LEWISBURG, WV — The director of an area domestic violence group said Wal-Mart’s decision to pull from its shelves an offensive T-shirt from its shelves that mocked the crime of stalking was “the right choice to make” and a “serious issue.”
The controversy involved a white, long-sleeved T-shirt with the phrase, “Some Call It Stalking. I Call It Love,” written in red on its front.
Gloria Martin, director of Lewisburg’s Family Refuge Center, became aware of the shirt last week after Nancy Hoffman of the West Virginia Sexual Assault Coalition sent a photo of the shirt to her in an e-mail.
An FRC staff member visited the Lewisburg Wal-Mart and found a display case with the shirt’s slogan, but no shirts were found behind its bin.
A Beckley stalking victim had called The Register-Herald to complain as well.
The Web site www.feministing.com featured the shirt and said that it was also being sold in North Carolina.
When Martin called the Lewisburg Wal-Mart manager to complain, she was told the shirts had already been pulled from the store.
In an e-mail to The Register-Herald on Thursday, Wal-Mart senior communications director Tara Raddohl confirmed the shirts had been removed from store shelves
Exactly what company manufactured the shirt was unclear, as was how many shirts were pulled nationwide.
“Stalking is a crime in all 50 states in the U.S.,” Martin said. “A majority of murder victims are first stalked. For us, it’s a really serious issue and we don’t see the humor.”
This isn’t the first time Wal-Mart has stopped selling a controversial T-shirt. In 2006, the store pulled a skull-and-crossbones shirt after complaints the image resembled a Nazi SS emblem from World War II.
— E-mail: cgiggenbach@register-herald.com
Local News
Wal-Mart pulls ‘offensive’ T-shirt
- Local News
-
-
Passenger screening system installed at Greenbrier Valley Airport
Greenbrier Valley Airport this week became one of the first airports of its size to boast a cutting-edge passenger screening system.
- NRCTC impresses high school students
-
GOP revives welfare drug testing bill
A Republican-led effort Wednesday would force anyone getting a welfare check in West Virginia to undergo a drug test in what a sponsor sees as an act of compassion to get addicts clean.
-
Governor, truckers, NTSB support texting ban
Veteran truck drivers joined Gov. Earl Ray Tomblin and the National Transportation Safety Board in a concerted plea Wednesday to ban texting and cell phone chatter while driving on West Virginia highways.
- Bank robbery suspect faces more charges
- Calendar — Thursday, Feb. 9, 2012
- Area news
-
Greenbrier drug suspects rounded up
The drug task force of the Greenbrier County Sheriff’s Department, along with members from several agencies, initiated a roundup of suspected drug users, abusers and dealers in the area after the county’s grand jury returned sealed indictments Tuesday, Sheriff Jim Childers explained.
- Man arrested for sexual assault at weekend game
-
Rainelle couple arrested for drugs
A drug bust in Rainelle landed a husband and wife in jail last week, Police Chief J.P. Stevens said.
- More Local News Headlines
-






