[link removed]
FAIR
View article on FAIR's website ([link removed])
Shoplifting Is Big News; Stealing Millions From Workers Is Not Steven Keehner ([link removed])
Urban crime is the golden child of local media, as recent FAIR coverage (6/21/21 ([link removed]) ) has shown. But as FAIR's Julie Hollar recently noted, the amount of attention given to a topic does not always reflect the seriousness of the situation.
KGO: Thief steals garbage bag full of items from Calif. store as customers and security guard record video
The original KGO report (6/15/21 ([link removed]) ) that sparked hundreds of followup stories.
An alleged “crime surge ([link removed]) ” at Walgreens drugstores in San Francisco was a hot topic for Bay Area news outlets in the early months of 2021. When Lyanne Melendez, a reporter for the ABC-owned KGO-TV in San Francisco, tweeted out a cellphone video ([link removed]) of a brazen shoplifter, it elevated this narrative into a nationwide story. The video purports to show a man apparently filling a garbage bag with items before riding a bicycle out of the store, as two people, one of whom seems to be a store security guard, record him.
FAIR identified 309 published pieces on the 21-second video, using a combination of Nexis and Google advanced search to find every article published by a news outlet, from the video's publication on June 14 to July 12—a 28-day timeframe.
Compare this to another Walgreens-related theft story: the November settlement of a wage theft and labor law violation class-action lawsuit ([link removed]) against Walgreens, filed by employees in California for $4.5 million.
A multimillion-dollar settlement coming after a two-year legal struggle, this should have been a national news story, not to mention a major topic in local California outlets. But FAIR was unable to find a single general news outlet that covered the settlement, looking from November 2020 to July 2021, using the same search parameters as the aforementioned shoplifting video.
As court documents ([link removed]) explained, Walgreens agreed to create a common fund after allegedly violating California’s Labor Code:
Plaintiff alleged that defendants rounded down employees' hours on their time cards, required employees to pass through security checks before and after their shift without compensating them for time worked, and failed to pay premium wages to employees who were denied legally required meal breaks.
While San Francisco admittedly has a higher crime rate ([link removed]) compared to many major cities in the United States, this rate has been decreasing, even amidst a global pandemic (San Francisco Chronicle, 4/2/21 ([link removed]) ):
While San Francisco’s crime rates did deviate from previous trends in 2020, most types of violent crime actually plummeted — and all violent crime rates remain near their lowest levels since 1975.
SF Chronicle: Out of Control: Organized Crime Drives SF Shoplifting, Closing 17 Walgreens in Five Years
Kyle Barry in the Appeal (6/22/21 ([link removed]) ) noted that the San Francisco Chronicle (5/20/21 ([link removed]) ) failed to point out that "Walgreens announced in 2019 that it was closing hundreds of stores nationwide as a cost-saving measure."
But not only is this context consistently brushed over in news reports, much of the coverage connected to this video could lead one to believe the complete opposite, as in the San Francisco Chronicle (5/20/21 ([link removed]) ):
For years, John Susoeff walked from his home two blocks to the Walgreens at Bush and Larkin streets — to pick up prescriptions for himself and for less mobile neighbors, to get a new phone card, and to snag senior discounts the first Tuesday of the month.
That changed in March when the Walgreens, ravaged by shoplifting, closed. Susoeff, 77, who sometimes uses a cane, now goes six blocks for medication and other necessities.
Much of the narrative around the story of San Francisco’s crimes relates back to 2014, when California voters approved Proposition 47 ([link removed]) . Prop 47 reclassified several nonviolent offenses as misdemeanors rather than felonies. This included any instances of shoplifting at or below $950.
DataSF's crime database ([link removed]) includes the June 14 incident, listing it as “Theft, Shoplifting, $200–$950”—meaning that the maximum possible cost of the merchandise allegedly stolen was $950.
While basic arithmetic would indicate that $4.5 million is greater than $950, media have demonstrated that the question isn't how much is being stolen, but who it is being stolen from.
Obviously, the shoplifting video is supposed to represent multiple examples of retail theft, to boost awareness about shoplifting as a larger issue. But the wage theft settlement is also one example of a widespread issue: Employers stealing from their workers is a $15 billion a year ([link removed]) problem that gets little attention.
San Francisco is a city that falls far short in caring for the homeless population ([link removed]) , with pervasive poverty, particularly among people of color ([link removed].) . In that context, to treat an individual stealing a few hundred dollars from a corporation worth $150 billion as infinitely more newsworthy than that same company stealing millions from its employees is to enlist the media on the well-funded side of the class war.
Read more ([link removed])
© 2021 Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting. All rights reserved.
You are receiving this email because you signed up for email alerts from
Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting
Our mailing address is:
FAIRNESS & ACCURACY IN REPORTING
124 W. 30th Street, Suite 201
New York, NY 10001
FAIR's Website ([link removed])
FAIR counts on your support to do this work — please donate today ([link removed]) .
Follow us on Twitter ([link removed]) | Friend us on Facebook ([link removed])
change your preferences (*%7CUPDATE_PROFILE%7C*)
Email Marketing Powered by Mailchimp
[link removed]
unsubscribe ([link removed]) .