Here’s How The Media Are Lying Right Now: ‘Violent Crime Dropping’ Edition
Democrats and the news media are claiming 'violent crime' is down. That's possibly true, but looting, carjacking, and theft are up.
A former security guard for a King Soopers grocery store in Aurora, Colorado, told KDVR-TV he was fired after a shoplifter punched him in August 2022.
“I absolutely was fired unfairly for defending myself," Jessie Sims told the station in an exclusive interview. "Every person has a right to defend [themselves]."
'I just got tired of seeing things get out the door. I just ... I lost it. I basically lost all the training. Everything they tell you to do, I just ... I just lost it. I didn’t expect to get terminated. Maybe a reprimand or a suspension.'
Sims, 52, told KDVR he worked as a guard for the store for nearly 15 years when the incident occurred at the store. Sims confronted the male shoplifter trying to leave the store with a bag of snow crab legs worth more than $200, the station said, adding that Sims said he "never struck this gentleman. It was all defensive, open-hand technique."
A coworker stated in writing that Sims "came in contact with the shoplifter. The shoplifter then proceeded to punch Jessie.” However, KDVR said Sim’s termination letter stated the punch “was not seen on video” and added Sims "left minimal room between himself and the shoplift subject. This made it difficult for the shoplift subject to easily leave the store.”
Sims acknowledged to the station that store policy prohibits security guards from touching shoplifting suspects, but he added that they are allowed to defend themselves when someone strikes them. Sims told KDVR he had been assaulted five times in the previous four years on the job at King Soopers — and that sometimes offenders know store policy and say things like, "You can’t touch me. You can’t do nothing" and then walk off with goods.
“It’s a free-for-all," he added to the station. "A majority of our criminal element that is doing this know our policies. Know we can’t touch them. And they know if we call law enforcement, it could be two to four hours on average, sometimes two to three days before [police] get in to do a report.”
Sims told KDVR he’s contacted attorneys about filing for wrongful termination but has been informed that he doesn’t have a case since he wasn’t fired based on age, gender, race, or a disability.
The station said King Soopers declined to answer specific questions about Sims' firing but stated that "our top priority is the safety of our associates and customers and any activity that does not align with that core value is addressed on an individual basis resulting in disciplinary action up to and including termination."
You can view a video report about the incident here. What's more, that isn't the only King Soopers drama, either. KDVR also said five employees of a King Soopers store in Greenwood Village, Colorado, were fired for holding a shoplifting suspect and calling police in November 2022.
What follows here are 10 additional instances of retail workers who got fired for confronting shoplifters — even for just recording heists on video, which yet another former King Soopers employee learned the hard way last summer:
Lily Oxford — a single mom and former manager at Big Lots — told KGET-TV she and another store manager were fired after they confronted an alleged shoplifter in the parking lot of a store in Oildale, California, on April 5, 2023. Oildale is about 10 minutes north of Bakersfield.
Oxford told the station her intention was to retrieve the shopping cart used to transport 15 jugs containing allegedly stolen Tide laundry detergent, not to get back the merchandise itself. She said the store got 40 brand-new carts for Christmas but were down to just five by March — and that customers aren't allowed to take the carts outside. If they do, Oxford said employees are instructed to retrieve them.
"So many customers see [shoplifting] happen on a daily basis," she told the station. "At least four to five times a day this happens whether they go out the front door or whether they go out the back door ... at least. Bare minimum."
Big Lots reportedly declined KGET's multiple requests for comment. But if the company didn't appreciate the former managers' efforts, other shoppers apparently did.
"I had people, at least three different people out here, applauding me because it happens so much," Oxford — who started a GoFundMe to help with her expenses as she searches for a new job — told KGET. You can see a video report about the incident here.
A King Soopers grocery store employee was fired after he recorded video showing three males loading stolen laundry detergent into a vehicle in June 2023.
"Damn, these guys are good — look at 'em, stealing," Santino Burrola narrated in the video recorded in the parking lot outside of a King Soopers in Centennial, Colorado, on Father's Day. "Really, bro? You got to resort to this? The economy's not that bad. Better get it while the gettin's good."
As the vehicle drove off, Burrola yanked off a piece of aluminum foil covering the license plate of the getaway vehicle. He called police and shared the video on social media. His efforts helped police identify the driver, whom cops later arrested. Police were still searching for the other two males.
