Crime Is Shoplifting Really Surging? - Claims that the U.S. is in the middle of a retail theft wave are exaggerated.

  • ⚙️ Performance issue identified and being addressed.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
e4955b47c9ba105a2fd26cfccfff419d.jpg
Plastic barriers at a Walgreens.

By German Lopez
Nov. 29, 2023, 6:43 a.m. ET

Is the U.S. in the middle of a shoplifting wave? Target and other retail chains have warned of widespread theft. News outlets have amplified the story. On social media, people have posted videos of thieves looting stores.

But the increase in shoplifting appears to be limited to a few cities, rather than being truly national. In most of the country, retail theft has been lower this year than it was a few years ago, according to police data. There are some exceptions, particularly New York City, where shoplifting has spiked. But outside New York, shoplifting incidents in major cities have fallen 7 percent since 2019, before the Covid pandemic.

Why has the issue nonetheless received so much attention? Today’s newsletter tries to answer that question while taking a deeper look at recent shoplifting trends.

The data​

The various sources of crime data — from government agencies and private groups — tell a consistent story. Retail theft has not spiked nationwide in the past several years. If anything, it appears less common in most of the country than it was before the pandemic.

The most up-to-date source is the shoplifting report published this month by the Council on Criminal Justice, which uses police data through the first half of 2023. The other sources go through only 2022.

The council tracks 24 major U.S. cities. Overall, shoplifting incidents were 16 percent higher in the first half of 2023 than the first half of 2019. When New York City is excluded, however, reported shoplifting incidents fell over the same time period. Out of the 24 cities, 17 reported decreases in shoplifting.

The shoplifting problem “is being talked about as if it’s much more widespread than it probably is,” said Sonia Lapinsky, a retail expert at the consulting firm AlixPartners.

1701549319018.png

Other data also indicates that shoplifting is not up in most cities since 2019. Retailers’ preferred measure, called shrink, tracks lost inventory, including from theft. Average annual shrink made up 1.57 percent of retail sales in 2022, up slightly from 2021 (1.44 percent) but down compared with 2019 (1.62 percent). The F.B.I. and the Bureau of Justice Statistics also found that theft and property crime ticked up in 2022 but remained below pre-Covid levels.

The notion that the U.S. is enduring a period of higher crime in some areas is not wrong. Car thefts are up by more than 100 percent since 2019. Murders are on track to be 10 percent higher this year than they were in 2019.

1701549333767.png

Many major downtown areas have also become emptier and more chaotic since the pandemic, which may explain why drugstores and other retailers are more often locking up items even if shoplifting isn’t much more common than in the past.

The noise​

There seem to be several reasons that shoplifting has received so much attention lately:
  • Events in New York tend to receive outsize scrutiny. It is the country’s biggest city, a big retail market and the headquarters for much of the national media. Another city where property crime has risen is Washington, D.C., where many journalists, as well as politicians, also live.
  • Videos of extreme but rare crimes can go viral today. On social media, people post videos of looting flash mobs or thieves ramming cars into stores. “There are millions of property crimes a year,” said Jeff Asher of the research firm AH Datalytics. As a result, people can always find outlandish anecdotes, even if crime is down.
  • Conservative media has promoted these videos as evidence of disorder in liberal cities and under President Biden.
  • Retailers have an interest in spreading the shoplifting narrative because it can suggest that disappointing profits are beyond their control.
  • Inflation may play a role, too. Even if retail theft is not up, retailers might care more about it now. After all, higher prices have eaten into their profit margins by increasing the underlying costs of doing business. That makes reducing theft more important.
  • The rise in murder, car theft and some other crimes makes shoplifting seem like part of a larger story even if it isn’t in most cities.
Whatever the full explanation, the current focus on shoplifting is part of a broader trend: The public often overestimates crime. Over the past two decades, most Americans have said that crime is rising, according to Gallup’s surveys. In reality, crime rates have generally plummeted since the 1990s.

Related: Some middle-aged white women shoplift at self-checkouts in Britain because people assume they won’t steal, a Guardian columnist argues.

Source (Archive)
 
Last edited:
Stores aren't closing up and pulling out of cities because of Karen stealing a pack of tampons at the self-check by choosing not to scan them, or Lil' Billy sticking a candy bar in his pocket.

They're closing because of organized, persistent and large-scale crime. Not just the "smash and grab" stuff. It's wider spread than that.
 
Hard to report shoplifting statistics when nobody's being arrested for it anymore.
 
Over the past two decades, most Americans have said that crime is rising, according to Gallup’s surveys. In reality, crime rates have generally plummeted since the 1990s.
I took a statistical analysis class in college as an elective. I frankly dislike math but can be fairly good at it when I work for it, which--as a college kid--I didn't like to do. The high point of the class was the instructor--not a professor but a guy who made money on the side by teaching part-time from his area of expertise. He always stressed asking the right questions (What is it you truly want to know?) because data can be cherry-picked for a desired conclusion, or the question can be too broad or vaguely worded to be useful. In short, statistics can be deceptive--or worse, used as a deliberate means of deception, a statistical model built with the intent to mislead.

