A Massachusetts cafe has apologized after refusing to serve and calling 911 on an award-winning black journalist in a case of “mistaken identity,” according to reports.
The bizarre incident unfolded after Philip Martin, a seasoned reporter for GBH who retired earlier this year, arrived at Caffè Nero in Cambridge before 5 p.m. on Thursday to meet a fellow journalist, Naomi Kooker, the Boston Globe first reported.
Kooker arrived first, ordered a drink, and was seated at a table. But, when Martin, 71, tried to place his order, the worker behind the counter told him she’d been instructed not to serve him, he recalled.
“I was aghast,” he told Boston.com, “I said, ‘I’m completely confused. Are you mistaking me for someone else?’ And she said, ‘No, it’s you. We have you on videotape.’”
After a back-and-forth conversation, both Martin and the worker decided to call 911.
Cambridge police officers responded to the cafe and spoke separately with Martin and Caffè Nero staff, ultimately deciding the incident was a misunderstanding and allowing Martin to reenter the establishment for his scheduled meeting.
“I was intent on not being pushed out of the store based on someone’s faulty misidentification,” he told the outlet.
A Caffè Nero spokesperson said in an email to the Boston Globe that the hostile interaction was “a genuine case of mistaken identity due to the close similarity of height, build, and style of beard and glasses with a customer who had been responsible for significant anti-social behaviour previously.”
The week prior, a different customer was thrown out of the cafe for being “abusive to the staff” and had relieved himself inside, the spokesperson said.
“While it is not acceptable to confuse any customer with another, the prior incident was traumatic for the barista involved, and it triggered her response,” the spokesperson said, per the outlet.
“Everyone at Caffè Nero is deeply sorry for the behaviour towards Mr. Martin, which should not have happened, even though it was a genuine error driven by a recent prior experience.”
Employees at the quaint cafe situated in Central Square have since undergone training to prevent similar incidents, the spokesperson added.
Martin eventually was shown a picture of the alleged barista tyrant he was misidentified as, and said he remains “befuddled” as to how he was mixed up with a much younger light-skinned Black man with a scruffy beard.
“I looked at the photo, and I told them, ‘He looks nothing like me,’” Martin said.
Martin has since filed complaints against Caffè Nero with the Massachusetts Commission Against Discrimination and the Cambridge Human Rights Commission, detailing the humiliation he experienced, per the Boston Globe.
The retired reporter maintained that he does not want anyone to lose their jobs or boycott the cafe, and is simply asking for some accountability for the encounter.
“I told them I had no interest whatsoever in anyone being fired over this,” Martin told Boston.com.
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