Crosswords1 min ago
My Neighbour Was In M And S Today.
She told me that she was given a tresspassing document and told not to go back in any of their shops. When I asked what happened she said that she had been to the hairdressers and been in there 2 hours and had had nothing to eat. Wrongly she picked up some fruit meaning to go to the till and pay for it and forgot and started eating it. She is in here late 80's and gets confused at times. They took her to an office and questioned her, said they wouldnt call the police. She is very shaken up. They got her details and got her to sign a paper saying she was tresspassing in M and S. They said it would go no further but she said how will they know her will they have taken a photo ?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by tamaris. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
-- answer removed --
I know about trespassing documents...they are part of the banned from one banned from all scheme to discourage shoplifting without it going to court. If what we have been told is the whole story, maybe Age Concern or the GP might help? It certainly doesn't seem to be behaviour that M and S would generally demonstrate....are you on facebook? maybe a private message to them via their facebook page might get more information?
“…maybe a private message to them via their facebook page might get more information?”
Personally, if the circumstances are as you describe, I would start with this man:
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne
Executive Director of Customer, Marketing and MS.com
Marks and Spencer Group plc
Waterside House
35 North Wharf Road
London
W2 1NW
I find you usually get better results if you avoid the CEO but choose somebody at board level, so leave Steve Rowe, the CEO, alone. Your enquiry will still almost certainly be dealt with by a lackey, but you should get a better response. You might ask them whether this is the way they treat customers of 80-odd years old and whether they treat all suspected thieves in that way, regardless of the circumstances. Methinks an over-zealous (and idiotic) store manager may be the cause of this.
Personally, if the circumstances are as you describe, I would start with this man:
Patrick Bousquet-Chavanne
Executive Director of Customer, Marketing and MS.com
Marks and Spencer Group plc
Waterside House
35 North Wharf Road
London
W2 1NW
I find you usually get better results if you avoid the CEO but choose somebody at board level, so leave Steve Rowe, the CEO, alone. Your enquiry will still almost certainly be dealt with by a lackey, but you should get a better response. You might ask them whether this is the way they treat customers of 80-odd years old and whether they treat all suspected thieves in that way, regardless of the circumstances. Methinks an over-zealous (and idiotic) store manager may be the cause of this.
^ Excellent answer from NJ.
They will have taken a photo ,which will have been entered into the facial recognition system.
But if the story is just as told ,them M&S are WAY over the top. I did not think they would a trespass notice for a single event,especially one as minor as this. I know a person who got one but it was only after three warnings inside a month .
They will have taken a photo ,which will have been entered into the facial recognition system.
But if the story is just as told ,them M&S are WAY over the top. I did not think they would a trespass notice for a single event,especially one as minor as this. I know a person who got one but it was only after three warnings inside a month .