Nick Shirley's Latest Fraud Video Is Another Gold Mine
Wait, That Cannot Be James Talarico's Latest Voter Outreach Strategy?
Graham Platner's Top Aide Is Now DSA's Public Enemy Number One
Sportscaster Dan Patrick Cannot Believe the WNBA Commissioner Bailed on Him
So, That's Why the Trump Administration Subpoenaed Some NYT Reporters
Trump Rips 'Maggot Hagerman' for Spreading 'Fake News' in New Book on His...
Man Who Accused Hunter Biden of $800M Iran Bribery Scheme Now Owes Him...
Tim Walz's Response to the Deportation of a Child Sex Offender Is Disgusting
No Still Means No
The Inhumanity of Surrogacy
DOJ Opens Investigation Into Texas Police Department Who Threatened Street Preacher With A...
The State Department Just Canceled a Baffling Meeting Between a Mamdani-Aide and Iran
This Democrat's Reaction to the Houston ICE Self-Defense Shooting Was Hilariously Dumb
DHS Creates 'Deportation Airline' to Carry-Out 24/7 Deportation Flights
The Narrative Wars
Tipsheet

Ferguson Business Owner: 'I Pray I Stay Open'

Ferguson Business Owner: 'I Pray I Stay Open'

Idowu Ajibola is a Nigerian immigrant who owns the Rehoboth Pharmacy in Ferguson, Missouri. It’s been described as a stable small business; one of many that dotted the city, which was virtually destroyed in the riot that erupted after it was announced that the grand jury was not going to charge then-Officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown.

Advertisement

He gave his account of what happened to his store to CNSNews.com’s Brittany Hughes. Ajibola said that the looters broke four windows and doors and ransacked his shop. Police secured the area around two in the morning on November 24-25, but he had to explain he was the business owner since they closed the road; they eventually let him through.

Horrified at the damage, Ajibola stayed and slept in his car to ward off any future attempts by looters to rob his store (via CNSNews):

“I feel that I was a victim twice,” Ajibola told CNSNews.com at his store, which was severely damaged by rioters in the second wave of Ferguson riots on Nov. 24-25. “It’s very devastating.”

It’s been a little more than two weeks since Ferguson was rocked by the second set of violent riots and looting that broke out when a grand jury decided not to bring charges against white police officer Darren Wilson for the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown in August. Rioters ransacked dozens of stores, burned several others, torched police cars and ultimately left the small city and its citizens to bear the scars of the violence.

With the rioters and most of the media gone, the process of trying to assess, recover, and rebuild is only just beginning for many small business owners like Ajibola.

“I pray I stay open,” Ajibola told CNSNews.com, trying to smile as he looked about his small, ransacked store. Meager offerings of pain medicine and paper towels sat on the nearly empty shelves, as tiny rays of natural light peeked through the plywood that covered the holes where windows and doors used to be.

Advertisement

Related:

#FERGUSON LOOTING

I certainly hope Ajibola's business survives. While it may be tough some days, this is America; where there's always tomorrow to rebuild if tragedy strikes, or room to do better when you fall short the first time.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement