The Palm Beach Post

Starbucks closes early after hoax about defiling food

- By Alex Horton

The admissions from a Starbucks employee were apparently too revolting not to share. Spitting in a woman’s coffee, sprinkling dog feces in a child’s hot chocolate, mixing blood into jam — all were disgusting acts, presumably committed by a black woman, Shanell Rivers, targeting white customers in the Atlanta area and detailed on Facebook for the world to see.

By Sunday night, as images of the post mushroomed on social media, Starbucks was trying to reassure customers that the post was a fake that was “maliciousl­y” created. But that was after a store’s phone started ringing in an Atlanta suburb, with threats coming from the other end of the line.

The digital outrage spurred real-life consequenc­es Sunday, forcing the store in Brookhaven, north of Atlanta, to close two hours early, a Starbucks corporate staffer told The Washington Post. Maj. Brandon Gurley, a Brookhaven Police Department spokesman, said police responded with additional patrols in the area. Authoritie­s have also launched an investigat­ion to determine how the false informatio­n spread, Gurley said.

The incident marks a growing headache for law enforcemen­t: accusation­s or claims of salacious behavior weaponized on social media and taken offline to produce realworld potential for harm.

Such targeted false accusation­s are reminiscen­t of #Pizzagate, the debunked conspiracy theory that suggested that Washington, D.C., pizza restaurant Comet Ping Pong was harboring a child sex ring involving Hillary Clinton. That online hoax sparked hundreds of death threats against the restaurant’s owner and culminated on Dec. 4, 2016, when Edgar Welch fired three shots inside Comet Ping Pong as part of a self-proclaimed mission to rescue children.

A Starbucks spokeswoma­n said Monday that the Facebook post “is completely false” and that Starbucks does not have an employee named Shanell Rivers.

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