Black men arrested at Starbucks hope
scandal sparks change
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[April 20, 2018]
By Ian Simpson and Lisa Baertlein
(Reuters) - A week after their arrests at a
Starbucks Corp <SBUX.O> cafe in Philadelphia sparked protests and calls
for boycotts of the coffee chain, the two black men involved broke their
silence and said they wanted the incident to change U.S. racial
attitudes.
The men, Donte Robinson and Rashon Nelson, sat down with ABC's "Good
Morning America" as scrutiny of the popular chain and U.S. police
tactics widen.
The arrests have been a "stepping stone to really stand up and show your
greatness and that you are not judged by the color of your skin," Nelson
said.
A video of the incident, filmed by an onlooker, has been viewed almost
11 million times. Their arrests sparked protests and a decision by
Starbucks to close more than 8,000 stores on May 29 for employee
racial-tolerance training.
The incident put Starbucks, which prides itself on diversity and
inclusiveness, at the center of a social media storm after the cafe
manager called police on Nelson and Robinson, who had not made a
purchase and were waiting to meet a friend.
The manager, who is no longer with the company, called police within two
minutes of the pair's arrival, according to the men's account of the
incident. They were released without charges.
"It didn't really hit me what was going on, that this was real, until
I'm being double-locked with my hands behind my back," Robinson said.
Police Commissioner Richard Ross, who came under sharp criticism for the
incident and his defense of the officers, apologized to Robinson and
Nelson and said he had made the situation worse.
Ross told a news conference he had been unaware that Starbucks' policy
was to allow people to remain in its cafes without making a purchase.
Police will draft a policy to deal with similar situations, he said.
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Protesters gather at Philadelphia police headquarters, a week after
two black men were arrested at a Starbucks coffee shop, in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S. April 19, 2018. REUTERS/Dominick
Reuter
The men's attorney, Stewart Cohen, said they are in mediation with
Starbucks.
The arrests in Philadelphia have also prompted comments from
relatives of a man in Milwaukee who was shot to death four years ago
after employees at a Starbucks twice called police to report a man
sleeping in a nearby park. While Starbucks referred to the calls as
wellness checks, an officer shot the man, who was black, to death.
Then-Chief Executive Howard Schultz met with the man's family in
2015 and apologized in a private meeting, said Nate Hamilton, the
brother of victim Dontre Hamilton, who spoke to media this week
after the Philadelphia arrests.
"I'm happy it didn't turn out the same way," Hamilton told Reuters.
"Starbucks, they talk a good game," he said of Schultz's plans. "Is
it going to be put into action?"
(Reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington and Lisa Baertlein in Los
Angeles; Editing by Dan Grebler and Lisa Shumaker)
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