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Macy's To Stop Employees From Targeting Minority Customers For Discriminatory Security Practices And Detention
New York State Attorney General Spitzer today announced that his office has signed a groundbreaking agreement with Macys East, Inc., the owner of 29 Macys Department stores in the State of New York, to ensure that race and ethnicity play no role in Macys security efforts to identify and process suspected shoplifters.
Spitzers office began probing Macys security practices in July, 2003 after receiving complaints from black and Latino customers who said they were targeted for particular scrutiny. Black and Latino customers complained of being followed, questioned, and/or searched based solely on their race or ethnicity.
The Attorney General found that the vast majority of persons detained on suspicion of shoplifting were black or Latino, and that their representation in the pool of detainees couldnt be explained either by customer demographics or local crime rates. The very high percentage of blacks and Latinos among detainees at Macys over 75% at most of the stores examined is significantly higher than the percentage of blacks and Latinos shopping in those Macys stores.
Store patrons should be allowed to shop unencumbered and free from harassment, Attorney
The agreement requires Macys to:
- Appoint an internal Security Monitor to train, monitor, and investigate complaints about security employees;
- Train security employees and sales associates more extensively on how to avoid discrimination in efforts to detect and prevent shoplifting;
- Hire an outside entity to perform anonymous audits to assess whether security employees treat shoppers differently based on race and/or ethnicity;
- Adopt new record-keeping requirements to enable better tracking of security employees interaction with customers;
- Permit handcuffing of detainees based only upon individualized assessments of dangerousness;
- Change detention policies and practices to ensure that detentions are reasonable in length and nature;
- Centralize and improve the investigation of complaints about the conduct of security employees; and
- Conduct annual assessments at various Macys stores to determine if there are any racial disparities in security practices and, if so, take appropriate corrective action.
Spitzer commended Macys for cooperating with the investigation and agreeing to changes in policies and procedures that will enable Macys more effectively to avoid and address discrimination.
Spitzer also urged other department stores to reevaluate their own security policies, procedures, and practices, and to revise them as necessary to ensure that shoppers are not targeted for unfavorable treatment based upon their race or ethnicity.
The case was handled by Assistant Attorneys General Hilary B. Klein, Brian J. Kreiswirth, and Leah Griggs-Pauly, under the supervision of Bureau Chief Dennis D. Parker and Deputy Bureau Chief Natalie R. Williams of the Attorney Generals Civil Rights Bureau.
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