More

Woman Who Cut In Line At Walmart Could Face Prison Time In Racially Charged Incident

BETSY TAYLOR   11/16/09 05:26 PM ET   AP

Heather Ellis Walmart

ST. LOUIS — Nearly three years after Heather Ellis switched checkout lines at a southeast Missouri store and touched off what she calls a racially charged dispute with white customers and authorities, the young black schoolteacher faces a trial that could send her to prison for 15 years.

Witnesses have told authorities Ellis cut in front of waiting customers at the Walmart in Kennett on Jan. 6, 2007, shoved merchandise already placed on a conveyor belt out of the way, and became belligerent when confronted, according to court filings.

Ellis maintains she was merely joining her cousin, whose checkout line was moving more quickly. She claimed in a written complaint to the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People that she was then pushed by a white customer, hassled by store employees, called racial slurs and physically mistreated by Kennett police officers.

Police say in court documents that Ellis refused requests to calm down and leave the property, allegedly kicking one's shin and splitting another's lip. Her trial on charges of assaulting police officers, resisting arrest and disturbing the peace begins Wednesday in Dunklin County Circuit Court. A few hundred people attended a Monday rally held on Ellis' behalf by Syracuse, N.Y.-based Your Black World Coalition, according to a rally organizer, Boyce Watkins. Opponents also showed up, but the march remained peaceful, Watkins said.

A college student in New Orleans at the time of her arrest, the 24-year-old Ellis now teaches in Louisiana, where she is engaged to a state trooper. She has said she feels trapped by "small-town politics" in Kennett, where her family lives.

"What a shame the system can destroy a young person's future like this because of bad cops," Ellis wrote to the NAACP in April.

The group subsequently held a rally in Kennett. Before the June 13 event, police officers found threatening letters the size of business cards scattered along the route that said the Ku Klux Klan had paid a visit and "the next visit will not be social."

Dunklin County Prosecutor Stephen Sokoloff said the cards were removed and the source investigated but never discovered. He said he doubts the cards actually were from the KKK; he knows of no KKK presence in the area. Calls to KKK headquarters rang unanswered.

As for Ellis' allegations of mistreatment by law enforcement, Sokoloff said he's "seen absolutely no evidence of any kind, apart from her statements, that those things occurred." Kennett Police Chief Barry Tate did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Kennett is a town of roughly 11,000 residents, about 1,500 of them black. The police department also is predominantly white, but has actively worked to recruit more women and minorities, said longtime resident Charles B. Brown, who served as mayor from 1991 to 2003.

"We're a small country town with greater problems than racism. Our problems are economic," he said, explaining that Kennett needs more jobs.

Some community leaders fear the "big paint roller" being used by observers of Ellis' case has resulted in unfair portrayals of the town as prejudiced.

"They're searching their hearts and minds, and that's just not us," he said.

Sokoloff said he would have filed the same charges regardless of the races of those involved. Last week, he took himself off the case, telling the Southeast Missourian newspaper he hoped it would refocus attention on the facts. A special prosecutor was appointed.

Ellis and her lawyers, Scott Rosenblum and T.J. Hunsaker in St. Louis, declined to comment on the specifics of the case. She has previously rejected plea deals.

"Why would you plea bargain if you're innocent?" said Ellis' father, the Rev. Nathaniel Ellis of Kennett.

"This is not a matter of justice," he said. "It's a vendetta."

Ellis' written account to the NAACP describes Ellis and her cousin getting into separate checkout lanes before Ellis switched into the faster-moving line. The woman behind them had placed items on the conveyor belt, and Ellis alleged the woman pushed her when she tried to put her own items down.

Witnesses instead told police that Ellis shoved the woman's merchandise back, according to court filings.

Ellis wrote that a security officer and manager were called over and that although Ellis said she wanted to pay, the manager yelled at her to leave the store. Police were called and arrived.

Officers eventually followed her to the parking lot, she said, using racial slurs and telling her to go back to the ghetto. As her aunt and uncle drove into the parking lot, Ellis said, the officers "jumped" on her even though she said she was not resisting.

Officer A.W. Fisher wrote in a probable cause statement that Ellis was given "every opportunity" to comply with officers and leave the property. He said she used an expletive in telling him she would beat him if he put his hands on her.

Fisher said he then told Ellis she was under arrest, but she would not stop fighting while being handcuffed.

