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Report: Holiday retail crimes to take $8.85 millon toll in U.S.

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Monday, December 3, 2012

Retail crimes during the Christmas holiday season will cost U.S. and European retailers more than $16.3 million, according to a new report, Shoplifting for Christmas 2012, from the Centre for Retail Research.

That’s up 4 percent over 2011. The United States ranked at the top for retail crimes with $8.85 million, followed by Norway, the U.K., Finland and Ireland. Retail crimes are defined in the report as shoplifting, employee fraud and vendor/distribution fraud.

The report’s estimates are based on data from 300 retailers. The Centre for Retail Research has produced the annual report since 2002.

As far as shoplifters go, men are more likely to be the culprits than women, the study says.

Here’s what’s on shoplifters' wish lists:

  • Alcohol
  • Women’s clothing and fashion accessories
  • Toys
  • Perfume and other health and beauty products, including gift packs
  • Smartphones, tablet computers
  • Toiletries for men, aftershave, razors, razor blades
  • DVD gift sets, Blu-ray, games consoles, electronic games
  • Food and Christmas decorations
  • Electrical goods, including electronic toothbrushes and medical equipment and hardware/DIY including power drills
  • Watches and jewelry
  • Chocolates and confectionery

 

What does your securty staff do after hours? Dance?

 - 
Friday, November 30, 2012

We always suspected such things went on. We just didn't have proof. Until now.

Three members of the security staff at the New Museum in Manhattan strut their dancing stuff in a 6-minute and 45-second video titled, "Night at the Museum."

These flexible and jovial guys, Ron, Rafael and Jamel, do the robot, zombie and assorted pop-and-lock moves in the museum's lobby after hours. (Let's hope they were on their break.) And, they're quite good. (And again, let's hope they are just as good at their real jobs.)

Watch the video here. It's nice to see security peeps having such a good time on the job, right? Or no? I didn't see that any artwork was absconded during those 7 minutes, so that's a plus.

I give Ron, Rafael and Jamel a thumb's up.

 

 

Preventing loss at the returns counter

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Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Loss prevention specialists have their hands full at this time of year, when retailers see an influx of holiday shoppers. But it’s not just shoplifters, organized retail crime and criminal flash mobs they need to be concerned about. The “returns” counter can be fraught with fraud as well.

Savvy fraudsters know how to prey on holiday cheer, costing retailers thousands of dollars in fraudulent returns and exchanges, says Tom Rittman, vice president of marketing for The Retail Equation, which works with more than 17,000 stores to optimize transactions at point-of-return and point-of-sale.

Sixty-two percent of retailers require an ID to return merchandise with a receipt, according to the National Retail Federation. But even a printed receipt doesn’t eliminate fraud. “Even the best POS systems with centralized receipt databases are vulnerable to improper use of receipts that appear legitimate,” he says.

What to look out for? Here’s Rittman’s list of the nine ways consumers cheat with a seemingly valid receipt:

1.     Renting/Wardrobing: Buying merchandise for short-term use with intent to return, such as video cameras for weddings, big-screen TVs for a Super Bowl game, or a dress for a special occasion is a form of fraud. Return abuse—excessive violation of a retailer’s return policies—is often viewed subjectively. No one wants to deter a good shopper, but at some point a person’s returns overwhelm the value of his/her purchases and send that customer into a negative margin situation.

2.     Shoplifting with a receipt: Many thieves will shoplift with intent to return for full retail price. The classic example is when the fraudster makes a purchase, takes the item to his/her car, returns to the store immediately with receipt in hand, selects another of the same item from the shelf and proceeds to the return counter claiming he/she “changed his/her mind.” The receipt is valid and the return looks legitimate, but you’ve essentially paid this person for keeping your merchandise.

3.     Returning old/damaged merchandise: The process for consumers is simple: buy to replace old/broken item, keep new, return old. This system uses the retailer to keep personal items “up-to-date” at the retailer’s cost.

4.     Shoplisting: Also known as “shoplifting using found receipts,” fraudsters shoplist by using a discarded or stolen valid receipt as a shopping list to find items in a retail store and return them for a refund.

5.     Employee theft: Associates can usually find a valid receipt in the POS system to return items.

6.     Reselling: Another simple process for fraudsters: purchase, sell elsewhere, return unsold. In this case, the retailer is being used for free inventory.

7.     Tender liquidation: Consumers may buy on one form of tender (maybe even a stolen credit card) and exchange once or several times to switch to merchandise credit, which becomes saleable in an online marketplace. They also may return with small additional cash outlay to finally return products for cash.

