Crime California 7-Eleven workers take matters into their own hands as they stop brazen thief filling TRASH CAN with tabacco - Burger King's TND moment of the month awarded to two pajeets



Article (Archive)

A pair of 7-Eleven workers in California were left with no choice but to take on a brazen thief by themselves - but they were hardly empty-handed.

Stunning footage showed the scene filmed in 2023 at the store. The thief was clearing shelves and dumping merchandise into a trash can.

A stunned onlooker filmed the incident and encouraged the employees to wait until the police arrived.

They confronted the suspect about why he was stealing so much, but the thief threatened to shoot them and continued to scoop armfuls of goods into the trash can.

The workers eventually had enough and came together to restrain him and hit the suspect with a large wooden stick.

In the video, a man who wore a dirty white t-shirt, jeans and a blue head covering, aggressively threw tobacco items into a trash can.

One of the workers is heard asking: 'Hey, why are you stealing everything?' before the thief threatened to 'pull my strap on your b**** ass'.

A customer tried to diffuse the situation and told the employees 'Just let him go. Ain't nothing you can do until the police come here.'

The customer also asked the workers if the store was insured and advised them to wait for the authorities.

The thief tried to get past an employee with his trash can of stolen goods while shouting, 'watch out boss.'

The pair got into an altercation as the worker grabbed the trash can and tried to restrain the suspect.

A second 7-Eleven staff member arrived and hit the thief with a large wooden stick as the suspect shouted in pain.

One worker continued to strike the thief while his colleague tackled and restrained him on the ground.

A stunned onlooker filmed the incident and encouraged the employees to just wait until the police arrived

The employee was seen swinging the stick behind his back to generate force and continued to hit he suspect's torso, legs and back, as he shouted in pain

The employee was seen swinging the stick behind his back to generate force and continues to hit the suspect's torso, legs and back as he shouted in pain.

The thief screamed 'it's OK' and pleaded for mercy, but the employee continued to hit him.

'That's called whoopin' your a***,' the customer told him.

It is not clear exactly when the incident happened, but the 7-Eleven store's lottery games on display indicates it was in California.

Dailymail.com has reached out to 7-Eleven for comment.

Shoplifting has reached unprecedented levels across America with brazen thieves strolling out of stores with their arms full of stolen goods.

The National Retail Federation said that the scourge - which grew worse during the pandemic - cost the industry almost $100billion in 2022.

David Johnston, who represents the organization, said: 'These acts are occurring more openly and thieves have become more brazen and aggressive in stealing merchandise.
 
Muslims are orders of magnitude better than Hindus but pale in comparison to Sikhs, Buddhists or Christians.
Well the Muslims in India do seem pretty quiet except some feeble retaliatory rioting when the Hindus mog them

Derka derka Muslims going wild in India almost always cross the border from Pakistan or are ISI assets in Kashmir
 

1691342320987241.jpg

TOTAL CALIFORNIAN DEATH.

Kill Californians. Behead Californians. Roundhouse kick a Californian into the concrete. Slam dunk a Californian baby into the trashcan. Crucify filthy Californians. Defecate in a Californians food. Launch Californians into the sun. Stir fry Californians in a wok. Toss Californians into active volcanoes. Urinate into a Californians gas tank. Judo throw Californians into a wood chipper. Twist Californians heads off. Report Californians to the IRS. Karate chop Californians in half. Curb stomp pregnant black Californians. Trap Californians in quicksand. Crush Californians in the trash compactor. Liquefy Californians in a vat of acid. Eat Californians. Dissect Californians. Exterminate Californians in the gas chamber. Stomp Californian skulls with steel toed boots. Cremate Californians in the oven. Lobotomize Californians. Mandatory abortions for Californians. Grind Californian fetuses in the garbage disposal. Drown Californians in fried chicken grease. Vaporize Californians with a ray gun. Kick old Californians down the stairs. Feed Californians to alligators. Slice Californians with a katana.
 
would-be thief? pretty sure he was thieving all right before he was stopped.
In fairness if you never get it out of the door because a pair of Indian fellows pin you down and paddle your ass like your deadbeat dad should have you did not successfully carry out the crime.

