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Nick
Hanlon, LPQ promoted to District Loss Prevention Manager for TJX
Companies |
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See All the LP Executives 'Moving Up' Here
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How Organized Retail Crime is Threatening the Retail Industry
Organized
Retail Crime (ORC), the coordinated theft of merchandise for resale, has
grown exponentially in the U.S., necessitating increased security
measures and even causing store closures. The issue is projected to
escalate, demanding modern, tactical security solutions that allow
retailers and law enforcement to combat ORC while maintaining a pleasant
shopping environment.
Cloud video security is a powerful tool in fighting ORC.
OpenEye's comprehensive
guide delves into the current methods for defining and measuring ORC's
impact on businesses and the economy. It explores effective security
strategies for mitigating inventory loss and enhancing the shopping
experience. The guide also highlights the advantages of cloud video
surveillance in tackling ORC, and how the integration of other security
systems can provide a more robust solution for retailers.
Learn more
The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact
TikTok Theft Trend Raises Retail
Concerns
When Social Media Trends Influence Retail Theft
By the D&D Daily staff
A
recent shoplifting case in Ohio has drawn attention to the
growing intersection between social media and retail crime.
According to reports, two individuals accused of stealing more than $700
worth of merchandise from a retail store told police they believed they
could simply walk out with the items because of a "TikTok trend" they
had seen online. The suspects allegedly filled a shopping cart with
merchandise and exited the store without paying before being arrested.
Whether the incident reflects a widespread trend or an isolated
misunderstanding, it highlights a challenge retailers increasingly face:
the rapid spread of information and behavior through social media
platforms.
Over the past several years, social media has demonstrated its
ability to influence everything from consumer purchasing decisions to
workplace behavior. Retail theft is not immune from those effects.
Videos depicting shoplifting incidents, self-checkout manipulation
schemes or other theft-related activities can quickly reach large
audiences, sometimes creating the perception that theft is easy,
consequence-free or even socially acceptable.
For loss prevention professionals, the concern extends beyond any
single platform. The broader issue is how quickly ideas, tactics and
misconceptions can spread online. Content that attracts attention
through shock value, humor or controversy may not accurately reflect the
legal and financial consequences that often follow theft incidents.
The challenge is further complicated by the fact that retail crime
increasingly exists in both physical and digital environments. Theft
may occur inside a store, but discussions about methods, opportunities
and trends often occur online, where information can be shared widely
and almost instantly.
Retailers continue to respond through a combination of employee
training, investigative resources, technology and collaboration with law
enforcement. Many organizations are also paying closer attention to
emerging online trends that could influence customer behavior or create
new operational risks.
As social media continues to shape consumer culture, retailers and loss
prevention teams will likely remain focused on understanding how
online behavior can translate into real-world activity inside stores.
Has Shoplifting Become Normalized?
As retail crime rises, 7 in 10 shoppers see shoplifting as “normal”
behaviour, says new research from SAI
68% of shoppers say theft has become a “normalised” behaviour,
with customers now expecting shoplifting to take place in-store
Such is the prevalence of rising retail crime that shoppers are
becoming increasingly desensitised to shoplifting, viewing incidents
of theft in-store as “normal” shopping behaviour, according to new
research from SAI, the leading active intelligence solution for stores.
With ONS data showing that retailers reported 509,566 shoplifting
offences in the past year, original research of 1,000 UK shoppers by
SAI reveals that seven in ten (68%) now view theft as a “normalised”
behaviour and expect shoplifting to take place in-store.
And, as retail’s shoplifting scourge shows no sign of easing, more than
one in ten (12%) shoppers now feel “indifferent” to witnessing crime
when shopping in bricks-and-mortar locations.
Convenience and grocery remain top targets for
theft
With the average shopper witnessing four incidents of theft in-store
each year, six in ten (61%) shoppers polled by SAI have noticed more
incidents of crime in-store in the last 12 months, rising to 72% of Gen
Z.
