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Wednesday 4 December 2013
Macy's joins Barneys in brewing NYC 'shop-and-frisk' scandal
(26/10/2013) - New York's civil rights leaders on Saturday angrily decried the city's brewing "shop-and-frisk" scandal, in which two major retailers stand accused of profiling black shoppers who say they were detained by police after buying luxury items reported Reuters.
"We've gone from stop-and-frisk to shop-and-frisk," said Reverend Al Sharpton, president of National Action Network, alluding to a police crime-fighting tactic that critics say amounts to racial profiling.
A Network representative is set to meet next week with Mark Lee, the chief executive of Barneys New York, following allegations from two black shoppers that they were detained by New York police and accused of fraud after buying luxury items at Barneys.
In a third such allegation made this week, actor Rob Brown of HBO's "Treme" told the New York Daily News on Friday that he had been "paraded" through a midtown Manhattan Macy's in handcuffs in June, and held for an hour, after purchasing a $1,350 gold Movado watch for his mother.
Brown said he came forward after reading news accounts of others who had had similar experiences at Barneys.
Brown told the newspaper he "implored" cops to check his ID, but "they kept telling me, ‘Your card is fake. You're going to jail.'"
Retailer Barneys New York publicly apologised this week, and Macy's Inc said late on Friday that it is investigating Brown's allegations.
Police officials have said that grand larceny - which includes shoplifting and credit card fraud - are top priorities in midtown Manhattan's busy retail districts. An NYPD spokesman was not immediately available to comment on Saturday.
Grand larceny accounts for more than 75 percent of all crime in the precincts that cover the two retailers, according to New York Police Department crime statistics.
Brooklyn nursing student Kayla Phillips, 21, said this week that she was surrounded by four undercover police officers in February after leaving Barneys with a $2,500 Céline handbag she had purchased. She plans to sue, said her lawyer Kareem Vessup.
And Trayon Christian, 19, said he was detained for two hours and questioned by New York police in April after buying a $349 Ferragamo belt at Barneys.
Christian filed a lawsuit against the store and the NYPD this week, court records show. Brown filed a similar lawsuit against Macy's on Friday, according to the Daily News.
Barneys posted an apology on its Facebook page late on Thursday and said it was hiring civil rights attorney Michael Yaki of San Francisco, a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, to review the store's practices and procedures.
At a weekly gathering at the Network headquarters on Saturday, Sharpton said racially profiling shoppers is intolerable.
"We are not going to live in a town where our money is considered suspect and everybody else's money is respected," he said.
Neither Brown nor his attorney returned calls for comment Saturday.
In 2005, Macy's paid $600,000 to settle similar allegations that many of the chain's New York stores had targeted blacks and Latinos for particular scrutiny of theft, according to the New York Attorney General's office.
Grand larceny has risen 31.6 percent over the last two years in the NYPD's Midtown North precinct, which includes Macy's flagship store in Herald Square. It is up nearly 4 percent in the Upper East Side's 19th precinct, which includes Barneys New York.
RELATED ARTICLES
» Facebook users attack Barneys online over 'shop and frisk' racial profiling claims as a fourth person comes forward
» Rev. Al Sharpton addresses recent racial profiling by high-end stores
» Fourth New York shopper, pointing at Macy’s, makes racial profiling allegations
» Al Sharpton threatens boycott of Barneys over 'racial profiling'
» Barneys calls off Jay Z's fashion collaboration fundraiser that promised to raise $1m for his charity after mass furore over racial profiling claims
» Barneys, Macy's CEOs to lead city's high-end retailers in anti-racial profiling forum
» Readers sound off on Jay Z, feminism and Elmer Fudd
» Hamill: Between racial profiling and insane prices, Jay Z's Barneys collection a joke
» Jay Z's new Barneys deal doesn't address racial profiling: lawyer
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Tuesday 26 November 2013
Luxury high-end retailers Barneys & Macy's reveal profiling cases against black shoppers
Furious people took to Facebook to vent their anger over the recent profiling of shoppers in the New York retailer, Barneys.
