacy considerations and the potential for
false positives also remain important topics as organizations evaluate
new systems.
As AI capabilities continue to evolve, many retailers view the
technology as one component of a broader strategy aimed at improving
security, supporting employee safety and reducing operational risk.
Whether focused on theft prevention, incident response or workplace
protection, AI's role in retail security is expected to remain an area
of active interest and ongoing development.
Rural Stores Suffering from Retail
Crime
Farm shop staff facing verbal and physical abuse as retail crime hits
90% of businesses
Latest figures show many stores
targeted more than once a month
Nine in every 10 retail stores in rural areas have suffered at the
hands of criminals in the past 12 months, according to latest
figures.
The survey from NFU Mutual revealed a quarter of those businesses
surveyed had had members of staff physically assaulted and just under
half (46%) said staff had received verbal abuse. One in 10 had been
attacked with weapons.
More than one incident per month
The results of the study has prompted the insurer to issue a warning to
businesses which it said has hit rural retailers hard. According to the
figures, the average cost or store crime hit £83,490 over the past
year, although one in 20 said it set them back more £500,000 within the
same timeframe.
Almost a quarter of those who had suffered were hit on more than six
occasions, equating to an incident more than once every other month.
Zoe Knight, head of commercial at NFU Mutual, said: "We know first-hand
the pain and disruption criminals cause our rural communities and
retailers with these callous acts.
"Farm shops are often family-run operations and embedded into the
local communities. They have sadly been targeted in the past – and
continue to be so – due to their remote locations, so it is vital that
owners take all necessary and appropriative preventative steps to try
and deter thieves.
farmersguardian.com
National Guard Drove Down Property
Crime
National Guard $185 Million DC Surge Cut Property Crime 24% — Not
Murders
A study examined the impact of the
National Guard in the District of Columbia, finding that it's had more
impact on lesser crimes.
A new study finds that the federal government's deployment of U.S.
National Guard soldiers into Washington D.C. heavily reduced property
crimes but had no real impact on murders and violent crime.
The extended deployment, which initially included roughly 2,500 troops,
has remained ongoing and reports indicate that the number could as
much as double in the days and weeks ahead as multiple major events
are planned in the region to commemorate the nation's 250th anniversary.
On the criminal side, a recent study by the nonpartisan think tank
Niskanen Center found that the troops' deployment contributed to a
24% decrease in property crimes in D.C., saying such crime was
"concentrated almost entirely in opportunistic property crimes" while
adding that the Guard was not a substitute for Metropolitan Police (MPD)
due to having the inability to arrest or operate independently.
The troops "were placed mostly in highly visible commercial, transit,
and tourist areas rather than high-crime neighborhoods," according
to the study, "Washington, D.C.'s crime decline and its lessons for
American policing," published on May 28.
"For crimes driven by opportunistic calculation, that visibility
appears to have mattered," the study summary describes. "For violent
crime, which is less deterrable by patrol presence alone, it did not."
military.com
UK: New police data-sharing to target organized crime
Campaign Zero website to track Cincinnati police stops
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LP's Role Before Opening Day
The Role of Loss Prevention Before
a Store Ever Opens
By
the D&D Daily staff
When people think about loss prevention and retail security, they often
picture activities that take place after a store opens, such as
investigating incidents, monitoring security systems or addressing
theft-related concerns. However, many loss prevention professionals
play an important role long before the first customer enters the
building.
For retailers opening new locations, security and loss prevention
considerations are often incorporated during the planning and
development process. Early involvement can help organizations
identify potential risks, support operational goals and create safer
environments for both employees and customers.
During the design phase, loss prevention teams may work alongside
construction, facilities and operations personnel to review store
layouts and evaluate security-related needs. Visibility throughout
the sales floor, stockroom configuration, receiving areas and office
locations can all influence how effectively a store operates once it
opens.
Technology planning is another key area of focus. Decisions
regarding video surveillance, alarm systems, access control and
communication tools are often made well before opening day. Evaluating
these requirements early can help ensure that systems are properly
integrated into the store's overall design and operational strategy.
Loss prevention teams may also contribute to emergency preparedness
efforts. Reviewing evacuation procedures, identifying emergency
exits and developing response plans for various scenarios can help
retailers establish consistent safety practices from the outset.
In addition, many organizations involve loss prevention leaders in
associate training and onboarding plans. New store openings often
require large numbers of employees to be hired and trained within a
relatively short period of time. Incorporating safety, security and
operational awareness into that process can help create a stronger
foundation for the store's long-term success.
