A high-end Italian fashion line with a pill-popping motif is sparking outrage and a campaign by a Minneapolis drug counselor who wants Nordstrom to pull the controversial items from its stores.
Moschino, an Italian clothing brand known for being irreverent, bold and sometimes controversial, launched a clothing line that includes handbags that resemble prescription pill bottles and clothing peppered with colorful capsules. The items, sold at Nordstrom and Saks, are provoking protests in Minnesota and across the country for being tone-deaf and callous about a national drug epidemic that claims tens of thousands of lives each year.
Randy Anderson, an alcohol and drug counselor in Minneapolis, has collected nearly 2,000 signatures on an online petition asking the retailers to remove the Capsule clothing line from its stores. Nordstrom has several retail locations in the Twin Cities, including at the Mall of America and Ridgedale Center.
In his letter to the retailers, Anderson said he will not patronize Nordstrom and is encouraging others to boycott the stores until the items are removed.
On Tuesday, a Nordstrom official said the retailer does not plan to remove the items from its stores.
In the three days since Anderson launched the petition on change.org, many signing the petition have vowed "never to step in Nordstrom" again, chastising the retailer for glamorizing drug use.
Moschino introduced its Capsule line during New York's 2016 Fashion Week, saying the collection is inspired by the packaging and instructional inserts of over-the-counter medication and offers customers a colorful selection of garments. Items include a $950 prescription pill bottle shoulder bag, a $650 short black dress and $695 backpack featuring colorful pills and $1,095 pill-package-inspired purse.
In his letter to the retailers, Anderson notes that most people who became addicted to heroin started with a legal prescription from a physician after an injury or medical procedure — people like Prince, who died earlier this year after an accidental overdose of the painkiller fentanyl.