8.     Price arbitrage: This process consists of buying differently priced, similar-looking items and returning the cheaper one as the expensive item.

9.     Fake receipts: There are fake receipt web sites that thieves can use to duplicate or forge receipts, costing retailers thousands of dollars.

How does your salary stack up?

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Monday, November 26, 2012

ASIS has come out with its 2012 U.S. Security Salary Survey, always enlightening to peruse to see if you’re getting paid on par with colleagues in the same sector, vertical and geographic area. Not at par? Check out the education and certifications breakdowns to see if that can be remedied.

Security professionals in the South Atlantic states topped the median income list with a salary of $115,112. They were followed by:

New England, $105, 813

Pacific, $105, 444

Mid Atlantic, $104,000

West South Central, $103,000

East North Central, $102,750

East South Central, $90,000

Mountain, $89,475

West North Central, $88,000

 

Check here for more information.

 

Mall won't have loose kids to worry about on Black Friday

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Wednesday, November 21, 2012

It’s almost here: Black Friday. The day most retailers have a love-hate relationship with. It’s great for sales, but a strain, at the very least, on their security. From shoplifting, ORC, criminal flash mobs and just basic crowd management, store security professionals will have a lot to deal with.

One thing they won’t have to deal with at the Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn., however, is unaccompanied minors. The mall won’t allow any teen 15 and under through its doors all day Friday unless they are with an adult. Nor will they be allowed to enter during the busy retail week between Christmas and New Year’s, according to the Pioneer Press.

As a rule, the mall imposes the ban on Friday and Saturday nights year-round. Two days after Christmas last year, a group of teenagers was involved in a “chair-throwing melee” that was photographed and posted online, the newspaper said.

"Last year we experienced a large influx of youth, more than we had anticipated," mall spokesman Bridget Jewell told the newspaper. Many teens were just hanging out, and especially on crowded shopping days, "We don't want it to turn into a place for people to come and hang out."

Last year, a record 219,000 shoppers visited the Bloomington mall on Black Friday. "We'd never had that many people in our building on one day," Jewell said.

At least 180 stores at the mall are planning to open at midnight Friday.

Meanwhile, may your Black Friday be safe and secure!

 

Which retailer benefits big-time from re-election?

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Monday, November 19, 2012

It has been nearly two weeks since President Obama was re-elected and there’s one retail sector that is booming. Know which one? Here's a hint: It involves an issue that triggers a lot of heated debate.

You got it! Gun sales.

Across the country sellers report an increase in sales and background checks, which are in indicator of future sales, due in part to the president’s statement during a debate that he’s open to reintroducing an expired ban on civilian purchases of assault weapons. A dealer in Yuma, Ariz., reported a 70 percent surge in sales in the week following the election; one in Oklahoma City cited a whopping 105 percent increase.

The day after the election, shares in Smith & Wesson Holding Corp. surged 10.8 percent to $10.48 a share in morning trading, more than double its price at the beginning of the year. It opened at $9.86 on Monday. Sturm, Ruger & Co. Inc. got a 6.4 percent boost to $47.48 a share, a 39 percent increase from early January. It opened at $48.74 on Monday.

The sales activity was seen even before the election. In October, required FBI background checks increased 18.4 percent. After President Obama was first elected in 2008, the FBI said it conducted 12.7 million checks compared to 11.2 million the year before, for an increase of 13.4 percent.

The July massacre at an Aurora, Colo., cinema that left 12 people dead and 58 injured reignited, for both sides, the gun control debate. A semi-automatic rifle with 100-round magazine was used in the shootings.

Forget shaken, not stirred. How about NFC-enabled, not used?

 - 
Friday, November 16, 2012

Bond, James Bond, is an end-user. Or could have been.

In the 23rd and latest Bond film, the box-office hit Skyfall, gadget man Q provides Agent 007 with an NFC-enabled mobile phone.

Q outfits Bond with an NFC-enabled Sony Xperia T, which you’d think would be especially useful to an international spy. It redefines stealth, doesn’t it? Tracking, tailing, transferring secret data, purchasing ingredients for your after-work martini, the possibilities are endless.

Bond, however, must not be as tech-savvy as we’d like to think. He never once turns the phone on during the one hour and 23-minute movie.

Oh well, maybe next time.

