
Cargo thieves are plundering America blind — Congress must act
Every year, the days are Independence Day see a notable spike in criminal networks seizing shipments of everything from televisions to energy drinks to vital medical supplies, exploiting the disruptions and reduced oversight that come with the holiday rush.
It's all part of a growing cargo theft epidemic. Once a sporadic nuisance, it has metastasized into a nationwide criminal enterprise that is bleeding the U.S. supply chain to the tune of more than $35 billion each year. And everyday Americans are the ones footing the bill.
These thieves aren't just smashing locks in the dead of night. Sophisticated criminal rings are exploiting weaknesses in our digital infrastructure, using ever-evolving cyber fraud and identity theft to impersonate legitimate carriers and hijack loads without ever touching a crowbar — often rerouting freight before it even leaves the warehouse. Others target trucks and trailers at rest stops and distribution centers, threatening the personal safety of drivers who are simply doing their jobs.
The consequences ripple far beyond the loss of goods. Small trucking companies face higher insurance premiums or go out of business. Retailers, already navigating global supply chain headaches, must absorb delayed deliveries and inventory losses. Consumers see price hikes and empty shelves. And for drivers — often the last line of defense — the stress of constant vigilance becomes a daily burden.
Cyber-enabled 'strategic theft' is now one of the most insidious and fastest-growing methods of committing cargo crime. When coupled with virtually nonexistent enforcement, it's a low-risk, very high-reward proposition for these bad actors. Just one in ten thefts ends in an arrest.
That is why Congress must act and pass the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, a bipartisan bill that would finally give federal authorities the legal framework, resources and cross-agency coordination needed to take this crisis seriously. It is a badly overdue step toward unified national enforcement.
This bill would create a federal task force with the investigative authority to deter these criminal rings. Just as importantly, local law enforcement should be trained and equipped to recognize and respond to cargo theft. Federal funding should support multi-jurisdictional investigations.
We also need better data. Unlike other forms of crime, cargo theft is severely underreported and inconsistently tracked. The Combating Organized Retail Crime Act establishes a national cargo theft database — comprehensive, centralized and transparent — which would be a powerful tool for law enforcement and industry stakeholders alike. As it stands, we're likely severely underreporting the true scale of the economic damage.
The numbers we do know are concerning. The average value of each cargo theft is more than $200,000, and according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau, there's been a 1,500 percent increase in cargo theft incidents since 2021. Total cargo theft losses increased by 27 percent in 2024 and are projected to rise another 22 percent in 2025.
The FBI and Department of Homeland Security have flagged this as a growing national threat — but the theft epidemic rages on, because the real failure is one of enforcement. The penalties for cargo theft are weak. Investigations are rare. Prosecutions are slower than a backed-up port. Cargo thieves must face penalties that reflect the scale of their crimes — not pocket change that comes with a slap on the wrist.
Sen. Todd Young (R-Ind.) recently said it well: 'Eliminating cargo theft will require an 'all-hands-on-deck' approach that involves Congress, federal agencies, local law enforcement, and the private sector.'
That all-hands-on-deck approach would have helped Adam Blanchard, CEO of Texas-based Tanager Logistics. As he told members of Congress in February, thieves brokered loads under his company's name, deceiving both shippers and carriers. They then stole truckloads of Red Bull, diverting them to suspicious warehouses in California and ostensibly shipping them out of the country.
When Blanchard turned to insurance companies, local law enforcement and federal agencies — FBI, Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, even the Department of Homeland Security — he was met with a wall of indifference and red tape. This is the same bureaucracy that claims to protect our borders and secure our economy yet can't address this rampant fraud. It's unacceptable.
Put bluntly: cargo theft threatens our national security, weakens our economy and brazenly defies law enforcement. Truckers are being targeted, businesses are suffering and the costs are borne by consumers.
The trucking industry has shown its resiliency time and again — through pandemics, natural disasters and economic shocks. We take great pride in delivering America's freight safely and on time to keep our economy running. But we cannot fight organized cargo crime without the full support and partnership of our federal government.
By passing the Combating Organized Retail Crime Act, Congress can send a clear message: We will not stand by while criminal syndicates hijack our supply chain — we will hunt them down, shut them down and protect the backbone of American commerce.
