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Home Depot said retail theft continues to be a challenge. However, the executive said investments to combat shoplifting and organized theft "are paying off." AdvertisementShoplifting and organized retail crime was a dominant story in retail last year. Home Depot has been both a prominent target and opponent of organized retail theft in recent years. AdvertisementLast year, a Florida pastor was charged with running a retail crime ring responsible for stealing $3 million worth of goods from the chain.
Persons: Richard McPhail, , McPhail, Scott Glenn, Glenn, Dominick Organizations: Service, Home Depot, Watch, Home, Prosecutors, Depot, Business Locations: Florida
Insider Today: Preparing for Trump 2.0
  + stars: | 2024-11-10 | by ( Matt Turner | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . Preparing for 47Donald Trump, now the 2024 president-elect, never really stopped running for office after losing the 2020 election. Treasury yields also finished the week higher, as investors bet that a Trump White House will drive inflation. Also read:Risky businessGetty Images; iStock; Natalie Ammari/BIThere's no such thing as free lunch — or in one investor's case, free dinner. The great American shoplifting spreeGetty Images; Jenny Chang-Rodriguez/BIRegular Americans are shoplifting everything from tape measures to blocks of cheese.
Persons: , Andrew Yeung, that's, Donald Trump's, Donald Trump, Evan Vucci, Stocks, Bitcoin, Tesla, Steve Madden, Trump's, Goldman's, David Solomon Jeenah Moon, Goldman Sachs, David Solomon, It's, Andy Jassy, Carter Smith, Chelsea Jia Feng, Jassy, Natalie Ammari, Jenny Chang, Rodriguez, Trump, — Goldman Sachs Organizations: Business, Service, Google, AP, Trump White House, Airbus, Bloomberg, Getty, Getty Images, Amazon, BI Locations: Silicon Valley, China
And before you ask, no, he doesn't feel bad about it, especially when he pilfers from Whole Foods. AdvertisementBut there's also a lot we don't know about retail theft. "No, I don't feel bad about stealing from Jeff Bezos," one 20-something occasional shoplifter in Washington, DC, told me. "It doesn't feel like a world in which I can really get by and build a life very easily anymore, " he said. Advertisement"If most of this is happening in Walgreens and Walmart and places like that, I don't know, is it a problem?"
Persons: Carson's, he's, Carson, He's, shoplifts, Jeff Bezos, there's, it's, Joshua Jacobson, California who's, , that's, Ernesto Lopez, they've, Jeff Prusan, Joe Schmoes, they're, Keith, shoplifter, That's, Donovan, Donovan's, snagging, she's, Jacobson, Jeff Bezos isn't, David Johnston, we're, hasn't, Emily Stewart Organizations: Walmart, Foods, Amazon, National Association of, Criminal, Atlantic, Depot, Target, Guardian, National Retail Federation, Business Locations: New York, California, Washington ,, Atlanta, Texas, Illinois, Walgreens
The record shows that Mr. Trump often pursues his stated goals, regardless of how plainly they lack legal or moral grounding. For this reason, Americans would be wise to see this language as a genuine threat, not simply Mr. Trump on a tangent. Why You Should Believe Him As president, Mr. Trump repeatedly sought to use the power of government to punish his political opponents. But rules can be rewritten, and Mr. Trump has made clear that he intends to pick officials who will take orders from the Oval Office. Mr. Trump would have broad authority to pursue such a plan, though he’d need Congress to provide a lot of money.
