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7/10/26 D-Ddaily.net
 

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Robert LaCommare, CFI named Executive Director AP Strategy & Operations for CVS Health


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In Case You Missed It
 
Sekura's MoveAlert wins LPRC 2026 Integrated Solutions Award

Sekura's MoveAlert has won the 2026 LPRC Integrated Solutions Award for its ability to stop retail theft in real time. The intelligent, zone-based system detects suspicious behaviour and triggers an immediate audible response, while capturing incidents via CCTV integration. Combining detection, deterrence and seamless operation, MoveAlert helps retailers disrupt theft at the shelf, without compromising the shopping experience.

"Receiving this recognition from the LPRC is a significant milestone for our team and validates our belief that effective loss prevention should be proactive rather than reactive," said Chris Napthine, CEO, Sekura Global "MoveAlert was developed to help retailers disrupt theft behaviour in real time while preserving the shopping experience and reducing operational complexity."

For more information: https://sekura-global.com/movealert/

 




 



The U.S. Crime Surge
The Retail Impact


CORCA Nears Senate Finish Line
CORCA's Best Chance Yet? Why the Retail Industry Is Watching the Senate


By the D&D Daily staff

For years, retailers, loss prevention professionals and law enforcement leaders have argued that organized retail crime has outgrown the patchwork of state and local responses used to combat it. Now, after clearing the U.S. House with overwhelming bipartisan support, the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act (CORCA) may be closer to becoming law than at any point since the legislation was first introduced.

The biggest question is no longer whether the bill has support. It clearly does. Instead, the focus has shifted to how it reaches the President's desk.

Rather than moving as a standalone measure, many industry observers believe CORCA has its strongest path forward as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)—Congress' annual must-pass defense package. In recent days, supporters in both the House and Senate have taken formal steps toward attaching CORCA to the FY2027 NDAA, a move that could significantly improve its chances of final passage.

From a retail asset protection perspective, the legislation addresses a long-standing gap in how organized retail crime is investigated. Today's theft rings routinely operate across state lines, coordinate cargo thefts, exploit online marketplaces, and move stolen merchandise through complex fencing operations. Yet investigations often remain fragmented among local, state and federal agencies.

CORCA would establish a federal Organized Retail and Supply Chain Crime Coordination Center within the Department of Homeland Security, giving investigators a centralized hub for intelligence sharing while expanding tools to pursue interstate theft networks and the financial crimes that support them. Retail groups argue those capabilities are exactly what's needed to dismantle sophisticated criminal organizations rather than repeatedly arresting individual shoplifters.

Support for the bill extends well beyond retailers. Transportation companies, manufacturers, law enforcement organizations, shopping center operators and nearly 200 business associations have all urged the Senate to act, emphasizing that organized retail crime has evolved into a broader supply chain and public safety issue.

With bipartisan backing, House approval already secured, and momentum building around the NDAA, many in the retail loss prevention industry see the coming weeks as CORCA's most promising opportunity yet to become federal law.


Historical Property Crime Trends:
What the Numbers Mean for Retail
Historical crime data compiled and published by Crime Index, shows that property crime continued to decline in 2024, with every major category posting year-over-year improvements compared with 2023. While the figures are encouraging, they also highlight an important distinction for the retail industry: lower overall property crime does not necessarily translate into lower retail shrink.

According to Crime Index, overall property crime fell 8.1%, dropping from 6.51 million reported offenses in 2023 to 5.99 million in 2024. Burglaries declined 8.6%, larceny-theft—the largest property crime category by volume—fell 5.5%, and motor vehicle theft experienced the sharpest decrease at 18.6%. The data is based on FBI Summary Reporting System statistics.

For retailers, those nationwide trends offer reason for optimism, but they don't tell the entire story. Traditional property crime measures encompass a wide range of offenses beyond retail theft, and many loss prevention teams continue to report persistent challenges from organized retail crime, repeat shoplifting offenders, cargo theft and increasingly sophisticated fraud schemes.

