- Posted June 17, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Parents sue Wal-Mart, police over daughter's shoplifting stop
LIVONIA (AP) - The parents of a mentally disabled woman are suing Wal-Mart and police after she was stopped for suspected shoplifting at a Detroit-area store.
Wendy Kozma of Novi tells the Detroit Free Press her 25-year-old daughter, Jodi, who has the mental capacity of an 8-year-old, now is terrified of police after being handcuffed and questioned at a Wal-Mart in Livonia. Records show she didn't steal anything.
Wendy and John Kozma want an apology along with unspecified financial damages and assurance that police and store security follow proper procedures when dealing with disabled people. They filed a complaint with police in August 2012, when their daughter was stopped, and recently sued.
Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart says it believes its associates acted appropriately. Livonia police sent a letter to the Kozmas denying wrongdoing.
Published: Tue, Jun 17, 2014
headlines Oakland County
- Holiday Gala
- Nessel secures court order protecting SNAP benefits
- Attorney general to intervene in Consumers Energy’s latest $240 million natural gas rate hike request
- Minards sentenced after pleading guilty to two felonies
- Federal judge blocks Whitmer from shutting down submerged Great Lakes pipeline
headlines National
- Why state bars are struggling to keep pace with AI in legal practice
- The legal tech stories that defined 2025
- Federal budgets would further hit access to disability lawyers, advocates say
- ABA task force assesses AI’s ‘opportunities and challenges’ in new report
- Attorney discovers secret ‘watch list’ for immigration lawyers
- Lawyer and animal activist creates pet memorial for the holidays