Chris Spear is the president and CEO of the American Trucking Associations.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Hill
36 minutes ago
- The Hill
How $45 billion in ‘big, beautiful bill' funding aids ICE detention
More than $45 billion in the 'big, beautiful bill' that President Trump signed Friday is earmarked for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention space, which officials say will add up tens of thousands of beds for migrants being held in federal custody. An estimated $170 billion of the bill has been designated for immigration enforcement as the Trump administration has promised to orchestrate the largest mass deportation effort in American history. But the funding that has been devoted to ICE detention space in the final bill. passed by the House on Thursday, is more than the government spent on housing migrants during the Obama, Biden and first Trump administrations combined, The Washington Post reported. Federal officials estimate the $45 billion will provide an additional 100,000 beds in ICE facilities at a time when ICE has nearly 56,400 migrants in its detention centers nationwide as of mid-June, according to the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse. The number of detainees increased by more than 5,000 during the first two weeks of June. Data showed that of those detained, 28 percent have a prior criminal conviction, while 25 percent have pending criminal charges. The funding bump in the bill was approved after Trump and Department of Homeland Security Secretary (DHS) Kristi Noem toured a new detention facility that administration officials have called 'Alligator Alcatraz.' White House Border Czar Tom Homan told NewsNation's 'CUOMO' this week that the facility in the Florida Everglades will cost an estimated $450 million to operate each year. But officials said the facility could be a blueprint for more ICE detention centers that the government plans to open now that funding has been approved. President Donald Trump, Gov. Ron DeSantis, R-Fla., Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and others, tour 'Alligator Alcatraz,' a new migrant detention facility at Dade-Collier Training and Transition facility, Tuesday, July 1, 2025, in Ochopee, Fla. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci) 'Everybody we arrest, we need a bed, because they're going to be in detention from several days to several months, depending on the case,' Homan said. 'So, this will give us a little breathing room, give us extra beds so we can target more criminals throughout the country.' The border czar had previously called on Congress to provide more funding for detention that would allow ICE to detain migrants taken into federal custody. In June, the agency published a list of more than 40 contractors that could assist with the 'emergency acquisition' of space for migrant detainees, the Post reported. In addition to the $45 billion set aside for ICE detention and agents, the funding bill that was approved by Congress this week allocates another $46 billion for continued construction of the border wall along the U.S.-Mexico border. Real Clear Politics reported this week that the $45 billion that will be devoted to ICE represents a 265 percent increase in its current detention budget, which will be higher than that of the American prison system. The current load of detainees is the highest since that data has been compiled by ICE since the first time Trump was in office. In addition to providing more beds, DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in an emailed statement to the Post that the funding for ICE in the bill will allow the agency to hire an additional 10,000 federal agents. Officials announced earlier this year that the agency's migrant detention centers were at capacity. The government contracts with private prison companies to operate detention facilities. The two main companies, CoreCivic and the GEO Group, have been awarded nine contracts by ICE for expanded detention, per the Post. Contracts have also been awarded to companies to produce temporary tent structures, which would be used to house migrants, the report said. Last year, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) determined through a Freedom of Information Act request that private companies were looking to enter into government contracts in states like Michigan, California, Kansas, Nevada, New Mexico, Texas and Washington state. The Post's report indicated that CoreCivic and the Geo Group already own prisons that are sitting empty in several states, including Kansas (Leavenworth), Colorado, Minnesota, North Carolina, and Oklahoma. The ACLU also reported that in 2022, the GEO Group made $1.05 billion in revenue from ICE contracts alone, while CoreCivic made $552.2 million during the same year. 'Never in our 42-year company history have we had so much activity and demand for our services as we are seeing right now,' said CoreCivic CEO Damon Hininger during an earnings call in May with shareholders, according to The Associated Press. The expansion of detention space comes at a time when more than a dozen people have died in ICE facilities since October, including 10 during 2025. In 2024, an ACLU report indicated that 95 percent of deaths that took place in ICE facilities between 2017 and 2021 could have been prevented or possibly prevented. That investigation, which was conducted by the ACLU, American Oversight and Physicians for Human Rights, analyzed the deaths of the 52 people who died in ICE custody during that time frame.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Obama Warns 16 Million Americans Could Lose Health Care As GOP Pushes Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' With Deep Medicaid Cuts
