FERGUSON, Missouri — The massive law enforcement presence here has been focused in part on defending local businesses from the nighttime looting and vandalism that has plagued the area since the August 9th shooting of Michael Brown. But some business owners and employees say they just can’t count on the police for protection.
Meanwhile, they add, concerns about violence and chaos — as well as the sheer disruption to regular life — have driven away customers, impacting their bottom line.
“It’s killing us,” said Roderick Griffiths, as he shaved a customer’s head at Prime Time Barber Shop. “I don’t think people are focused on a haircut right now. They got other things on their minds.”
On Saturday night, looters smashed windows and emptied the display cases at St. Louis Cordless Communications, directly across W. Florissant Avenue from the corner store where Brown is said to have stolen cigars. Numerous other stores along Florissant have been looted and vandalized as protest over the killing of the unarmed teen have sometimes given way to violence and mayhem.
Sonny Dayan, the electronic store’s owner, said that because police were out in force in front of the corner store where the cigars were taken, he assumed his business would be safe, too.
“I thought to myself, ‘I got 60 police officers straight across from my shop, I really don’t have to worry,’” said Dayan, who has run the store for nearly two decades. So Dayan said he went home at 9 p.m. — and the police left a few hours later, too.
“What kind of help is that?” he asked. “You’re protecting in the day when everyone can see, and then you leave at midnight?”
“I didn’t feel secure, and I don’t feel secure today,” Dayan added. “Every night its an iffy night. You watch it on TV and you don’t know if the alarm company is gonna call you in the middle of the night.”
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Charles Davis, who runs the Ferguson Burger Bar just up the street, said it’s not police he’s looking to for help.
“I have a big friend,” Davis said. “His name is God.”
Davis said that wasn’t meant as a criticism of the police. He acknowledged that there’s too much potential for chaos for them to guard every business all night. “If something else breaks out down the street, I fully expect them to go to that and leave us open,” he said.
Gov. Jay Nixon noted the need to protect local businesses when he announced Monday he was calling in the National Guard.