Burrola, a former military police officer, told KCNC-TV that when he returned to work following the theft, he was suspended. Then during a meeting with the company that included a union representative, he was fired.
Apparently, King Soopers officials believe Burrola violated an employee policy that instructs workers to not intervene in theft. In a statement, the company refused to comment on the matter directly but said, "We have security measures in place to help prevent crime and de-escalate such confrontations to minimize the risk to our associates. While we are unable to comment on personnel matters, we value our hardworking associates and their safe return home."
"Did I feel that I overstepped boundaries? Not really because I didn’t physically touch them or alter their shoplifting in any way, I just revealed the license plate to help the community to be aware, the police be aware and to help better catch them," Burrola told KUSA-TV.
Burrola was fired without severance pay, according to a GoFundMe established to help him. You can view a video report about the incident here.
Three employees with a Louisiana sporting goods store reportedly were fired for chasing a thief who stole a firearm from their Metairie store on Dec. 16, 2023.
Michelle Sutton, a team leader at Academy Sports + Outdoors, told WGNO-TV she jumped into action when she heard a distressing call over her store radio about the theft.
"I just took off," Sutton said. She and two other store associates chased the suspect — but they were too late. The thief was long gone.
Four days later, Sutton said she was informed by Academy's corporate firearm compliance personnel that she was fired, along with her two colleagues. The trio violated company policy, which according to WGNO states that employees are prohibited from pursuing or restraining shoplifting suspects.
Sutton said she and her colleagues remained on the sidewalk by the store in hopes of obtaining information about the shoplifter for police, such as a vehicle tag number.
"I know my store director had said that they want you to be able to get the make and model of a vehicle, you know, maybe a direction ... the vehicle went," she explained.
Neither the store nor the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office responded to Blaze News' request for comment.
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A former manager at a Big Lots store in the Rochester, New York, area said he was fired after following a shoplifter — who took a swing at an employee — outside the store and into the parking lot to help police locate the suspect.
Pat Guider told WHEC-TV during an interview at his Irondequoit home that he saw the shoplifter take a swing at his assistant manager during the May 10 incident: “What I saw is that he took a swing, like a punch at [the assistant manager],” Guider said while making an uppercut motion with a clenched fist.
Guider also told WHEC that’s the only reason he followed the shoplifter out of the store: “I let people who shoplift leave the store every day. Every day. We just put it in the system like they ask us to do. This was an assault. This wasn’t shoplifting. This was an assault.”
Guider told the station he followed the male at a distance through the parking lot of the store while relaying his location to 911 so police might catch the suspect.
The suspect got away — and Guider told WHEC he was fired over the incident. The station said its reporter found no phone number for Big Lots' CEO or communication chief, so the reporter emailed the company three times — but Big Lots had not responded as of the publication of the station's story.
WHEC said a poster in the Big Lots lunchroom warns employees to “never leave the store to pursue, detain, or identify a customer.”
The station's reporter asked labor lawyer Paul Keneally at Underberg & Kessler how Guider could have been fired for trying "to help police track down a shoplifter ... how does that happen?”
Keneally told WHEC "the company is probably considering the liability of any sort of interaction between the perpetrator and store employee.”
The attorney added to the station that likely explains why Big Lots has "a rule in place that the employees are not to do anything, and it’s unfortunate because it sounds like this person was trying to do the right thing."
Guider told WHEC, "I did not put myself in jeopardy. I did not put any shoppers in jeopardy."
Now without a job — and with two sons in college — Guider noted to the station that he and his wife are trying to figure out how to get health insurance. What's more, at age 62, Guider added to WHEC he's not sure how easy it will be to find another job — but he's resting on a power greater than himself: “The good thing is we have a huge faith in God, a huge faith in God, and everything will work out. It’s just going to be difficult. It’s going to be difficult."
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Lululemon CEO Calvin McDonald defended his company's decision to fire two retail store employees who engaged with thieves in 2023.
Two Lululemon workers — Jennifer Ferguson and Rachel Rogers — confronted three thieves who stole thousands of dollars worth of merchandise from the athletic wear retail store's Peachtree Corners location in Georgia.
You can view a video report about the incident here, which includes cellphone video Rogers recorded of the theft in progress. It isn't clear from the cellphone clip if Ferguson or Rogers physically engaged with the shoplifters, but the video appears to show the thieves being followed outside as the crooks run to a getaway vehicle.