Convenience and grocery stores are where customers now notice the most
incidents of theft, averaging 5 instances in the last 12 months. Gen Z
shoppers witnessed even more shoplifting incidents than the average
shopper (7 vs 5 instances), as did higher earners, who reported seeing
more than double number of crime incidents compared to the average
shopper (10 vs 5) over the past year.
Shoplifting of everyday essentials and theft to
order on the rise
As cost-of-living pressures continue, over a quarter (28%) of UK
shoppers say they have witnessed theft of everyday essentials, such
as groceries, baby supplies and basic healthcare items, while over a
fifth (21%) have witnessed big-ticket items being stolen.
Organised crime is also becoming more prevalent and visible to a
growing number of customers who have witnessed ‘theft to order’.
Two thirds (65%) of consumers say organised retail crime has worsened
in the last year, and almost half (45%) say they have witnessed
goods seemingly being stolen to order in-store, rising to 58% among Gen
Zs and Millennials.
internationalsupermarketnews.com
90% of Independent UK Retailers Say
Theft Is Worsening
Retail theft is getting worse, say UK independent retailers
Nearly nine in 10 UK independent retailers affected by shoplifting
say retail theft has worsened over the past year, according to a new
Bira survey.
Retail theft is becoming a bigger problem for independent retailers
across the UK, with almost nine in 10 businesses affected by
shoplifting saying the situation has worsened over the past year,
according to a new survey by the British Independent Retailers
Association (Bira).
The findings highlight growing concerns about retail crime, staff
safety and the financial burden on smaller businesses as shoplifting
continues to rise.
The survey, which covered more than 25 retail sectors, found that
almost 77% of respondents experienced theft during the past 12 months,
up from 64% in Bira’s previous survey. Among those affected, nearly 90%
said theft had become worse compared with the previous year.
Many retailers described shoplifting as an increasingly common part of
running a business.
One respondent said theft had become “a weekly if not daily
occurrence”, while another described it simply as “constant”.
Several retailers reported that offenders appeared increasingly
confident, with some saying thieves would “laugh at staff while running
away”. Another respondent summed up the situation by saying: “We are on
our own.”
More than three-quarters of respondents believed shoplifters had
become more brazen, while over 75% said repeat offenders were
responsible for many of the incidents they experienced.
Retailers reported that known individuals frequently returned to the
same stores, sometimes working in groups or using distraction techniques.
Some respondents also linked theft to organised crime and drug
dependency.
The findings reflect wider concerns across the UK retail sector. Recent
industry data has also highlighted high levels of shoplifting and
increasing involvement by organised criminal groups, prompting calls
for stronger enforcement and greater police support.
retail-insight-network.com
Workplace Violence Up 5.3%
Workplace Violence Assault Trends
Violence has been increase 5.3% annually according to a survey
from National Council on Compensation Insurance.
A topic that is very much on both employers' and employees' minds is the
increasing violence that is occurring in the workplace.
A recent survey,
Workplace Violence, from the
National Council on Compensation Insurance, which used the most
recent US Bureau of Labor Statistics assault case data, found that
workplace assaults show a clear upward trend: increasing at an
annualized rate of 5.3% per year from 2011 to 2021–22.
Workplace violence spans a wide range of behaviors—from threats and
verbal abuse to physical assault and homicide.
In the report, the group explores nonfatal workplace assaults as
captured in the BLS Survey of Occupational Injuries and Illnesses.
Key Findings of the report include:
The rate of workplace assaults per 10,000 full-time equivalent (FTE)
workers increased by 62%.
The share of assaults among all of the BLS’ Days Away From Work (DAFW)
cases increased from 1.3% in 2011 to a peak of 2.3% in 2019.
