A $1 million shipment of LEGO sets was recovered this week in California, and on the surface it looks like a win. Arrests were made, freight was found, and it feels like the system worked. But the reality is different. That freight was only recovered because someone noticed suspicious activity and made a call. It was not stopped by a system and it was not caught through a verification step. By the time law enforcement got involved, the load was already in motion and close to disappearing. That is the part that should stand out. Cargo theft is no longer starting with clear warning signs. It is happening inside normal operations where everything appears to check out. The carrier looks legitimate, the rate confirmation is signed, and the pickup is scheduled without issue. Nothing raises concern early because the process allows it to move forward. Control shifts in the gap between what looks right and what has actually been confirmed, and that gap is where most of the risk now sits. This same pattern is showing up across multiple incidents right now. In Texas, nearly $470,000 in stolen vehicles were moving through standard freight channels before being stopped. In another case last week, more than 400,000 units of consumer goods were taken during transit with no signs of forced entry. These events are connected by how they start and how they move. The issue is not at pickup locations. It begins when responsibility changes hands and no one confirms who…