Thanks to Rogers and Ferguson, police apprehended the thieves, WXIA-TV reported, and they were facing felony robbery charges.
The employees said they were given little explanation for their termination, other than for violating a zero-tolerance policy for confronting store thieves. Lululemon later confirmed this, telling Blaze News that Ferguson and Rogers were fired for "knowingly violating our zero-tolerance policy related to physically engaging with the perpetrators which put their lives and the safety of our guests and other employees at risk."
Speaking on CNBC, McDonald justified firing the employees, whom Lululemon call "educators."
"We have a zero-tolerance policy that we train our educators on around engaging during a theft," McDonald said. "Why? Because we put the safety of our team [and] of our guests front and center."
According to McDonald, company policy directs Lululemon employees to allow thieves to steal at will: "It's only merchandise at the end; [employees are] trained to step back, let the theft occur, know that there’s technology and cameras, and we're working with law enforcement." He added that "unfortunately, in this situation the educators knowingly broke the policy, engaged with the thieves across multiple points — including following them out of the store — so post investigation and the zero-tolerance policy, which is well-known, that was what resulted in the termination."
McDonald also dispelled the claim that the employees were fired because they called police: "Just to be clear, our educators are able to call the police. We train them to step back. It's about their safety, and we take that policy seriously because we've had instances, and we have seen in other retailers instances, where employees step in and are hurt or, worse, killed."
Lowe’s employee Donna Hansbrough tried to thwart a shoplifting attempt of more than $2,000 in merchandise from the store in Rincon, Georgia, on June 25, 2023. Three suspects reportedly loaded up a shopping cart and exited the home improvement store with the stolen items.
The Rincon Police Department said in a statement that Hansbrough "attempted to stop one of the subjects by grabbing the shopping cart. Hansbrough did not at any time make contact with any person. The cart that Donna grabbed was in the possession of subject Takyah Berry. After Donna grabbed the cart, Berry struck Donna in the face three times causing Donna’s right eye to swell and blacken." Police identified the other two suspects as Jarmar Lawton and Joseph Berry, who's Takyah Berry's uncle.
Police said they arrested Lawton but were still searching for the other two suspects. Authorities said the trio stole merchandise worth $2,101.
Police said Lowe's fired Hansbrough for attempting to stop the theft and that she violated company policy against intervening with shoplifters. Hansbrough had worked for Lowe's for 13 years.
Hansbrough told the Effingham Herald, "They say that if you see somebody stealing something out the door, not to pursue, not to go out. I lost it. I grabbed the cart. I don't actually remember going out, but I did. And I grabbed the cart that had the stolen items in [it]." She added, "I just got tired of seeing things get out the door. I just ... I lost it. I basically lost all the training. Everything they tell you to do, I just ... I just lost it. I didn’t expect to get terminated. Maybe a reprimand or a suspension."
A GoFundMe campaign was launched to "directly help Ms. Donna with any bills while she attempts to find new employment after being fired by Lowe’s for something she clearly had no control over." You can view a video report about her initial firing here.
Soon after news of Hansbrough's firing went into viral outrage overdrive, Lowe's walked it all back. The Effingham Herald said Lowe's acknowledged that "after senior management became aware of the incident and spoke to Donna Hansbrough today, we are reinstating her job, and we are pleased that she has accepted the offer to return to Lowe's."
As for the two other suspects, police said Joseph Berry was apprehended in Jacksonville, Florida, on July 22. Takyah Berry was finally arrested Sept. 7 and charged with robbery, battery, exploitation or inflicting pain to an elder person, and wearing a mask, hood, or device to conceal identity.
The attorney for Antoinette Baez said Safeway grocery stores fired her after she stopped a shoplifter who in 2023 tried to exit the San Mateo, California, store with more than $500 in merchandise. The retail chain's policy is that employees should not touch shoplifters, according to attorney Neil Eisenberg.
Baez said she didn't touch the shoplifter but tried to grab at the stolen grocery bags. When the thief tried to punch at her, Baez's supervisor David Arevalos tried to protect Baez. The woman left without any of the items she was trying to steal.
Initially, Baez said the store's director was compassionate and caring — then Safeway fired Arevalos for getting physical with the thief, and then the store fired Baez for misconduct and said she wouldn't get unemployment benefits because of it.
