A Chicago comics store was vandalized by pride parade screwballs who wanted to assault a woman
A popular Lakeview comics shop suffered thousands of dollars in damages after a large group of people attacked a woman in the store after the Pride Parade.I hope she's okay, and the store employees too. The site of Block Club Chicago doesn't even search for or theorize exact details for why this happened. Was the women somebody who disagreed with LGBT ideology, and the creeps who invaded the store despised her for that so much, they went miles out of their way to break the law and even vandalize somebody's business? Or were they looking for excuses to attack one of their own? The clerk was quoted saying:
The area around Chicago Comics, 3244 N. Clark St., “got a little nuts” shortly after officials said the parade would be canceled because of rain Sunday, said Raphael Espinoza, who’s worked at the comic shop for more than a decade. The attack on the woman left him and other Chicago Comics employees shaken and dealing with damages of $2,500-$3,000, he said.
At about 4 p.m. Sunday, a woman came into the store looking “exasperated,” Espinoza said. She asked employees to call 911 and went to the back of the store; shortly afterward, two or three friends of hers came in and also asked employees to call 911.
Espinoza was going to call the police when about 20 people “stormed through the front door,” knocking over glass display cases as they sought out the woman who had come in first, Espinoza said.
Espinoza tried to block the group from getting to the woman and her friends and the group’s members threatened him.
“‘No, you’re not going to get past me,'” Espinoza said he told the crowd. “I don’t know what’s happening but there [were] way more people trying to come after this individual and no matter what the circumstances that doesn’t seem like a fair situation.”
But some of the crowd members went down a different aisle to get to the woman. The crowd cornered the woman and about three of them started spraying her with pepper spray while the others grabbed hardcovers books and products and threw it at her.
The group got spooked — possibly by someone saying they’d called 911, Espinoza said — and went outside. Espinoza tried to lock them out but they threatened him again, saying they’d break down the doors to get to the woman.
It wasn’t until there was a siren in the distance that the group’s members ran off.
Espinoza locked the door and checked on the woman, who was begging for an ambulance, he said. Her face was red, her eyes bloodshot and she was crying for help.
Espinoza told the woman and her friends not to leave until an ambulance came to the door because he could still see members of the group circling the store.
It was about 15 minutes before the ambulance got to Chicago Comics and the woman was taken off to a hospital.
“It was a lot to process. It was a lot to figure out what was going on, but a lot of it was things I wasn’t gonna get answers for, like why they were chasing her. What happened?” Espinoza said. “A lot of it was trying to figure out what the next step was.”Or, why doesn't anybody seriously ask for clear answers? We can't prevent this kind of lunacy from continuing if we don't ask bold queries about serious issues.
Espinoza said the customers who were left in the store helped him clean and were still interested in buying items, which helped the shop. The estimate of $2,500-$3,000 in damages covers ruined comic books, hardcovers and knickknacks and doesn’t take into account the display cases that were broken, he said.Well thank goodness they're physically unscathed. But here we have another case of repellent screwballs running amok committing assault and vandalism, and, if it matters, even showing utter contempt for the comics art form by destroying valuable book copies, both hardcover and softcover. And if this site's not going to do some meat-and-potatoes reporting, we'll never know the exact reason for why the gang assaulted the girl. Just utterly sick.
The shop’s employees, including Espinoza, were unharmed but were shocked at what happened and the threats that had been leveled against them. He doesn’t know what happened, if anything, between the woman and the large group that led to the attack.
“We were just a little bit shook over the situation and how fast it escalated and just how quickly everything happened,” Espinoza said. “I think we’re mostly just mentally shook, but physically we are fine.”
And it could even explain another reason why comics specialty stores are going out of business.
Labels: misogyny and racism, politics, sales, terrorism, violence
They carried the sign of the rainbow colored swastika.
Posted by Mr. Bee | 7:30 PM
"Or, why doesn't anybody seriously ask for clear answers? We can't prevent this kind of lunacy from continuing if we don't ask bold queries about serious issues."
Ask who? The people in question re long gone.
Posted by Anonymous | 7:33 PM
Perhaps they were just randomly trashing stuff? People don't need a good reason to go on a rampage you know.
Posted by Anonymous | 7:27 PM