Assault cases are most heavily concentrated in the health care and
social assistance NAICS sector. The number of annual assaults in
this sector is 10 times the number of assaults in the next largest NAICS
sector, retail trade.
ehstoday.com
ICYMI: Washington, D.C.’s crime decline and its lessons for American
policing
Australia: More protection against retail crime; jewellers included
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ISCPO Supply Chain Security Summit
Dallas ISCPO One Day Security Summit - June 11, 2026
The International Supply
Chain Protection Organization (ISCPO) announced the successful
conclusion of its U.S. Supply Chain Security Summit as it reached
new heights on June 11th, coming together for a dynamic day focused on
innovation, strategy, and mutual growth. This year’s ISCPO summit proved
to be a landmark event, showcasing cutting-edge exhibits and delivering
impactful, forward-thinking presentations designed to tackle the
industry’s most pressing security challenges.

From deep-dive presentations to our Preferred Partners showcasing the
latest in supply chain security, the summit served as a powerful
reminder of what happens when industry leaders align. Attendees engaged
in high-energy networking insights and collaborated on strategies to
build more resilient security within the supply chain.
“What an incredible day of learning, networking, and collaboration we
had on June 11th! From insightful presentations to cutting-edge
preferred partners exhibits, this year’s summit truly highlighted the
strength and innovation within our supply chain protection community.” –
Byron Smith, ISCPO President & Chairman
The success of the summit relies on the dedication of the entire
ecosystem. A massive thank you goes out to the energetic attendees who
brought invaluable perspective to every conversation, and the expert
speakers who generously shared their time and industry-leading
expertise.
iscpo.org

Reactive vs. Resilient Security
AlertMedia Releases The Security Maturity Benchmark Report, Revealing
What Separates Reactive Security Programs From Resilient Ones
New research uncovers widespread readiness gaps, staffing
challenges, and technology fragmentation across enterprise security
programs
AlertMedia, the leading provider of risk intelligence and response
solutions, today released
The Security Maturity Benchmark Report, a new research study
examining the operational, organizational, and technology factors that
determine whether security programs can effectively withstand today’s
evolving threat landscape.
The report features responses from more than 500 senior security
decision-makers and highlights how organizations are managing increasing
risk complexity, constrained resources, and rising expectations around
business resilience. The findings reveal a growing divide between
organizations operating reactively and those with mature, proactive
security programs built to detect threats earlier, coordinate faster
responses, and minimize operational disruption.
The report identifies five foundational dimensions that shape
security program maturity: leadership oversight, staffing structure,
incident response processes, technology integration, and performance
measurement. According to the research, organizations with mature
security programs are nearly twice as likely to spend their time
proactively preparing for threats instead of reacting to incidents
already underway.
The findings also reveal significant operational challenges facing
security teams:
-
92% have experienced consequences
tied to security readiness gaps
-
95% identified at least one
emerging risk they believe is under-discussed internally
-
59% report their security teams
are currently understaffed
-
Only 31% of organizations operate
a centralized, highly automated security ecosystem
-
47% say their organization would
not respond to a serious security incident as quickly as it
should
businesswire.com
Securing Stores with Smart Locking
Tech
How smart locking technology is reshaping retail security
Retail environments face increasingly complex security challenges.
From managing access across multiple locations to protecting high value
stock, the need for reliable and flexible locking solutions has never
been greater.
Traditional mechanical keys have long been the standard in retail
security, but they come with significant limitations. Lost keys mean
costly lock replacements. Unauthorised key duplication is difficult to
trace. And when staff turnover is high, as it often is in retail,
managing physical keys becomes a logistical headache.
Digital access solutions address these issues by removing the
physical key from the equation entirely. Access rights can be
granted, modified, or revoked remotely, often in real time. This gives
retail managers far greater visibility and control over who can enter
which areas and at what times.
One practical example of this evolution is the Smart padlock, a
battery free locking device that uses power harvested from the opening
action itself. This makes it a genuinely sustainable option for
retailers looking to reduce both operational costs and their
environmental footprint.
Digital access systems allow for granular permission setting. A
sales associate might have access to the shop floor and staff room,
while a manager holds access to the stockroom and security office. If
someone leaves the company, their access can be removed instantly
without changing a single lock.
retailtechinnovationhub.com
Supply Chain Hiccups
Supply chain tech issues prove costly — here’s how
A supply chain that meets technological expectations can still
pose financial risk.