While much of the public-facing work of loss prevention occurs after a
store begins serving customers, many security decisions are made
months earlier. By participating in planning, design and operational
discussions before opening day, loss prevention professionals can help
retailers address risks proactively and support a safer, more efficient
environment from the very beginning.
Safety Programs Must Evolve
Demographic Shifts and Rising Claim Costs Drive Need for Age Aware
Safety Programs
While older employees sustain fewer
total injuries, physiological changes and comorbidities cause modern
workplace slips, trips and falls to become exponentially more severe.
Workers aged 55+ now represent a rapidly expanding share of the
workforce, with their participation having doubled over the past two
decades. They are essential to industries like manufacturing,
healthcare, transportation, utilities and construction; sectors already
facing labor shortages. But with age comes a distinct risk profile that
organizations must proactively address.
Physiological changes, reduced strength, slower reaction time,
diminished balance, sensory decline and longer healing periods,
affect how older workers experience and recover from injuries. While
they tend to have fewer non‑fatal injuries due to experience and hazard
awareness, the injuries they do sustain are more severe, more complex
and more likely to be fatal when compared to other age demographic
groups.
Chronic conditions amplify this risk. Nearly half of workers aged
55+ have at least one major chronic condition such as arthritis or
hypertension, and many have multiple. These conditions influence
mobility, stamina, sensation and fall risk, and they slow recovery.
Medication use adds another layer, as some prescriptions impair
alertness, increase dehydration risk or elevate fall susceptibility.
Presenteeism, working while ill or physically compromised, is
especially concerning in this demographic. When chronic disease
intersects with demanding job tasks, the likelihood of errors, strains
and serious incidents rises.
Safety programs must evolve to account for age‑related
vulnerabilities. This includes ergonomic redesign, reduced
high‑impact exposures, chronic‑condition‑aware safety planning and
return‑to‑work pathways that reflect slower healing and higher reinjury
risk.
ohsonline.com
AI & EHS
Benefit of AI in EHS Needs to Be at Enterprise Level
Move focus from the type of AI to
the purpose it can serve for EHS, say EY study.
A recent survey, EHS: From Curiosity to Confidence, from EY, found that
many companies are, in fact, using AI within the EHS function to improve
efficiency. However, this is mostly limited to individual applications
of general AI Chatbots. What is needed to improve EHS functions is
shifting the technology to enterprise-level adoption.
“EHS performance has not been improving at the expected pace for some
time now," said Patricio Estevez partner, Environment, Health and
Safety, Ernst & Young, Australia, in the report. "While it’s certainly
not a silver bullet, AI offers a tangible way for us to shift the dial -
better protecting our environment and sending more people home safely
every day.”
Instead of the typical adoption of AI through a technology-driven path,
such as machine learning to deep learning, followed by generative AI and
agentic AI, EY suggests focusing on AI from the type of technology to
its purpose.
ehstoday.com
AI is Helping Frontline Employees
Walmart's AI-powered warehouses are slashing the time it takes store
employees to unload trucks
America's biggest retailer is on a
mission to become America's fastest.
One key piece of Walmart's mission is automating its supply chain. The
retailer has spent the past several years plowing cash into building
new facilities equipped with an army of robots, coordinated by AI.
That money is paying off in terms of raw speed.
What makes these distribution centers especially powerful is that they
use store-level data to direct robots to arrange pallets, making it
easier for workers to restock aisles, Walmart US CEO David Guggina told
the Oppenheimer Consumer Growth and E-commerce conference on Tuesday.
Store workers used to spend hours unloading a truck. Now they can do
so in a fraction of that time.
businessinsider.com
Consumer sentiment rises from 4-month slump as gas prices fall
Consumer sentiment rose 9% this month after
a four-month slump as the average price of gasoline declined from highs
it reached earlier in the war with Iran.
Father’s Day Spending Could Hit Record-High $27.9 Billion
Gen Alpha Consumers Are Becoming Increasingly Relevant in Retail
2026’s Most Patriotic States in America – WalletHub Study
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Pushout Theft has a Huge Impact on Retail Shrink, and
the Recent Data Proves it.
Every year, the
Pushout Theft
News Center compiles pushout theft incidents reported in the news from
across the United States. The 2025 Pushout Theft Annual Snapshot captures
the theft events that make the news: high-value incidents, violent
confrontations, multiple offenses by the same individuals, and coordinated
organized retail crime (ORC) rings.