Anger: Furious Facebook users attacked Barneys' website over what they call 'modern racism', including the likes of rapper, Jay Z |
Barneys' menswear ad was bombarded with angry comments |
'Love these shoes ... but having dark skin, my hard earned money may not be enough to allow the purchase at this establishment,’ Facebook user Amelia Rios Alex wrote on the page, which features glitzy photos of shoes, perfume, jewellery and apparel.
An ad for a John Varvatos suit with the tagline, Modern Monochrome, attracted 72 people to vent about the profiling scandal.
‘Modern racism,' said John Renaud.
‘Monochrome is right. Whites only’, according to David Nieves.
‘Will I get arrested if I buy this?’ asked Ramona Morgan.
‘Do handcuffs [come] with this or are they sold separately?’ said Facebook user Glenny Lennox.This comes as a fourth person has come forward with similar claims, this time against Macy's - the second in a week.
Another department store customer came forward Sunday 27 October 2013, with the fourth “shopping while black” complaint in a week — a customer who says he was surrounded by cops after a legitimate purchase at Macy’s Herald Square in New York.
Art Palmer says four plainclothes cops questioned him three blocks away from the flagship store after he bought $320 worth of Polo dress shirts and ties in April.
Palmer, a 56-year-old exercise trainer from Crown Heights, Brooklyn, said he made the purchase without incident, using both his Macy’s platinum card and his American Express card.
He was walking to a gym on Park Avenue when police surrounded him and demanded to see his ID.
The officers said they were suspicious because they had lost sight of him on the store’s surveillance cameras, he said.
When asked if he believed he was racially profiled, he told the New York Daily News that there was 'no other reason'.
He was allowed to continue on his way after he showed his receipt for the duds and the cards with which he purchased them.
When Palmer returned to the store the next day to complain, a Macy’s manager blamed it on the cops and said officers frequently come into the store to monitor surveillance videos without permission, according to Palmer.
The latest accusation echoes those by Trayon Christian and Kayla Phillips against Barneys and by actor Robert Brown against the same Macy’s.
Shocking: Trayon Christian, 19, lclaim they were interrogated by police after buying expensive items from Barneys |
Shocking: Kayla Phillips, 21, claim they were interrogated by police after buying expensive items from Barneys |
Trayon Christian, 19, is suing Barneys, saying he was accosted by undercover NYPD officers after using his debit card to buy a $349 Ferragamo belt in April.
Kayla Phillips, 21, said she was surrounded and interrogated by police after purchasing a $2,500 orange Celine suede handbag from Barneys in February.
Robert Brown with Sean Connery who he starred with in the movie, Finding Forrester. Brown is suing Macy's for racial profiling |
Fashion megastar Tyson Beckford, 42, told PIX11 on Thursday that he frequently gets judged on the colour of his skin in Barney's and other places.
Tyson Beckford on the Runway |
Reverend Al Sharpton has threatened protests against Barneys and a possible boycott for 'upscale racial profiling'.
'In major cities like New York, blacks and Latinos not only worry about being “stopped-and-frisked” by police, but they also fear the embarrassment of being “shopped-and-frisked” in retail stores,' he said in an opinion piece for the New York Daily News.
'Perhaps all retailers need a friendly reminder of the immense buying power of blacks and minorities. We will definitely remember those who welcome us and those who would rather profile us, and we will speak loudly with our dollars — bottom line.' We ever naively believe that our work is done?' Sharpton wrote.
Sharpton said it was a 'travesty' that police and retailers interrogate black people who buy expensive items.
'Barneys, a high-end retailer with stores in major cities, must answer for this pattern of biased behaviour, as must the NYPD,' he wrote.
'Our National Action Network (NAN) Brooklyn chapter President Kirsten John Foy said it best when he called Barneys’ behaviour schizophrenic. On the one hand, they want to expand their brand to the urban market, but then they turn around and see us as suspects rather than prospects.
Macy's CEO Terry Lundgren will attend the conference on racial profiling Pic: M. SPENCER GREEN/AP |
Sharpton has demanded a meeting with Barneys CEO, Mark Lee, and is 'currently mobilising activists for peaceful direct-action against the store and the NYPD.'
Earlier this week, Lee said the company had retained a civil rights expert to help review its procedures and offered his 'sincere regret and deepest apologies'.
