Amazon Halts Warehouse Build After 7th Noose Is Found

Local police are working with FBI and state authorities on 'potential' hate crimes
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted May 21, 2021 12:19 PM CDT
Amazon Halts Warehouse Build After 7th Noose Is Found
Windsor Town Council member Nuchette Black-Burke, center, with state and local elected leaders, together with the Connecticut NAACP, speaks out at a news conference on May 7, 2021, in Windsor, Conn., after a noose was found at an Amazon warehouse construction site, rear.   (Mark Mirko/Hartford Courant via AP)

Amazon has temporarily shut down a new warehouse construction site in Connecticut after a seventh noose was found hanging over a beam, a series of incidents local police called potential hate crimes. Another rope tied like a noose was discovered Wednesday at the site in Windsor, about 10 miles north of Hartford, prompting an intensified law enforcement investigation and calls by the state NAACP on Thursday for the suspect or suspects to be brought to justice. Amazon said in a statement that it's closing the site until Monday so that additional security measures can be put in place, reports the AP. "We continue to be deeply disturbed by the incidents happening at the construction site in Windsor," Amazon said. "Hate, racism, or discrimination have no place in our society and are certainly not tolerated in an Amazon workplace."

The first noose was found at the site last month. Connecticut NAACP leaders joined with state and local officials at a news conference outside the site Thursday to condemn what they called racist acts. "We're here to make sure that people are safe," said Scot X. Esdaile, president of the state NAACP. Carlos Best, an ironworker and foreman at the site, said he's heard racist remarks there, including some made by a worker that he fired. "Personally, on this job here, I have seen a lot of racism," he said at the news conference. "This is not the only construction site that these things occur on, and it has to stop." Windsor police said they're working with the FBI and state police. A reward has been doubled to $100,000 for information leading to the identification of the culprits.

(More Amazon.com stories.)

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