High-risk cargo categories
Food and beverage shipments represent the highest theft risk during the Thanksgiving period, with 31 incidents recorded in the 2024 analysis. However, thieves demonstrated a diverse appetite for cargo, targeting household products (24 incidents), electronics (19 incidents), and vehicles and accessories (14 incidents).
Historical data shows criminals consistently target high-value items, including computers, alcoholic beverages, and automobile tires, during the holiday period. The total commodity value of stolen goods during the 2024 analysis period reached $9.5 million, with an average theft value exceeding $151,500.
The company has identified emerging threat categories throughout 2025 that warrant particular attention: truckload quantities of copper shipments, enterprise server hardware, and nutritional supplements. Multi-million-dollar thefts of computer components used by AI firms and in cryptocurrency mining are common, leading to 2025’s average shipment value increasing to $278,797, and recorded loss value exceeding $318 million.
Geographic concentration and emerging hotspots
California remains the most heavily targeted state with 67 recorded incidents, followed by Illinois (27 incidents) and Texas (26 incidents). Florida (15 incidents) and Georgia (11 incidents) round out the top five states for theft activity.
CargoNet identified four counties warranting particular attention: San Bernardino County, California; Los Angeles County, California; Cook County, Illinois; and Dallas County, Texas.
The New York City metropolitan area has become a major hub for sophisticated shipment misdirection schemes. Criminal organizations in this region employ complex fraud techniques to steal loaded conveyances, and CargoNet anticipates this activity will continue throughout the holiday season.
“What we’re seeing in the New York City metropolitan area is particularly concerning,” Keith Lewis, Verisk CargoNet vice president of operations, said in a news release. “Criminal organizations have transformed this region into a sophisticated operation hub for shipment misdirection and fraud. Combined with the persistent threats in California, Illinois, and Texas, the geographic spread of organized cargo theft requires a coordinated, industry-wide security response during the Thanksgiving period and beyond.”
Recommendations for supply chain security
Supply chain stakeholders should implement enhanced security measures during the Thanksgiving holiday period and throughout the remainder of the year. Companies should verify the legitimacy of all carriers and freight brokers, secure vehicles and trailers in well-lit and monitored locations, and maintain communication with drivers throughout transit periods.
Motor carriers should exercise particular caution when accepting loads involving high-value commodities or when conducting business with unfamiliar partners. The increased incident rates during holiday periods make this an especially critical time for rigorous security protocols.
Credit: Source link