Baez said she had worked for Safeway for 22 years since she was 16 years old and had been an exemplary employee the whole time. "When you hear that, it just felt like a punch to the gut," she said. "Devastated, coming from a place of transparency and honesty, that it just, it somehow worked against me."
Baez, a single mom, decided to fight back legally. She initially lost her lawsuit but won on appeal earlier this year. An administrative Employment Development Department judge found Baez was not on the clock when she confronted the shoplifter and was wrongly terminated. Baez will receive a year's worth of unemployment benefits as a result of the ruling.
Her attorney had strong words for Safeway and its unfair treatment of his client: "A judge said she was fired for doing her job, and basically said the state of California stands behind her, and she beat Safeway in a state proceeding."
Eisenberg said it was no different than a citizen's arrest because Baez was not clocked in to work. He also blasted the store for its actions: "Safeway has not reached out to her. They have not offered her job back. They have not offered to pay her lost wages for a year."
He also accused the company of treating its employees worse than retail thieves: "Safeway’s a food bank for thieves. You are better off stealing from Safeway than paying for your goods or your groceries because when you pay for your goods or your groceries, you are absorbing the cost of shoplifting."
Eisenberg said he plans to file a wrongful termination lawsuit against the store and will ask for $1 million in punitive damages.
"If you're shoplifting, you get to go free, no consequences," Eisenberg continued. "This is probably the dumbest, cruelest incident I've seen in my entire practice."
Safeway did not respond to a request for a comment from KTVU. You can view a video report about the incident here.
Starbucks fired a pair of baristas who beat up two males who allegedly tried to rob one of the mammoth coffee chain's stores in St. Louis in late 2023.
Police said 37-year-old Joshua Noe and 35-year-old Marquise Porter-Doyle rushed into the store Dec. 17 with what looked like real handguns and demanded the employees open up a cash register and safe. When they couldn't, Noe allegedly hit an employee in the head with his gun, which shattered — and that's when the victims realized the guns were fake.
Two of the baristas and some customers beat down the two would-be robbers and held Noe until police arrived. Porter-Doyle escaped, but police caught up with him later and arrested him. The two alleged robbers were facing a combined 20 felony charges for robbery, attempted robbery, and assault
But instead of thanking the two employees, Starbucks fired them.
An attorney for the former barista Michael Harris says he's filing a lawsuit against Starbucks, according to the St. Louis Riverfront Times. The other fired barista is Devin Jones-Ransom. Attorney Ryan Krupp said "Harris complied with the robbers' demands until it was no longer an option for himself and others" and that his client acted out of fear that he might be killed.
“I just wanted to do the right thing as a person and as an employee," said Harris in a statement.
A representative for Starbucks released a statement about the lawsuit: "The safety and wellbeing of our partners (employees) and customers is always our first concern. All partners are expected to follow our carefully crafted protocols to ensure the safety of customers and partners during these situations."
An elderly Colorado woman told KCNC-TV in September 2022 she was fired for the job she held at a Circle-K convenience store for 16 years after her manager didn't believe her story that a crook she tried to stop one night two years prior was carrying knives.
Turns out the suspect reportedly pleaded guilty to menacing with a deadly weapon — and Mary Moreno decided to sue the store, the station said.
Moreno was working a night shift at the store on Oct. 4, 2020, when a man came in around 7 p.m. holding what she described as two hunting knives, the station reported. Moreno told the station the man asked for cigarettes — but soon it became clear he wasn't intending to pay for them.
"He kept insisting, 'You have to give them to me.' He said, 'You have to give them to me,'" she noted to KCNC.
After Moreno refused, she told the station the man came behind the counter — after which she put up resistance.
"I pushed his arm, you know?" Moreno told KCNC. "And when I pushed his arm, he took off."
Police later arrested Tyler Darren Wimmer in connection with the incident and charged him with aggravated robbery and menacing with a deadly weapon, the station said. He pleaded guilty to the menacing with a deadly weapon charge, KCNC said, citing a lawsuit filed on Moreno's behalf by the Rathod Mohamedbhi Law Firm. She told the station that despite video of the incident, eyewitness accounts, and Wimmer's arrest, her store manager didn't believe her story.
"He took me in the office, and he said, 'Well, I don't see a knife,' because he watched the video, I guess," Moreno recounted to KCNC. "And I said, 'Well, there was a knife.'"
