Elias Usso got an alert at home around 9:30 p.m. Wednesday when an alarm went off at his small pharmacy near Lake Street and Hiawatha Avenue.
Then he watched the live security footage on his phone as looters ransacked the Seward Pharmacy shelves, set a small fire in the back and carted out a safe holding prescription drugs. "I saw the whole thing — it was agonizing," he said Thursday afternoon as workers mopped up floors drenched from sprinklers and boarded up the shattered store windows. "My biggest concern is that my customers won't be able to get their prescriptions on time. That's a nightmare for a pharmacist."
More than 100 small businesses across Minneapolis were damaged during the protests Wednesday night over the death of George Floyd in police custody, said Allison Sharkey, executive director of the Lake Street Council, a nonprofit business coalition. Most of them were along Lake Street, but some were in other sections of the city, including Uptown and north Minneapolis.
Businesses hunker down
As more looting and vandalism continued Thursday and spread, including to St. Paul's Midway neighborhood, many businesses across the Twin Cities hunkered down for another potentially rough night. Businesses along Nicollet Mall in downtown Minneapolis, which were not hit the night before, boarded up windows along with many others around the city.
Target pre-emptively closed 22 stores around the Twin Cities in addition to two on Lake Street that had been damaged the previous night.
After a sleepless night, business owners along Lake Street — many already hurting from the economic downturn caused by COVID-19 — emerged early Thursday and stared at what was left of their shops with quiet disbelief.
Charles Stotts, who has owned Town Talk Diner for four years, looked at his restaurant with gentle eyes and a somber frown. Smoke filled the dining room, and water from the sprinklers flooded the floor and poured onto the street.
"It's worse than anything I could have ever imagined happening to our little restaurant," said Stotts, who took part in the peaceful protest Tuesday night. "What did my little building on the side of the road do?"