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Officers respond to Augusta grocery store eviction (Food gets trashed - Not given away)
Online Athens ^ | 03/27/2013 | By Steve Crawford and Meg Mirshak

Posted on 03/27/2013 9:32:22 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd

Richmond County sheriff’s officers were called Tuesday to fend off crowds outside an Augusta grocery store hoping to make off with merchandise that had been set out during an eviction.

Officials estimated 200-300 people filled the parking lot at Laney Supermarket after word spread that the Richmond County Marshal’s Office was enforcing an eviction at the business.

Officials said onlookers became angry when they learned they would not be allowed to take away food and other sundries that were piled outside the grocery as “abandoned property.”

The crowd dissipated after a swarm of deputies arrived, along with Sheriff Richard Roundtree, to assist the three marshals who had been initailly assigned to the eviction.

“There is the potential to have people fighting and causing problems,” said Lt. Calvin Chew. “That’s not something we want.”

There were no arrests in the resulting confusion, but groups of people remained to watch the proceedings, many clutching empty bags and grumbling about the situation. Tiffany Serles said she heard about the eviction from her aunt who lives nearby.

“She said they evicting Gurley’s,” Serles said, referring to the former name of the neighborhood market. “So, I came down here to get some of the stuff.” Serles was watching with several friends while workers scooped up the food and other merchandise in trash cans which were in turn, dumped into two waiting garbage bins that officials said were destined for the Richmond County Landfill.

“It’s a shame that they are just throwing all this stuff away and not even donating it to a shelter or anything,” she said.

Her friend, Victoria Williams, said she heard about the eviction on Facebook, as did many others. Word spread fast and soon the parking lot was packed with people and cars waiting for a chance to take away the spoils. “There are people with babies who need diapers out here,” she said.

Teresa Russell, chief deputy with the Marshal’s Office, said the landlord, SunTrust Bank, was paying to have the displaced merchandise hauled away.

She said the tenant, Il Ki Choi, of Sun and Food LLC, could have avoided the commotion if he had moved out when notified by the court.

“They’ve known about this since Feb. 13,” Russell said. “They could have moved out anytime before today.” SunTrust notified the tenant on Jan. 1 that he had 30 days to vacate the property because the lease would not be renewed, according to court records.

A court ordered eviction notice was served Feb. 13. Russell said the tenant failed to file an answer, so a judge signed the final order Feb. 27. SunTrust delayed scheduling the eviction until Tuesday.

According to Russell, a final notice was posted on the grocery’s door on Friday. The tenant removed some goods from the store Tuesday morning before leaving, she said. When reached by phone Tuesday afternoon, Choi said he was busy and could not answer questions.

Johanne Vargas, an agent for property manager FirstService Residential Realty based in Sandy Springs, Ga., said she was unable to discuss the matter when asked why the groceries were not donated.

Joseph Young, who helps run a youth mentoring program in the same shopping center as the supermarket, watched marshal’s stand guard as food was tossed into the trash. “We could have gotten some of this stuff and done something special for the kids this weekend,” Young said.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events; US: Georgia
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To: ExCTCitizen
"And if someone get sick or worse,"

I've seen this exact situation before, and its because THEY FIGHT OVER IT that it has to be trashed.
If they gave it away, a lawyer would find a way to make them liable for fight injuries.
Once they put it all in a dumpster, they can walk away from liability.
21 posted on 03/27/2013 7:48:33 PM PDT by 45semi (A police state is always preceded by a nanny state...)
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To: 45semi

I worked in a supermarket during the Oct 11 snow storm in the northeast. Normally in power outages, we could get plenty of dry ice for frozen foods, reefer trailers for the open refrigerated case or large diesel generators to run the refrigeration racks in a extended outage. The natural gas gensets in the store only carried lights, POS, pones, and a few outlets.

With most of CT, MA and RI out we couldn’t get enough dry ice or trailers and the nearest generators (500kW range) ended up coming from the Carolinas about 48-72 hrs after the power went out. We almost had customers fight over melted ice cream that had been sitting in glass door cases with no refrigeration for 72 hrs.


22 posted on 03/27/2013 9:39:32 PM PDT by matt04
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies]


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