Moreno's boss even insisted that she apologize, the station said, after which she refused and then was fired. KCNC reported that Moreno decided to sue the store: "I'm not doing it for money. I'm doing it because of the way they treat their employees."
KCNC said it reached out to Circle-K for comment but didn't hear back. You can view a video report about the incident here.
In the end, the lawsuit didn't work out. A federal judge ruled earlier this year that Circle K lawfully fired Moreno, and that she "does not explain why her statutory or common-law right to assert self-defense in the criminal context is related to her job-related duties at Circle K." Moreno's attorney said she plans to appeal.
A former Walmart worker in North Carolina alleged to Business Insider that the retail giant fired her in 2023 for stepping outside the store to confront shoplifters and putting her hand on stolen merchandise.
The worker told the outlet that her job was monitoring self-checkout, and two girls on the night of Nov. 4 rang up a $6.95 plastic storage container and "then they walked right past me." The former worker told Business Insider about Walmart's saying, "Do you know B.O.B. and L.I.S.A.?" She said B.O.B. is "bottom of the basket," and L.I.S.A. is "look inside, always."
She noted to the outlet, "So I followed them and asked them if I could go and look inside the tote. They declined and tried to push their cart past me. I used my finger and flipped the lid off to where I could see inside. It was half-full of stuff, and 90% of it was makeup. And I don't know if you know anything about cosmetics, but one little pencil is $10, so the value of that tote added up quickly."
The former worker said police were called, but the girls were let go and "the asset protection team at the store didn't do anything, either."
But a few days later, store higher-ups allegedly did something to the worker: They fired her over the "incident with the girls" and "went against policy by stepping out of the door of the store and because I grabbed the tote."
Despite this, the former worker told Business Insider that Walmart made employees at her store wear a badge that reads "how much shrinkage there has been" and that workers aren't doing their job to "stop theft."
"That's how it's gotten to be," the former worker told the outlet. "These companies want you to prevent shoplifting and theft. But I say: 'You're not giving us the tools to do what you want us to do.'"
Business Insider told Walmart that "while we are not discussing the details of a personnel matter, violating policies can lead to termination under our progressive disciplinary process."
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A pair of teens entered a Sunoco convenience store in Humble, Texas, on Jan. 19. After shoplifting, they left the 42-year-old clerk dead in his car.
Although the 18-year-old present for Asif Maknojia's slaying was never charged, the apparent shooter, 17-year-old Mario Young, was charged with capital murder.
This week, a Harris County grand jury spared Young from any consequence, deciding not to indict him for murder.
The shooter's mother has painted her son as a victim, and Young's attorney Lott Brooks reiterated that the teen had just acted out of self-defense, reported KTRK-TV
Surveillance footage shows Young and his 18-year-old friend enter the convenience store around 11:25 a.m. with dark hoodies pulled over their heads. Maknojia followed them in, dressed in an orange and black jacket.
While the clerk resumed mopping the floor, he noticed one of the teens stuff a bag of chips into his pants.
BREAKING: A grand jury declines to indict Mario Young (17) for shoplifting and then shooting and kiIIing the store clerk.\n\nActivists claim that Mr. Young acted in self defense since the clerk chased after them, asking for the stolen items back.\n\nThe 2nd teen was never even\u2026— (@)
Maknojia followed the teens outside then confronted the duo.
A witness told KPRC-TV that he saw the clerk follow the young men out of the store.
"I'm just kind of being a little nosy, looking to see what's going on. He seemed to be confronting the gentlemen about something," said the unnamed witness. "It didn't seem to be that serious."
While Young reportedly walked toward the rear of the store, the other teen paused to brandish a bottle of Gatorade, which was apparently also taken from the store, then point it at the clerk.
According to the witness, the clerk returned to the store, and the apparent shoplifters walked over to a grassy area nearby. Maknojia reportedly went back outside and yelled at the teens, telling them to return to the store. They responded with an obscene gesture.
When the teens began jogging away, the clerk allegedly got into his car and pulled up to the duo — at which point the witness heard two gunshots.
According to the Humble Police Department, one of the suspects opened fire on the victim's vehicle, striking and killing the clerk.
Humble Assistant Police Chief Dan Zientek told KPRC, "They started shooting at him, in which he tried to reverse his car and ended up on the median over there."