As a result, retailers are continuing to invest in intelligence-led investigations, video analytics, exception reporting, license plate recognition technology and stronger collaboration with law enforcement. These strategies are designed to identify repeat offenders, connect theft incidents across multiple locations and disrupt organized criminal networks before losses escalate.

The data also reinforces the importance of local analysis. Crime patterns can vary significantly by market, meaning a national decline in property crime may not reflect conditions in every community or every retail sector. Retailers that combine national crime trends with store-level data and regional intelligence are often better positioned to allocate security resources where they are needed most.

The broader takeaway is encouraging. Property crime has continued its long-term decline nationally, but retailers remain focused on combating the specific theft and fraud risks that have the greatest impact on inventory, employee safety and profitability. For loss prevention professionals, national crime statistics are valuable context—but they are only one piece of the overall risk picture. crimeindex.org


Stores Worldwide Beefing Up Security
New security proposal welcomed by New Zealand retailers

Retail industry representatives in New Zealand have applauded a proposed policy that would provide additional security measures for stores.

The proposal involves the deployment of specially trained security guards with additional powers to manage what are described as ‘high-risk’ situations in retail stores.

This particular policy was described as a preferred alternative to a highly controversial proposal over the past year, which would have seen the encouragement of ‘citizen’s arrests’ as part of the Crimes Amendment Bill.

Retail NZ CEO Carolyn Young said this policy could ease the stress on businesses navigating escalating levels of customer aggression.

"Retailers have been struggling to manage the growing level of abuse and violence from customers in their stores,” Young said.

“We support any changes that would provide advanced training to security guards to allow them to appropriately and safely manage these higher-risk situations," Young said.

Retail NZ's Crime Reports, released in 2023 and 2024, found retail crime costs the industry more than $2.5 billion each year. Young added that anecdotal reports from members of Retail NZ suggest that retail crime remains a mounting issue for businesses. jewellermagazine.com


The Great Debate Over ALPRs
Home Depot and Lowe’s use controversial retail theft system

Both retailers are collecting customer data, and you may not like what happens next.

Retailers have always been secretive about the security measures used in stores, because if you tell the bad guys how you’re fighting them, they can plan to evade those measures.

Retailers commit an incredible amount of resources to keep stores safe for employees and customers. But combating the growing problem of organized retail crime has been tremendously challenging, particularly as criminals become more brazen and sophisticated in their operations and exploit online marketplaces to sell stolen goods,” Retail Communities Foundation Lisa LaBruno told the Retail Industry Leaders Association (RILA).

Both Home Depot and Lowe’s have been using something called Flock Safety at select stores.

Flock Safety’s automated license plate reader system captures vehicle data at retailers in Ohio and shares it with law enforcement for various purposes, including theft investigations and immigration enforcement. Flock’s AI-powered cameras scan and log license plate numbers, vehicle make, model, color, and physical markers, creating a searchable database accessible to law enforcement agencies,” according to Gadget Review.

Home Depot and Lowe’s share data from hundreds of Flock cameras with police, according to 404 Media’s investigation. Flock itself does not sell data. thestreet.com


TAPA AMERICAS Calls on Senate to Advance Combating Organized Retail Crime Act

Violent crime up in Kansas but total crime down, new KBI stats show

Ohio Crime Statistics Dashboard showcases 10 years of crime data
 



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Retail AI Industry Survey
Help Shape the D&D Daily's First Retail Crime AI Report
Artificial intelligence is transforming retail loss prevention, from video analytics and fraud detection to investigations, reporting and operational efficiency. Yet one question remains: How are retail asset protection professionals actually using AI today, and where do they see the technology heading?

To help answer those questions, the D&D Daily has launched its first Retail Crime Prevention and AI Survey.

The brief, two-minute survey is designed to gather insights from retail asset protection, loss prevention, security and law enforcement professionals. Rather than focusing on specific products or vendors, the survey aims to better understand how AI is being adopted across the industry, the challenges organizations face, and the opportunities professionals see for the future.

The survey findings will be featured in the D&D Daily's inaugural Retail Crime Prevention and AI Report—an executive overview of artificial intelligence's growing role in retail crime prevention.