On the other hand absolutely fuck the people who decided to investigate this. These two deserve a round of applause and possibly the jobs of police chief and mayor.
 
They were within their rights to act the moment Jaquantius threatened to "pull strap".
That said, the brownskins don't belong either. Sikhs are not your friends and the ones who have fled India to the west are not looking to stab Muslims with their little daggers. They're here to seize land just like the rest.
Too bad I’ll give them honorary Aryan cards before you can sperg more about brownies.
 
Last edited:
In northern California, two 7-Eleven clerks beat up a man seen trying to steal, and a witness caught it all on camera.

The beating seen in this now-viral video is under investigation by the Stockton Police department.

The clip, more than five minutes long, shows a man emptying shelves of cigarettes into a trash can and store clerks stepping in as a bystander recorded the tense moments.

That 7-Eleven store is on South Center Street in Stockton, about a half-mile away from the business co-owned by the man who took the video, who wanted to be identified as “Deda.”

“And I’m telling him, ‘No, there’s nothing we can do. There’s nothing you can do. Just let him take and just go,’” said Deda. “I’m trying to feel it out. My job is to make it home. … Hopefully everyone learns in this situation to be in a better mindset next time.”

He said he was just stopping by the 7-Eleven for a Red Bull and gas when he saw the masked man go behind the counter.

“Once the guy was done, he tried to bypass the other employee,” Deda said. “The other employee grabs him, and another grabs the stick. And then from there, the fiasco happens.”

In the clip, the man is hit more than two-dozen times.

“Then I had to get really stern with my words. ‘It’s enough,’ so they kind of stopped,” Deda said. “I’m narrating the situation: ‘He doesn’t have a gun. He’s all right. Are you done? Are you done? Are you done? Now it’s time for everyone to go. … He needs to go and you guys need to stop.’”

Stockton police said someone from the business eventually called police. Police said a report was taken and that this is an ongoing investigation.

Deda said he worries the situation would have escalated further had he not been there and said the city and the people in it need to step up and be better than what he saw inside the store.

“We just need to figure out as a community that we have to love each other. We have to do better,” he said.

Article Link

Archive
 
The man seen in the video is believed to have previously robbed the store:
Stockton police said they are investigating the assault of a 7-Eleven robbery suspect by two workers and say the suspected thief is believed to have robbed the store two other times within the same 24-hour period.

Video of the July 29 assault has gained national attention. In the more than five-minute clip, a man can be seen emptying shelves of cigarettes and other products from the store’s shelves before the clerks step in to stop him. The clip shows one of the clerks pinning the man down while another beats the would-be thief with what appears to be a pole.

The manager of the store said questions about the incident would need to be directed to a corporate spokesperson. 7-Eleven has not returned messages for comment.

Stockton police said in an update Saturday that they were aware of two other reports of early morning robberies at the 7-Eleven location involving the same suspected thief, one on July 28 and another on July 29.

Police said that on July 28 at 3:41 a.m., a 7-Eleven worker reported the suspect going behind the counter and threatening to shoot the clerk if he intervened. The suspect then took several packs of cigarettes in a large garbage bag before fleeing.

On July 29 at 12:27 a.m., a 7-Eleven worker reported the suspect demanding money at the store while simulating that he had a handgun. When the worker didn’t comply, the suspect grabbed food items and put them in a garbage bag before leaving, police said.

At some point later in the morning, the man is believed to have returned to the store, police said. That’s when the beating captured in the viral video took place.

Stockton police said they were unaware at the time of that attempted robbery and assault.

But around 3:45 a.m., police joined members of the fire department in assisting a man who was requesting medical aid because of pain in his leg and shoulder.

The man, who police now believe was the suspected 7-Eleven robber, had said he did not know if he was assaulted.

Stockton police said witness video of the July 29 robbery and assault has now linked all the investigations.

They said that after their investigation concludes, they will forward the findings to the San Joaquin County district attorney for review.
 
Nice post OP! No big deal, this story has just been around for a week, already featured on MATI and has a thread with almost 100 replies. Could you have just poasted this in the thread that already exists? Pfffft nahhhh. Shine on, you dumb shit diamond!

