Racist US woman rants at Indians in store, asks them to return to their country

Simoni Lovano, another customer, said, the woman was upset because the family was using coupons, which made the wait in the queue longer.

Update: 2017-06-08 14:01 GMT
In the minute-and-a-half video recorded by another customer, the woman can be heard saying that an Indian is waiting on another Indian. (Photo: Youtube Screengrab)

New York: A woman at a US departmental store allegedly made a racist rant against an Indian employee and a Latino family while in a queue, saying "you got an Indian waiting on an Indian".

The incident took place at the Sears store in New Brunswick, New Jersey, and a city man videotaped the woman making bigoted comments.

Simoni Lovano, 27, said he recorded the video on Sunday at the department store. In the video, a woman can be heard making bigoted comments against an Indian employee and a Latino family, who she assumes are of Indian descent, Lovano was quoted as saying by NJ.com.

"Send them back to their own country," the unidentified woman can be heard saying in the video. The woman was upset because the family was using coupons, which made the wait in the checkout line longer, Lovano said.

He said the woman was right to be frustrated with the lack of open cash registers, considering it took about 20 minutes to process the family's coupons. Lovano said he started recording, however, when the woman began to blame the customers. She thought the family was receiving preferential treatment because she assumed they were Indians, he said.

In the minute-and-a-half video, the woman can be heard saying, "You got an Indian waiting on an Indian, that's what it is." "They're not Indians," someone said to her. "I don't know what the hell they are..." the woman said.

"That has nothing to do with anything," another person said, according to the video of the incident.

Lovano, whose family moved to the US from Sicily when he was a few years old, said Sears employees should have kicked the woman out of the store.

Lovano, who works at a biotechnology company in North Brunswick, said he hopes the video becomes viral so he can monetise it to raise money for social justice organisations that advocate in favour of immigrants.

Lovano said he felt guilty for not standing up for the family at the time. He said he is glad he captured the incident on video, however, because "this is something that is happening in New Brunswick, New Jersey, a very diverse area."

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