June 17, 2024 Last Edit: November 27, 2024
The legislation calls for preventative measures and tougher penalties for shoplifting and other crimes
Assistant State Director Cameron Garczyk recently provided written testimony to the House Criminal Justice Committee in support of House Bill 366, legislation to reduce organized retail theft in Ohio.
“House Bill 366 will work to provide a coordinated response to the increase in retail theft and shoplifting taking place in Ohio businesses,” Garczyk wrote.
“This measure is necessary as businesses are targeted by individuals who utilize the black market to profit from theft of stolen goods,” Garczyk wrote. “The legislation takes a number of important steps aimed at combatting this problem and strengthening the penalties for engaging in such activity.”
HB 366 would establish the Organized Retail Theft Advisory Council within the Office of the Attorney General, and the Organized Retail Theft Task Force within the Organized Crime Investigations Commission. “The goal of these entities is to work with retailers and law enforcement from across the state and nation to develop methods and strategies to respond more ably to shoplifting and retail theft activities,” Garczyk said.
Read his full letter to the committee below:
June 11, 2024
Chairwoman Abrams, Vice-Chair Williams, and members of the Ohio House Criminal Justice Committee, I am writing on behalf of the nearly 21,000 members of the National Federation of Independent Business in Ohio (NFIB) to lend our support for House Bill 366. We thank Representative Ghanbari for sponsoring this piece of legislation aimed at combatting retail theft against businesses in Ohio.
By way of background, a typical NFIB member in Ohio employs 20 or fewer and does less than $2 million in annual gross receipts. Our members come from all industry types and each of the 88 counties. Member companies range in size from sole proprietors to larger operations employing hundreds.
House Bill 366 will work to provide a coordinated response to the increase in retail theft and shoplifting taking place in Ohio businesses. This measure is necessary as businesses are targeted by individuals who utilize the black market to profit from theft of stolen goods. The legislation takes a number of important steps aimed at combatting this problem and strengthening the penalties for engaging in such activity.
The bill establishes two new entities, the Organized Retail Theft Advisory Council within the Office of the Attorney General, and the Organized Retail Theft Task Force within the Organized Crime Investigations Commission. The goal of these entities is to work with retailers and law enforcement from across the state and nation to develop methods and strategies to respond more ably to shoplifting and retail theft activities. This will be accomplished by looking at “innovative methods of detecting, deterring, preventing, and prosecuting organized retail theft”, according to the bill.
Furthermore, complaints and/or tips of organized retail theft having occurred or continuously occurring in counties across Ohio may be investigated in a manner identical to existing organized crime task forces.
Another innovative measure to be carried out by these entities is the adoption of a secure retail theft web portal that will allow real-time information and updates to be shared across the state to ensure that perpetrators of these crimes are being brought to justice more quickly and stopped from carrying out theft against a swath of businesses in a short period of time.
House Bill 366 also increases penalties, expands definitions, and creates additional offenses to meet the seriousness of these criminal actions. Some of these include: creation of the offense of “theft of mail” which is a fifth degree felony with increases based on value of mail stolen and the nature of the victim, creation of the offense of “organized theft of retail property” that takes into account the value of goods stolen in setting the penalty, as well as aggregating an offender’s record of theft over the course of one year to determine total value of goods stolen and subsequent penalties. Additionally, the bill expands the crime of counterfeiting to include stealing business or customer information on encoding devices.
While the increase in organized retail theft and shoplifting has been covered more extensively by its effect on larger retailers, small businesses are not immune to such criminal activity and the harm caused may be even more lasting and impactful to the long-term well-being of the business. Any small business that sells products on shelves or displays accessible to customers and guests is liable to be a victim of repeated shoplifting or organized retail theft. The value of the product being sold only increases the potential for it to be shoplifted and some businesses have been forced to secure their products behind cases or locks to prevent such theft. Small business owners and their employees are hardworking individuals who have enough on their plate, they should not have to worry about being robbed or losing their valuable inventory to criminal actors out to make money selling off stolen goods.
We support the intent of House Bill 366 to strengthen the response to organized retail theft facing Ohio businesses and urge the committee’s favorable adoption. Thank you for the opportunity to provide comments.
Sincerely,
Cameron Garczyk
Assistant State Director – NFIB Ohio
NFIB is a member-driven organization advocating on behalf of small and independent businesses nationwide.