That's right, it needs to be determined by a court, which is why the police
should have arrested Allyn as well.
The facts are that no citizen can make a citizen's arrest unless a felony is in progress. There was no felony in progress, so a citizen's arrest could not happen and Allyn Gibson could not argue that's what he was invoking.
In regard specifically to shoplifting, no merchant is allowed to:
If there was a question of whether or not assault/chokeholds constituted undue restraint, the police
should have arrested Allyn and allowed the courts to decide. Hence the protest and citizens believing racial bias, both on the part of Gibson's and the police.
I'm not finding anything discussing exactly what constitutes undue restraint
Considering the fact that, just prior to that part, merchants are explicitly not allowed to search the person or seize any property belonging to them "without the person's consent" I'd say it's pretty easy to determine that prolonged physical assault--for a misdemeanor offense--would be undue.
but I did find a case where the shoplifter died and it wasn't considered undue restraint and his mother got nothing in the civil suit.
Link. And note that, if true and in the same district in Ohio, then all you've presented would be evidence of a pattern of malfeasance.
ETA: Although from an Ohio law firm, I found
this:
In 2004 shoplifting laws were modified so that the right of the shopkeeper to detain a person is limited to "a reasonable manner for a reasonable length of time within the mercantile establishment or its immediate vicinity." They cannot arrest you at your home. They do not have the right to force you off the road. They do not have the right to tackle you if you are not resisting. They do not have the right to use unnecessary force. They must be in the vicinity of their store.
And there's this (same source):
Did you exit the store? Did you pass the front registers? The law states you must deprive the owner of the property. If you intended to pay and did not pass the registers or exit the store, the law may not apply.
What happens when a subject inside the store hides an item in his or her pocket and is arrested prior to leaving the store? That becomes the decision of the judge or the jury. Did that person remove a security tag prior to putting it in his pocket? Did he or she remove the packaging or price tag? Intent can be shown prior to leaving the store.
From the Oberlin petition for summary judgment (emphasis mine):
On the late afternoon of November 9, 2016, the 32-year-old son and grandson of the owners of Gibson's Bakery—an institution in the City of Oberlin—violently and unreasonably attacked an unarmed 19-year-old Oberlin College student who he suspected of trying to steal two bottles of wine from his family's store while purchasing another bottle with a fake ID. This Bakery employee accosted the student inside the store, then chased the student out of the store across West College Street and into Tappan Square, the green space that connects the College to the City of Oberlin, where he placed the student in a chokehold in plain view of shocked passersby.
So, the kid never crossed any threshold; never deprived the store of their property. Until he was evidently forced out into the public square by Allyn Jr.
Indeed, the whole protest centered around
Gibson's "archaic chase and detain" policy toward suspected shoplifters:
What is clear is that 2-1/2 years after the protests, Plaintiffs [Gibson's] still do not understand that Gibson's Bakery's archaic chase and detain policy regarding suspected shoplifters was the catalyst for the protests.
...
[T]he protests originated because Plaintiffs thrust themselves into the heart of an issue of public concern when they chose to execute their chase and detain policy beyond the borders of their store and into full public view of their customer base. Nobody, least of all Oberlin College, has ever denied that shopkeepers possess a statutory right to use "reasonable" efforts to detain suspected shoplifters. However, when and how a business confronts and detains a suspected shoplifter is a serious matter. Plaintiff's decision to unleash the martial arts trained 32-year-old Allyn D. Gibson ("Allyn, Jr"), who initiated three separate rundowns and physical altercations with a black Oberlin student in full public view, thrust the Bakery into public debate as to whether the conduct wa reasonable or racially motivated.
ETA: Here's yet another excellent
point (emphasis mine):
Later, when the male student was charged with felony robbery rather than shoplifting, even as his fake ID suggested at the very least that his initial intent had been to make a purchase, many at Oberlin perceived a miscarriage of justice and wondered whether race had played a role in the charging decision. That, too, is easy to understand.
If he was intent on shoplifting, then why present his fake ID at all? And how could he have been charged with
felony robbery? Again, were these $500 bottles of wine?
And of further note (and the piece I'm quoting from is by no means pro-Oberlin):
While pleading guilty to misdemeanor theft charges in August 2017, each of the students would declare in an official statement, “I believe the employees of Gibson’s actions were not racially motivated. They were merely trying to prevent an underage sale.”
Well, gee. They were
charged with
felony theft, so it sure as shit looks to me that they were coerced into making such a statement as a condition of the more lenient plea deal to a misdemeanor.
And note the wording. Gibson's were not trying to prevent a
theft; they were trying to prevent an "underage
sale."
The more you dig, the bigger the stench. MUCH was made of these "confessions," but they are very clearly coerced and don't even stipulate to shoplifting!
Legal Insurrection noted (emphasis mine):
[T]he boycotts and protests against Gibson organized by students, and allegedly encouraged and coordinate with Oberlin administrators, were not primarily about a supposed assault on a student. Certainly, that was part of the mix, but the primary attack on Gibson’s was and still is that it allegedly engaged in racial profiling and unfairly targeted three black students with false claims of shoplifting. The guilty pleas put the lie to that line of protest, yet it it the defense laid out for Oberlin and Raimondo in their court filings.
No, the "guilty pleas" very clearly do NOT "put the lie to that line of protest." Quite the opposite in fact. Three college kids faced with
felony charges--thereby ruining their lives forever--instead plead to what it should have always been, a
misdemeanor--and then only the one kid that allegedly shoplifted--so long as they inexplicably and for no legal reason
each affirm that Gibson's wasn't racially motivated, they just wanted to protect the kids against an underrage
sale.
Fuck no.
Why would the DA require each of the kids to affirm anything at all about their personal opinions as to whether or not they thought the Gibson's were racists in their plea deals and wtf is up with the inclusion of trying to prevent an underrage
sale, not trying to reasonably detain a suspected shoplifter, or the like?
So, let's recap. The cops show up to find someone they likely know, but regardless, a 32 year old white guy assaulting a seventeen year old black kid (and two girls, probably same age, trying to help him) in a public space. They arrest only the black kids, not the white guy committing the assault.
The white guy and his dad--the owner of the Bakery--take off immediately. Just gone the next day. A protest over the events erupts the next day as well.
The kids are presumably booked and processed, while this is all going on, so
before any plea deal is being worked out, the protest erupts and accusations of racial bias are publicly expressed by about a hundred or so citizens (not
just Oberlin students).
At some point long after the protests, the DA decides to charge all three kids, apparently, with a career ending/life destroying charge of
felony robbery, but will plea them down to nothing more than a misdemeanor (what it should have been to begin with and then only for the one who actually allegedly shoplifted), IF they inexplicably
ALL declare that in their opinions, they didn't think Gibson's acted out of racial motivations, they were merely trying to prevent an underrage
sale (not a "felony robbery" or "shoplifting," but a
sale).
Yeah, that dog don't hunt.
It is these "confessions" that are evidently what puts the "lie" to Oberlin's defense. Which means, that since these "confessions" were clearly coerced, it puts the
truth to Oberlin's defense.