 

Mass shootings: What to look for before they happen

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Wednesday, November 14, 2012

I listened in on a web conference this week, “Mass Shootings: Attacker Types and Threat Assessment,” presented by the Emergency Information Infrastructure Project. The speaker was August Vernon, instructor, author and operations officer for the Forsyth County, N.C., Office of Emergency Management.

Most mass shootings are carried out by “insiders,” an employee at the targeted workplace or a student on the campus, he said, and typically they act out of anger and revenge. “We have to perceive the world as they do,” Vernon said. On campuses, “We may think we’ve been helping a student all we can, but they think we have nothing to help them.

“A lot of times you’ll hear these individuals are nuts, A lot of times they’re not,” he said. “Someone with severe mental health issues, we’re going to pick up on that. They can’t come to work or class everyday.”

The deadliest hour for shootings at schools is first period, second is lunchtime, he said. Most school shooters have no history of violence, and most of them—80 percent—plan on dying during the shooting, either by suicide or suicide by law enforcement officer.

A large percentage of school shooters give warning of what they are planning, Vernon said. That can be alarming behavior, statements they’re making or the fact that they are gathering weapons. They post on social websites, put videos online, blog about their intentions and take notes from their web searches.

“The FBI found that in 81 percent of school attacks there was leakage” of information about the planned attack in advance, he said.

On campus and in the corporate realm, no two shooters are alike, further complicating attempts to prevent such violence.

Still, there are come commonalities. Here’s Vernon's take on what to look for at the workplace:

  • White male
  • 30 to 50 years old
  • Problem employee
  • History of violent behavior
  • Intimidates others
  • Possible drug or alcohol abuse
  • Obsessed with guns, gun magazines; talks about guns all the time
  • “Creeps people out,” overly interested in acts of violence in the workplace in the past or in the news
  • Makes open or veiled threats
  • Obsessed with job but not a good employee
  • Loner
  • Other staff members have dealt with him before over disciplinary issues, co-worker complaints, etc.
  • Has us vs. them mentality
  • Holds a grudge

 

Los Alamos security cost overrun nearly doubles

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Monday, November 12, 2012

I wrote a short story a few weeks ago about the failure of the new $213 million security system at Technical Area 55 at the Los Alamos National Laboratory site. Cost overruns were estimated to be $21 million to $25 million.

Estimated cost overruns are now tagged at $41 million, according to a report in the Albuquerque Journal. Los Alamos is one of three nuclear weapons design labs in the nation.

Lab Director Charles McMillan said in a memo to staff that it could take six months to fix the system and work is not likely until March, the newspaper said. More guards will be needed to protect the building in Technical Area 55, and that expense is included in the latest overrun estimate.

The newspaper wrote:
“The system was to have used sensors, cameras and other technology to protect one of the lab’s most sensitive sites. But when lab staffers were going through final checkout of the system while preparing to turn it on, they found that ductwork that was supposed to carry data from the sensor systems to computers used to manage the system was improperly installed.

“Because the project had already spent its entire budget by the time the problems were discovered, the lab was legally obligated to shut down work until an agreement can be reached with the federal government regarding additional money needed to correct the problems.

“ ‘Because we are not authorized to make this type of change in funding, the project remains in suspended status until Congress or NNSA directs us otherwise,’ McMillan wrote in the lab staff memo.

The NNSA said no decision has been made on how to make up the cost overruns.

LP ‘reality’ show back on the air

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Friday, November 9, 2012

Move over "Keeping Up with the Kardashians," "Hoarders" and "Bridezillas." The new season of the loss-prevention show "Caught Red Handed" has begun.

The show, on the off chance you haven’t seen it, “gives a new definition to cat and mouse games as undercover store detectives help hunt down bold shoplifting suspects,” according to truTV, which is also the cable home to other “reality” shows such as "Hardcore Pawn," "Clipaholics" and "South Beach Tow." I say “reality” because truTV’s reality shows have been known to be, well, reenacted in part, at best.

Anyway, some of the shoplifters on the show are extremely crafty—others are extremely not and provide some funny moments. Five loss prevention agents are featured. The three men and two women each have LP experience ranging from two to 19 years, truTV says. One of the agents claims to be a “master of disguise,” another was a “world champion professional wrestler.” All are purported to be fearless and with no tolerance whatsoever for those who steal from stores.

“Covert surveillance, big takedowns and crazy excuses are all in a day's work for them,” the show’s website says.

I watched a clip online and it did evoke a few giggles and a few groans. It’s on Monday nights, check it out—or not.

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