'Barneys New York has zero tolerance for any form of discrimination and we stand by our long history in support of all human rights,' Barneys said in a statement.
Barneys New York |
Brown claimed he was paraded through Macy’s Herald Square in handcuffs and placed in a holding cell because an employee suspected that his credit card didn’t belong to him in June,
Whitaker said he was accused of stealing and patted down after leaving a store in Morningside Heights.
'When international celebrities can be disrespected and mistreated in such a humiliating manner, how can we ever naively believe that our work is done?' Sharpton wrote.
Amidst the controversy let us not forget the buzz around the launch of Jay Z’s Barneys collection more about high prices than style.
Canceled! Barneys calls off Jay Z's holiday fundraiser that promised to raise $1m for his charity after mass furor over racial profiling claims |
The Madison Ave. display in Midtown is assembled 20/11/13. Jay Z has said all the proceeds from his line will go to charity and that he will sit on a council to tackle racial profiling, unfortunately for the multi-millionaire, on Tuesday the New York Daily News announced the department store chain has canceled the event which guaranteed to raise $1m for the rapper's Shawn Carter Foundation.
The store - which blamed the cancellation on 'unforeseen circumstances'. This comes just after the megastar stood by the expensive New York store just days ago.
In a statement made on his website Friday, Jay Z said he'd agreed to attend the party, which also served as the launch for his BNY SCC fashion collection, under the condition that he helped lead the store's review of its policies.
'The easy position would have been to walk away and leave policy making to others hoping that someone addresses the problem. I will not leave the outcome to others,' he wrote in a statement posted to his website Life and Times: A Statement From Shawn “JAY Z” Carter 11.15.2013.
The rapper-turned-mogul said that one of the stipulations for his continued support of the store was that he be given 'a leadership role and seat on a council specifically convened to deal with the issue of racial profiling'.
'I am in a unique position to use my voice to affect change to this disturbing issue,' he wrote.
'I will take this into my own hands with full power to recommend, review and revise policies and guidelines moving forward. I am choosing to take this head on.'
It's not clear if Jay Z will still get involved with those policies now that the party has been canceled.
So are luxury high end retailers telling black shoppers your money is not respected or wanted here? Have your say..
RELATED ARTICLES
» Rev. Al Sharpton addresses recent racial profiling by high-end stores
» Fourth New York shopper, pointing at Macy’s, makes racial profiling allegations
» Al Sharpton threatens boycott of Barneys over 'racial profiling'
» Barneys calls off Jay Z's fashion collaboration fundraiser that promised to raise $1m for his charity after mass furore over racial profiling claims
» Barneys, Macy's CEOs to lead city's high-end retailers in anti-racial profiling forum
» Readers sound off on Jay Z, feminism and Elmer Fudd
» Hamill: Between racial profiling and insane prices, Jay Z's Barneys collection a joke
» Jay Z's new Barneys deal doesn't address racial profiling: lawyer
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Thursday 21 November 2013
Marc Jacobs is leaving Louis Vuitton
Final salute: Marc Jacobs addresses the audience at his final show for Louis Vuitton in Paris on October 2, following a spectacular 16-year tenure at the brand. Source:DailyMailUK
When Marc Jacobs stepped onto the runway after the Louis Vuitton spring/summer 2014 show at Paris Fashion Week, he smiled and accepted the applause for what was to be his final reverence for the label.
The designer, who has worked at the helm of Vuitton for the last 16 years, is leaving to focus on his eponymous label ahead of an IPO (Initial Public Offering), the LVMH chairman and CEO Bernard Arnault confirmed this morning.
And Jacobs made sure he went out with a bang at Paris Fashion Week by presenting a celebration of his greatest hits including clothing inspired by his first ever collection, shown on a set featuring pieces from previous shows.
Mr Jacobs' 2014 collection for Louis Vuitton was imbued with signature elements from his 16-year run at the label, which he has transformed from a dusty heritage luggage purveyor to a commercial luxury powerhouse.
The show was staged with Mr Jacobs's evolved flair for lavish settings.