The report will be published as both an interactive website and a downloadable PDF, featuring industry data, visualizations and key takeaways drawn from survey responses and insights from senior leaders across retail and law enforcement.

Whether your organization is actively deploying AI, evaluating new solutions or simply beginning to explore the technology, your perspective is valuable. Broad participation will help create a more representative snapshot of where the industry stands today and where professionals believe it's headed.

The survey takes approximately two minutes to complete, and every response helps strengthen the final report.

If you work in retail asset protection, loss prevention, security or law enforcement, we encourage you to participate and share your perspective.

Take the survey today at: survey.retailcrime.ai


Execs Falling Behind on AI Investment?
CEOs fear they’re underinvesting in AI

More than half of chief executives are concerned their businesses will fall behind due to limitations in technology foundations, according to a new survey.

Chief executives are optimistic about AI’s potential, with almost two-thirds now worrying they’re underinvesting in the technology, according to Cisco’s survey of 2,500 CEOs across 23 countries.

Infrastructure modernization ranks as CEOs’ top technology priority for 2026, while fragmented data and AI security remain key obstacles of deployment. Despite prioritizing AI agent deployment, 72% of CEOs expect humans to retain oversight of AI systems through 2030.

Cisco’s research found 69% of CEOs view AI adoption as essential to remaining competitive, yet more than half believe their existing infrastructure could limit AI initiatives.

That concern is having an effect on executive priorities, with 40% of CEOs ranking infrastructure modernization as their top business priority for 2026, followed by upskilling teams to handle AI workloads, deploying AI agents alongside employees, measuring AI’s business impact and strengthening governance.

The findings indicate that AI implementation is becoming less about experimenting with models and more about modernizing the enterprise foundations that support them. retaildive.com


Physical Store Revival?
China aims to revive physical stores, make them ‘immersive’, as shield against e-commerce

Beijing’s new 2030 retail road map targets price parity and social experiences to combat ‘trading down’ as retail growth hits weakest pace since pandemic

With retail sales growth cooling in May to the slowest pace since December 2022 and persistent weakness in big-ticket items extending through last month, Beijing has stepped in to reinvigorate bricks-and-mortar operators facing intense price competition from e-commerce platforms.

The Ministry of Commerce, together with eight other relevant authorities, on Thursday released guidelines to accelerate the innovative development of the retail sector. The document charts out a path for differentiated competition between online and offline retailers, featuring plans to build a more rational pricing system over the next few years.

The road map arrives against a backdrop of “trading down”, a trend that emerged during the Covid-19 pandemic and has persisted through 2026. The behaviour sees shoppers switch from premium brands to lower-priced alternatives, or simply purchase less, due to economic uncertainty or less disposable income.

To shore up consumption growth and upgrade the sector, the guidelines – which run through 2030 – stipulate that China will strive to transform physical retail spaces into destinations for shopping, immersive experiences and social entertainment. scmp.com
 
RELATED: China aims to boost consumption, jobs via retail sector plan


New Tariffs on the Horizon?
Retailers frontloading goods ahead of potential tariffs in August
Import volume at the nation’s major container ports is forecast to hit a new all-time record in July as retailers stock up ahead of a potential new round of tariffs and other trade uncertainties.

Global tariffs that took effect in February are set to expire July 24. But a new round of higher tariffs regarding forced labor are expected to be imposed by the Trump administration as early as August, according to the Global Port Tracker Report by the National Retail Federation and Hackett Associates.

“Import volumes have risen sharply, with strong growth likely continuing into July,” Hackett Associates Founder Ben Hackett said. “Much of this increase reflects frontloading ahead of expected tariff increases.”

