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Cafe shut down after protesters enter, chanting, ‘Starbucks coffee is anti-black!’

Posted at 4:16 PM, Apr 16, 2018
and last updated 2018-04-16 16:16:08-04

Anger over two black men being perp-walked out of a Philadelphia Starbucks had not waned Monday morning, as protesters demonstrated at the location, calling the mammoth coffee chain “anti-black.”

The store was closed for a few hours. A sign on the front door said, “We are temporarily closed. We apologize for the inconvenience. Please visit one of our surrounding neighborhood stores.”

The sign was later taken down, but the front door remained locked. Staff were visible inside. The store reopened Monday afternoon.

As the protests heated up, the arrested men, who were not charged with a crime despite being detained, agreed to meet with Starbucks’ CEO. And the Philadelphia police commissioner, who is under fire for defending his officers, said the policemen never wanted to arrest the men.

The men, who have not been identified, initially asked to use the restroom inside the Starbucks on Thursday but were told the cafe’s bathrooms were for customers only. They then occupied a table without making a purchase, which many observers have noted is a common occurrence at the franchise’s locations.

A manager called policeafter the men declined to leave the premises because, they said, they were waiting for an acquaintance.

That manager is no longer working at the store, Starbucks said, but it’s unclear if she was terminated or relocated.

‘If we can’t get it, shut it down’

At the Rittenhouse Square location, where the incident occurred, a man led protesters in call and response early Monday, in video captured by CNN affiliate KYW.

“Starbucks coffee is anti-black!”

“A whole lot of racism, a whole lot of crap!”

The next chant began, “Anti-blackness anywhere is anti-blackness everywhere!”

“What do we want?” the man asked.

“Liberation!” the protesters replied.

“When do we want it?”

“Now!”

The next chant — “If we can’t get it, shut it down” — speaks to the demonstrators’ demands. They are not happy with Starbucks’ apology, nor the company’s promise to review its policies.

CEO calls arrests ‘reprehensible’

They bristle particularly at the sentence, “Our store manager never intended for these men to be arrested.” Why then, posited the protesters — as did their counterparts on social media — did the manager call police in the first place? And why, in the video of the arrests that went viral last week, is the manager not seen intervening, despite several customers taking the arresting officers to task?

Top cop: Men wouldn’t leave coffee shop

In the KYW video, a woman protesting in the store Monday tells customers, employees and her fellow protesters, “We are here today not just to bring attention to what Starbucks has done but to bring more attention, as if we needed it, to what the PPD continues to do. So we are very clear that corporations aren’t here for us and we’re also clear that the Philadelphia Police Department is not here for us, either.”

Other protesters off camera chime in, saying, “Not at all” and “Never been, never been.”

Police Commissioner Richard Ross has said previously that his officers did nothing wrong and performed only “a service that they were called to do.”

On Monday, in an interview with CNN affiliate WPVI, Ross called the arrests “very unfortunate” and said his officers tried to avoid making an arrest but were left with no choice but to handcuff the men.

It’s common for officers to respond to reports that someone won’t leave a business, he said, adding that, typically, the person or people leave before police get there or when they arrive.

“Most people will move just simply because we tell them the proprietor wants you to leave. In this case, that was not the issue, and that’s for them to decide why they didn’t do that,” he told the station. “There are laws on the books that we have to follow. If we had our druthers, we wouldn’t (have) come there in the first place. That’s just keeping it simple.”

Protesters, Starbucks VP face off

The protesters do not appear to see any temperance in the officers’ actions, however. On their Facebook page — titled “Shut Down Starbucks!” — they allege the Philadelphia police “have once again demonstrated their inherent white supremacy and inability to serve the black community.”

They demand that the Starbucks manager who called police be fired and that the officers who arrested the men face the same fate. They also want an official apology to the men and the black community at large and demand that “Starbucks create and publicize a new policy that expressly disallows calling the police on citizens,” according to the Facebook page.

When Camille Hymes, a regional vice president for the coffee behemoth, asked to speak to protesters in the store Monday, she was rebuffed.

“We know that you don’t have the power to change everything. You’re just a figurehead, but we’re going to get to those in power and we’re going to make sure that we shut you down,” a protester tells Hymes in the KYW video.

On Sunday, another KYW video showed Hymes asking protesters to leave the store when her conversation with them went sideways.

“We put (the manager) in a position that did not allow her to be set up for success or those two men,” Hymes told the crowd, explaining that Starbucks’ policies, and not its employees, drove the arrests.

A man in the store yells, “They got a picture in the system now! They’re fingerprinted!”

Asa Khalif of Black Lives Matter in Pennsylvania refuses to let the manager off the hook, telling Hymes, “She’s a racist bigot. I’m sorry. I’m calling her that. Until that element is removed from this store, there cannot be any dialogue. There can only be protest.”

Someone in the background asks Hymes, “Can you understand the lack of empathy for the manager when…,” but she doesn’t finish her question.

“At this time, we’ll ask that you step outside,” Hymes tells the protesters.

CEO doesn’t want to ‘point blame’

In an interview with WPVI, Khalif summed up protesters’ anger.

“Black people are met with aggression every time we are encountered with police. What that manager did was she put those men in danger,” he told the station.

The Starbucks CEO said in an apology posted on Facebook that he believes “that blame is misplaced.” On “Good Morning America,” he said he did not want to “point blame” for the arrests.

“My responsibility is to look not only at that individual but to look more broadly at the circumstances that set that up, to ensure that this never happens again,” he told “GMA.”

He will be meeting face-to-face with the arrested men, but the timing of that meeting has yet to be determined. A spokesperson said it will ideally take place this week.