Persons: Donald Trump, Will, Trump, supplicants, , Newsmax, Joe Biden, Hillary Clinton, John Kerry, James Comey, Andrew McCabe, Comey’s, Trump’s, Biden, Kamala Harris, Stephen Miller, Jan, Mark Esper, Esper, , shoplifters, Mark Milley, John Kelly, James Mattis, Gavin, we’re, Gavin Newsom, Hurricane Maria, Hurricane Michael, Mr, Ron DeSantis, Mark Harvey Organizations: U.S, Department, National Guard, Justice Department, Mr, NPR, Fox, Capitol, American, , Joint Chiefs of Staff, Joint Chiefs, Associated Press, Democratic, Puerto Rico, Florida Panhandle, National Security Council, Politico, Trump, Congress Locations: smithereens, America, New York, Ukraine, Arizona, United States, Erie, Pa, Iran, North Carolina, Coachella, California, Florida, Hurricane, Orange County, Calif, Iowa, Richmond , Va, South Carolina, Russia
America's absurd war on 'organized retail crime'
  + stars: | 2024-09-30 | by ( Amy Martyn | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +26 min
Organized retail crime "is not shoplifting," the agency says on its website, "and these crimes are not victimless." AdvertisementOne homeless woman in jail who pleaded guilty to felony organized retail theft tells me she steals out of desperation. Gavin Newsom sent $267 million to cities across California to increase arrests of organized retail crime — and the crackdown has escalated dramatically. Even the guy who says he coined the term "organized retail crime" can't say how much is lost to it. Gavin Newsom has provided California cities with $267 million and signed 10 new bills into law to bolster the prosecution of organized retail crime.
Persons: Veronica Lumbreras, Deysi Ramirez, Brooke Jenkins, Lumbreras, Villanueva, Ramirez, Louis Vuitton, Sen, Chuck Grassley, Gavin Newsom, Chanel, ANGELA WEISS, David Johnston, shoplifters, Shalia Brown, she's, Brown, Thomas Riddle, Riddle, Elizabeth Camacho, That's, Jeff Loftin, they're, Eric Risberg, Aziza Graves, Miss Graves, Graves, Jenkins, Maury Povich's, Jeffrey Ross, Ross, there's, Read Hayes, Jeffrey Epstein, San Francisco Bloomingdale's, Alto, Bloomingdale's, Cuauhtemoc Ramirez, Amy Martyn Organizations: San Francisco's Mission, San Francisco Police Department, CVS, Target, National Retail Federation, of Homeland Security, San Francisco Chronicle, Hearst Newspapers, Getty, San Francisco, Walgreens, Retailers, Gov, Patrol, Saks, Retail Federation, Kroger, San, Nvidia, Employees, Hall of Justice, ABC News, Prevention, Body, Alto, Mental Health, Anadolu, Walmart, Safeway Locations: San Francisco's, Arriba Juntos, Villanueva, Bay, Walnut, San Francisco, Hayward, California, Mission, Napa County, America, Los Angeles, San Francisco's County, Oakland, Bath
New York CNN —A year ago, America’s stores declared a shoplifting epidemic. Target also closed nine stores, saying “theft and organized retail crime” threatened worker and customer safety and made business unsustainable. Many retailers’ merchandise losses have stabilized or improved, and chains have publicly dialed back their rhetoric. Their shrink rate — lost inventory as a percentage of sales — is their best estimate for items that go missing. The shoplifting rate in the first half of 2024 was also 10% higher than in the first half of 2019.
Persons: Target, , Michael Fiddelke, Lindsey Nicholson, Gavin Newsom, , Michael Baker, DA Davidson, Donald Trump, William Blair, Walgreens ’, James Kehoe, ” Neil Saunders, “ That’s, it’s, Baker, ” Baker, David Johnston, Duane Reade, Angela Weiss, Ernesto Lopez, Edgar Dworsky, “ We’ve, ” Johnston Organizations: New, New York CNN, Target, Getty, , DA, CNN, Companies, National Retail Federation, Criminal, Retailers Locations: New York, Queens , New York, California, New York City
Small business insurance like property, liability, and business interruption are key to helping protect against major risks. By assessing the threats to your small business and putting resources in place to prevent and mitigate them, you can help keep your small business running. Your insurance agent can also help you analyze your small business and identify types of coverage that may help safeguard it against potential risks. Here are five types of risks to consider, along with some ideas to help protect yourself and your small business. State Farm offers Small Business Insurance for a wide range of small businesses.
