When you read yet another headline about retail crime in Washington state, it’s tempting to file it under “more of the same.”
But this one should give everyone in retail a pause.
Recent reporting highlights just how bad things have become: Washington is now ranked the No. 1 state in the U.S. for retail crime, with billions in losses tied to shoplifting and organized retail theft.
Behind that headline are the people we think about every day at Patronscan. From store managers, frontline associates, loss prevention teams, and owners, we aim to protect both their inventory and their people.
The data coming out of Washington is stark:
At the same time, many retailers are working under “no chase” policies and strict limits on what staff and security can actually do when they see someone stealing. In many cases, the process looks like this:
From a liability and safety standpoint, those policies make sense. No product is worth someone getting hurt. But as a strategy, it’s broken.
You’re not preventing the incident before it takes place, you’re just managing the fallout.
If you walk into a modern retail store today, you’ll see more cameras, more mirrors and often more security guards.
Yet, theft is still rising, and organized retail crime rings are getting bolder and more coordinated, often targeting high-value goods and hitting multiple locations across a region.
The problem is that cameras, security guards, and mirrors are reactive instead of proactive.
This is where we believe the conversation needs to shift.
If staff can’t safely chase, tackle, or confront (and we agree they shouldn’t) then the system itself needs to do more of the work.
That’s why we’ve been investing so heavily in technology-led access control:
It’s not about turning stores into fortresses. It’s about changing the question from:
“How do we react when someone steals?”
to:
“How do we make it harder to steal without putting staff in harm’s way?”
For the majority of honest shoppers, this experience is simple and transparent:
“I scan, I’m verified, I get what I came to buy.”
For would-be thieves, it’s no longer a quick grab-and-go.
When we talk about retail theft, we can’t separate inventory from human safety.
Technology can’t eliminate every risk of course, but it can absolutely change the kinds of situations staff are exposed to.
If high-risk products are only accessible through controlled systems, staff don’t have to decide at that moment whether to intervene. The system already made most of the hard calls upstream.
That’s what we’re aiming for with Patronscan’s access control solutions: fewer confrontations, fewer impossible choices, and a safer baseline for everyone in the building.
Washington state is getting a lot of attention because the numbers are so stark and the ranking is so visible.
But if you’re running a store in Toronto, Denver, Sacramento, or any other busy metro, you would probably say the same thing local Washington retailers are saying right now:
Our view at Patronscan is simple:
As a company, our mission has always been bigger than ID scanning.
We’re in the business of building trust and shaping safer spaces - for nightlife, for casinos, and for retail.
When we look at what’s happening in Washington and across North America, our takeaway is this: If everything is getting worse, then “more of the same” is not a plan.
It’s time to rethink:
If you’re a retailer who feels like the current playbook isn’t working, this is the moment to explore something different, not just for your bottom line, but for the people who unlock the doors every morning.
Book a Free Demo with our team to learn what Access Control methods may be right for you: https://www.patronscan.com/request-a-demo