The busy back-to-school selling season has already started, and the winter holidays won’t be far behind, noted Jonathan Gold, NRF VP for supply chain and customs policy, “so retailers have been working to get products into the U.S. and ready to go before new tariffs can potentially drive prices higher.” chainstoreage.com


Deloitte: Back-to-school spending to be flat amid growing economic uncertainty

Qdoba signs deals to expand in two markets; opening 100 restaurants annually

 



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In Case You Missed It

Interface Systems Introduces Digital Keys to Simplify Access Control

Mobile wallet credentials help multi-location businesses reduce key management costs, streamline employee access, and strengthen security


St. Louis, MO – Interface Systems, a leading provider of AI-powered security and expert remote video monitoring for restaurants, retailers, and commercial businesses, recently announced the launch of its Digital Keys a mobile credential solution for Digital Monitoring Products (DMP) access control systems. Digital Keys enables businesses to replace traditional cards, fobs, and physical keys with secure mobile credentials stored directly in Apple Wallet and Google Wallet.

Designed for retailers, quick-service restaurants, and other distributed enterprises, Digital Keys simplifies access management by allowing administrators to issue, update, schedule, and revoke employee, contractor, and vendor credentials remotely through the DMP Virtual Keypad application. Credentials can be delivered instantly by text or email and added directly to a user’s mobile wallet, without requiring employees to download a separate credential app. For businesses managing high employee turnover, multiple locations, temporary contractors, and lost or unreturned keys, Digital Keys reduces the operational burden of physical credential management while improving control over who can access each location.

Key benefits include:

Tap-to-unlock access: Using Near Field Communication (NFC), the same standard used for tap-to-pay transactions, Digital Keys allow authorized users to unlock doors with a smartphone or smartwatch. Credentials can continue to function even when the phone’s battery is low.

Lower key and badge management costs: Administrators can issue or deactivate credentials remotely, helping reduce the time, cost, and operational burden of shipping badges, recovering keys, replacing lost fobs, or rekeying doors.

Stronger accountability: Mobile credentials are assigned to individual users, making them harder to share, lose, or misuse than traditional keys or badges.

Greater visibility: When combined with video integrations, businesses can connect credential activity with recorded footage to verify who accessed a facility and when.

Temporary access control: Contractors, vendors, and temporary employees can be granted access for a defined period, with credentials scheduled to expire automatically.

Phased modernization: Multi-technology readers support NFC credentials alongside existing cards and fobs, allowing organizations to modernize access control at their own pace while preserving prior infrastructure investments.

“Retailers, restaurant operators, and commercial businesses need access control that keeps pace with employee turnover, distributed locations, and evolving security expectations,” said Steve Womer, SVP of Product at Interface Systems. “Digital Keys gives them a practical way to reduce dependence on physical credentials while improving control over who can access each location. Administrators can issue, modify, or revoke access remotely, helping businesses lower costs, reduce risk, and respond faster when employees, vendors, or contractors change.”

The Interface Digital Keys solution is available for customers using DMP access control systems. To learn more about Digital Keys, visit: https://interfacesystems.com/managed-alarms-access-control/managed-access-control/


 

 

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Retail's AI & Cybersecurity Investment Grows
Retailers plan to invest deeper in AI, cybersecurity this year

The majority of retailers already allocate more than $50 million annually to technology, while 28% spend between $100 million and $250 million a year.

More than half (52%) of retailers are pouring $50 million or more into digital technology annually, according to KPMG’s recent survey of 250 retail executives across sectors. That includes 28% who are allocating between $100 million and $250 million.

Nearly half (48%) of respondents said the cost of technical debt, defined by IBM as the future costs stemming from shortcuts and flawed decisions during software development, prevents them from investing in other technologies. This is lower than the 63% average across industries.

The majority (86%) of respondents said their tech enhancements are “frequently improving business value.” Furthermore, most have realized between 31% and 40% of their total financial value from AI and other intelligence tech tools, per the report.

As AI tools proliferate throughout the retail industry, a narrative shift is underway, KPMG noted in its report. While retailers focused on digital transformation a few years ago, AI has become a ubiquitous tool to help companies gain a competitive edge and drive future growth, the report said.

Currently, 42% of the surveyed executives said their company is innovating and deploying AI use cases at scale, but 74% expect that to be the case in 12 months’ time. AI and automation, including generative AI and agentic AI, is also one of the top areas where retailers expect to increase their investment. Forty-two percent said they would do so, compared to 52% who will increase spending on cybersecurity and 49% who plan to boost investments in data and analytics.

