Even if you successfully shoplift and exit the store without being caught, you can still be arrested. When there is missing inventory or if something distinctive is gone from the shelves, businesses may review security footage.
Many stores have surveillance cameras designed to capture footage of shoplifters. If the store took footage of you shoplifting and you are later identified in the footage, you can be charged with theft any time within the statute of limitations.
In fact, according to NASP, only 1 in 48 shoplifters are caught, and only about half of those people are turned over to police for prosecution. With numbers this high, it is obvious that shoplifting is nearly epidemic in America.
Employees are also trained to look out for suspicious behavior. Large shopping bags, hanging around high-theft items, moving in groups, and hanging around certain areas for long periods of time are all indicators that someone is likely to steal.
Typically, surveillance footage is checked only when there is an incident that needs to be reviewed. The standard timeframe to keep recorded video used to be in the 30 day range, but with modern digital recording and the decreasing costs of storage, holding a year or more worth of video is not uncommon.
When and how frequently you perform a full stock take varies from one store to another. Some stores limit full physical inventory counts to once a year, others do them bi-annually, while others conduct them at frequent intervals.
Most grocery stores use inventory management software, which manages stock lists in real-time. This software scans products in when received at the backdoor. Then keeps track of what gets sold through the register. Some stores even use automatic purchasing systems that re-order when items get low.
This creates an equilibrium for the time in-between, which could take anywhere from 2-3 weeks to a do a complete physical inventory count.
In general, surveillance video is recorded, not watched live. Less than 1% of all surveillance video is ever viewed by human eyes. There are too many cameras to watch. Studies have shown that when a security person watches a video monitor, fatigue sets in after 18 minutes.
Most security camera footage is stored for 30 to 90 days. This is true for hotels, retail stores, supermarkets, and even construction companies. Banks keep security camera footage for up to six months to comply with industry regulatory requirements.
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