Although close to two-in-three (63%) companies say their supply chain
operates as intended, almost three-in-four (73%) report losing
revenue due to supply chain issues. More than half (51%) of
respondents to the Cleo “2026 Global Supply Chain Executive Report” say
technology-related issues contribute to revenue loss.
Of those respondents, 65% cite service-level agreement violations,
chargebacks, penalties and deductions as a result. Supply chain
issues are typically reported to impact 2–5% of total revenue.
Respondents say the most time-consuming parts of issue resolution are
implementing fixes (60%), determining root causes (58%) and identifying
possible solutions (55%).
“As volatility becomes a permanent operating condition, companies can
no longer rely on fragmented systems, periodic fixes, or automation
alone,” said Tushar Patel, chief marketing officer at Cleo. “That is
why supply chain orchestration, accelerated by AI, is gaining momentum.
Businesses need a more connected, real-time operating model that
transforms disparate transactions into intelligence that drives smarter,
proactive actions.”
chainstoreage.com
The most trusted retail brands are…
Yum! Brands to sell Pizza Hut for $2.7 billion in two transactions
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How Purchek® by
Gatekeeper Systems
can reduce pushout attempts before they happen and why fewer incidents may be
the right result.
Retail security and theft mitigation solutions are often measured by visible
activity. Incident counts, apprehensions, stops, and case volume are common
benchmarks used to determine results. Those metrics are useful, but they do not
always tell the full story.
Preventive technologies operate differently from reactive tools. Their purpose
is to prevent incidents before they happen. When they are effective, theft
attempts decrease, and operational disruption becomes less frequent.
That creates an important shift in how success should be viewed. In many cases,
fewer incidents are not a warning sign. They are evidence that deterrence is
actually working.
Read the full business case and learn more about:
-
How Deterrence Changes Offender Behavior
-
Understanding the “No News Is Good News” Effect
-
Why Baseline Measurement Is Critical
-
Setting Realistic POC Expectations
Continue Reading Here
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Cyber Scam Targeting Retail Giant
Scammers impersonate retail giant Boots to bag themselves almost nine
million UK shoppers’ details
Cybersecurity company Huntress says that it has uncovered a large
scale scam campaign that impersonated UK health and beauty retailer
Boots, targeting nearly nine million email inboxes.
The campaign promised a free beauty sample pack in exchange for
completing a short customer satisfaction survey. Anyone who took the
bait was walked through a realistic looking fake Boots storefront and
asked to hand over their name, email address, date of birth, phone
number, home address, and ultimately their payment card details,
under the guise of covering a delivery fee.
What makes this particularly striking is how the scammers pulled it off,
Huntress observes. Rather than building their own suspicious looking
website, they broke into the real website of a Bolivian government
cultural institute and hosted the fake Boots store there. A
government web address looks legitimate, passes automated spam filters,
and gives victims no obvious reason for suspicion.
They also didn't use their own computer to send the emails. Instead,
they quietly broke into a small UK business's server, installed
legitimate bulk mailing software (the kind businesses use for
newsletters), and were in the process of firing off emails to 8.9
million addresses when Huntress's security team caught them and shut
it down. The small business had no idea any of this was happening.
Huntress says that it has shared its findings with Bolivia's national
cybersecurity authority.
Its full research, including screenshots of the fake Boots survey
exactly as victims would have seen it, can be found
here.
retailtechinnovationhub.com
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Microsoft Teams Hit By Ransomware Gang
Ransomware gang abuses Microsoft Teams relays to hide malicious traffic
DragonForce ransomware used a custom malware named 'Backdoor.Turn' to
hide command-and-control traffic inside Microsoft Teams relay
infrastructure.
The backdoor abuses the Traversal Using Relays around NAT (TURN)
protocol used by Microsoft Teams to distribute messages when a direct
connection to the client is unavailable (e.g., clients on a private
network).
