Originally posted by Curtis Baillie
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If I stop you for shoplifting and you produce a knife, we're talking ADW if you have stolen nothing, and armed robbery if you have.
These are both at least class C felonies in every state in the union, and to my mind all of the solicitous concern about "injuring the poor shoplifter" that the Best Practices literally reeks of becomes nonsensical, in my view. Surely the permissible actions of LP personnel even by "Best Practice" standards should at least be equal to those of any other citizen resisting such a crime.
Best Practices fails miserably in dealing effectively with the reality that a simple shoplift detention can be escalated all the way to felony crimes by an assaultive shoplifter, and when that happens common sense demands that a different set of rules must apply. A general failure to recognize this fact throughout the retail industry is one of the reasons so may LP personnel are injured in the course of duty. It also bears some responsibility in an untold number of highly questionable agent dismissals and disciplinary actions.
The retail industry wants to have its cake and eat it too. The industry knows full well that in order to prevent loss it is necessary to put LP people in harm's way, but they really don't want to come down to brass tacks with ALL that this implies, or to give LP personnel the proper scope of action that is demanded in order to deal with such situations effectively. As a consequence, in many cases the LP agent commencing a shoplifting stop is never sure which he should fear most - the shoplifter or the general lack of support from management that he will experience if the stop should go south on him.
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