Black veteran wrongly called thief and banned from every Morrisons
An ex-police sergeant who was banned from every Morrisons store in the UK after being wrongly accused of shoplifting has called for an apology.
Jez Daniels believes he was âracially profiledâ by staff, who accused him of acting suspiciously while buying rosĂ© wine and chocolates at a shop in Newport.
He said he was wearing a face mask because of Covid restrictions at the time, adding: âThey saw a black guy with his face covered up and assumed he must be here to steal.â
Morrisons said it did not want to comment.
Mr Daniels, an RAF veteran in his 40s, said he was now âvery uncomfortableâ in supermarkets.
It was in February 2022, during the Covid pandemic, that he was followed around the Morrisons store in Rogerstone, Newport.
âI was wearing a surgical-style face mask â in compliance with store policy, with Welsh government legislation as well,â Mr Daniels said.
He intended to buy wine, and chocolate for his children â but said he became aware of staff following him.
âI knew straight away that they decided I was a thief,â he said.
âI thought, OK, well, if I carry on with what Iâm doing, the staff will realise Iâm not trying to steal â and theyâll leave me alone.â
He then picked up some crisps, and said he even held his shopping bag open to show he was not trying to hide anything.
Mr Daniels, who served as a police officer in two forces, and was also a volunteer firefighter, said: âThey cornered me in the aisle.
âThey had staff either end â I started to fear for my safety.â
He decided to leave, which is when he was approached by a staff member who told him he was banned and to get out.
âI was very disappointed,â he added.
âTo be blunt, I think itâs because they saw a black guy with his face covered up and then they just assumed he must be in here to steal.â
He contacted Morrisonsâ head office, but said he felt âgaslitâ by their response.
BBC Wales has seen an email from the company to Mr Daniels, which reads: âYou are now no longer able to shop with us or enter a Morrisons store.
âThe reason for this decision is due to your recent behaviour as observed in the store.â
In other documents seen by BBC Wales, a staff member described Mr Daniels as shouting âaggressive abusive wordsâ.
Another employee said they became suspicious when he âentered the store without a basket or trolleyâ, and went âstraight to the alcohol aisleâ.
Mr Daniels said he was also accused of picking up ÂŁ200-worth of spirits â something he denies.
âSince the Morrisons incident, Iâve spoken to a lot of people, white people,â he said.
âIâve told them some of the things that Morrisons have said was suspicious â and they say âbut I do that, Iâve never been stoppedâ.â
Mr Daniels runs a cybersecurity business from his office in Newport and counts the UK government among his clients.
He used his professional knowledge to make a Data Subject Access Request â this required the supermarket to provide CCTV footage and staff statements about him.
After watching the CCTV footage, Mr Daniels said he âfelt vindicatedâ.
He said he had been starting to doubt his memory of what happened, but added: âThe CCTV recordings matched my recollection of events, they did not show what Morrisons claimed.
âThey did not show me being aggressive. They did not show me abandoning trolleys. They did not show me in possession of ÂŁ200-worth of spirits.
âEven just talking about it now is triggering.â
Mr Daniels then confronted Morrisons with its own footage.
BBC Wales has seen an email from the company acknowledging âdiscrepancies in the statements provided by the store and what the CCTV footage showsâ â but did not comment on allegations he took ÂŁ200-worth of alcohol.
The email said âas a gesture of goodwillâ it was lifting the ban, but it continued to accuse Mr Daniels of âacting suspiciouslyâ and behaving aggressively.
It added there was âno racial motivation behind the complaintâ, and a staff member denied being racist.
Mr Daniels said he now wants an apology and an acknowledgement what happened was wrong.
He said: âThey insisted it was all my fault â what I would like now is recognition from Morrisons that their staff were wrong.â
He now tries to avoid supermarkets, with the incident leaving him feeling âanxious and fearfulâ.
âItâs just the whole supermarket environment, Iâm very uncomfortable in it, so I do my shopping online,â he said.
Mr Daniels is so concerned about âconsumer racial profilingâ â where shoppers believe they are approached because of the colour of their skin â that he has taught his children âdefensive techniquesâ to avoid being accused of shoplifting.
âItâs not a new phenomenon â Iâve lived here all my life,â he said.
âItâs only really in the last five years that the rest of society are starting to acknowledge it actually does exist.â