Community Corner

Customers Make Staff Cry At Cape Cod Restaurant: Patch PM

Also: Council hopeful gets pepper sprayed | Ex-Patriot running for senate |Breakthrough COVID-19 cases on Cape Cod | More

BREWSTER, MA — It's Monday, July 12. Here's what you should know this afternoon:

  • Former New England Patriot Jake Bequette is running for U.S. Senate in the Arkansas Republican primary.
  • Police shot an Everett man was after he charged officers with what was described as a "sword-type weapon."
  • Health officials on Cape Cod are monitoring reports of "breakthrough" coronavirus cases in Provincetown.

Scroll down for more on those and other stories Patch has been covering in Massachusetts today.


Today's Top Story

A Cape Cod restaurant closed for breakfast Thursday morning after customers berated staff to the point some employees cried.

Find out what's happening in Barnstable-Hyannisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Like many other restaurants, Apt Cape Cod in Brewster has struggled with staff shortages and high customer demand after coronavirus restrictions were lifted. Restaurant management said many customers continued treating staff with kindness and understanding, but others haven't been as patient.

"As many of our guests and patrons treat us with kindness and understanding, there have been an astronomical influx daily of those that do not, swearing at us, threatening to sue, arguing and yelling at my staff, making team members cry," the restaurant said in a statement on its Facebook page. "This is an unacceptable way to treat any human. So Chef Regina and I have decided to take the day and give the staff time deep clean the restaurant, train, and treat my staff to a day of kindness."

Find out what's happening in Barnstable-Hyannisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.


Monday's Other Top Stories

From football to politics: A former New England Patriots third round draft pick is running for Congress. Jake Bequette, who played eight games over two seasons with the Pats, is running against incumbent Arkansas Sen. John Boozman in the Republican primary. In his announcement Monday, Bequette described himself as a "God-fearing Christian conservative who is 100 percent pro-life and pro-police."

Police pepper spray council candidate in bar brawl: In order to get an unruly bar patron under control, Lowell Police had to pepper spray and tase him before he could be subdued and arrested: the unruly bar patron in question was a man running for Lowell City Councilor. Jeffrey Thomas, 45, was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest after the brawl at the Blue Shamrock in Lowell.

Police shoot suspect in Everett: An Everett man was shot by police after he charged officers with a sword-type weapon, the Middlesex District Attorney's office said. Officers responded to an apartment building on Buckman Street for a report of a resident who had barricaded himself inside, authorities said. The resident, identified as a 45-year-old man, ran at them while holding "what was described as a sword," the district attorney's office said.

More white supremacist vandalism on North shore: Two men who police said were caught in the act of "tagging" public property with potentially white supremacist, racist and antisemitic graffiti were charged with vandalism, could face more charges, according to police. Salem police have been investigating a rash of racist spray-painted phrases in recent months from members of a group they identified as the "Patriot Front" — which the Anti-Defamation League classifies as white supremacist, racist and antisemitic.

Cockatoo apprehended: It wasn't a cat stuck in a tree, but a bird on the loose in the backyard that drew out Danvers fire crews on Sunday. Danvers fire Local 2038 said crews responded to the unusual call of a Cockatoo that had escaped someone's house and flown to a tree in their backyard.


Eat fresh: Patch's 2021 Massachusetts Farmers Market Guide


They Said It

"We never expected COVID to completely vanish. We have to do our best to manage it. Vaccinations, better treatment and more research since last year have put us in a better position to do just that."

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