'To the showgirl in all of us,' read his notes for the collection, which was presented among reinvisioned versions of the elevators, escalators, carousels, fountains, and hotel corridors that he has previously created for Louis Vuitton's seasonal grand displays.
In fact, fashion's overall commercial expansion, which has skyrocketed in the last decade, can be easily traced through photos of his tenure at Vuitton.
His evolution at the label is a prime example of the industry's transition from an exclusive tribe to a novel, friendly affair.
It was Mr Jacobs who masterminded and evolved the modern idea of themed collections, over-the-top settings, and dramatic staging effects. His adeptness at these grand events grew alongside the expansion of digital media.
In memory: Mr Jacobs recreated many of his most successful Vuitton moments for his final show, including a reinterpretation of the fountain he created for the label's fall 2010 show
Mr Jacobs now leaves Vuitton (which he joined in 1997), after starting its ready-to-wear business from scratch, as well as growing its overall commercial popularity and cool quotient.
In the last 16 years, Mr Jacobs steered the Vuitton brand through a variety of successful phases, the most fruitful of which was the brand's obvious foothold in the 'logo-mania' trend of the early aughts.
When he was appointed to Vuitton, the brand's holding company LVMH also bought a majority stake in his namesake brand and later helped him launch a diffusion line, Marc by Marc Jacobs, for spring 2001.
Vogue editor Alexandra Shulman commented: "Marc has provided fashion with so much during his years at Vuitton.
"It's important to know how to exit, as well as arrive, and it's going to be exciting to see how this impacts on the creativity of his own line."
Nicolas Ghesquiere |
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Luxury goods theft causes Hermes collection preview cancellation
HERMES HMRS.PA accessories worth 400,000 euros ($550,900) were stolen in Milan, forcing the French luxury goods group to cancel a presentation on Wednesday even after the items were recovered by police, a company spokeswoman said.
An Italian man born in 1966 was arrested in connection with the theft from a van in Milan's fashion district on Tuesday morning, police said.
Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera said the theft had occurred when the two French drivers of the van containing the collection left it unattended to go and get breakfast.
Hermes canceled the presentation as the collection, including its 6,000-30,000 euro ($8,300-$41,300) handbags, was being held by police as part of the investigation.
The robbery was the second in Milan's "golden quadrangle" in six months. In May, six people armed with clubs looted luxury Swiss watch shop Franck Muller in nearby Via della Spiga, throwing petrol bombs into the street as they escaped.
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Britons: Number One in E-Commerce Revolution
A study by the British Retail Consortium has found that almost 1 pounds in every 5 pounds is spent through computer, tablets and smartphones, making Britain the most tech-savvy nation in the world when it comes to online shopping reports MyRetailMedia.
Retail spending made via the internet (excluding food) accounts for 18.3% of all retail spending, according to the BRC’s figures.
Britons are also expected to spend more than 20.4 billion pounds in the run up to Christmas, with some 10 billion pounds being spent in December alone, according to a separate study.
The BRC said: “Online sales of non-food products in the UK grew 12.1% in October versus a year earlier. The online penetration rate was 18.3% in October, the highest level ever recorded by our monitor over 23 months”.
Britain’s love of online shopping is so strong that the rest of Europe, and even the USA, are behind the UK in terms of online spending.
This trend has not gone unrecognised and many retailers are working on their multi-channel offering in order to survive.
The shift has led to a major re-think about the problem of Britain’s high streets with many retailers urging the government to reconsider business rates.
The BRC is not alone in their online spending forecast either. The IMRG, the trade body for web stores, is predicting that Christmas web sales will increase by at least 15% compared to the previous year.
Spokeswoman Tina Spooner said: “Already we are seeing a number of retailers ramping up their online offering in the run up to Christmas.
“Click & Collect, next day delivery and even on-hour delivery slots are just a few of the options on offer to attract the lucrative festive shopper at this highly competitive time of year”.
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Saturday 19 October 2013
Woman sues Prada after she couldn't get champagne splashes out of her £1,000 skirt - and wins
MELBOURNE woman has successfully sued luxury fashion label Prada because champagne stains on a £971 ($1660) skirt she wore once won't clean off, reports the Australian paper, the Herald Sun.