Organizations: State, The Insurance Institute, Business, US Chamber of Commerce, US Small Business Administration, Farm, Small Business Insurance, Insider Studios
Read previewDrugstores like CVS, Walgreens, and Rite Aid have long been the spots where you can pick up essentials like a can of soup or some Tylenol in addition to your prescriptions. Another appears to show a Rite Aid store with an even wider selection of locked-up merchandise, including tortilla chips and microwavable ramen. Rite Aid did not immediately respond to a request for comment. She said she even avoids taking orders that involve shopping at one particular Walgreens store due to all the locked-up goods there. Do you work at CVS, Walgreens, Rite Aid, or another drugstore chain and have a story idea to share?
Persons: , that's, Neil Saunders, Saunders, Duane Reade, Walgreens execs, Tim Wentworth, GlobalData's Saunders, dreuter@businessinsider.com Organizations: Service, Walgreens, Rite, Business, Global, CVS, Rite Aid, Companies, Walmart, Target Locations: Brooklyn , New York, Nevada
Deodorant, shampoo and underwear are all under lock and key in many stores in California. Retail clerks are often told to ignore shoplifters, after a handful of store employees who confronted thieves were assaulted or killed. Video clips of smash-and-grab crews snatching armloads of merchandise have gone viral. Californians of all political stripes have become fed up with the problems plaguing supermarkets and retail stores, not to mention car break-ins and open-air drug use. Now the state’s lawmakers and voters are weighing what to do.
Organizations: London Breed Locations: California, San Francisco
I went straight to the cameras and saw we were being robbed,” Zuniga told CNN. Hayes told CNN his team works with a majority of retailers that carry Lego products as well as Legoland theme parks. “Demand is always there.”As a result, there’s not only a market for stolen Lego products but also a burgeoning counterfeit market, especially online. When reached for comment, Lego directed CNN to online resources on its website to educate consumers how to spot fake online Lego stores and fake Lego products. He bought Lego sets that were on sale at the local Target to fill up empty shelves.
Persons: New York CNN —, Miguel Zuniga, , ” Zuniga, Miguel Zuniga’s, Noble, Olay, , Read Hayes, Hayes, there’s, Michael Blackshire, Casey Slaughter, ” Slaughter, Indiana Jones, Lego, Calvin Mah, Zuniga Organizations: New, New York CNN, CNN, Southern, KABC, LAPD, Barnes, Noble, Target, University of Florida, Prevention Research Council, Walmart, Los Angeles Times, , Wichita Police, Star Wars, Los Locations: New York, Lumita, Los Angeles County, Lomita , California, California, Southern California, Philadelphia, Richmond , British Columbia, Pasadena , CA, Wichita , Kansas,
In today's big story, we're looking at why the US economy is on track (again) for a soft economic landing . The big storyAnother economic turnaroundGetty Images; Chelsea Jia Feng/BIIt took longer than expected, but the US economy is finally on track for a soft landing. After a scary few months of economic data that had investors fearing a recession and stagflation, the tides have turned again. AdvertisementRecent data showing inflation and the labor market cooling have given hope that a soft landing is in the cards — and may even be underway — for the US economy, writes Business Insider's Madison Hoff. AdvertisementThe US economy is about to make a soft landing — a situation in which inflation cools without causing a recession or sudden spike in unemployment.
Persons: , Chelsea Jia Feng, Insider's Madison Hoff, Arantza Pena Popo, bummed, it's, aren't, Johannes Eisele, Monica Schipper, Nordin Catic, Tyler Le Tim Cook, Cook, Jack Dorsey, Dorsey, Abanti Chowdhury, Sam Altman's, Dan DeFrancesco, Jordan Parker Erb, Jack Sommers, George Glover, Annie Smith Organizations: Service, shoplifters, Business, Fed, Johannes, Getty, OpenAI, Apple, BI, Street Journal, Comcast, New York Stock Exchange Locations: AFP, New York, London
Some T.J. Maxx and Marshalls employees are being asked to wear body cameras to combat retail theft. But the cameras aren't making much of a difference so far, employees told CNN. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . AdvertisementThe parent company of T.J. Maxx is outfitting some employees with body-mounted cameras in the latest example of how retailers are trying to counter theft at their stores. Dozens of job listings for loss prevention employees at T.J. Maxx, Marshalls, and HomeGoods — all owned by TJX — mention that those hired must wear a "company-issued body worn camera" as part of the job.