While some retailers are diving headfirst into their AI integrations, others are balancing AI tools with human connection. retaildive.com
 



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AI Is Shifting Cyber Focus
US enterprises incorporate cyber risk into larger strategic focus

The rapid adoption of AI and cloud is forcing significant shifts toward business resilience and financial impact.

U.S. companies are merging cyber risk issues into their overall enterprise risk strategy, at a time when AI adoption and business resilience are leading to significant shifts in business priorities, according to a report released Tuesday by Information Services Group, a technology research and advisory firm.

Cybersecurity is increasingly seen as a business-critical concern, as companies accelerate their adoption of agentic AI and transform much of their technology and data infrastructure to hybrid or multicloud environments.

Enterprise leaders are closely integrating cyber spending decisions with overall IT strategy. In addition, C-suite and board members are taking greater accountability for business continuity, financial exposure and regulatory compliance.

The report reflects significant changes among large enterprises in terms of how expanded use of AI cloud adoption has changed the conversation around overall business risk.

AI adoption is forcing companies to rethink their corporate governance, internal controls and overall preparedness for a major cyberattack or IT outage. cybersecuritydive.com
 

Microsoft 365 Accounts Hijacked
Extortion crew hijacks Microsoft 365 accounts via fake passkey setup
The Pink cyber extortion crew is tricking employees into giving them access to their Microsoft 365 accounts by faking Entra passkey enrollment requests.

The attack starts with a vishing call to an employee. The caller poses as IT and says it’s time to set up a passkey. Everything after that is theater, built to keep the victim occupied while the attacker finalizes everything.

The attackers instruct the target to visit a subdomain that mimics the Microsoft Entra ID login page, which has been customized to look like it belongs to the victim’s employer. helpnetsecurity.com


5,811 arrests, $293 million seized over social engineering scams

Accenture faces massive data breach that could put clients at risk


 


 


 



The Power of Online Reviews
How Online Reviews Are Shaping the Health Industry

Discover the real impact of online reviews on the health industry, from FDA fines and third-party testing to transparency tech and social commerce.

Online reviews used to be one of the biggest trust signals in the health industry. It’s what customers look for first when comparing products and verifying legitimacy. And in most cases, reviews become better promotional assets than professionally made ads.

Unfortunately, many brands within the health industry abuse review platforms to game search engines and to trick consumers. With how accessible and good AI is, it’s easy to scale fake reviews that sound real.

Are Health Product Reviews Trustworthy: What Can You Trust?

The short answer is yes. But health product reviews must come from trustworthy, independent sources that conduct their own in-house lab tests. Reviews from a random Amazon user don’t carry as much weight.

Back in 2024, Amazon removed over 275 million fake reviews. Google is also implementing strict policies against fake reviews on its platforms. They’re also using AI tools, like Gemini, to flag AI patterns in reviews and remove them, causing a 600% review deletion rate in 2025.

But that’s where it stops. Google can’t control brand-owned websites. They can just upload fake reviews and testimonials to control their narrative. The same can be said for e-commerce platforms like eBay, Walmart, and iHerb.

How Reviews Created a Structural Shift in the Health Industry

Reviews are a trust signal to both consumers and search engines. But with how prevalent and easy they are to fake, reputable names in the healthcare industry use reviews to their advantage. worldhealth.net


Data Center Backlash Continues
Judge weighs challenge to Amazon's $4 billion Ohio data center

A case challenging Amazon's proposed $4 billion project in Wilmington, Ohio, continues for a second day at the federal courthouse in Cincinnati

A legal battle over a proposed $4 billion Amazon Data Center project in Wilmington, Ohio, has resumed for a second day at the federal courthouse in Cincinnati.

A group of homeowners who live next to the 472-acre Amazon site argues the City of Wilmington pushed forward a series of zoning changes and ordinances last year, without properly notifying or giving the public a fair chance to weigh in. Attorneys for the City of Wilmington disputed those claims during the first day of arguments in an evidentiary hearing on Tuesday.