DragonForce is a ransomware operation active since at least 2023, that
adopted a cartel-style organizational structure and has been linked to
the infamous Scattered Spider threat group.
According to researchers at the cybersecurity company Symantec, the
hackers used custom Go-based malware in an attack against a major U.S.
services company.
Backdoor.Turn abuses Teams' TURN infrastructure by obtaining an
anonymous Teams visitor token, using a legitimate Microsoft TURN relay
during connection setup, and then connecting to the attacker's
command-and-control (C2) server.
As a result, defenders see traffic associated with the Microsoft Teams
infrastructure, allowing the malware to hide its communications
within a trusted network.
bleepingcomputer.com
Cyberattacks Against Travel Sites
Surge
Planning a trip? Fake travel sites are multiplying this summer
Cyberattacks against hospitality, travel, and recreation
organizations rose 24% year over year, reaching an average of 2,291
incidents per organization each week in May 2026, according to Check
Point.
“The sector has more than doubled its attack volume since May
2023,” researchers noted, reporting a cumulative increase of 122% over
three years.
According to the report, 47,318 travel-related domains were registered
in May 2026, a 33% increase from the previous month. One in every 112
newly registered domains was already classified as malicious or
suspicious.
“Many others remain dormant for now, waiting to be activated as
summer traffic peaks.”
Check Point identified three coordinated bulk-registration operations
during April and May. One involved more than 210 sequentially numbered
hotel-themed domains using naming patterns such as hotel-stay[N].com and
stay-hotel[N].com.
helpnetsecurity.com
Cyber resilience metrics that drive action
Software supply chains are heading for a transparency test |
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Fake AI Businesses Have Online
Shoppers On Alert
Survey: Most shoppers have abandoned a purchase due to website raising
doubts
While e-commerce is commonplace, a few factors give consumers pause
before completing a purchase.
According to online business certification program provider
TrustedSite's 2026 edition of its State of Ecommerce Trust, 94% of
shoppers are concerned about fake businesses created with AI-generated
content, while 93% about AI-generated phishing emails impersonating
retailers, and 91% about fake product reviews written by AI.
More than half (51%) of shoppers cite questionable business
legitimacy as a reason they have abandoned a purchase, up from 46%
in TrustedSite’s 2024, and ahead of credit card security at 43%. In
total, nearly nine-in-10 (89%) shoppers have abandoned a purchase
because a site raised doubts.
The overwhelming majority (96%) of shoppers are concerned about sites
they have never heard of, and 94% about sites they simply haven't
bought from before, compared with 48% for large, established sites.
Eight-in-10 (82%) respondents say they are more likely to trust a
site that prominently displays a third-party verified trust badge
than one that does not, and 40% read the absence of third-party trust
indicators as a possible sign of fraud. Shoppers say the statements that
would most increase their likelihood of buying are that their data is
encrypted and kept private (51%) and that the business's contact
information has been validated (50%).
"As AI reshapes online shopping, trust has become more important than
ever,” said Lisa Dowling, CEO of TrustedSite. “Consumers are
navigating a landscape where it's harder to tell what's real, and
they're looking for credible signals before they buy. Earned, verified
trust gives businesses a way to stand out and gives shoppers the
confidence to complete their purchase."
TrustedSite surveyed 1,295 U.S. consumers via SurveyMonkey Audiences in
2026. Concern figures exclude "N/A" responses and are based on consumers
who answered each question. Year-over-year comparisons reference prior
surveys from 2018, 2020, 2022 and 2024.
chainstoreage.com
AI Agents More Trusted Than Friends?
Accenture: Customers trust AI agents to perform these tasks for them
Consumer trust in artificial intelligence agents to automatically take
action is growing.
Nearly three-in-four (74%) consumers would trust a personal AI agent
more than their best friend to make a purchase on their behalf. This
means an agent that acts, decides and buys at their instruction at
scale, rather than a chatbot or search engine.
