Park Slope Deli Owner Tries to Shame Shoplifters Thieves of the Week video

A fed up Brooklyn deli owner has come up with a new way to try to stop a group of local teenagers from stealing from his popular Park Slope store again – public denunciations.

Majid Arbahri, owner of the Green Olives Deli & Grill Juice Bar on Seventh Avenue, began playing a Thieves of the Week video behind the counter, hoping it would deter a group of troubled local high school girls from blindly robbing him.

“I told them when I first caught them about four weeks ago that I would if they repeated theft,” Arbahri, 25, told The Post on Wednesday.

“They said they were going to do it again and then they did it again,” he said. “There are other people who steal. We catch them and tell them to leave it and never come back and they don’t come back. But these people, they don’t feel embarrassed.

“They steal and come again and again,” he said.

Majid Arbahri, owner of the Green Olives Deli & Grill Juice Bar in Park Slope, says a group of local high school students were constantly shoplifting.
Majid Arbahri, owner of Green Olives Deli & Grill Juice Bar in Park Slope, says a group of local high school students were constantly shoplifting.
Paul Martinka
Green Olives Deli & Grill Juice Bar in Park Slope.
Arbahri wants to shame the teen thieves in his Park Slope store.
Paul Martinka

The 30-second video shows four schoolgirls entering the store, with at least one of them stuffing her coat pockets with chips and other snacks, while the rest stand guard.

They eventually leave without paying.

Therefore, Arbakhri took drastic measures.

“I told them if you guys need something I can give you because sometimes people call and order sandwiches and they don’t take them,” Arbahri said. “I told them, ‘We can give you sandwiches for free.’

“But they just want to steal,” he said. “For them, it’s fun. But for us, it’s a business.”

Theives of the Week video by Green Olives Deli

A still from Green Olives Deli’s “Thieves of the Week” video.


Theives of the Week video by Green Olives Deli

“The first time I was caught, about four weeks ago, I told them I would do it if they repeated the theft,” owner Majid Arbahri, 25, told The Post on Wednesday.


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Theives of the Week video by Green Olives Deli

The 30-second video shows four schoolgirls entering the store, with at least one of them stuffing her coat pockets with chips and other snacks, while the rest stand guard.


Theives of the Week video by Green Olives Deli

“They just want to steal. For them, it’s fun. But for us it is a business,” Arbakhri said.


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Other students at the John Jay Education Campus, an all-girls school about four blocks away, told The Post that the video had little effect on the alleged thieves.

“They laughed at it,” said 16-year-old student Jose Robles. – They have a problem. They do not care. They just don’t want to go to the store anymore. They said they regret it, but I highly doubt it.

“I just think it’s stupid to come here to steal,” Robles said. They have money, I’m sure.

Arbahri said he has spread the word about the video to other John Jay students who frequent Green Olives, but is not sure the public stigma is producing the desired results.

“I don’t think they were even embarrassed,” he said. “Someone told me they like it. They don’t want to come back, but it doesn’t bother them.”

Video
Majid Arbahri hopes his “Thieves of the Week” video will deter local thieves at his Park Slope store.
Paul Martinka
Green Olives Delicacies "Thieves of the Week"
“I just think it’s stupid to come here to steal. They have money, I’m sure,” said 16-year-old José Robles (right), who said he goes to school with girls.
Paul Martinka

He said he even talked to the principal of the school and sent him a video.

“He said they did it outside the school, so there is nothing they can do,” Arbahri said. “I told him, ‘At least you can tell them it’s a bad habit.’

A drastic video shame ploy comes as Park Slope merchants rebel against a surge in shoplifting and theft in the area.

The Post reported on Tuesday that the number of petty and major thefts in the area has skyrocketed by 55% in the first nine months of 2022 compared to 2021.

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texasstandard.news contributed to this report.

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