Jewelers braced for holiday crime
Dec 11, 2003 12:00 PM
In 2002, jewelers lost $58 million nationally to thefts in their stores, according to the New York City-based Jewelers Security Alliance. That's not including gem salespeople who travel and are targeted outside of stores.
As a result, jewelers are adding thousands of dollars in new security, including shatter-proof film over outside glass and inside display cases, a drastic cutdown on inventory and strict policies to remove only one item at a time from display cases. This is all in addition to silent alarms, door buzzers, window security bars, CCTV and even the use of guard dogs, John Kennedy, president of the Jewelers Security Alliance, told Chicago's Daily Herald.
Kennedy says the alliance puts out reminders for added security every holiday season. "The stores are a little more crowded," he says. "There's a greater chance of crime because staff is more busy and there is more part-time staff."
According to the alliance's numbers, criminal events against jewelers in the third quarter of 2003 have declined 18.4 percent from the third quarter of 2002.
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