Catherine Whitty spent £971 ($1,660 in Australian dollars) on the silk skirt for her 40th birthday party, but a guest dampened the night by spilling French bubbly over the Italian creation.
Ms Whitty was surprised when her drycleaner said the stains couldn't be removed, and that any liquid - including rain or splashes from washing hands - would have damaged the delicate silk.
Catherine Whitty sued Prada over a champagne-stained skirt. Picture: Stuart Walmsley Source: HeraldSun |
Ms Whitty told the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal she'd chosen the A-line skirt because it was a timeless piece that she expected to wear many times.
The frequent Prada patron said she expected the garment would be fit for "common usage" and that she would be able to remove simple stains to allow for multiple outings.
The Princes Hill physiotherapist said she'd checked the washing instructions on the skirt before purchase, and the label said "professionally dryclean".
Ms Whitty said no Prada sales assistants had advised her the fabric would be irreparably damaged if alcohol - or water - were spilt on it.
Prada retail operations manager Albin Cheng said staff had proffered the skirt based on fashion, not what would be served at the party.
He argued the stains were not a fault of the garment, but of Ms Whitty's failure to take due care while wearing it.
"This was not caused by us," Mr Cheng told Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal.
Ms Whitty's delay in taking the skirt for cleaning hadn't helped, he claimed.
The party host waited until Monday morning after the Saturday-night mishap in the belief her preferred shop was shut on Sundays.
Mr Cheng said a search of Prada's customer database revealed that four months after the party, Ms Whitty had bought another item of the same material, raising questions about whether she really did doubt its quality and wearability.
Ms Whitty told the tribunal she'd bought other silk items from Prada and was "usually a very happy customer".
Ms Whitty in the skirt at her birthday party. Source: HeraldSun |
She said she'd spent several frustrating months trying to get the brand to respond to her concerns before launching tribunal proceedings.
Tribunal member Peter Moloney found in favour of Ms Whitty, and ordered Prada Australia refund the full £971 ($1660) to her.
Mr Moloney noted unless sold with a warning, garments were usually be expected to withstand some use and exposure to normal hazards of life such as spills or a rain shower.
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Content thanks:HeraldSun
Tuesday 15 October 2013
Christian Louboutin wins case against anti-Islamic group
Christian Louboutin |
Thee campaign group Women Against Islamisation featured a image of a woman's legs wearing Louboutin heels with the distinctive red sole, visible on one of it's posters.
Women Against Islamisation unauthorised poster pic:AFP/GETTY |
Women Against Islamisation unauthorised poster pic:AFP/GETTY |
The legs belong to Anke Van dermeersch, a senator from the party.
A judge at the Antwerp court has given the party 24 hours in which to take down the posters.
Miss Van dermeersch, a former Miss Belgium, called the decision a political ruling. Her party has issued another advert, this time with the senator lying down and wearing similar-looking, but yellow-soled stilettos.
Revised poster showing yellow sole and heel |
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Sunday 13 October 2013
Victoria Beckham to open her own boutique in Mayfair, London
Victoria Beckham is set to open her own boutique in London's upmarket Mayfair |
After months of negotiations, the 39-year-old former Spice Girl has signed a deal to open the shop, selling her collections of clothing and handbags by joining the fashion elite with a store located in Dover Street in the heart of the fashion district, in Dover Street, just a short walk from Old Bond Street - places Victoria at the heart of the capital’s fashion district.
Victoria first hinted at her desire to open a flagship store for her brand in April, when she told British Vogue that London would be the perfect location.
She said at the time: ‘This is where I want to have my first store. I’d like to do something that is really new, really fresh. Something a little bit conceptual – but not too much.’
Her designs have proved popular with the likes of Beyonce and Gwyneth Paltrow, but have previously only been available online, in fashion outlets and department stores.
A source close to Victoria said: ‘She’s really excited about getting things moving quickly.
‘Obviously there is still a lot to do, but the hope is to open the store properly early next year with one of the biggest fashion parties of the year.’
It was reported last week that Victoria and husband David's business empire now boasts earnings of almost £100,000 a day |
The Dover Street location, just a short walk from Old Bond Street, places Victoria at the heart of the capital's fashion district |
Content thanks: DailyMailUK
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