Crime Rampant shoplifting leads to another Walgreens closing in S.F.

Rampant shoplifting leads to another Walgreens closing in S.F.​

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea...fting-leads-to-another-Walgreens-15654730.php (https://archive.vn/zQQH9)

After months of seeing its shelves repeatedly cleaned out by brazen shoplifters, the Walgreens at Van Ness and Eddy in San Francisco is getting ready to close.

“The last day is Nov. 11,” Walgreens spokesman Phil Caruso said.

The drugstore, which serves many older people who live in the Opera Plaza area, is the seventh Walgreens to close in the city since 2019.

“All of us knew it was coming. Whenever we go in there, they always have problems with shoplifters, ” said longtime customer Sebastian Luke, who lives a block away and is a frequent customer who has been posting photos of the thefts for months. The other day, Luke photographed a man casually clearing a couple of shelves and placing the goods into a backpack.

“I feel sorry for the clerks, they are regularly being verbally assaulted,” Luke said. “The clerks say there is nothing they can do. They say Walgreens’ policy is to not get involved. They don’t want anyone getting injured or getting sued, so the guys just keep coming in and taking whatever they want.”

For security reasons, Walgreens declined to provide details on their security policies, but Caruso did say that “the safety of our team members and customers is our top concern.”

A recent trip to the store revealed aisle after aisle of empty or near-empty shelves. Beauty supplies appear to be a favored target.

Most of the remaining products were locked behind plastic theft guards, which have become increasingly common at drugstores in recent years.

But at Van Ness Avenue and Eddy Street, even the jugs of clothing detergent on display were looped with locked anti-theft cables.

When a clerk was asked where all the goods had gone, he said, “Go ask the people in the alleys, they have it all.”

Homeless encampments are common in the neighborhood, including two just across Eddy Street.

No sooner had the clerk spoken than a man wearing a virus mask walked in, emptied two shelves of snacks into a bag, then headed back for the door.

As he walked past the checkout line, a customer called out, “Sure you don’t want a drink with that?”

Just across busy Van Ness and down a block, a competing CVS pharmacy was fully stocked.

The difference? The CVS had a security guard at the door.

“Up there, they are closer to the Tenderloin. It’s the Wild West,” said a CVS clerk who was standing with the security guard.

The homeless encampments and the thefts at the Walgreens were front and center at a neighborhood town hall at St. Mary’s Cathedral in March.

Police responded by placing two officers and a squad car outside the store at the corner of Eddy and Van Ness.

“Everyone was happy,” Luke said.

But as the pandemic shutdown dragged on, the officers were needed elsewhere. And a short time later, the thieves returned in full force.

Why not?

Under California law, theft of less than $950 in goods is treated as a nonviolent misdemeanor. The maximum sentence for petty theft is six months in county jail. But most of the time the suspect is released with conditions attached.

The Van Ness location is at least the third Walgreens to close in the city in the past year. The Walgreens at 16th and Mission streets closed in December. The Walgreens at 730 Market St. closed in March.

It’s hard to pin down how much the market forces that prompted the closure of 200 Walgreens nationwide was a factor in the local closures and how much theft contributed — or if it was a combination of reasons.

In February, the local news website Hoodline reported that an employee at the Market Street store said the store couldn’t cope with the shoplifting, which was costing the company $1,000 a day.

“Organized retail crime in San Francisco has increased the challenge for all retail, and Walgreens is not immune to that,” company spokesman Caruso said.

Jay Cheng, public policy director for the San Francisco Chamber of Commerce, said the rising incidents of shoplifting and worsening street conditions have made it difficult for all neighborhood retail stores to continue to operate in San Francisco.

“We’ve already seen California Attorney General Xavier Becerra uncover a major Bay Area retail theft ring with over $8 million in stolen merchandise,” Cheng said. “These crimes make it dangerous for businesses, employees and customers, and need to be addressed.”

Some stores have hired private security firms or off-duty police officers to deter would-be thieves.

But security is expensive and can cost upward of $1,000 a day.

Add in the losses from theft, and the cost of doing business can become too high for a store to stay open. As for the customers at the Van Ness Walgreens, their prescriptions will be handled by the Walgreens at 1301 Franklin St.

At least for as long as it stays open.
 
I wish that big-city Californians would learn a lesson from this, but they won't. They're too focused on faux-compassion and have been for longer than I've been alive. Instead they will simply move and begin the process once more in a nicer area of the country. Often in places they belittle.
 
I wish that big-city Californians would learn a lesson from this, but they won't. They're too focused on faux-compassion and have been for longer than I've been alive. Instead they will simply move and begin the process once more in a nicer area of the country. Often in places they belittle.
It's wonderful how this all ties back to Thorstein Veblen’s Theory of the Leisure Class in one way or another. Affluent status-seeking liberals reaffirming their class markers by supporting and advocating for policies that ultimately dogfuck the lesser masses, all at little to no cost to the liberals.
 
This has been out of control,” said Supervisor Ahsha Safaí, who held a hearing Thursday with retailers, police, the district attorney and probation departments. “People are scared to go into these stores — seniors, people with disabilities, children. It’s just happening brazenly. We can’t just as a city throw up our hands and say this is OK. We have to come up with solutions.”

Safaí said he is proud of Prop. 47 and supports criminal justice reform and rehabilitation

You can’t have both.
 
Ah yes, the only street in the entire world I have ever been followed down by a crazy woman carrying a 2 gallon jug of prego pasta sauce who was waiting to ambush people at the BART station, harassing me first for money, and then for a phone, and then food, all while getting increasingly belligerent.

I'm shocked, shocked I tell you, to see these videos and hear this is happening.
 
There's no way to write an "it's okay if the RIGHT people steal, but not the wrong ones" law....

And even the wokest of the left are dimly aware you can't put "black" and "white" in the law and not have it immediately thrown out.

But darned if the left won't keep trying. And failing. But they'll never learn to stop.

They'll get there, some day, they just know it.
 
The cost of business and shoplifting led Walgreens to shut 17 locations in San Francisco in the past five years — an “unpopular and difficult decision,” Jason Cunningham, regional vice president for pharmacy and retail operations in California and Hawaii, said at the hearing. The company still has 53 stores in the city.
By those numbers San Fran will have none in about 15 more years, and that's being optimistic that shit doesn't ramp up exponentially due to "muh brotha getting shot by tho po-lees but he dindu nuthun yunowhatimsain."
 
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