Real-world data from stores using
Gatekeeper Systems’
Purchek® solution tells a broader story. While news coverage captures the
most dramatic cases, including (ORC) Organized Retail Crime, opportunistic,
lower-value thefts — the kind that rarely make headlines — are occurring at a
high frequency and are quietly compounding losses across store locations.
Purchek® addresses both ORC and opportunistic shoplifting, and is proven to
increase merchandise recovery from unsuccessful pushout attempts and to deter
the activity entirely.
Retailers who activate the
Purchek® system have seen up to a 70% reduction in pushout theft attempts
within the first weeks of deployment — a result that speaks for itself.
Knowing a store is protected, bad actors move on, displacing their activity
elsewhere rather than risking a failed attempt. Here is what the 2025 data
shows.
Continue reading the full report
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AI Aiding Cybercrime
AI has become an accessary to cyber crime
AI data breaches are on the rise, with hackers increasingly using the
technology to detect software vulnerabilities, according to Verizon's
2026 Data Breach Investigations Report. Nearly a third of breaches start
with software vulnerabilities, overtaking stolen passwords as the main
way for hackers to gain access. As the focus shifts from tricking people
into revealing passwords, generative AI is boosting the speed at
which hackers work, from identifying new security weaknesses to writing
the matching malware.
CrowdStrike reports that AI-enabled hackers increased their attacks by
89% year-on-year in 2025, boosting the skills of both less sophisticated
operators and advanced ones.
As hackers exploit AI to speed their attacks, the window for
cybersecurity professionals to detect and respond is becoming ever
smaller, and they are struggling to keep pace. They must use AI more
effectively to counter and preempt cyber attacks, Verizon's chief
information security officer Nasrin Rezai told Reuters
A case in point is the European Central Bank working on defences against
attacks that use Anthropic's new AI model Claude Mythos. Mythos –
currently only available in the US – was developed to counter
cyberattacks but has been shown to threaten the very systems it is
supposed to protect.
Mythos is currently undergoing testing with 50 partner organisations,
and Anthropic reported that it had helped uncover more than 10,000
vulnerabilities over a month.
Ransomware attacks are on the rise
Cyberattacks eased in May 2026, but ransomware surged by 48%,
according to Check Point Research. Education was targeted more than any
other industry, averaging 4,641 weekly attacks per organization, up 7%
year-on-year. Government and telecommunications were next in line.
Retailers also remain prominent targets. In May, convenience store
chain 7-Eleven confirmed a breach after cybercriminal ShinyHunters
gained unauthorized access to systems used to manage franchisees'
documents and subsequently leaked 9.4GB of stolen records after failed
ransom negotiations.
While technology companies tend to be lower down the list of
ransomware targets, Foxconn, a semiconductor manufacturer with
clients including Apple, Google, Nvidia and Sony, fell victim to
extortion in May. Foxconn makes products across the entire global
technology supply chain. The hackers claimed to have stolen over 11
million files, including confidential data relating to Foxconn
customers.
weforum.org
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Tracking Employees?
Microsoft’s workplace check-in via Wi-Fi tracks who’s in the office, and
not everyone’s happy
Microsoft is rolling out workplace check-in via Wi-Fi for Teams and
Microsoft Places. Connect to your office network and your in-office
presence updates automatically, no manual status change needed.
Microsoft says the signal isn’t stored as location history, and that you
can configure your own settings. Here’s the catch. Your employer enables
the feature at the tenant level, and you only control how it’s used on
your end. Privacy advocates and labor groups have already flagged
that gap.
When enabled by the organization and the employee, workplace check-in
via Wi-Fi can automatically update a user’s work location when their
device connects to a configured workplace network. Employees can manage
workplace check-in, presence sharing, and location permissions through
their settings. They can also manually set or override their work
location.
Microsoft says workplace presence is an in-the-moment signal that
indicates where someone is working, such as in the office or
remotely, and is not stored as historical data. The feature does not
track or retain employees’ movements or location history. At least for
now.
“It applies only to workplace contexts. The signal is generated when a
device connects to configured corporate office networks through the
Teams client and does not extend beyond those environments. If a
device is not connected to a configured workplace network, the user’s
location is shown as ‘Remote’,” Brennan McReynolds, Product Lead at
Microsoft Places, explained.
helpnetsecurity.com
MS-ISAC enters uncertain new era after losing federal funding and
thousands of members
The information-sharing group, a vital resource for state and
local governments, has cut staff and pinned its hopes on a membership
surge.
Eight months after the Multi-State Information Sharing and Analysis
Center lost its federal funding, the cybersecurity threat
intelligence sharing group for state and local governments has lost
dozens of states and more than ten thousand local jurisdictions that
can no longer afford its vital cybersecurity services, even as the
hacking threats they face have grown more numerous and more dangerous.