Following her arrest, Ellis alleged, she was thrown against doors on the way into jail and an officer later twisted her shirt with his knuckle to choke her while she was in custody.

"Incidents involving our customers are unfortunate and we take them seriously," Walmart spokesman Lorenzo Lopez said in a statement earlier this month. "In this matter, there was a disturbance and law enforcement was contacted, in accordance with our normal procedures. The police then determined how to proceed."

FOLLOW HUFFPOST BUSINESS

ST. LOUIS — Nearly three years after Heather Ellis switched checkout lines at a southeast Missouri store and touched off what she calls a racially charged dispute with white customers and author...
ST. LOUIS — Nearly three years after Heather Ellis switched checkout lines at a southeast Missouri store and touched off what she calls a racially charged dispute with white customers and author...
Filed by Ryan McCarthy  | 
 
 
  • Comments
  • 744
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (19 total)
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anonani
A woman of substance
11:17 PM on 11/20/2009
The police are always right, even if they are wrong.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ergon
Man From Atlan
09:56 PM on 11/20/2009
What I 'purported' to tell you was that every such case diminishes the real cause of civil rights. Now that the case was plea bargained AFTER the case went to jury, it appears that the testimony heard in court from so many witnesses was embarassing in the extreme, and would have led to a guilty verdict. Unless you want to paint every Southerner as a racist?
08:45 AM on 11/18/2009
how stupid is this.........fight to go through walmart.......wow.........i can't remember the last time i was even in walmart.........and yet this woman wanted a police record to go along with her shopping experience.........laughing
12:16 AM on 11/18/2009
Irrespective of race; looks like all adults involved were "behaving stupidly". If everyone admits to having a bad day; and apologies of everyone to one another. As far as jail time or fines, I think it's uncalled for, perhaps everyone, including the troopers and other customers involved, should all work in a soup kitchen or hand out turkeys to the needy for a day; to discover we have bigger problems in this country other than getting through lines at Wal * Mart. Perhaps learning a little humility would be good for all parties involved.
photo
brooklyncitizen
Quaerite primum regnum dei
11:35 PM on 11/17/2009
Guess these are the small town values of real America that Palin spoke so highly of.

Bunch of immature townies, the whole lot of them.
09:25 PM on 11/17/2009
sounds like lots of people behaved less than ideally...
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Thinklongterm
Conservatives are a disease....we are the cure.
09:13 PM on 11/17/2009
The real crime here is shopping at Walmart.
photo
brooklyncitizen
Quaerite primum regnum dei
11:32 PM on 11/17/2009
LOL
08:30 PM on 11/17/2009
15 years makes good headine. Racism even better. Having a bad attitude not so much. May get more milage out of story if they all set down for a beer.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
07:54 PM on 11/17/2009
Don't ever visit SE Asian then, where cutting in line is a common practice.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
traveling1
50 states, 6 continents, 53 countries and counting
09:36 PM on 11/17/2009
Definitely! I was on a trip in China a couple months ago. Besides everyone cutting in lines at the sites and shoving their way into elevators before people get out, I actually had one woman try to shove her way INTO my bathroom stall when I was getting out, using her arm to push me out of the way. Even if she really, really had urgent needs that is just ridiculous. I shoved her back and stood in the door until she backed off so I could get out. Is that racist because I'm white and she was Chinese? No. She was just freaking rude and pushy!!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anonani
A woman of substance
06:56 AM on 11/21/2009
Our history especially in small towns of a mostly homogeneous population is not especially good on race relations. While it is possible that the act was racists, sounds like it "may have" gone there if racial epithets were used. Once that happens, it looks like and sounds like....... (fill in the blank). A. racism B. stupidity and racism C. racism and anger.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anonani
A woman of substance
06:58 AM on 11/21/2009
Rude behavior, cutting in line, pushing you out of the way, running over you....flash back...Germany 2003.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kennyfasugbe
07:10 PM on 11/17/2009
The prosecutor seeking 15 years for this incidence is the real story here. And it is blatantly a RACIST way of pursuing justice. Common now! Granted, that woman did what was socially unacceptable, but that in itself is not a felony.
Oh, what about a video recording to see what actually happened? I forgot, the white cops and the white wall mart management won't be able to find it. Who knows what the impartial truth would reveal through such a video recording of the event.
Give her a fre@king probation and trash this story where it belongs. In the garbage!
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
skatoolaki
Passionate, fiery walking contradiction.
08:22 PM on 11/17/2009
You're so quick to yell "racism", yet your statement screams the same. "white Wal-Mart management" this and "white cops" that.

