Richard R. Johnson is the first to admit it was a bad idea.Recently laid off from a job building trailers in Elkhart, Ind., Mr.
Johnson came up a dollar short at Martin’s Supermarket last month when
he went to buy a $4.99 bottle of sleep medication. So, “for some stupid
reason,” he tried to shoplift it and was immediately arrested.“I
was desperate, I guess,” said Mr. Johnson, 25, who said he had never
been arrested before. As the economy has weakened, shoplifting has
increased, and retail security experts say the problem has grown worse
this holiday season. Shoplifters are taking everything from compact
discs and baby formula to gift cards and designer clothing.Police
departments across the country say that shoplifting arrests are 10
percent to 20 percent higher this year than last. The problem is
probably even greater than arrest records indicate since shoplifters
are often banned from stores rather than arrested.Much of the
increase has come from first-time offenders like Mr. Johnson making
rash decisions in a pinch, the authorities say. But the ease with which
stolen goods can be sold on the Internet has meant a bigger role for
organized crime rings, which also engage in receipt fraud, fake price
tagging and gift card schemes, the police and security experts say.And as temptation has grown for potential thieves, so too has stores’ vulnerability.“More people are desperate economically, retailers are operating with
leaner staffs and police forces are cutting back or being told to
deprioritize shoplifting calls,” said Paul Jones, the vice president of
asset protection for the Retail Industry Leaders Association.The problem, he said, could be particularly acute this December, “the month of the year when shoplifting always goes way up.”Two
of the largest retail associations say that more than 80 percent of
their members are reporting sharp increases in shoplifting, according
to surveys conducted in the last two months.Compounding the
problem, stores are more reluctant to stop suspicious customers because
they fear scaring away much-needed business. And retailers are
increasingly trying to save money by hiring seasonal workers who,
security experts say, are themselves more likely to commit fraud or
theft and are less practiced at catching shoplifters than full-time
employees are.More than $35 million in merchandise is stolen
each day nationwide, and about one in 11 people in America have
shoplifted, according to the nonprofit National Association for
Shoplifting Prevention.CONTINUE READING..