Ohio's open meetings law requires local governments to hold public hearings before most zoning changes. The law also requires the government to notify nearby property owners by mail at least 30 days before the hearing, to allow residents an opportunity to learn about the proposal and voice their opinions. wlwt.com


How streaming analytics is reshaping the future of e-commerce
 
Amazon intends to build massive, long-awaited warehouse in Georgetown

 


 

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Scottsboro, AL: Scottsboro pharmacy burglary could be linked to statewide ring
Scottsboro Police are investigating a pharmacy burglary they believe is connected to a statewide burglary ring responsible for as many as 30 to 50 break-ins across Alabama. Scottsboro Police Department spokesperson Coty Durham said officers received a break-in alert at Bruce’s Foodland in Scottsboro around 3 a.m. on June 27. When officers arrived, the glass front door was shattered and the pharmacy inside the store had been ransacked. No suspects were found on scene. Durham said the same pharmacy was burglarized last November in an identical manner. In both incidents, three men broke in, did not remain long, and used a getaway vehicle parked far enough from the store to avoid surveillance cameras. Durham said the suspects targeted the same items in both break-ins. “They are going for controlled substances medications. Things that have a higher street value than, you know, Ibuprofen 800, things like that. These are things that are going for — that are stronger opioid type substances medications that they can turn around and sell very quickly to turn that profit,” Durham said.  waff.com


Tucson, AZ: Armed robbers steal $40,000 in tactical gear and firearms from Riton optics store
Two armed robbers broke into Riton Optics on Tucson's eastside on the morning of June 21, stealing nearly $40,000 in tactical gear, including scopes, air compressors for air rifles, and firearms. The robbers, wearing masks, first attempted to shoot out surveillance cameras around the store before breaking through the front door and grabbing what they could, then driving away. Chris Varas, head of product development at Riton Optics, said the loss was significant. "Right now, estimated from at least this, which is about $40,000," Varas said.   kgun9.com


Atlanta, GA: Smash-and-grab: Masked men ram U-Haul into clothing store
Atlanta police are searching for three masked men who drove a rental truck directly through the brick wall of a downtown clothing store early Wednesday morning. Investigators say the thieves heavily ransacked the business before making a quick escape. The burglary occurred just before 5 a.m. Wednesday at Identity-ATL, a high-end streetwear shop on the 100 block of Walker Street SW. Police say three masked men repeatedly rammed a U-Haul truck into the side of the building, smashing a massive hole in the brick wall. Store owner Rod Thomas received an urgent call from his alarm company and rushed to his business as fast as he could. The thieves grabbed whatever clothing items they could get their hands on, drove away a white pickup truck, and left behind a pile of rubble.  fox5atlanta.com


Burlington, WI: Over $15K of stolen Midwest business merchandise discovered by Wisconsin police

Palm Beach County, FL: Four theft cases, $9,100 in goods: Fort Lauderdale woman jailed in Palm Beach County

Okeechobee, FL: Deputies seek 2 people after over $2K theft from Ulta

 



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Shootings & Deaths


Huntsville, AL: One dead, one charged with murder after shooting at gas station on Highway 72
Police say a man is dead and another is charged with murder after a shooting at a Texaco gas station located on Highway 72 and Nance Road on Wednesday. According to HEMSI spokesperson Don Webster, the call came in around 11:05 a.m. HEMSI transported a man with a gunshot wound to Huntsville Hospital Trauma Services in critical condition. Huntsville police said that the man, identified as Michael Wayne Walters, 44, of Huntsville, later died. The department said Austin Ballesteros, 22, of Huntsville, was detained on the scene without incident. He has been charged with murder.  whnt.com


Dothan, AL: Update: Three teens charged in Wiregrass Mall shooting
Three teens face charges connected to last week’s shooting at Wiregrass Commons Mall. Jail records show officers booked 19-year-old E’Quavian Demonte Horne, 18-year-old Zakyih Vicker, and 19-year-old Alphonso Adams. All three are charged with attempted aggravated assault, shooting into the mall, and shooting into an unoccupied vehicle. No one was injured, but the gunfire prompted the mall to close as employees and shoppers rushed to safety.  wtvy.com


