timtommy said:
It seems like Chris has accumulated several bans from stores and restaurant.
Forgive my naivete, but I haven't banned from anything since I was 15 and my friend and I got busted screwing with for sale stickers.
If any one has worked in retail I am curious:
How common is it to ban someone from a store?
Does it tend to be an official procedure that the manager will have been trained for and have forms to fill out for, or is it just a thing to say to get rid of a situation?
Will other employees be aware of it, so they can enforce it if the manager who issued it is not on duty?
I imagine if a ban is ignored by the bannee, he/she can be charged with trespassing. Do banns tend to be respected? If they are not, are the police brought in?
For the veteran Christorians: Has Chris always respected his banns?
I've been in the retail industry for around 7 years, so I've got a lot of firsthand knowledge about this.
Banning people from stores in very uncommon, by the percentages or by the days in which it happens. Our store quite possibly has over 1,000 transactions daily, yet we go two weeks or longer between any kind of bannable incident.
By and large, bans generally occur after someone steals/attempts to return fraud/does something like harass other customers. At our store, bans lead to a notice to the banned party. If they are arrested, that takes priority and a ban is likely forgotten. However, having witnessed a customer being thrown out and then noting his return a year later--most managers would probably forget or ignore a ban after a few months if the formerly banned customer didn't attempt to cause trouble.
Charging someone with trespassing is a legitimate choice but reflects a deliberate decision to seek legal help to remove someone from the property; we did have someone last week busted for it after ignoring a ban, but before that we've gone years without that happening. Frankly, the concern is the trespasser's behavior--if they don't cause problems enforcing a ban may very well not be worth the effort.
As for Manager Training: The decision to ban someone from the store is generally made conservatively. Some customers are assholes, but if they pay for product it's probably worth tolerating. Most bans are no-brainer situations where the banned party is clearly more trouble than they're worth; CWC racking up a bancount reflects a common belief amongst stores that he's not worth dealing with; they could very well be right.
Bans aren't empty threats, but in my experience any sort of patience in letting tensions cool and then avoiding any further trouble is generally sufficient to address a ban.
Disseminating information about a banned customer to employees likely follows the determination that this customer is likely to violate his ban and needs to be busted for trespass. That happened in the situation last week, but unless the manager expects that a customer will try that he wouldn't tell everyone.
As it applies to Chris: Repeated Bans reflect a common belief amongst Stores that Chris isn't worth the trouble he causes. In the case of Michael Snyder, its also clear that the whole store was informed about the situation, and CWC went to extraordinary lengths to violate that ban. It would seem that Walmart and Fashion Square Plaza have gone through multiple rounds of banning our Lolcow, although FSP's situation as a landlord instead of a store might well make that ban harder to enforce. These locations were formerly the place he spent his time away from home, so they've probably become a party to some particularly bizarre tardraging or attraction signage.
Chris is also, for what it's worth, a paying customer who generally doesn't engage in criminal acts. Banning him means that he's freaked people out or otherwise disrupted business badly enough to lose his $$$. Each time he is banned, there is some sort of incident that is worth losing him as a customer. Those incidents are going to be 98%+ his fault and each one potentially as ugly as the Crazy Pacer or the Hexbox Vandalism story.
It is clear that Christory is still being made by other means.