Persons: , TJX Organizations: Marshalls, CNN, Retailers, Service, Business Locations: Maxx
New York CNN —Hourly retail security workers are now wearing police-like body cameras at major stores. The manufacturer of Taser devices and other security companies are now designing and marketing body cameras specifically for retail workers. “Body cameras are just one of the many ways that we work to support a safe store environment,” the spokesperson said. Bakery chain Greggs gave employees body cameras after a rise in sausage roll thefts and threats from customers. Applebaum also expressed concerns about the information the body cameras are collecting and whether it could be used to stymie union organizing attempts.
Persons: TJ Maxx, John Klinger, , they’re, , TJX isn’t, TJX, Joshua Isner, John Eck, shoplifters, They’re, Ernesto Lopez, Thaddeus Johnson, ” Stuart Applebaum, “ it’s, Applebaum, CNN’s Curt Devine Organizations: New, New York CNN, Marshalls, National Retail Federation, Tesco, CNN, University of Cincinnati, Criminal, Wholesale, Department Store Union Locations: New York, HomeGoods, Florida, Miami Beach
In mid-2020, the country was reeling from a surge in violent crime and civil upheaval after the killing of George Floyd by the police — a knife’s-edge national crisis that President Donald J. Trump made a central issue in the run-up to Election Day. Four years later, the nation’s crime rates have shifted. Homicide rates are tumbling from pandemic highs in most cities, funding for law enforcement is rising, and tensions between the police and communities of color, while still significant, are no longer at a boiling point. But property crime, carjackings and smash-and-grab burglaries are up, adding to a sense of lawlessness, amplified on social media and local online message boards. of fabricating positive crime data to bolster Mr. Biden.
Persons: George Floyd, Donald J, Trump, , ” Joseph R, Biden, shoplifters Organizations:
The Macy's logo is seen at its store in Herald Square in New York City on Jan. 19, 2024. "Through our investigation, we found that Rehana's Cosmetics was well-known to shoplifters, who would willingly bring them stolen items," Bragg said. Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced an indictment relating to more than $1 million in stolen goods as part of a retail theft fencing operation. The charges come as retailers such as Target and Ulta increasingly cite theft as a growing problem at their stores. In March, a monthslong CNBC investigation showed how police broke up an organized retail crime ring that stole millions in cosmetics from Ulta stores and resold them on Amazon .
Persons: shoplifters, Bragg, Rehana's, Alvin Bragg, Attorney Alvin Bragg Organizations: Empire, Manhattan, Attorney, CNBC, Attorney's Office, CVS, Manhattan District Locations: New York City, Midtown Manhattan, borough's, New York
Shruti Gandhi has a simple rule for meeting founders: She only takes the meeting if she wants to invest. Being the solo general partner of her firm, the early-stage outfit Array Ventures, also means she can get deals done quickly. Over the past five years, she's returned most of her maiden $7 million fund to limited partners at a net multiple of almost four. For founders, by foundersThe founders Gandhi has backed like working with her because of her technical chops and hands-on approach. We will back you if you raise a fund,'" Gandhi said.
