U.S. Retailers Report Rise in Organized Crime, Cargo Theft

By | June 20, 2011

Sophisticated technology, less staff at stores and more gang activity are all contributing to more U.S. stores being hit by organized crime, according to a survey by an industry group.

Of 129 retailers, primarily national store chains, surveyed this spring by the National Retail Federation, 94.5 percent said they were victimized by organized criminals in the past year. And 84.8 percent said the problem has only worsened in the past three years.

The NRF said cutbacks of security employees, the desire for low prices by consumers, and the ease of selling stolen goods online or at pawn shops all contribute to the problem. NRF members range from Macy’s Inc. to mom-and-pop shops.

“Shoppers are conditioned to look for a deal,” a senior NRF advisor, Joe LaRocca, told Reuters. He said consumers do not actively seek stolen goods, but the appetite for low prices has spurred demand.

“Thieves are looking for highly desirable, easily resold items,” he said.

In contrast to shoplifting, organized crime involves people conspiring to steal merchandise, often between distribution centers and stores, and reselling the items rather than keeping them.

The survey found that targeted items include such items as jeans, video game consoles and medication.

Shoplifting and theft cost retailers 1.6 percent of sales, or $32 billion in 2009, the last year for which data is available, the NRF said.

That does not include the damage from hits on cargo, or merchandise that has not yet reached stores.

The NRF’s annual survey included questions about cargo theft for the first time and found that just under half of retailers, 49.6 percent, had been struck by this kind of theft.

Criminals are also growing more violent when caught by store employees. Some 13 percent of in-store apprehensions lead to violence such as assault, the survey found.

With the struggling economy, LaRocca said demand for stolen goods could remain strong.

Reporting by Phil Wahba; Editing by Andre Grenon

Topics Trends USA Fraud Trucking

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