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Race-based lawsuit against Victoria’s Secret

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LOS ANGELES (CNS) – Two black women are each seeking $4 million in
damages from Victoria’s Secret, claiming they were treated like criminals and
ordered out of the the Beverly Center store by management after a confrontation
with an aggressive customer.
A lawsuit filed by Shaunda McDaniel and Tammi Robinson alleges
negligence, slander, intentional infliction of emotional distress, false arrest
and violations of various state codes.
“Plaintiffs were shocked and humiliated to be accused of wrongdoing and
to be thrown out of the store as if they were criminals,” their lawsuit says.
The complaint further alleges a “pervasive racist sentiment” in which
black customers are “treated as suspect,”  despite Victoria’s Secret
representation of support for racial diversity that states, “As one of our
company’s core values, we understand, appreciate and leverage diversity….”
A Victoria’s Secret representative could not be immediately reached for
comment on the suit filed Thursday in Los Angeles Superior Court.
Each plaintiff is seeking $2 million in compensatory damages and the
same amount in punitive damages. They also want an order enjoining Victoria’s
Secret from engaging in further alleged discrimination.
According to the complaint, the plaintiffs went to the Victoria’s Secret
store, located in a predominately white and affluent area, last June 16 for
the chain’s semi-annual sale. They were perusing the sale items when a woman
who “appeared to be white” hit and shoved McDaniel and pushed Robinson, the
suit alleges.
After McDaniel requested an apology, the other customer said, “I’m
saying nothing to you,” according to the suit.
A manager showed up to investigate and said she would call security. The
other customer continued to be rude and aggressive toward the plaintiffs
while all three of them were being detained, according to the lawsuit.
Another store manager, who was white, approached without any security
guards, according to the lawsuit. Having done no investigation, she assumed
McDaniel and Robinson were at fault because they were black and the other
customer was white, according to the complaint.
“She instructed plaintiffs in the presence of other customers to
immediately leave the store because they were in the wrong and were no longer
permitted to be there,” the suit alleges.
The plaintiffs were further dismayed when the white manager turned to
the other customer and apologized and told her to continue shopping, the suit
says.
“Plaintiffs, because they were black, were racially profiled as
suspect, unwanted (and) unworthy of being in (the) store,” their complaint
alleges.