Meijer big box retailer under fire for arresting young autistic employee who stole food

A Midwest retail giant is under bipartisan fire for calling the police on a 19-year-old autistic deli worker who also just happens to be a thief.

The incident at a Michigan Meijer store actually occurred on March 7th of LAST YEAR but has just now gone viral on social media.

The incident involved James Denison, a 19-year-old autistic deli worker who stole $110 of food over a 3-month period, according to MLive.com.

Watch the full bodycam footage of his arrest here (X is mysteriously not allowing the video to be embedded), or watch a snippet below:

Denison openly admitted in the video to stealing food during his break with the intention to later pay it back.

“It started off slow,” he said. “It happened a couple of times because, like, I forgot my wallet or something, and then I meant to pay it, and then when I had my wallet the following day I either just forgot or I didn’t know who to talk to.”

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According to Upworthy, he specifically ate fruit cups and cooked chicken from a bin containing items that were going to be thrown away. Moreover, his managers were aware of his thefts but quietly allowed it until he’d eaten over $100 worth of food. Only then did they call the police.

Denison was ultimately arrested on charges of minor theft and later released with a generous $0 bond.

With footage of his arrest having gone viral, a boycott has now erupted, with critics blasting Meijer for forcing Denison to go through the process of being arrested, fingerprinted, and booked.

Look (*Language warning):

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Meijer has, for its part, bent the knee to the bipartisan outrage mob.

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“We take this very seriously and recognize that the situation should have been handled differently,” the company said in a statement. “Earlier this year, we implemented a new procedure to make sure this doesn’t happen again.”

“We’ve learned a great deal of experience. We hold ourselves to a higher standard and are committed to making sure our actions reflect how we want to treat each other,” the statement continued.

But there are critics who say that Meijer did nothing wrong and was completely in the right to pursue Denison’s arrest. Critics also argue that the arrest on a minor, minor, minor charge will teach him a good lesson.

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Vivek Saxena

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