Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Glasgow Live
Glasgow Live
National
Holly Lennon

Mum humiliated as Asda worker 'accuses her of buying five-year-old son a scratch card'

A mum from Clydebank was left 'humiliated' after being told to leave her local supermarket and accused of buying a scratch card for her five-year-old son.

The woman was in her local Asda store with her son on Saturday when she attempted to buy the card at a kiosk. As her son is obsessed with letters and numbers, the 41-year-old asked him to pick a number to help her decide which one to buy.

Despite having just bought tobacco from the same member of staff, the cashier refused to hand over the scratch card and accused the mum of breaking the law.

Read more: Glasgow electrician hits council with £1210 bill after new car damaged by potholes

She told Glasgow Live: "It's our local supermarket so we're in there quite often. I had seconds before bought and paid for tobacco for my husband before remembering to buy a scratch card.

"My son is obsessed with numbers so I asked him to pick a number in a private conversation between the two of us. When I tried to buy it, the cashier refused to serve me.

"It's not like I handed the money or my bank card to my five-year-old son to purchase the ticket. I simply turned to him, in private, to ask what a lucky number was for him.

"I asked to speak to the manager who agreed with the cashier. By this point, he was getting distressed and had run away to hide behind a wall. It was all unfolding in front of other customers.

"The manager then asked me to leave the store as if I had done something wrong. It was so humiliating and left my son distraught."

Once back at home, the mum decided to call the supermarket's customer service line to complain and was given an apology by not only the complaints team but another manager of the store.

She added: "I understand the law on this issue but in no way is this justified behaviour. It’s totally unreasonable. I contacted customer service as well as forwarded a further complaint on the matter to Asda and had a phone call from the secondary manager on shift who apologised for the incident after checking the CCTV and seeing the effect it had on my son.

"He said that the manager at the time had agreed with me but was obliged to back up his staff member.

"The way I was dealt with was embarrassing and humiliating, as a successful businesswoman who has employees and deals with customers on a daily basis to be looked down on in such a way is terrible."

When approached by Glasgow Live, Asda refused to comment, stating only that it is illegal to sell a scratch card by proxy to a child.

READ NEXT:

Rutherglen drugs bust uncovers £400k worth of herbal cannabis as three arrested

Two Glasgow hospitals 'close to collapse' as 27 ambulances queue outside Royal Infirmary

Investigators seize £1million Glasgow house linked to bankrupt businessman with '£120million debt'

Newly-wed Glasgow joiner's family 'hoping for breakthrough' 28 years after disappearance

Pedestrian rushed to hospital after being run down by car in Clydebank

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.