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Shoplifting is on the rise. So are solutions.

As a woman exits a Seattle clothing store, the security tags inside her shopping bag trigger an alarm.

She runs. A security guard gives chase.

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High-profile cases of shoplifting seem to be everywhere. Policymakers, researchers, and businesses are all trying to both assess and solve the problem.

“Between 9 a.m. and 8 p.m., I say we probably catch 10 to 12 [thieves],” says the guard, who asked not to be identified.

As shoplifting rankles concerned citizens and business owners alike, efforts are rising to both assess the problem and find solutions.

The National Retail Federation found that inventory loss amounted to $94.5 billion in 2021. Some say this is hardly cause for alarm: This rate of “shrink,” averaging 1.4% of revenue, is similar to previous years.

Others see crime on the rise. When Business.org surveyed 700 small-business owners, it found a 54% spike in peak-season shoplifting in 2021. New York City reported a similar jump in shoplifting complaints between 2021 and 2022.

Some stores have started locking everything up in plexiglass. Power tools sold at Lowe’s only work once the bar code gets scanned.

A new federal law requires online marketplaces like eBay to verify the identity of high-volume third-party sellers, in a bid to trace organized groups that sell stolen goods online.

Seattle is focusing on repeat offenders. Result? A year into the initiative, the city attorney reported 750 fewer police referrals and thousands fewer criminal incidents.

At a clothing store in downtown Seattle, a woman approaches the exit during the busy lunch hour. A security guard smiles at her. But when she passes through metal detectors at the store entrance, security tags inside her shopping bag trigger an alarm.

“Ma’am?” says the security guard.

Without turning around, the woman starts running. The guard dashes after her and stops her on the street outside.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

High-profile cases of shoplifting seem to be everywhere. Policymakers, researchers, and businesses are all trying to both assess and solve the problem.

“She actually did purchase a couple items, but she also stole a couple items,” says the security guard, who asked not to be identified. “Between 9 a.m. and 8 p.m., I say we probably catch 10 to 12 [thieves].”

This kind of stealing isn’t confined to just urban Seattle. Across the United States, retailers are undertaking extraordinary measures to combat a rise in shoplifting, from locking goods behind plexiglass to installing specialty surveillance cameras.

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