The MS-ISAC, run by the nonprofit Center for Internet Security (CIS),
says it’s working hard to recruit new members, including through
discounted fees, and it stresses that it’s still collecting enough data
from its remaining members to produce high-quality cyber threat
intelligence for that community. But the MS-ISAC’s membership drain
could leave thousands of small jurisdictions and their critical
infrastructure more vulnerable to nation-state sabotage and ransomware
attacks — local impacts that could resonate nationally at a time
when China and Iran are using cyberattacks as a tool of foreign policy
in their conflicts with the U.S.
cybersecuritydive.com
Ten Great Cybersecurity Job Opportunities
Ukrainian national pleads guilty in connection with Conti ransomware |
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Businesses Battle Fake Reviews
Survey: Majority of small businesses say fake reviews have hurt them
Fake online reviews are a persistent problem for small businesses.
The majority (72%) of U.S. local business owners have received a fake
review in the past 12 months, according to a new survey from online
reputation management platform LocalImpact. A quarter (25%) of owners
reported receiving six or more fake reviews in a single year, and 7%
said they'd received more than 10.
About three-quarters of owners said fake reviews have hurt their
business in some way. More than half (52%) report damage to their
overall star rating, while 40% report meaningful time spent managing or
responding to fake reviews, and 33% report lost potential customers.
Reduced revenue (28%), increased staff stress or morale issues (24%) and
challenges attracting new hires (20%) were also reported problems.
Nearly eight-in-10 (79%) respondents believe their business has been
targeted by a coordinated fake review attack at some point, with 42%
saying "yes, definitely" and 37% saying they suspect so. A majority
(70%) of small business owners suspect their competitors of using fake
positive reviews to inflate their own ratings.
Only 28% of owners said their reported fake reviews were removed
promptly by the host platform, according to the survey. The majority
described waiting periods, refusals, or unclear status updates, during
which the fake review continues to influence potential customers.
At the same time, only 31% of businesses use a dedicated review
management platform, and just 36% said they'd feel "very
well-equipped" to handle a sudden spike in fake negative reviews.
"Fake reviews have become one of the most common operational problems
local business owners deal with, and most of them are managing it
without the right tools," said Vitaly Motuz, CEO of LocalImpact.
chainstoreage.com
Inflation Boosting Prime Day?
Numerator: 43% of U.S. households to shop Prime Day, many driven by
inflation
Consumers will be looking for deals come Prime Day — and not just
on Amazon.
Prime Day shoppers plan to shop or compare prices with other retailers
during the Amazon mega-sale event, including Walmart (62%),
Target (41%), Costco (27%), Best Buy (17%) and Temu (10%), according
to a Numerator “Verified Voices” survey.
Forty-three percent of U.S. households are expected to shop Amazon
Prime Day based on last year’s lift and current 2026 Amazon shopping
behavior, according to Numerator estimates. Planned Prime Day shoppers
expect to spend over $11 billion, with the average planned household
spend around $187.
Of the planned Prime Day Shoppers, nearly half (47%) cite inflation
as making them more likely to shop on Prime Day, compared to just
20% who say it makes them less likely, with similar patterns for
concerns about the economy (44% vs. 18%) and gas prices (43% vs. 15%).
chainstoreage.com
New Amazon AI search turns words into shoppable images |
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Newberry Springs, CA: Box Truck Loaded With $87,000 In Suspected Stolen
Brooks Shoes Recovered
A Barstow sheriff’s deputy recovered more than $87,000 in suspected
stolen merchandise during an early morning vehicle check Sunday in
Newberry Springs, a small desert community east of Barstow along the
I-15 corridor. On June 14, 2026, at about 4:48 a.m., Deputy Rivera
checked a white box truck near Harvard Road and Hacienda Road after
seeing a man inspecting the engine compartment. Rivera ran the truck’s
license plate and learned the registration had been expired for more
than six months. During the contact, Deputy Rivera requested
identification from the man, who suddenly fled on foot through a parking
lot before jumping a fence toward the I-15 freeway, according to a
written statement. Deputies later found about $87,120 worth of Brooks
tennis shoes inside the box truck. The merchandise is believed to be
stolen and was recovered as evidence.
