Shoplifting suspect's wife: He didn't have to die
by JACOB JORDAN, Associated Press
Nov 27, 2012 | 5857 views | 9 9 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A shopper loads bags into a car in the parking lot of the Walmart Monday, Nov. 26, 2012, in Lithonia, Ga., where the day before a shoplifting suspect died after a confrontation with store employees. DeKalb County police spokeswoman Mekka Parish said Monday the man had not been identified and police hadn't decided whether to file any charges in the Sunday incident. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
A shopper loads bags into a car in the parking lot of the Walmart Monday, Nov. 26, 2012, in Lithonia, Ga., where the day before a shoplifting suspect died after a confrontation with store employees. DeKalb County police spokeswoman Mekka Parish said Monday the man had not been identified and police hadn't decided whether to file any charges in the Sunday incident. (AP Photo/David Goldman)
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ATLANTA (AP) — The wife of a shoplifting suspect who died after he was wrestled to the ground outside a suburban Atlanta Walmart said Tuesday that store employees used too much force to subdue him.

Vidal Calloway, 37, died Sunday after he was taken down in the parking lot of a Walmart store in Lithonia and put into a choke hold by a security guard as the employees waited on authorities, according to a police report. Store workers accused Calloway, an ex-convict, of trying to steal two Blu-ray players, which also play DVDs.

"I don't think that it should've happened," Calloway's wife Fatimah Calloway said. "He didn't deserve to die over a DVD player."

About 1:30 a.m. Sunday, a store manager asked Calloway for a receipt near the door and he ran out of the store, according to the police report. The manager, Michael Burton, grabbed Calloway and slammed him down to the ground, but Calloway fought back, punching Burton in the face, neck and chest, according to the police report. The security guard, Jaiviere Pruitt, rushed Calloway and the three men fell to the ground. Pruitt put Calloway into a headlock because he was still fighting, police said.

The guard "told the suspect to tap when he can't breathe," store employee Phille Roberts, who also helped hold Calloway down, told officers, according to the police report.

Emergency medics tried to treat Calloway, but he was unresponsive. He was later pronounced dead at a hospital. Detectives were awaiting autopsy results to determine exactly how Calloway died.

Burton and Roberts have been suspended with pay and Pruitt, a contractor working security with the store, will no longer work there, according to Bentonville, Ark.,-based Wal-Mart Inc.

"Associates are trained to disengage from situations that would put themselves or others at risk," Wal-Mart Inc. spokeswoman Dianna Gee said. "That being said, this is still an active investigation and we're working with police to provide any assistance."

Calloway had a criminal record that includes shoplifting, forgery and substance abuse.

Burton and Pruitt did not return telephone calls. A phone number for Roberts could not be immediately located.
Comments
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dumpcake
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December 01, 2012
Good job on the part of the employees for stopping this guy. He won't commit any more crimes, thankfully.

I'm sure his mother will be along shortly to tell us all how he just "fell in with the wrong crowd".
Vatican
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November 29, 2012
Ahhhh!!! Good old "The Criminal is the Victim," story. My first grader is studying the word "Consequences" in school. There is a consequence for actions. Stupidity begats danger, and danger begats sometimes injury, harm or death. Maybe this will be a lesson to other idiot shoplifters who continue to raise prices for the honest people, who go through the check out and pay for what we want, need and desire.

As far as the writer, is it really necessary to state that the Blu-Ray Player also plays DVD's? That was so unnecessary to the story...Was the writer an advertising executive, who just had to put a plug in there? Just saying......
mother5
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November 28, 2012
WELL TO ADD IN ...ITS DOENN'T MATTER WHAT TYPE OF LIFE STYLE THIS MAN LIVED THAT DON'T GIVE ANYBODY THE REASON TO CHOKE THE LIFE OUT OF SOMEONE.....THIS IS SAD , ONE THING i CAN SAY IS THAT I HAVE WORKED FOR WALMART BEFORE AND HOW WE WERE TRAINED IS THAT YOU DON'T RUN OUT THE STORE AFTER NO ONE REGAURDLESS. YOU CALL THE POLICE FIRST, AND YOU TELL THEM HOW THEY LOOK THIS WAS WRONG AND IT MAY COST WM.......MY PRAYERS GO OUT TO THIS FAMILY
Enforcer
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November 29, 2012
My prayers go out to the staff. I hope they were not injured as a result of this convicts actions.
ElephantWhip
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November 28, 2012
Once the contract security guard put him in a head-lock and said "tap if you can't breathe," liability began. Walmart had their merchandise. The police were on their way. If the deceased had chosen to flea, it would have meant more charges. If he had chosen to fight, it was 3 on one and certainly someone had a taser or a pistol.

It's called excessive force and law enforcement officers are trained to avoid it. They are also subject to liability if they use excessive force.
dbeall
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November 27, 2012
It's always a tragedy when someone dies before their expected time. However, it is very easy to criticize the employees for doing what they are trained to do: stop thieves from stealing.

The man may have had a heart condition or some other condition that made it dangerous for him to exert himself. The employees are under no obligation; moral or otherwise to assess whether that is the case when someone willingly places them-self in a situation where a confrontation is almost guaranteed.

I must respectfully disagree with those of you blaming Walmart. the employees did no wrong. The thief did wrong and paid for it with his life. Actions have consequences. What an unnecessary tragedy the thief has caused. His family is on my prayer list.
dianna428
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November 27, 2012
Dear Lied To:

This isn't a political issue. This is about common sense.

The death penalty isn't the normal consequence for shoplifting even an expensive item. These Wal-Mart folks overreacted. And it is likely to cost WM some money. As it should.

A tragedy all around.
LiedToAgainAndAgain
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November 27, 2012
Democrats will plead "This poor man is the victim of a racist society that never gave him an opportunity for a fair chance for success. The cards were stacked against him from the start. He is the actual victim, not the other way around. He is a victim as well as the product of the environment that whites placed him into for the start, from his very birth to his death."

Republicans will plead, "This life-long criminal got just what he deserved. His own personal choices and decisions ended up getting him accidentally killed. He was a victim of his own poor judgment. How many other times had this guy robbed others and never gotten caught doing it? While this incident is tragic in how it ended, when someone CHOOSES to rob others, always expect the worse, as well as the consequences that might have to be paid."

Which one, Democrat or Republican, liberal or conservative, is the correct view?
Trelicious
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November 27, 2012
Did you see her interview on the Atlanta news? She did herself no good by saying over and over again that he was on drugs and couldn't help it. Excited Delirium will be Wal-Mart's defense if she doesn't take whatever they offer her.
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