The City Council tackled the emotional issue on Wednesday at a
hearing that included statements from Macy's and Barneys New York
denying allegations by customers that they had been singled out and
followed.
City Council member Jumaane Williams calls the problem "staggering."
The stores did not send representatives to the session in the City
Council's main chamber.
"I'm offended that Barneys New York and Macy's is not here. I think
it's insulting, not just to the City Council, but to the City of New
York and the people who shop there," Williams said.
The NYC Commission on Human Rights has sent letters to 17 retailers
— including Macy's and Barneys — requesting the following
information: loss prevention policies; procedures for approaching
and detaining individuals suspected of theft; records regarding all
individuals accused of theft in the past two years; and what, if any
presence, NYPD officers have in the retail locations.
The stores are: Century 21, Loehmann's, Sephora, Target,
Bloomingdale's, Bergdorf Goodman, Banana Republic, Old Navy, Sears,
Lord & Taylor, Neiman Marcus, The Gap, CVS, Saks Fifth Avenue,
Barneys, Macy's, Bath & Body Works/Limited Brands/Victoria's Secret.
Letters may be sent to additional businesses, but "we selected these
locations based upon previous discrimination complaints against
these stores, and the size and prominence of the stores," said
Patricia Gatling, the city's human rights commissioner. "This is
only the beginning of our investigation."
The Associated Press requested comment from each of the retailers by
phone and email, only Sephora replied as of late Wednesday. Sephora
declined comment.
While tensions over shoppers' charges that they are being followed
in various stores have simmered for years, they've resurfaced again
in recent months after several incidents.
A 19-year-old City College of Technology student, Trayon Christian,
sued the NYPD and Barneys last month, claiming he was racially
targeted after buying a $349 Ferragamo belt in April at the Madison
Avenue store.
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And Barneys customer Kayla Phillips, 21, filed a complaint with the
city's police watchdog agency, saying she had a similar experience
after buying a $2,500 Celine handbag in February.
Barneys CEO Mark Lee had apologized, saying "no one should go
through the unacceptable experiences described by Trayon Christian
and Kayla Phillips in recent media reports, and we offer our deepest
sympathies to them both."
But the company said in a report issued Tuesday that its employees
did not initiate any profiling, and did not call police requesting
or suggesting that the customers be stopped or detained.
Actor Robert Brown filed a lawsuit against Macy's, saying he was
stopped inside its flagship store in Herald Square in June after he
purchased a $1,350 Movado wristwatch. Brown said he thought he was
stopped because he is African-American.
Macy's has said it does not tolerate discrimination.
The Rev. Al Sharpton also testified at Wednesday's hearing, as did
Donna Lieberman of the New York Civil Liberties Union.
"It's important that we hear from both the department stores and the
police department what on earth is going on when people of color go
shopping and end up in handcuffs," said Lieberman.
No one represented the New York Police Department at the hearing.
Hip-hop star Jay-Z, who is promoting a Barneys clothing line, said
he's working with the retailer on issues of racial profiling. But a
launch party for the Jaz-Z collection planned for Wednesday was
canceled.
[Associated
Press; VERENA DOBNIK]
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