The witness rushed over and found Maknojia slumped over behind the wheel of his car.
"Hey, buddy. Hey, are you OK?" the witness recalled saying to the victim before calling 911. "When I looked through the window, he seemed to be unresponsive," noting that it appeared the clerk had been unarmed.
While the teens later claimed the clerk was armed, neither court documents nor the police provided any indication the clerk had a gun at the time.
After a brief manhunt, Young and his compatriot turned themselves in with the help of Quanell X, the former national chairman of the New Black Panther Nation.
Zientek told KPRC, "No one ever anticipates just going to work that day and not coming home."
"You've lost a great citizen who's just trying to work and do their job, and instead we have two people that also have ruined their lives because they will be going to jail," added Zientek.
Evidently, the chief hadn't considered the possibility that a jury would cut Young loose.
KRIV-TV indicated that part of Brooks' strategy for getting his client's case thrown out was having him tell his sob story to the jury.
"I wanted him to be there with the grand jury, be honest and tell them exactly what happened," said Brooks.
"It is just absolutely devastating, and I know my client is very upset about what happened," added Brooks, who said he didn't know where Young acquired the firearm that was used to kill Maknojia.
Precious Ferguson, Young's mother, told KTRK her son was "physically and mentally depressed, he's stressed, and he's going to need some counseling."
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New York Police Department officers raided an open-air market run by illegal migrants on Roosevelt Avenue near 91 Street in Jackson Heights, the New York Post reported.
A day before the raid, the Post published an exposé on the illicit street market, where migrants have been selling stolen goods at discounted prices. Most of the items were snagged off the shelves of nearby businesses, which have been complaining about an uptick in shoplifting. Merchants and residents have made more than two dozen calls to 311 this year to report the illegal activity in the area.
Each morning for several months, migrants have been laying blankets and towels on the street to display the stolen goods for sale. The items range from power tools to hygiene products. Tags belonging to the merchant from which the ill-gotten goods were stolen remain on some of the items.
The block has also become overrun by illicit brothels, with sex workers roaming the streets in search of customers.
The Post reported that NYPD officers raided the street market on Monday after 4:30 p.m. and seized some of the stolen merchandise.
NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell said, "We responded today."
"We've been here before, whether it be brothels, illegal bikes, vending now. So, this will be a continuing process. It's gonna take a while but we owe it to the residents of Queens," he explained.
According to the news outlet, spotters informed many of the illegal vendors about the impending raid, affording them enough time to flee the scene before officers arrived. Prostitutes were reportedly seen ducking into nearby buildings to avoid police.
A spokesperson for the NYPD told the Post that no arrests were made as a result of the Monday raid.
One neighbor said the illegal market would be back up and running after police leave the area.
"They'll be back. No question," the resident told the news outlet. "The TV cameras and the cops ran them off today, but they'll all be back tonight."
Milton Reyes, who manages a pharmacy on the block, told the Post earlier this week that the situation is "relentless."
"[Police] will come by and they will pick up a few of them. But as soon as the police car pulls away, they start moving back. Twenty minutes later, they're all set up again like nothing happened," Reyes remarked.
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Illegal migrants have recently taken over a block in New York City and turned it into an open-air market, selling stolen goods at deep discounts, the New York Post reported.
Roosevelt Avenue near 91st Street in Jackson Heights has been turned into an illicit market where migrants sell everything from mouthwash to power tools stolen from local merchants.
Migrants arrive each morning with suitcases filled with ill-gotten items that they ransacked from local establishments. Many sellers display the items for sale by laying them on a blanket on the sidewalk, offering 20% to 30% discounts.
Francisco O’Porta, a security guard for a local department store, told the news outlet that the migrants are stealing from his employer.
“They rip it out of the box, but it’s ours. You can see. It is brand-new, but they are selling it as used. It’s our stuff,” O’Porta remarked.
“They have been training people,” he continued. “They have lookouts, you know, people to yell so they can pick up and leave when police come. I am catching a lot, a lot of them stealing. I caught 20 people last week. Twenty in one week. They are hurting business.”
Milton Reyes, who manages a pharmacy on Roosevelt Avenue, told the Post that the issues in the area are “relentless.”
“You should see it on Saturdays. It’s so heavy, you can’t even step onto the sidewalk. There are a lot of doctors’ offices right around here, and my customers don’t even want to get dropped off,” Reyes stated.