Fargo, ND: Shooting suspect caught on camera firing into occupied vehicle outside shoe store
A Minneapolis man charged with attempted murder fired a handgun into an occupied vehicle in a parking lot outside a north Fargo shoe store in May, according to newly obtained police reports, and investigators say he dropped his phone at the scene while fleeing, which ultimately helped crack the case. Eric Lucian Yeanee Dubar, 26, of Minneapolis, faces four felony charges in Cass County District Court in connection with the May 23 shooting outside 701 Kickz in Fargo. He is currently held at Cass County Jail. According to incident reports, officers were dispatched around 12:52 p.m. after gunshots were reported in the parking lot. Surveillance video obtained by investigators captured the sequence of events: a man later identified as Dubar arrived at the scene in a red Kia, briefly entered the shoe store, never looking at any merchandise then returned to the parking lot.  valleynewslive.com


Lima, OH: Investigators ask for tips on alleged shooter and additional people involved in Meijer shooting
The Allen County Sheriff's Office is asking for the public's help identifying the people involved in a shooting at the Meijer store on Elida Road last week. Investigators are still searching for 18-year-old Dezzmin Cobb, who they believe discharged a firearm inside the retail store at approximately 4 p.m. on June 29. Authorities are also seeking information about other individuals who were involved in the incident. According to sheriff's deputies, a group of younger individuals entered the Meijer looking for an employee. The confrontation escalated and became physical before a single shot was fired. The individuals fled the store before law enforcement officers arrived. Sheriff Matt Treglia said the incident was directed at a specific target and was not a random act of violence.  hometownstations.com


Long Beach man gets 26 years in prison for robbery spree that ended in deadly crash

Huntsville, AL: Shooting outside Cato Fashions grazes woman, bullet enters store

Las Vegas, NV: Update: New surveillance video shows chaos during grocery store shooting

Kingstree, SC: Man charged with attempted murder in Kingstree c-store shooting
 



Robberies, Incidents & Thefts


Huntsville, AL: Man in custody following Home Depot robbery, chase with Huntsville Police officers
The Huntsville Police Department said a man is in custody following a robbery that led to a chase and standoff in Northwest Huntsville on Thursday. A spokesperson with HPD said that officers were responding to a theft in progress at the Home Depot on Memorial Parkway. HPD said that the suspect, later identified as 58-year-old Jimmy Lewis Price Jr., stole some home improvement items. Then, when employees caught him, he threatened them with a knife. Officers were able to identify his vehicle, which led to a chase. HPD said the man was driving erratically, hitting three police cruisers during the pursuit. No injuries were reported following the chase.  whnt.com


Wheaton, IL: Second of Four Men Charged with Robbing Wheaton T-Mobile Store Sentenced to 28 Years in the Illinois Department of Corrections

Ajax, Ontario, Canada: 'Like the jewelry business now': 2 Ajax stores targeted for high-value trading cards, police say

San Diego County, CA: 8-year-old boy allegedly breaks into Lakeside pet store to steal snake


 


 

Adult – Santa Clarita, CA – Robbery
Beauty – Okeechobee, FL – Robbery
C-Store – Winston-Salem, NC – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Williamsburg County, SC – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Tulare County, CA – Armed Robbery
C-Store – Albany, NY – Armed Robbery
Clothing – Atlanta, GA – Burglary
Gas Station – Huntsville, AL – Armed Robbery/ Vict killed
Grocery – Odessa, TX – Robbery
Guns – Tucson, AZ – Armed Robbery
Hardware – Gouverneur, NY – Burglary
Hardware – Huntsville, AL – Armed Robbery
Hardware – Fairborn, OH - Burglary
Jewelry - Whitehall, PA - Robbery
Jewelry - Tulsa, OK - Robbery
Jewelry - Citrus Heights, CA - Burglary
Jewelry - San Diego, CA – Robbery
Pet – San Diego County, CA – Burglary
Restaurant – Houston, TX – Burglary
Restaurant – Keo, AR – Burglary                              
 

Daily Totals:
• 13 robberies
• 7 burglaries
• 1 shooting
• 1 killed




Click map to enlarge
 

 


 

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