Shopkeeper told by police to take down sign calling shoplifters ‘scumbags’

Rob Davies, owner of Run Ragged, holding the notice
Wrexham shopkeeper Rob Davies said his notice labelling shoplifters ‘scumbags’ was ‘honest and straight from the heart’ (Picture: Newsquest)

A shop owner has been told by police to remove a sign branding thieves as ‘scumbags’.

Rob Davies, 61, who runs Run Ragged, a shop selling retro vintage items in Wrexham, North Wales, installed a notice warning shoppers he had lockedcabinets due to a recent spate of thefts.

He said he had lost around £280 due to shoplifting alone in the last year, during which he had caught five thieves in the act.

The sign read: ‘Due to scumbags shoplifting, ask for assistance to open cabinets. Thank you.’

However officers took a different view, telling the store owner that his notice was ‘provocative and potentially offensive’.

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But Mr Davies has remained defiant he will not change the message despite being advised by police to reword it.

A store owner put up a sign describing shoplifters as ?scumbags? - and had a warning from police about it being offensive. Crime-hit shopkeeper Rob Davies put up notices across the shop to inform customers that some cabinets were locked due to shoplifters. His home-made notice states: "Due to scumbags shoplifting, please ask for assistance to open cabinets". But to his surprise, officers turned up to the retro shop called Run Ragged in Wrexham, North Wales, due to a complaint made about his shop signs Mr Davies said: "It apparently caused offence to someone. The only people it should be causing offence to are the shoplifters. "One person whinges about a sign, and the police turn up and ask if I can take the signs down. "I have a legitimate reason to complain to the police due to thieving, they don't turn up." He said that the shop is subjected to theft and has given up reporting it to the police - and instead has taken his own steps to protect his stock. Rob, 61,said police had turned up about his signs that could be seen "as provocative and offensive". Mr Davies said he had been "advised me to re word them?- but said a rewording would "not happen". He said: "You couldn't make it up. When I asked who it could offend I was told a member of the public had reported the sign to them,I just wonder if that person was a shoplifter who was offended as it was detrimental to their work? ?Well guys if you know me you will know I don?t mean to cause offence but in this case please feel free to be offended and stop frequenting my shop you are no loss? Mr Davies has spent the last five years running the quirky shop that sells vintage clothing and accessories. "This is my livelihood," he said. "When people are stealing your safety net, what are you supposed to do? "In the last year I've caught five shoplifters, reported all of them. "The police came out to the first one, handed me back the shirt the guy had stolen and told him to get on his way." Mr Davies said he's lost about ?200 worth of stock to shoplifting, adding: "Every penny counts for me." "But it seems like the big names like Tesco and the Co-op are the ones prolific shoplifters are being banned from," he said. "It's compounded with the cost of living, the business rates and everything else. Domestic electricity bills are a totally different price to commercial - commercial is nearly double. "When you're not getting back up by the authorities you're paying for, it's really difficult." Mr Davies said he received a lot of great support about the matter. One fellow shopkeeper gave him another sign reading: "If you find anything offensive here please let us know so we can have a good laugh." He added: "It means a lot, and restored my faith that there is that sense of community." North Wales Police has been approached to comment. WALES NEWS SERVICE
Mr Davies’ sign on the window of his Run Ragged store told customers to ask for assistance with locked cabinets due to ‘scumbags shoplifting’ (Picture: Wales News Service)

He insisted that the only people who should be offended by his warning areshoplifters.

‘Well, guys, if you know me, you will know I don’t mean to cause offence but in this case, please feel free to be offended and stop frequenting my shop’, he said.

The frustrated shopkeeper said his note was ‘straight from the heart and honest’.

Mr Davies told TalkTV: ‘It’s absolutely mad. I spent a couple of days thinking about a note to go on my cabinets.

‘Various people saw it and laughed and joked. But then I had a police officer and PCSO ‘provocative and potentially offensive’

‘When I asked him who it could be offensive to he didn’t have an answer to that.’

He added that police had failed to deal with thieves in his shop, including one shoplifter he caught trying to steal a shirt.

‘They came in and basically took a basic set of details from him and handed back the shirt’, he said.

A store owner put up a sign describing shoplifters as ?scumbags? - and had a warning from police about it being offensive. Crime-hit shopkeeper Rob Davies put up notices across the shop to inform customers that some cabinets were locked due to shoplifters. His home-made notice states: "Due to scumbags shoplifting, please ask for assistance to open cabinets". But to his surprise, officers turned up to the retro shop called Run Ragged in Wrexham, North Wales, due to a complaint made about his shop signs Mr Davies said: "It apparently caused offence to someone. The only people it should be causing offence to are the shoplifters. "One person whinges about a sign, and the police turn up and ask if I can take the signs down. "I have a legitimate reason to complain to the police due to thieving, they don't turn up." He said that the shop is subjected to theft and has given up reporting it to the police - and instead has taken his own steps to protect his stock. Rob, 61,said police had turned up about his signs that could be seen "as provocative and offensive". Mr Davies said he had been "advised me to re word them?- but said a rewording would "not happen". He said: "You couldn't make it up. When I asked who it could offend I was told a member of the public had reported the sign to them,I just wonder if that person was a shoplifter who was offended as it was detrimental to their work? ?Well guys if you know me you will know I don?t mean to cause offence but in this case please feel free to be offended and stop frequenting my shop you are no loss? Mr Davies has spent the last five years running the quirky shop that sells vintage clothing and accessories. "This is my livelihood," he said. "When people are stealing your safety net, what are you supposed to do? "In the last year I've caught five shoplifters, reported all of them. "The police came out to the first one, handed me back the shirt the guy had stolen and told him to get on his way." Mr Davies said he's lost about ?200 worth of stock to shoplifting, adding: "Every penny counts for me." "But it seems like the big names like Tesco and the Co-op are the ones prolific shoplifters are being banned from," he said. "It's compounded with the cost of living, the business rates and everything else. Domestic electricity bills are a totally different price to commercial - commercial is nearly double. "When you're not getting back up by the authorities you're paying for, it's really difficult." Mr Davies said he received a lot of great support about the matter. One fellow shopkeeper gave him another sign reading: "If you find anything offensive here please let us know so we can have a good laugh." He added: "It means a lot, and restored my faith that there is that sense of community." North Wales Police has been approached to comment. WALES NEWS SERVICE
Mr Davies has run Run Ragged, which sells retro vintage gifts, for five years (Picture: Wales News Service)

The shopkeeper, who has run Run Ragged for five years, having previously worked as a weapons expert, including supervising fight scenes in famous films including Gladiator and Braveheart.

He said he had received a great deal of support from locals, with one neighbouring shopkeeper sending him a sign reading: ‘If you find anything offensive here please let us know so we can have a good laugh’.

North Wales Police said it deals with shoplifters ‘robustly’ and takes all reports of theft seriously.

But the force added that it took a ‘proactive approach’ to signposting as well as to assisting offenders struggling with substance or alcohol misuse.

Wrexham City District Inspector Rhodri Ifans said his team had the best record on detecting shoplifters within the north Wales force over the past two years.

He told Daily Mail: ‘Protecting staff, businesses and their customers from this type of criminality, which has created a significant impact on their wellbeing and business, is a priority in Wrexham city.’

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