Is it legal for stories to keep items commonly stolen under lock and key? Not if they’re items purchased [ahem stolen actually…] by minorities and represented by the infamous attorney Gloria Allred. See a video exposé on this woman on the next page.
A California woman is suing Walmart for racial discrimination after she went to the store to buy a product and was shocked to discover it was kept behind locked doors. The lady is claiming the product being kept under lock and key was only being stored so due to race, NOT the fact it is every major store’s policy to keep items frequently stolen in locked cases.
Essie Grundy starts out her campaign of social justice warrior-esque vigilance in the most prominent way possible by holding a press conference in which she decries the abuses she faces as an African-American woman in “racist” America.
The real question in all of this is will Walmart be able to retain their legal right to keep items [coincidently..] commonly stolen by people of color under lock and key? Like they do for every other item commonly stolen by a homo sapien. Are we or are we not supposed to “see color”?
Head on over to the next page to learn the details of this peculiar case and how it stands to affect retailers around the nation
How stupid !! They lock up alot of items that people shoplift!
They are not African American if they ar African then get the hell out.
Then she will not have to wait for a black out or Hurricane
Truth hurts
piggy
Equine processed hay!
Shows who shoplifts the most, otherwise, they wouldn’t be locked up. Get mad at your own people, lady. Can’t blame Wal-Mart for protecting their inventory.
Gloria Allred is an ‘ambulance chacer’, you know the type to try and convince a person that they should sue just to make the attorney money.
The Only Things They Lock Up Are Those Things MOST STOLEN. I Don’t See Alot Of White Or Hispanic Or Asians Stealing Black Hair Care Products.
Anything to do with Gloria Alred…. Just nonsense.