An eight-week-old puppy tripped over his paws as he sniffed for treats in the Mall of America's basement in late March.
When he's older — and if his training goes well — the canine will eventually use his snout to detect firearms as one of the mall's first gun-sniffing dogs, part of a new security plan to make the country's shopping destination safer.
Retailers have long debated how to keep stores secure but still welcoming. That has become even more complicated for shopping centers such as the Mall of America as well as retailers such as Target, Best Buy and smaller Twin Cities area stores whose private safety protocols are now under greater public scrutiny.
Nationwide, retailers reported more than a 26% increase in organized retail crimes in 2021, according to a report the National Retail Federation (NRF) released this past fall. Eight in 10 said the violence and aggression associated with those incidents has increased.
This past holiday season, for example, the Mall of America experienced the first fatal shooting in its 30-year history. In November, Target said it lost $400 million worth of inventory, mostly from crime, and expected that number to grow to more than $600 million for the full year. That aligns with one argument that lawbreakers have become more shameless and violent with smash-and-grab shoplifting.
Yet another view blames viral social media videos — of crimes and interactions with security officers — for ramping up awareness. Walgreens CFO James Kehoe said in January that his company might have "cried too much last year" about theft and over-secured its stores.
"We're having this really tough debate," said Jason Matlock, co-founder of a Twin Cities consultancy helping organizations plan for critical incidents. "OK, we want safety, but how do we get there?"
Striking a balance