Persons: Shruti Gandhi, Gandhi, Nikhil Teja Kolli, Kolli, she's, wasn't, Dumbledore, Harry Potter, Champ Bennett, Zimperium's Zuk Avraham, Mehul Nariyawala, Google —, Doktor Gurson, Gurson Organizations: Ventures, Business, PayPal, IBM, Columbia University, True Ventures, Samsung, Google, University of Chicago Booth School of Business, Rad Locations: India, Poughkeepsie , New York, She's
MokSa.ai uses general-use models and customizes them to detect suspicious activity at store locations. The company also pays college interns in India to watch footage for suspicious activity and annotate it — a process called data labeling. The dashboard shows reports of suspicious activity at a glance. MokSa.aiThe Android of the surveillance marketBefore MokSa.ai, Kolli worked as a quality manager at a company producing parts for high-speed rails. While these two tout their abilities to detect suspicious activity and send alerts, they both require customers to use their cameras and sensors.
Persons: , Nikhil Teja Kolli, Kolli, Jay Farner, MokSa.ai, MokSa.ai Kolli, Shruti Gandhi, Gandhi, It's Organizations: Service, Business, Array Ventures, Quicken Loans, The Fund, Ventures, Royal Ozarks Locations: Kansas, India, Detroit
But Walmart, Target, and other chains's own policies and practices could be worsening the problem. From conflicting policies to understaffing, retailers can make it hard for workers to prevent theft. That's because major retailers, including Walmart, Target, and others, have policies that sometimes prevent their own staff from addressing shoplifting at their stores, current and former employees told Business Insider. Among the report's recommendations for retailers: Hire enough employees at stores, and make sure they aren't constantly overworked. Do you work at Walmart, Target, or another major retailer and have a story idea to share?
Persons: , Rhea Gordon, Gordon, Lululemon, Calvin McDonald, Santino Burrola, Thea Sebastian, Hanna Love, Sebastian, Love, everything's Organizations: Walmart, Target, Service, Business, BI, CNBC, company's, Futures Institute, Brookings Locations: North Carolina, Colorado, California, Montana
But a new report suggests we don't know whether organized retail crime is a big problem or not. "Organized retail crime," "retail theft," and similar terms don't correspond with categories that local police departments use to categorize crimes, Hanna Love, a fellow at Brookings, told Business Insider. It's unclear what makes organized retail crime "different than, say, other instances of shoplifting" from a data perspective, Love said. The NRF has said that it took back the estimate due to an error by an outside analyst who contributed to its report on organized retail crime. About fourteen states passed new laws on retail theft in 2022 and 2023, Stateline reported in December.
Persons: , Hanna Love, Love, James Kehoe, William Blair, Target's, it's, Sebastian, Stateline Organizations: Walmart, Walgreens, Service, Target, National Retail Federation, Brookings Institution, Brookings, Retail, The New York Times Locations: States, Brookings, San Francisco, Indiana, Fairfax , Virginia
Facial recognition frequently misidentifies people of colorMIT Media Lab researcher Joy Buolamwini found that facial recognition technology misidentified black women up to 35% of the time, the New York Times reported in 2018. When fewer photos of people from other racial and gender groups are used, facial recognition tech is less accurate at identifying people of those backgrounds, the study said. In some cases, it's possible to opt out of using facial recognition technology — and its high error rate. But sidestepping facial recognition often isn't possible, said Gideon Christian, a law professor at the University of Calgary who has written about the legal and societal aspects of facial recognition technology. AdvertisementThe FTC banned Rite Aid from using facial recognition technology in stores for five years as a result.
Persons: , Spark, Joy Buolamwini, shoplifters haven't, Gideon Christian, Samuel Levine, Christian Organizations: Service, TSA, Business, MIT Media, New York Times, MIT Technology Review, Walmart, CBP, University of Calgary, FTC, FTC's, Consumer Protection, Rite Aid Locations: India
Theft just keeps getting worse for Dollar Tree
  + stars: | 2024-03-13 | by ( Alex Bitter | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +3 min
Dollar Tree says theft will remain a problem at its stores well into 2024. Dollar Tree is closing about 1,000 Family Dollar stores, it also said Wednesday, a result of a review of the brand that has been months in the making. Theft was one of many factors that Dollar Tree considered when it decided which locations to close, the executives said. Last year, Dollar Tree locked some items up and put others behind checkouts to deter would-be shoplifters. Do you work at Dollar Tree, Family Dollar, or Dollar General and have a story idea to share?