Former President Barack Obama warned Wednesday that more than 16 million Americans risk losing their health coverage as House Republicans struggle to advance President Donald Trump's sweeping tax and spending package that includes significant cuts to Medicaid funding. What Happened: 'More than 16 million Americans are at risk of losing their health care because Republicans in Congress are rushing to pass a bill that would cut federal funding for Medicaid and weaken the Affordable Care Act,' Obama said in a social media statement. 'If the House passes this bill, it will increase costs and hurt working class families for generations to come.' Trending: Tired of Grid Failures and Charging Deserts? This Startup Has a Solar Fix and $25M+ in Sales — The former president urged Americans to 'call your representative today and tell them to vote no on this bill,' as House Speaker Mike Johnson (R-La.) worked through the night to secure enough votes for passage by Trump's July 4 deadline, according to the Associated Press report. The legislation, dubbed Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill,' would implement a $1 trillion Medicaid cut over 10 years while expanding work requirements for able-bodied adults ages 19-64, including parents of children 14 and older. Recipients would need to log 80 hours monthly of work, study, or volunteering to maintain It Matters: The Congressional Budget Office projects that approximately 12 million more Americans would become uninsured by 2034 from the Medicaid provisions alone. States would face increased administrative burdens, conducting eligibility verification twice yearly and income checks every six months. The 887-page bill also targets the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program with $295 billion in cuts over a decade, representing the deepest food-aid reduction in modern history. Work requirements would expand to able-bodied adults without small children until age 64, up from 54 under current law. House Republicans faced significant resistance from their own caucus Wednesday night, with several members refusing to vote on the procedural measure. Trump criticized the delay in a midnight social media post, warning holdouts about 'COSTING YOU VOTES!!!' The package includes $4.5 trillion in tax cuts over 10 years, with provisions for deducting tips and overtime pay, plus a temporary $6,000 deduction for seniors earning under $75,000 annually. Defense and immigration enforcement would receive $350 billion in new funding, according to the AP report. Read Next: Maximize saving for your retirement and cut down on taxes: Schedule your free call with a financial advisor to start your financial journey – no cost, no obligation. Bezos' Favorite Real Estate Platform Launches A Way To Ride The Ongoing Private Credit Boom Photo courtesy: Gregory Reed / UNLOCKED: 5 NEW TRADES EVERY WEEK. Click now to get top trade ideas daily, plus unlimited access to cutting-edge tools and strategies to gain an edge in the markets. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? This article Obama Warns 16 Million Americans Could Lose Health Care As GOP Pushes Trump's 'Big Beautiful Bill' With Deep Medicaid Cuts originally appeared on
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Melania Trump Praises Taylor Swift Ahead of 4th of July
Melania Trump recently gave her take on Taylor Swift during a visit to a children's hospital in Washington, D.C. While speaking with young patients about their favorite singers, the First Lady praised the pop star just months after her husband, Donald Trump, mocked the singer on social media. Read on to know more. While visiting children at a Washington, D.C., hospital ahead of the Fourth of July, Melania Trump offered kind words about pop star Taylor Swift. This notable shift comes amid Donald Trump's recent criticism of the singer. During an arts and crafts session at Children's National Hospital, Melania was chatting with a group of young patients when one child excitedly named Swift as their favorite singer. The First Lady responded warmly, calling Swift 'very talented.' This comment comes just weeks after the American President posted on Truth Social, 'Has anyone noticed that, since I said 'I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT,' she's no longer 'HOT?'' Following her exchange with the kids, Melania spent time helping them decorate patriotic crafts in celebration of Independence Day. She brought along teddy bears and other small gifts, greeting the young patients by saying, 'Everybody gets a teddy bear — and more stuff, too.' When she asked if they knew why they were celebrating the next day, one child quickly replied, 'Independence Day!' (via New York Post) Melania encouraged the kids with promises of a big White House party and even invited them to visit the following year when they felt better. She said, 'It's a very special day. So we will have a big party at the White House… When you feel better, maybe next year, you come over and we'll celebrate together.' When another child mentioned that they liked Sabrina Carpenter, the First Lady replied, 'She's great too.' To wrap up the visit, she helped the children plant a new yellow tea rose called 'Eternal Flame' in the garden beds. 'It's beautiful here,' she said, admiring the setup. Originally reported by Disheeta Maheshwari on ComingSoon. The post Melania Trump Praises Taylor Swift Ahead of 4th of July appeared first on Mandatory.