| Area businesses want more police patrols (Toronto Sun) |
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By JENNY YUEN, Toronto SUN
Chinatown business associations want bolstered
police patrols after a supermarket owner's wife and two employees were recently
assaulted by an accused shoplifter.
Two months after Lucky Moose owner David Chen was
charged with kidnapping and assaulting a person he alleges was stealing from
his store, a similar incident occurred July 18 at Wah Lung Supermarket on
Spadina Ave.
"We want them to help with some short-term
solutions," Ralph Hui, immediate past-president of the Toronto Chinese
Business Association (TCBA) and Chinatown festival chariman, said at a
press conference yesterday.
The call for more patrol officers was echoed by the
Toronto Chinese Business Association (TCBA).
"If they have more police in pairs walking the
streets for at least two or three weeks, it will minimize these
occurrences," Hui said.
Employees of Wah Lung said they saw a woman conceal
groceries in her clothes without paying for them.
When confronted outside the store, the woman went
back in and allegedly punched the owner's wife, said Const. Tony Vella.
In a letter to Supt. Hugh Ferguson of 52 Division,
the TCBA expressed concerns that police didn't immediately
charge the alleged shoplifter.
"It may send a message to the public that the
Toronto Police force is condoning crimes to be committed in Chinatown,"
said Stephen Chan, chairman of the CBIA.
It's not always clear what's gone on when officers
arrive, Vella said, and if the case requires more investigation, the Crime
Investigation Bureau interviews more witnesses.
The TCBIA is encouraging Chinatown shopkeepers to
report even the smallest incidents to police so there will be available data to
back up requests for more officers.
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