During a news conference this week announcing a reward in the shooting of a pizza delivery driver, Minneapolis police spokesman John Elder stopped briefly to compose himself as he gave the details of the crime.
"This could be anybody — I delivered pizzas," Elder said. "It's sad that this guy just out doing his job is paying for this and may end up paying for it for the rest of his life."
In many cases, the robbery starts with a ruse: The suspect will request the pizza be delivered to such-and-such address. This wasn't one of those cases, Elder said.
His comments came as police and Domino's Pizza officials announced they were partnering with CrimeStoppers to offer a $10,000 reward for information leading to arrests in the April 5 robbery and shooting. As of Friday afternoon, no arrests had been announced in the case.
Police say would-be robbers tend to place a bogus delivery order to lure their victims. The addresses they give are either fake or belong to an out-of-the-way corner of the city, usually several blocks away from where the suspect is lying in wait.
A high-risk job
For years, pizza delivery drivers appeared on lists of the most dangerous jobs, next to loggers, steel workers and farmers. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said with 71 on-the-job deaths, "driver/sales workers," a category that includes delivery drivers, was among a "number of occupations [that] recorded their highest fatality counts" in 2016, the last year for which data are available. Many others were injured, mostly in traffic accidents, experts say.
But there are no reliable statistics for how many drivers are robbed or assaulted nationwide each year.
Minneapolis police don't track how many delivery robberies are logged annually, but said anecdotally that the number of such crimes has remained steady in recent years.