The Mercury News

Shop owner catching heat for attending Trump rally

Some are calling for a boycott of candy store

- By Joseph Geha jgeha@bayareanew­sgroup.com

MENLO PARK >> A candy store in Menlo Park is tanking in online ratings this week after a photo started circulatin­g online of its owner attending Wednesday’s pro-Trump rally in Washington, D.C., which escalated when a mob breached and stormed into the U.S. Capitol.

The photo shows Sugar Shack owner Suzi Tinsley posing outside in a crowd of people wearing what appears to be a President Donald Trump flag around her back like a cape, a red Trump hat and a Tshirt that says “Make America Great Again.”

Tinsley is not wearing a mask in the photo.

A former customer and local activist, Henry Shane, 18, of Menlo Park, said in an interview Friday that people should boycott Tinsley’s store because she participat­ed “in an anti-democracy protest to overturn a legal, fair election.”

Shane said he grew up going to Tinsley’s store and tolerates all political views, but Wednesday’s demonstrat­ion was not about a political viewpoint. It was about fascism and rejecting election results that had been upheld against legal challenges around the country, he said.

Tinsley did not immediatel­y return requests for comment from this news organizati­on Friday.

In written statements issued to ABC 7 News and NBC Bay Area, Tinsley said she did not participat­e in the violence and attended the rally only because it was going to be Trump’s last public appearance as president. The statement also said she didn’t post to social media about it.

“I was there for a peaceful march and shared photos via text with a few friends. I left the rally when the crowd became unruly and I was pushed to the ground. I returned to my hotel at that point, long before the agitators stormed the building,” Tinsley said.

“Just like every other American, I watched in horror as the chaos unfolded on television. I couldn’t believe my eyes and re

main appalled at what I saw,” she said.

“I love my community, I love my country and I hope those responsibl­e for storming our Capitol building are held fully accountabl­e,” Tinsley added.

To Sha ne, however, “Anyone who took part in marching to the Capitol, even if you didn’t partake in the violence, you were participat­ing in an anti- democracy action.”

After photos of Tinsley leaked and posts about her business made the rounds online, some people started leaving bad reviews about Sugar Shack on Yelp, calling the owner a “racist,” a “thug” and a “terrorist,” among other labels, and encouragin­g others to boycott the business.

The posts caught the attention of Yelp, which has temporaril­y suspended commenting on the page for Sugar Shack while it investigat­es whether the posts ref lect “actual consumer experience­s rather than the recent events,” the site said.

Others online and on the Peninsula are concerned about Tinsley not wearing a mask in the photo.

“I think a lot of people

are more upset that she was in D.C. without a mask with thousands of different people, and then coming back to her community when we were all supposed to be on lockdown,” Rebecca Olson, a Palo Alto resident, said in an interview Friday.

“It’s wildly irresponsi­ble,” she said.

But not everyone feels that Tinsley should face criticism or have her business boycotted because of her participat­ion in the rally.

Carey Mitchell, who owns Yellow Dog Real Estate in

Redwood City, stopped by Sugar Shack on Friday afternoon to put out flowers and signs of support for Tinsley, including one that read, “God Bless Sugar Shack.”

“You shouldn’t have your livelihood attacked for whatever belief system you

have, across the board,” Mitchell said in an interview Friday.

“This was really just one small-business owner supporting another small-business owner,” she said of dropping off the items.

“I believe that a smallbusin­ess owner is being unfairly attacked just by being at a rally. And it’s just the same as a Black Lives Matter supporter at a protest or rally being blamed for the looters,” she said.

Mitchell said she doesn’t know Tinsley but thinks those who attended the nonviolent parts of the rally have a right to question the election results as part of their free speech.

“They probably felt that they were trying to stand up for democracy in their own minds, whether that’s true or not. I don’t think they believed they were participat­ing in something that was anti-democratic,” she said.

But Olson said she doesn’t feel bad about the criticism Tinsley is getting or the potential impact on her business.

“It’s important to know who your small community business owners support politicall­y because you should put your pocketbook behind who you believe in,” Olson said.

“She put herself out there,” Olson added. “She is who she is, she’s owning who she is to all of her friends, and now she’s upset that people are finding out.”

 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Carey Mitchell drops off signs of support for Sugar Shack owner Suzi Tinsley, whose store in Menlo Park remains closed Friday after Tinsley’s pictures at the rally backing Prsident Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., began showing up online.
KARL MONDON — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Carey Mitchell drops off signs of support for Sugar Shack owner Suzi Tinsley, whose store in Menlo Park remains closed Friday after Tinsley’s pictures at the rally backing Prsident Donald Trump in Washington, D.C., began showing up online.

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