
Quote of the Day: TRUMP'S ICE USES NEW WAY TO SPLIT MIGRANT FAMILIES
EVGENILIA, who with her family fled her native Russia and sought political asylum in the United States, on choosing to be sent to an immigration detention center while her 8-year-old son was taken to a shelter for unaccompanied children over returning to her homeland as a family.
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Forbes
25 minutes ago
- Forbes
Tech Savvy Thieves Commit Cargo Heists At Record Levels
The number and value of thefts from cargo on the move in the United States is on the rise and predicted to grow even further according to reports by several organizations. It's a trend experts believe will be exacerbated by new import tariffs and growing technical sophistication on the part of the thieves. 'We're in record breaking territory,' declared Danny Ramon, director of intelligence and response at cargo security company Overhaul, during a webcast Thursday previewing the company's second quarter cargo theft report. Cargo thefts increased 4% in the second quarter of this year from Q1 but 33% higher than Q2 2024, according to the Overhaul report. Cargo thefts were up 10% during the first six months of this year compared to the first half of 2024. 'You got to keep in mind that 4%, that 10% is on top. It's compounded on top of year over year, over quarter over quarter of record breaking cargo theft,' explained Ramon. Overhaul now predicts cargo thefts will increase 19% during the second half of the year. Indeed, the value of stolen merchandise and estimated losses broke the $1 billion mark for the first time in 2023, going on to increase 27% in 2024. These figures are projected to increase another 22% by the end of 2025, David J. Glawe, president and CEO of the National Insurance Crime Bureau revealed in testimony before the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee on July 15. The items cargo thieves most often target are vehicles, household goods and consumer electronics, according to the just-released July 2025 Cargo Security Index, produced by cargo security companies GearTrack and Verisk. The methods cargo thieves are using have escalated, making prevention and enforcement more challenging, including the use of artificial intelligence. 'There's been a trend over time of moving from opportunistic or even petty theft to organized, highly sophisticated criminal rings that are identifying where their vulnerabilities in the supply chain, where the highest value assets and targeting those assets,' noted Ilan Gluck, general manager of GearTrack, in an interview. 'What has accelerated dramatically over the last couple of years is the level of sophistication of the criminals has increased dramatically.' Cargo thieves are also becoming more aggressive in stalking their prey, showing a patience and willingness to travel beyond traditional hot spots for the crime. While California traditionally accounts for the most cargo thefts, the GearTrack/Verisk report revealed a 75% rise in theft incidents in Indiana, 40% in Arizona and 35% in Illinois. The report attributed those increases to 'rising warehouse operations in Indianapolis and organized theft rings targeting shipping routes in Arizona. There's also been a sharp spike in cargo theft in the Texas triangle of Dallas, Houston and Austin as stolen goods are moved over the border to Mexico, according to Gluck. The 200-mile, so-called, Red Zone in southern California remains the cargo theft hotspot, but motivated by the possibility of lucrative payoffs, thieves are willing to go beyond the zone to make their scores. 'Once they've identified a particular shipment that they're interested in and going to steal it and dedicated to that theft, they're going to follow it till they get to opportunity,' said John Cannon, law enforcement liaison at Overhaul. 'We've seen them several hundred miles outside the 200-mile radius strike and steal the cargo.' Add to the mix new tariffs on imported goods, it's likely to create new targets for cargo thieves along with more misery for consumers. 'Tariffs, in some cases are going to drive shortages--in some cases are going to drive price increases,' predicted Ramon. 'Both of those things are going to increase demand, which will increase targeting. I will say organized cargo thieves are incredibly agile to market trends and are able to shift targets at the drop of a hat.' In response to the continuing rise in cargo and retails thefts in general, Congress is considering legislation aimed at combating the crime. The bipartisan Safeguarding Our Supply Chains Act has been proposed in the U.S. House of Representatives. If passed, it would establish a Supply Chain Fraud and Theft Task Force. 'It's just giving law enforcement the power and teeth to enforce something that's already on the books and so it's important when it comes to tracking and identifying theft, you have to have the integration with law enforcement to actually take action,' said Gluck. The U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee is looking at the proposed Combating Retail Crime Act of 2025, that would establish a coordinated multi-agency response and create new tools to tackle evolving trends in organized retail theft. Companies such as GearTrack and Overhaul are in business to help shippers track cargo and prevent thefts through the use of various technologies. 'We deploy sensors on assets, on vehicles, on trucks, on, really, anywhere it's needed, throughout the supply chain,' explained Gluck on GearTrack's Internet of Things solution. 'We're deploying sensors that are generating data constantly to help translate the truth around what what's actually happening on the ground. So for us, it's about deploying a network of hardware devices, capturing all of the data from that hardware and then translating that data back to our customers, for them to make meaningful decisions within their operation.' Aside from technology, Overhaul's Ramon implores all-around vigilance every step of the way from loading to delivery, advising, 'It is the full throated, layered security program. Vet your carriers, vet your brokers, vet your drivers through all means available to you, not just one. Don't just check a box and move on. Use all the tools that you have access to.'


Washington Post
25 minutes ago
- Washington Post
We are upending the world based on anecdotes, exaggerations and lies
As a horrified world watches the upending of an economic order that has brought it stability and prosperity for decades, the question I hear in country after country is the same: Why is the United States, the nation that has flourished so mightily under this system, tearing it down?


Bloomberg
25 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Here's What's at Stake If Trump-Putin Meeting Happens
President Donald Trump said he'd be willing to meet with Vladimir Putin, even if the Russian leader hadn't yet agreed to also sit down with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy. Here's what's at stake if and when the pair meet. Blomberg's Oliver Crook reports. (Source: Bloomberg)