Persons: , Richard Dreiling, Jeffrey Davis, Davis, Dreiling Organizations: Service
Read previewSelf-checkout might make shoppers feel less loyal to a store, according to new research. One asked shoppers about their recent grocery-buying habits, including whether they used a self-checkout kiosk or were rung up by a human employee. In it, some shoppers read a short passage about how doing something themselves is rewarding before paying for groceries using self-checkout. But technology aimed at catching shoplifters using self-checkout has caused confrontations between Walmart employees and innocent customers, Business Insider reported. Do you work at a store with self-checkout and have a story idea to share?
Persons: , Yanliu Huang, Farhana Nusrat, Huang, Nusrat, She's, Todd Vasos Organizations: Service, Business, Kroger, Costco, Drexel University's LeBow College of Business, Drexel, University of San, Walmart Locations: University of San Diego, Albuquerque , New Mexico
Target and Walmart stores in the Bay Area are putting underwear and socks behind locked doors. AdvertisementUnderwear and socks are some of the latest items to be locked up at Target and Walmart stores in the Bay Area, in the retailers' latest efforts to combat shoplifting, NBC Bay Area reported . One customer told NBC Bay Area that they had to wait 10 minutes for an assistant to retrieve an item. A Walmart store located in Hilltop, California is also keeping underwear locked up in a bid to prevent theft. Cesar Zepeda, a Richmond City councilmember, said in an interview with NBC Bay Area that retail theft is hurting the local community and its likely to lead to store closures.
Persons: , Cesar Zepeda Organizations: Walmart, Service, Target, NBC Bay, NBC Bay Area, Richmond City councilmember, Social, National, Security Survey Locations: Bay, Hilltop , California, Richmond
I asked some of those who first warned about the dangers Trump poses what their views are now. At times it seems as if he cannot control himself or his hateful speech. We need to wonder if these are the precursors of a major deterioration in his character defenses. In recent months, Trump has continued to add to the portrait Glass paints of him. At the California Republican Convention on Sept. 29, Trump told the gathering that under his administration shoplifters will be subject to extrajudicial execution: “We will immediately stop all the pillaging and theft.
Persons: Leonard L, Glass, Trump, Hitler, remorseless Trump, ” Trump, Joe Biden, Trump’s, Isaac Arnsdorf, Josh Dawsey, Devlin Barrett, John F, Kelly, William P, Barr, Ty Cobb, Mark, Organizations: Harvard Medical School, Democrats, California Republican, Claremont, White, The Washington Post, Justice Department, Joint Chiefs Locations: Waco , Texas, California, Claremont N.H, America, The
One-litre bottles of extra-virgin olive oil are selling for as much as 14.5 euros ($15.77) in some supermarkets, propelling olive oil into the category of products retailers fit with security tags, alongside spirits, cosmetics and appliances. "Olive oil has become an ideal product for them to steal." STC, a Spanish company providing anti-theft solutions to retailers, saw a 12-fold increase in orders this summer from supermarkets for devices to protect olive oil bottles, managing partner Salvador Canones told Reuters. Spanish police have also uncovered thefts of olive oil from mills and in October arrested two people as part of an investigation into the theft of 56 tonnes of extra virgin olive oil. Among the world's biggest consumers of olive oil, they have already significantly cut back: sales volumes of extra-virgin olive oil fell by 17% in the 12 months to September, according to NielsenIQ.
Persons: Jon Nazca, Ruben Navarro, Navarro, Tu, " Navarro, Salvador Canones, Corina Rodriguez, Helen Reid, Elaine Hardcastle Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, Tu, STC, Reuters, Spanish, Thomson Locations: Olive, Malaga, Spain, Rights MADRID, Spain's Andalucia, Carrefour, Madrid, Spanish
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