The latest Accenture Consumer Pulse Research of more than 25,000
consumers in 16 countries, presented in the study “Talk to my AI Agent,”
shows that 74% of respondents are also open to an agent completing
commerce tasks such as negotiating deals, resolving complaints, and
re-ordering or renewing subscriptions as long as the consumer
remains in full control.
Seven-in-10 (71%) respondents say that at least 50% of their spend
for a given category will be influenced by AI over the next 12 months.
Close to one-in-three (32%) respondents are willing to let an agent make
the final purchasing decision on their behalf (before payment is made by
the consumer) within defined boundaries such as price and preference.
One-in-three (31%) respondents say a successful low-risk purchase
(such as reordering household staples) would make them more comfortable
moving toward autonomous agents, but only with protections such as data
safeguards, configurable permissions, instant override and clear
recourse when outcomes fall short.
And nearly one-in-10 consumers (9%) would empower an AI agent to shop
autonomously on their behalf, even completing purchases.
chainstoreage.com
Amazon plans for central Missouri data center |
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Calgary, AB, Canada: Police seize $150K in stolen Lululemon merch from
NE Calgary home
A woman is facing charges after police found a large amount of stolen
merchandise, drugs and cash inside a northeast Calgary home. Police say
the investigation began when officers went to a residence on Herron Mews
NE in the community of Livingston on May 20 for a routine curfew check.
The woman living there didn’t answer the door, which violated her
release conditions. Officers returned the next morning with a warrant
and arrested her outside the home. Officers also saw drugs, cash and
suspected stolen goods in plain view. They returned with a search
warrant and later seized more than $150,000 in stolen lululemon
merchandise, along with meth, cocaine, cash, illegal tobacco, ammunition
and dozens of stolen IDs. The Lululemon items were believed to have been
stolen during transport. Police also recovered items tied to earlier
break ins, including perfume, beauty products and a coin collection.
calgary.citynews.ca
Madera , CA: Madera Police Arrest Two Suspects in Del Sol Jewelers
Robbery Incident
“On June 12, 2026, Officer Harland responded to Del Sol Jewelers,
located in the 100 block of E. Yosemite Avenue, regarding the theft of
jewelry from the business. During the investigation, it was determined
that several individuals worked together to steal approximately
$12,000 worth of jewelry from a display case while a store employee
was distracted. Through diligent investigative efforts, Officer Harland
identified two of the involved suspects as Kytaisha Bellinger (46) and
Shandee Rivera (39). Today, Officer Harland coordinated with members of
his patrol team to safely take both suspects into custody without
incident. Bellinger and Rivera were booked into the Madera County Jail
on charges of Grand Theft and Conspiracy.
crimevoice.com
Jonesboro, AR: Man pleads guilty to theft after video shows him stealing
cart full of Lowe’s merchandise
Cape Coral, FL: Publix shopper ‘used ramen to steal $2,500 worth of
groceries’ after cops say long running scheme was caught on camera
Seattle, WA: West Seattle Crime Watch:: Another police operation at
Westwood Village; 11 suspects arrested. $2,800 in stolen merchandise was
recovered
Shepparton, Australia: 40 Arrested In Two-day Operation Securus Blitz In
Shepparton
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Shootings & Deaths
Calumet City, IL: Update: Man found guilty in 2019 shooting deaths of 2 teens
outside south suburban mall
A man was found guilty of murder Monday in the drive-by shooting deaths of two
teens outside a south suburban mall in 2019, according to court documents. Dajon
LTyrell Wade, 17, and Christin Ross, 18, died after the October 2019 shooting.
Prosecutors said on Oct. 10, Wade, Ross and three other people saw Lewis at
River Oaks Center Mall and confronted him about robbing Ross' sister.