This article is an attempt to deceive. Note the author focuses on national crime statistics. 'Why looky here, shoplifting is actually down nationwide, you guys!' when there is, in all probability, a direct correlation between Soros-funded DAs and astronomically high crime rates within those light-on-penalty Soros DA Blue city jurisdictions. People living within those high-crime jurisdictions do their best to adjust or--if they can afford it--get the hell out. People living outside those jurisdictions are worried the people getting the hell out will bring the plague with them.
 
But the increase in shoplifting appears to be limited to a few cities, rather than being truly national. In most of the country, retail theft has been lower this year than it was a few years ago, according to police data
Funny they left out the part about most stores prohibiting not only interfering in shoplifting but reporting it to the police as well cause muh racism might get a poor poc shot. Gee, I wonder if that has anything to do with the lack of shoplifting reports in those areas
 
apparently we didn't have viral videos way back in the year of our lord, two-thousand and nineteen :eyeroll:
 
Pretty sure NYC and other major cities are still holding onto crime statistics so they are likely not in this and this completely neglects that shoplifting is also simply allowed to happen because chains and clerks know the risk of harm is high and the chance of prosecution is zero.

When you have major retailers pulling out of what should be profitable markets you have a lot of issues in that market and one of them is always going to be crime.
 
I saw two people shoplift in the last year with my own eyes. Just from casually being out at a mall, and at the grocery store.
I've never seen it before but it was incredible and so blatant-- and both looked like they could be related to each other!

Store owners did literally nothing.
 
It isn't just middle-aged women. Adding a few free items to the self checkout now seems to be the norm (anecdotal and YMMV) from the groups of people I talk to/work with.
None of them are miscreants by any means, but simply see the normalisation of a lack of anyone giving a fuck about shoplifting, as a reason to do it, seems as "everyone else is doing it".

What is funny/infuriating, is that these same people who would nick £5's worth of goods from a shop, will happily pay £15 a month for movies and tv shows and would be morally repulsed at the idea of pirating media.

I know of some that have been doing it here and there because things are genuinely becoming so fucking over the top expensive. Plus, you know, niggers get away with literally everything now to the point even the normies are noticing, so I imagine more people are also feeling emboldened by our "justice system" being an utter joke.

I have the same exact experience as your later paragraph though. Most of them would be just fine if they cut out excess bills and spending and arm and a leg on anything but the most bargain value ingredients that aren't fucking premade. Things are getting bad, thats undeniable, but a non-insignificant portion of those people "economicly suffering" are only suffering because they refuse to tighten their belt and cut out the bullshit they do not need. I sure as fuck ain't a rich man, Hell, I'm probably not even "middle class", but I'm doing just fine by not blowing all my money on shit I don't need, and this is including Christmas shopping (thank fuck I'm done with that). Sure as fuck don't pay for any media at this point either. I'm not forking over $60-$100 for a game or $15 a month for a "digital good" that can be copied infinitely at virtually no cost. There's no moral quandary to media piracy. You are being robbed paying for that shit. I can't say the same for food that some farmhand had to raise and harvest that's now getting fucked over, as well as the business selling it, because someone can't be financially responsible.
 
They need to accept reasonable shoplifting like the UK has for centuries. It used completely acceptable to steal from Woolworths but since they shut society has taken to accepting the theft of one chicken product per person from major supermarkets, but that's just an egg sample.
 
I guess that's why some retailers have taken to placing photographs of items on shelves, which you have to bring to an employee so they can retrieve it for you. I guess that's why they're bailing on lawless, shit-smelling "progressive" hellholes like San Fransodom. This is such shameless, baldfaced gaslighting. But what else can they do? Joetato is cratering in the polls and their propaganda reflects their desperation.

Have some of this, you bughive fuckstick faggot.
1701557816701.png
 
Liberal cities can lie all they want about this; they can't stop or even ignore the reality of major retailers closing up shop in their cities once their profit margins disappear. The food deserts will only get bigger and more people will just eventually leave when they can't find a good grocery nearby anymore.
 
People underreport crime because they know either nothing will be done or worse, they will be harassed by the media for it.

Many major downtown areas have also become emptier and more chaotic since the pandemic, which may explain why drugstores and other retailers are more often locking up items even if shoplifting isn’t much more common than in the past.
Do we ignore something that was mostly peaceful and happened a few years ago. It magically destroyed a lot of retail space. hmm
 
Not lawyer, just I consider "shop-lifting" like snagging one or two things, and not every time you enter a store, and usually with a hint of secrecy/discretion. All the videos I've seen are outright brazen theft, with thugs going in and just grabbing armsfull of shit or loading up trash bags and running out. Is shop-lifting up, yeah probably, but it's overshadowed by the insane fucking wild animal theft going on.
 
Funny they left out the part about most stores prohibiting not only interfering in shoplifting but reporting it to the police as well cause muh racism might get a poor poc shot. Gee, I wonder if that has anything to do with the lack of shoplifting reports in those areas

I have some family who work retail. At non-grocery-store major chains.

They don't even bother to report it to the police, most times. There's no point. But people coming, loading up a cart with high-value merchandise, and just walking out the door? Happens with frequency. That's not even shoplifting, at that point. It's just flat-out robbery.

The only time they bother reporting it to the police is when the same person does it several times, and then only so they can get a tresspass order against them.
 
Back
Top Bottom