Tuesday, December 24, 2024

Co-ordinated shoplifters target vulnerable retailers

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The Richmond-Tweed, Southern Highlands and Shoalhaven regions experienced the greatest surge in retail theft, with incidents rising by 96.3 and 70.1 per cent across the past two years.

‘Substantial concern’

Shopping Centre Council of Australia executive director Angus Nardi said he was incredibly concerned about the rise of violence and weapon use associated with retail theft.

While the organisation doesn’t publicly release data, Nardi said there had been a year-on-year increase in the number of violent or armed incidents in shopping centres.

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“There’s a toxic mix of prolific and high-harm offenders … which is a key challenge and causing substantial concern,” he said.

He welcomed new laws passed this month giving NSW Police the power to use handheld scanners to check for knives in shopping precincts, sporting venues and public transport stations.

Australian Retail Association chief industry affairs officer Fleur Brown said the rise in crime came as many businesses were doing it tough.

“For many retailers, that’s quite a blow in a year that’s already tough with pronounced spending slowdown and the rising cost of doing business,” she said, adding that increased wages, energy and supply chain costs and increasing price of goods and services were taking their toll.

“We are deeply concerned about the impact of retail theft on the wellbeing of the retail workforce and the flow on effect on the bottom line,” she said.

The ARA estimates shoplifting costs retailers more than $9 billion a year.

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A NSW Police spokesperson said officers regularly and proactively target retail theft across the state, including high-visibility operations aimed at recidivist and opportunistic offenders.

“Officers work closely with shopping centre management, as well as loss prevention officers and other relevant stakeholders to run these proactive operations, which occur regularly throughout the calendar year across the state … This sort of criminal behaviour will not be tolerated,” the spokesperson said.

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