6 officers asked to leave Starbucks in Arizona for making customer 'uncomfortable'

The incident in Tempe, Arizona, prompted an outcry on social media.

July 7, 2019, 7:43 AM

Six Tempe, Arizona, police officers were asked to leave a local Starbucks on the Fourth of July because a customer said the officers were making them feel uncomfortable, prompting an outcry on social media and an apology from Starbucks.

"Don’t appreciate Starbucks asking our Tempe cops to leave on 4th of July 2019," The Tempe Officers Association posted on Twitter. "Several of those cops are veterans who fought for this country! #ZeroRespect"

After that, the hashtag #DumpStarbucks trended on Twitter.

Reggie Borges, a Starbucks spokesman, told ABC News that the store and the officers have "a really good relationship with the Tempe police department," and that the cafe often hosts ‘Coffee with a Cop’ events to cultivate the relationship in the community.

PHOTO: The Starbucks logo it's seen outside a store, May 29, 2018, in Philadelphia.
The Starbucks logo is pictured, May 29, 2018, in Philadelphia.
Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images

He said that Starbucks has submitted a formal apology to the Tempe Police department as well as a sit down with Police Chief Moyers to rectify the matter.

"When something like this happens -- if there was something we did that doesn’t align with our mission and values -- we address it. I’m glad we had that line of communication with the Tempe Police Department," said Borges.

He said that everyone involved in the incident was white.

PHOTO: Demonstrators gather at a Starbucks location in Philadelphia, April 15, 2018, where days earlier two black men were arrested.
Demonstrators gather at a Starbucks location in Philadelphia, April 15, 2018, where days earlier two black men were arrested.
Bastiaan Slabbers/NurPhoto via Getty Images

The Tempe location was among the Starbucks cafes that briefly shut its doors last year for bias and diversity training. That followed an incident in Philadelphia, in which two black men were arrested at a Starbucks in an incident that was caught on video and went viral.

ABC News' Emily Shapiro contributed to this report.

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