I doubt seriously that every witness in the store that day was white; why has no one come forward to corroborate her story?

Even if she's being charged with 15 years, you and I both know there is *no way* she is going to get that. Probation is likely all she'll get, if that. Stop making a mountain out of a molehill. What she did was wrong and the "white" woman behind in line had every right to start something and have management called. Did this woman act all sweet and innocent while she was asked to move back or while the cops were called? Something tells me "no" - unless every witness in the store that day is all in on this together and lying (impossible).

She assaulted police officers and resisted arrest. Those are serious charges; I don't care what color her skin is.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
09:21 PM on 11/17/2009
Fanned!
09:28 PM on 11/17/2009
yeah, sounds like she cut in line, and was wrong to do so, but it also sounds like the woman behind her over reacted a bit. Is it really worth "starting something" over that? There so many more important things to 'start something' over than some line cutting...
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bola47
05:47 PM on 11/17/2009
as a nation we are totally stressed out. life is bad for everyone except the top 1% so just accept the fact and calm down.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:47 PM on 11/17/2009
I have no idea if the actions of the other customers and police were racist, I'd have to be there to form my own opinion. But I do know Missouri, and it is possible they treated her differently than they would have a white person. Maybe they didn't, like I said, I don't know.
BUT
This cutting in line business is truly obnoxious, and I would like to see people in jail for doing it. I've gotten into arguments with (white) people who cut in front of me.
At Walmart, or Costco, or supermarkets, etc., people pick a line by looking at what's already in line in waiting. Naturally, they choose the smallest line (or if they know the cashiers, they factor in the faster cashiers). At McDonald's, or at a movie line, on the other hand, you just count the number of people. I don't care if a party of two splits up at McDs, or at the cinema, it doesn't effect my choice if I see two together or a single person. But at Walmart ... all of a sudden a big cart full of stuff starts trying to butt in to join their cousin or spouse or whoever ... No. That's a jailable offense.
Well, okay, I'm exaggerating. Not jailable. But it's really rude, no matter how many people do it.
01:41 PM on 11/17/2009
Its certainly rude to see that another line is moving faster and move your stuff to the front of that line even if your cousin is there. But I can also see how the incident might have escalated from there. Sometimes we need to take a deep breath in the middle of things. And sometimes things don't need to be made into criminal charges.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
munki
Global to Local now Local to Global
01:02 PM on 11/17/2009
Cutting line and shoving someone's purchases itself is a CRIME!

NEED not be racial!

I had many occasions - women just come around and took my parking space during holiday seasons...

My little boy and I were stunned then... ever since, I decided not to go shopping, but buy on internet.

There are rude people, it need not be racial !!!!

Using racial as an excuse should stop!
03:38 PM on 11/20/2009
Actually I agree that it's not necessarily "racism" here. But there was videotape that didn't back up the witnesses claims that she was "yelling" or being "loud"...in fact, several of them have walked back their stories a bit. The other lady involved (the white one) did admit that she shoved Ellis first.

But some clarification:

Ellis' cousin was standing in another line...so as to have two people standing in line so they got through checkout quicker. The cousin didn't have any items...just holding a space in line. The lady went in front of Ellis' cousin...Ellis changed lines and went in front of the lady (who cut in front of Ellis' cousin). That's how the situation started.

I REALLY doubt that a 24 year old TEACHER would go out into the parking lot and immediately threaten to kick a male cops' "ass" if he tried to arrest her. Doesn't add up. If she wasn't threatening the lady who SHOVED her, why would she threaten to beat up police officers?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
12:41 PM on 11/17/2009
It's always everyone else's fault. It's nice to know that any time I lose my temper and blow up I can blame it on everyone else and so many people in society would be more than happy to back me up on it.

Has anyone ever heard of a single instance where the NAACP took a complaint from a black person and said, "No, we're not going to back you up on this. Based on the evidence, it really appears that you got out of control"? Zero credibility whatsoever.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Kia Williams
Lover of Most Things
08:43 PM on 11/21/2009
Yes there are instances. All the time in fact. the point is, they don't back up the people they feel are wrong, which is why we don't hear about it.