Prosecutors said Wade and Ross were in the Macy's parking lot preparing to leave
when Lewis was spotted with a gun. Lewis, who was 18 at the time of the crime,
was found guilty of seven counts of murder after a jury trial, court documents
show.
abc7chicago.com
Decatur, AL: Wanted Suspect Seriously Injured in Officer-Involved Shooting at
Decatur Lowe's
A wanted suspect was seriously injured in an officer-involved shooting Monday
after law enforcement officers attempted to make contact at a Lowe's store in
Decatur. According to the Morgan County Sheriff's Office, deputies were
assisting the Lawrence County Sheriff's Office in locating a wanted person when
they found the individual at the store. Authorities said an officer-involved
shooting occurred during the encounter. Deputies involved in the incident
suffered minor injuries. The suspect was seriously injured and was taken to a
local hospital for treatment.
abc3340.com
Groesbeck, OH: 3 hospitalized after shooting at shopping center in Colerain
Township
Three men were taken to the hospital after a shooting at a shopping center in
Colerain Township Tuesday. It happened around 1 p.m. when police responded to
the shopping center at Compton and Pippin roads. All were taken to the
University of Cincinnati Medical Center. Their conditions are unknown at this
time. WLWT's cameras saw at least 26 evidence markers at the scene in the
parking lot as well as a bullet hole into one of the storefronts.
wlwt.com
Louisville, KY: Employee shot at Texas Roadhouse released from hospital
Texas Roadhouse has confirmed the employee injured during a shooting in
Louisville has been released from the hospital. The employee was shot Thursday
at the Texas Roadhouse at 3322 Outer Loop by a customer who allegedly was trying
to leave without paying. Police said Ronald Winter, 24, was trying to
dine-and-dash when the employee confronted him. According to police, the
employee attempted to tackle Winter to the ground and then heard a gunshot go
off. The bullet hit the employee's shoulder. Winter is now charged with
second-degree assault. His bond was set at $25,000.
wlky.com
Robberies, Incidents & Thefts
New Orleans, LA: C-store clerk stabbed in head while trying to stop suspected
shoplifter
A clerk at a convenience store in the Irish Channel was hospitalized in critical
condition after authorities say he was stabbed while confronting a suspected
shoplifter. The New Orleans Police Department arrested Roy Holmes Jr., 37, and
booked him with attempted second-degree murder and armed robbery, court records
said. The stabbing was reported just before 11 a.m. Monday at a business on
Washington Ave. according to the NOPD. The victim thought Holmes was taking
merchandise and confronted him, authorities said. Holmes is accused of stabbing
the clerk at least three times in the head.
nola.com
Charlotte, NC: Pregnant woman among 2 stabbed in northeast Charlotte
Two people were stabbed in front of a restaurant in northeast Charlotte Monday
afternoon, incident reports say. The victims were a pregnant woman and a
34-year-old man. The stabbing happened on Equipment Drive and W Sugar Creek,
near the I-85 exit around 3:40 p.m. The suspect has assaulted the pregnant
victim then attempted to kill her with a weapon, the incident report said. The
suspect then assaulted the man with a weapon with intent to kill. The man
suffered serious injuries with severe lacerations while the pregnant victim
suffered minor injuries.
wcnc.com
Raleigh, NC: Walgreens Hit In Brazen Armed Heist Caught On Camera
Oklahoma City, OK: Suspect arrested after string of armed robberies in NW OKC
Austin, TX: Suspect uses paintball gun to block camera in break-in attempt at
south Austin card shop |
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•
C-Store – Sterling
Heights, MI – Robbery
•
C-Store – New Orleans,
LA – Armed Robbery / Emp stabbed
•
C-Store – Cumberland
County, TN – Robbery
•
C-Store – Huntington,
WV – Robbery
•
Collectables –
Danville, PA – Burglary
•
Collectables – Austin,
TX – Burglary
•
Gas Station – Oklahoma
City, OK – Armed Robbery
•
Guns – Fayetteville,
AR – Armed Robbery
•
Jewelry – Madera, CA –
Robbery
•
Pharmacy – Raleigh, NC
– Armed Robbery
•
Vape – Johnson City,
TN – Armed Robbery
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Daily Totals:
• 9 robberies
• 2 burglaries
• 0 shootings
• 0 killed |

Click map to enlarge
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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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