The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

‘Robin Hoods’ steal from M&S for food banks

- By Sophie Robinson and Neil Johnston The Telegraph

Police launch investigat­ion into activists who accuse retailers of profiteeri­ng and plan to continue action

A GROUP of self-styled Robin Hoods are being investigat­ed by police after claiming to have stolen from Marks & Spencer (M&S) to give goods to food banks, can reveal.

Activists who targeted the shop said they now planned to steal from other supermarke­ts, which are already reeling from Britain’s shopliftin­g epidemic.

Campaigner­s from Everybody Eats, a group calling for direct action on food poverty – in a similar way to eco-protesters – bragged on social media about stealing from the M&S Foodhall in Chorlton-cum-Hardy, Manchester, at the weekend. They said they would “keep replicatin­g this across the country” until the Government answered their demands on food security.

Shopliftin­g reached its highest level in two decades last year, according to figures from the Office for National Statistics released in January, which showed more than 402,000 offences were recorded in the year to September 2023. And theft cost retailers almost £1.8 billion in 2022-23, up from £953 million the previous year, according to the British Retail Consortium (BRC).

The campaign by Everybody Eats threatens to put further pressure on retailers. The group claimed that food banks were aware of where the stolen goods came from and even suggested its members had been asked to steal. Everybody Eats posted an image of the activists alongside five bags of food – including Percy Pig sweets – on X, formerly Twitter. It added: “Today we took food from an M&S without paying for it. The food will be distribute­d straight to the community and food banks. We cannot sit by as we and our friends, our families, our neighbours starve.”

Campaigner­s also filmed themselves walking gleefully into the M&S before bags with olive oil, bread, cereal, oat milk and other foodstuffs. The footage, posted on Instagram, shows them walking out with baskets and then later unloading the goods. No security guards or shop assistants can be seen intervenin­g in the clip.

An activist in the video says: “What we do is we go into major supermarke­ts and liberate food essentials to distribute to food banks and those living in the area who are in food poverty.

“Supermarke­ts make huge profits off rising prices of essential items in this cost of living crisis. A lot of their own staff are living in food poverty and use food banks. We’ve been asked by food

‘It is the right thing to do, people are hungry in the land of plenty and I think that’s obscene’

banks for their help. It is the right thing to do, people are hungry in the land of plenty and I think that’s obscene.”

Some covered their faces on social media as they posed with Sainsbury’s bags, but others proudly showed off the food while dressed in Robin Hood costumes. No one has been arrested. Despite one of the group being seen holding up a bag of Percy Pig sweets, Charlie Peterson, an activist who advises Everybody Eats, said only essential items were taken, such as simple foods, baby formula and sanitary products, which were handed out on the street and given to local food banks.

“It’s not a case of being above the law. It is illegal. That is superseded by a desire to actually do some good and put some food on their tables,” he said.

Mr Peterson compared the work of Everybody Eats to the suffragett­es, saying that activists sometimes have to work outside the law to bring about change.

“I think you’d be foolish not to acknowledg­e that it is illegal, but the levels of people that we’re seeing, of people that are going hungry in this country at the moment – 13 years ago, there wasn’t a single food bank in this country. Now there’s more food banks than there’s ever been.”

Greater Manchester Police confirmed that a shopliftin­g incident was reported at 1.40pm on Sunday April 14 at a shop in the area. The force is still investigat­ing and urged anyone with informatio­n to contact officers.

Graham Wynn, assistant director of regulation at the BRC, said: “Stealing – however small – is not a victimless crime. The £1.8 billion a year lost to shop theft would be better spent investing in lower prices and better service. Meanwhile, retailers are forced to spend a further £1.2 billion a year on anti-crime measures like CCTV, security personnel and anti-theft devices.”

M&S did not respond to requests for comment.

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 ?? ?? Self-styled Robin Hoods from activism group Everybody Eats posted images and footage of them filling shopping baskets with food and household items in a Manchester M&S Foodhall, top right, before showing off their haul contained in Sainsbury’s bags, below
Self-styled Robin Hoods from activism group Everybody Eats posted images and footage of them filling shopping baskets with food and household items in a Manchester M&S Foodhall, top right, before showing off their haul contained in Sainsbury’s bags, below
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