He noted that he does not blame local law enforcement for the issues.
“They will come by and they will pick up a few of them. But as soon as the police car pulls away, they start moving back. Twenty minutes later, they’re all set up again like nothing happened,” Reyes explained.
For months, residents have complained about sex workers standing along the street propositioning those who pass by. The Post reported that several buildings in the area are functioning as brothels.
Earlier this year, police closed down a dozen establishments that were being used for prostitution. However, the illegal activity has continued.
One source told the Post, “Roosevelt Avenue is the microcosm — a perfect storm composed of lunatic legislation that prevents enforcement of laws and the subsequent punitive results.”
“Add to that waves of people with nothing to lose and you have criminality and degradation in quality of life for the community — and the city as a whole,” the source added.
Zhou H., a local, told the news outlet that the open-air market has expanded within the last year.
“I don’t know what’s ever going to get rid of this,” Zhou said. “It’s like a sub-economy. Everybody buys from these guys. There was a few, mostly at night. Kind of like a bazaar. About a year ago, it built up.
“But I thought, these people aren’t getting the kind of opportunities, they need to feed themselves, you know, they’re trying to survive, so, whatever,” he stated. “About a year ago, there’s five of them, starting at 10 in the morning. Then 10 of them and then there’s 20 of them all day. At night? Forget about it!
Zhou noted that the illegal activity in the area has “just become normal.”
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New York business owners are fed up with state Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie (D) after he refused last week to back Democrat Governor Kathy Hochul's plan to strengthen penalties for violent shoplifters, the New York Post reported.
In an effort to curb rampant theft, Hochul's budget proposal called for increased sentences for shoplifters who assault retail workers. Heastie rejected the plan, claiming that it would not be effective at preventing retail theft, Blaze News previously reported.
"All the other times that we've raised penalties on different classes of people, that hasn't stopped assaults. We still need to get to the root issues of what's going on. We'd be open to talking about the organized crime rings that people have, but I just don't believe raising penalties is ever a deterrent on crime," Heastie stated last week. "You can stop anybody in the street and ask them what is the penalty for assaulting anybody, and they probably won't be able to give you an answer."
"I don't want to make it sound like we're not concerned about stemming what's happened to retail workers," he continued. "We care very deeply about that. We just have other ideas of how to get there."
Heastie's refusal to implement tougher jail sentences for violent shoplifters ignited outrage among New York City business owners battling the retail theft crisis.
Nelson Eusebio, who heads the National Supermarket Association and Coalition to Save our Supermarkets, told the Post, "How do you deter crime except by penalty?"
"Our workers are on the front line dealing with shoplifters and criminals," Eusebio added. "It's open season on retail workers in the city."
A CVS retail worker explained to the news outlet that the thieves were "not taking one or two" items but "taking the whole shelf."
"Nobody wants to deal with it," the employee stated, noting that even "low-price products" are being locked up.
"Now the items get locked up, and the people don't," the worker added.
Kenneth Giddon, co-owner of Rothman's New York in Union Square, told the Post on Monday that a violent flash mob targeted his clothing store twice over a three-week period in December 2021. He called Heastie's stance on increased penalties "ridiculous."
"I'd be glad to talk to him so he can learn what it's like firsthand dealing with these problems and getting the same people who come back over and over and over again to rob us," Giddon told the news outlet. "He's completely out of touch."
"We've had employees punched during shoplifting instances," he added. "Retail jobs are important for the economy, but why should people work in a dangerous situation and not be protected?"
"Common sense says that stiffer penalties deter crime," Giddon continued. "People believe now that they can shoplift and not be punished for it, and that is really, really bad for our society. So what's the next crime that you're not going to be punished for?"
New York retailers lost approximately $4.4 billion in 2022 due to rampant shoplifting and organized retail theft rings.
Former Governor David Paterson (D) told WABC that he was "kind of surprised" Heastie did not support Hochul's plan to boost criminal sentencing.
"These are people who are not high wage earners. Most of them are not unionized. … When people come in to rob the stores … that there should be any leniency for this type of thing, I really don't understand that," Paterson said. "People like myself who have always been advocates for a fair trial for people — not let the deck get stacked against them as it used to be in the past — are having to recognize that there's going to have to be a greater sense of punishment than there is right now."
Heastie did not respond to the Post's request for comment.
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