*edit
This is no longer aimed at OP, threads were merged. Looking at you @Breadbassket
 
Last edited:
That 7-Eleven store is on South Center Street in Stockton, about a half-mile away from the business co-owned by the man who took the video, who wanted to be identified as “Deda.”
More interestingly, the only 7-Eleven on S. Center st. is directly across the road from Stockton PD.

Screenshot_2023-08-07-12-37-12-31_3d9111e2d3171bf4882369f490c087b4.jpg

believed to have robbed the store two other times within the same 24-hour period.
:story:
How pissed would you be if you got robbed 3 times in 24 hours within sight of the fucking police station?

We're reaching levels of rampart niggerdom not previously thought possible.

Police said a report was taken and that this is an ongoing investigation.

Try looking out of the window you retards.
 
Unless you're willing to kill cops, they're going to keep punishing citizens.

I pray that Californian shitlibs and their kids die of cancer from a Russian nuke.

Or have their kids curb stomped right onto the pavement so their head explodes like that one scene from invincible.

Put the Californian liberal migrants into the ground.

Like this editorial from the Modesto Bee.

Stockton 7-11 clerks went too far in viciously beating brazen shoplifter | Opinion (Archive)

Store clerks have legal options when someone shoplifts. Teaming up to brutally beat the thief isn’t one of them. No wonder two 7-11 clerks in Stockton who battered a would-be shoplifter with a wooden rod are being investigated by police, as reported on TV news. Although brazen stealing is frustrating, costly and dangerous to store employees, confronting it with violence that far exceeds self-defense is not the answer. Most people watching the first part of a viral video taken by a bystander will be shocked at the way a man with partially concealed face methodically sweeps stacks of cigarette cartons off a shelf with his arms and into a bag-lined garbage bin on July 29. Viewers might be outraged and angry that the suspect seemed to believe he could calmly walk out with stolen goods, unimpeded.

These types of images symbolize growing public frustration over brazen theft occurring in public stores that many of us frequent. Part of our outrage is that we imagine ourselves faced with sudden danger while minding our own business while shopping. In this case, the robber was impeded from “getting away with it.” One clerk grabs the shoplifter’s arms and takes him to the ground while another man wails on the suspect with a staff or pole — raining more than two dozen blows in full-arc swings, mostly to his legs and torso as the man screams in pain.

California law gives a homeowner the right to confront an intruder with deadly force. That right does not extend to commercial property subjected to shoplifting. This is an important distinction and one wonders if the legal outcome of this confrontation results in felony assault charges for those who went too far defending a store from theft that may not have even risen to a felony charge. The justice system will decide this. Readers of The Modesto Bee recently learned the ins and outs of citizen’s arrest. If you observe a crime, you can lawfully detain someone until the cops arrive, reporter Dominique Williams explained. “Reasonable” force is OK under some circumstances, Modesto police told her. But a citizen’s arrest that goes wrong could lead to civil or criminal charges such as assault and battery, false imprisonment or kidnapping, according to the Shouse California Law Group. “If there isn’t an immediate threat to their own or others’ safety, citizens should be encouraged to let police handle the situation,” Williams wrote with reference to a California Department of State Hospitals policy manual.

FRUSTRATION DOESN’T JUSTIFY VIOLENCE

No doubt the Stockton clerks were frustrated. Authorities said the partially masked man had reportedly stolen from the store before. A Stockton police station is just across the street from the store, which may have contributed to the frustration of the store clerks. But again, we don’t know that, shouldn’t assume that and even if this were the case, frustration over theft on commercial property is not a justification for violence, in the eyes of the law. Police in Stockton are busy with weighty matters, as they are in Sacramento, Modesto and elsewhere. Petty theft often doesn’t get the cops’ attention, and if a thief is arrested, the punishment handed out in court typically is light. But thrashing the guy with a big rod, viciously and repeatedly, is not a lawful response. The bystander recording this display of vigilantism saw the beating for what it was and tried to intervene verbally, asking the clerks to stop and ushering the bruised man toward the door. Before exiting, the shoplifter asked for a soda, calling into question his mental state. At no time did he appear to pose a physical threat to the clerks. Street justice may be popular in movies or among frustrated citizens, but it has no place in a society governed by the rule of law.
 
Back