San Diego Union-Tribune

RETAIL GROUP RETRACTS ITS CLAIM ABOUT ‘ORGANIZED’ SHOPLIFTIN­G

- BY EDUARDO MEDINA Medina writes for The New York Times.

A national lobbying group has retracted its startling estimate that “organized retail crime” was responsibl­e for nearly half the $94.5 billion in store merchandis­e that disappeare­d in 2021, a figure that helped amplify claims that the United States was experienci­ng a nationwide wave of shopliftin­g.

The group, the National Retail Federation, edited that claim this month from a widely cited report issued in April, after the trade publicatio­n Retail Dive revealed that faulty data had been used to arrive at the inaccurate figure.

The retraction comes as retail chains like Target continue to claim that they are the victims of large shopliftin­g operations that have cut into profits, forcing them to close stores or inconvenie­nce customers by locking products away.

The claims have been fueled by widely shared videos of a few instances of brazen shoplifter­s, including images of masked groups smashing windows and grabbing high-end purses and cellphones. But the data show this impression of rampant criminalit­y was a mirage.

In fact, retail theft has been lower this year in most of the country than it was a few years ago, according to police data. Some exceptions, including New York City, exist. But in most major cities, shopliftin­g incidents have fallen 7 percent since 2019.

Organized retail crime, in which multiple individual­s steal products from several stores to later sell on the black market, is a real phenomenon, said Trevor Wagener, the chief economist at the Computer & Communicat­ions Industry Associatio­n, who has conducted research on retail data. But he said organized groups were likely responsibl­e for just about 5 percent of the store merchandis­e that disappeare­d from 2016 to 2020.

He emphasized that there’s “a lot of uncertaint­y and imprecisio­n” in measuring losses, because it is difficult to parse out what is shopliftin­g and what is orory

ganized crime.

Wagener testified in Congress in June about the discrepanc­y in the National Retail Federation’s report.

Even as it retracted the figure and revised the report, the federation, which has more than 17,000 member companies, insisted in an emailed statement that its focus on the problem was appropriat­e.

“We stand behind the widely understood fact that organized retail crime is a serious problem impacting retailers of all sizes and communitie­s across our nation,” the statement said. “At the same time, we recognize the challenges the retail industry and law enforcemen­t have with gathering and analyzing an accurate and agreed-upon set of data.”

At issue is “total annual shrink” — the industry term for the value of merchandis­e that disappears from stores without being paid for, through theft, damage and inventory-tracking mistakes.

Mary McGinty, a spokespers­on for the federation, said the error was caused by an analyst from K2 Integrity, an advis

firm that helped produce the report.

The analyst, who was not named, linked a 2021 National Retail Federation survey with a quote from Ben Dugan, the former president of the advocacy group Coalition of Law Enforcemen­t and Retail, who said in Senate testimony in 2021 that organized retail crime “accounts for $45 billion in annual losses for retailers.”

Dugan was citing the federation’s 2016 National Retail Security Survey, which was actually referring to the overall cost of shrink in 2015 — not the amount lost to just organized retail crime, McGinty said.

Alec Karakatsan­is, a civil rights lawyer who has studied and critiqued how the media has covered organized retail crime, said the retraction underscore­d how some news organizati­ons, which have extensivel­y covered the issue of shopliftin­g, were “used as a tool by certain vested interests to gin up a lot of fear about this issue when, in fact, it was pretty clear all along that the facts didn’t add up.”

One of the most prominent

examples came in October 2021, when Walgreens said it would close five stores in San Francisco, citing repeated instances of organized shopliftin­g. The company’s decision had come months after a video seen millions of times showed a man, garbage bag in hand, openly stealing products from a Walgreens as others watched.

But an October 2021 analysis by The San Francisco Chronicle showed that police department data on shopliftin­g did not support Walgreen’s explanatio­n for the store closings.

Eventually, Walgreens retreated from its claims. In January, an executive at the company said that Walgreens might have overstated the effects on its business, saying, “Maybe we cried too much last year.”

Karakatsan­is said the exaggerate­d narrative of widespread shopliftin­g was weaponized by the retail industry as it lobbied Congress to pass bills that would regulate online retailers, which they claim is where much of the stolen product ends up.

 ?? KARSTEN MORAN NYT FILE ?? The National Retail Federation had said that nearly half of the industry’s $94.5 billion in missing merchandis­e in 2021 was the result of organized theft. It was likely closer to 5 percent.
KARSTEN MORAN NYT FILE The National Retail Federation had said that nearly half of the industry’s $94.5 billion in missing merchandis­e in 2021 was the result of organized theft. It was likely closer to 5 percent.

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