The Palm Beach Post

Starbucks CEO calls for training

Damage control continues after two black men arrested in store.

- By Rachel Siegel and Alex Horton

The chief executive of Starbucks on Monday called for “unconsciou­s bias” training for store managers and unequivoca­lly apologized for what he called “reprehensi­ble” circumstan­ces that led to the arrest of two black men at a Philadelph­ia store.

Starbucks’s Chief Executive Kevin Johnson said on “Good Morning America” that the company was reviewing the actions of the store manager who called the police. Johnson said that “what happened to those two gentlemen was wrong.”

“My responsibi­lity is to look not only to that individual but look more broadly at the circumstan­ces that set that up just to ensure that never happens again,” Johnson told GMA anchor Robin Roberts.

Johnson, who flew to Philadelph­ia as protests broke out, said he hoped to meet with the two men to apologize and “show some compassion and empathy for the experience they went through.” Johnson said he also hoped to work with the two men “in finding a constructi­ve way to solve this issue.”

NBC and CNN reported that Johnson was expected to meet with the two men. Exactly when the meeting would take place was not immediatel­y clear.

The manager who called the police on the two men no longer works at Starbucks, according to the Philadelph­ia Inquirer. The the city. One person in the crowd hoisted a sign that read, “Is she fired or nah?”, referring to the store manager who called the police. Others chanted “anti-blackness anywhere is anti-blackness everywhere.”

Rosalind Brewer, Starbucks’ chief operating officer, reiterated the call for unconsciou­s bias training among store managers in a morning interview with NPR and called the incident a “teachable moment for all of us.” She said that as an African-American executive with a 23-year-old Afri-

can-American son, the video was painful to watch.

“It would be easy for us to say that this was a one-employee situation, but I have to tell you, it’s time for us to, myself included, take personal responsibi­lity here and do the best that we can to make sure we do everything we can,” Brewer told NPR.

Cellphone videos captured the tense moment Thursday afternoon when at least six Philadelph­ia Police Department officers stood over two seated black men, asking them to leave. The officer said that they were not complying and were being arrested for trespassin­g.

“Why would they be asked to leave?” said Andrew Yaffe, who runs a real estate developmen­t firm and wanted to discuss business investment opportunit­ies with the two men. “Does anybody else think this is ridiculous?” he asked people nearby. “It’s absolute discrimina­tion,” Yaffe added.

The two unidentifi­ed men were taken out in handcuffs soon after. The men were held for nearly nine hours before being released, said Lauren Wimmer, an attorney who represente­d the men over the weekend. No charges were filed.

One of the videos of the arrest rocketed across social media, with more than 9 million views by Monday morning.

Benjamin Waxman, a spokesman for Philadelph­ia District Attorney Larry Krasner, said over the weekend that the office decided that there “wasn’t sufficient evidence to charge (the men) with a crime.”

On Monday morning, Starbucks’ CEO said there are some scenarios that warrant a police call — including threats and other disturbanc­es — but that in this case, “it was completely inappropri­ate to engage the police.”

After the arrest, the police were also being criticized for their handling of the situation. Police Commission­er Richard Ross addressed the incident on Facebook Live on Saturday, saying that one or both of the men asked to use the restroom but had not purchased anything. An employee said Starbucks company policy was to refuse the use of the bathrooms to non-customers and asked the men to leave, according to Ross. The employee called the police when they refused.

“These officers did absolutely nothing wrong. They followed policy; they did what they were supposed to do. They were profession­al in all their dealings with these gentlemen,” Ross said. “And instead, they got the opposite back.”

He said police arrested the men after they refused three requests to leave.

Ross, a black man, said he was aware of issues of implicit bias — unconsciou­s discrimina­tion based on race — but did not say whether he believed it applied in this case.

He said the incident underscore­s the need for more body-worn cameras to present different perspectiv­es of police responses. The officers were not wearing cameras, he said.

 ?? MICHAEL BRYANT / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER ?? Local Black Lives Matter activist Asa Khalif (left) stands inside a Philadelph­ia Starbucks store on Sunday to protest the Thursday arrests of two black men.
MICHAEL BRYANT / PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER Local Black Lives Matter activist Asa Khalif (left) stands inside a Philadelph­ia Starbucks store on Sunday to protest the Thursday arrests of two black men.

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