vvng.com
Tarrant County, TX: Man gets 45 years in prison in Texas for serial
theft of LEGOs from Target at gunpoint
Winston Love, a 28-year-old from Tarrant County, Texas, was sentenced to
45 years in prison after being found guilty of organized retail theft
with the use of a deadly weapon. The verdict, handed down this week by a
jury, marked the first trial under Texas’ new organized retail theft
legislation, which took effect on September 1, 2025. Prosecutors
reported that Love spent 50 days in 2025 systematically attacking Target
stores in several regions of North Texas, stealing more than 200 LEGO
kits, as well as coffee machines, vacuum cleaners and PlayStation
controllers. The vast extent of the operation, which covered at least 14
cities, caught the attention of several law enforcement agencies and
raised questions about the scope of organized retail theft networks that
expand across different states.
mixvale.com.br
Franklin Park, PA: Romanian gang members accused of stealing, using
credit cards taken from YMCA lockers
Three men identified as part of a Romanian organized crime group are
suspects in the theft of cash and credit cards from lockers at the
Baierl Family YMCA in Franklin Park in December, according to a criminal
complaint filed by Franklin Park police. Franklin Park police filed
charges June 11 against Robert Cristian Amza, 36, Florin Ionut Costache,
28, and Mihai Antonio Andrei, 26. None of them are in custody, according
to court records. According to police, Costache and Andrei were captured
on surveillance cameras inside the YMCA on Dec. 13, while Amza was
recorded using the credit cards taken from two men to buy nearly $5,000
worth of gift cards the same day at Dick’s House of Sports, Giant Eagle,
Dollar Tree and Whole Foods. Amza tried to use one at a Louis Vuitton
store for just over $8,000, but the transaction was declined, the
complaint states.
community.triblive.com
Prattville, AL: Prattville Police asking for help locating organized
retail theft suspect
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Shootings & Deaths
Jacksonville, FL: 4 shot at Sherwood Forest party, C-store owner says violence
was not the norm
Four people, including a teenager, were shot after a large weekend gathering in
Jacksonville’s Sherwood Forest neighborhood, according to the Jacksonville
Sheriff’s Office. Social media video shows the chaotic moments when gunfire
erupted near a convenience store where a crowd had gathered for what community
members described as an annual block party. The video, which lasts more than two
minutes, shows people crouching on the ground and scrambling for cover as
multiple rounds of gunfire can be heard.
actionnewsjax.com
Jefferson County, AL: One person injured in shooting near Home Depot store in
Fairfield
One person is injured after a shooting at a business in Jefferson County on
Monday afternoon. The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office said deputies responded
to the 5100 block of Birmingport Road. The sheriff's office said the incident
reportedly happened behind the Home Depot in Sylvan Springs.
abc3340.com
Miami, FL: Teenage boy shot outside Little Havana corner store
New York, NY: Man Shot Inside Upper West Side Convenience Store, Suspects Sought
North Myrtle Beach, SC: Man accused of shooting into Verizon store after hours
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
San Marcos, TX: Store employee reports woman tried to run him over after theft
An employee at a Denton store reported a woman attempted to run him over when he
tried to confront her for theft on Sunday, according to a police report. At
about 5:12 p.m., officers were dispatched to a disturbance at a store in the
5800 block of Interstate 35. An employee reported that a man and a woman in the
store approached him saying there was a child alone at the back of the store.
When the employee went to look for the child, he said, the man and woman ran out
of the store with merchandise they had not paid for. The employee ran to the
parking lot to confront them. He told officers the two had gotten into a vehicle
and the woman drove straight at him before speeding off toward I-35.
wsfa.com
Banks County, GA: Armed robbery at Georgia grocery store; 3 charged
Grand Haven, MI: Holland man sentenced to 33 years for Armed Robbery at West
Olive One-Stop
Columbus, OH: Pizza Hut robbery suspect came back days later for lost wallet |
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•
C-Store – Springfield,
MA – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – New York, NY
– Armed Robbery / clerk wounded
•
C-Store – Miami, FL –
Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Bend, OR –
Robbery
•
C-Store – Kanawha
County, WV – Armed Robbery
•
C-Store – Colorado
Springs, CO – Armed Robbery
•
Clothing – Cleveland,
OH - Robbery
•
Dollar – Hinton, WV –
Robbery
•
Hardware – Visalia, CA
– Robbery
•
Jewelry – Arlington, VA – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Las Vegas, NV – Robbery
•
Jewelry – Beaumont, TX – Robbery
•
Jewelry - Wichita, KS – Robbery
•
Restaurant – Myrtle
Beach, SC – Armed Robbery
•
Restaurant – Columbus,
OH – Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 15 robberies
• 0 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 0 killed |

Click map to enlarge
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