Crime & Safety

Woodbury Woman On Mall of America Fight: 'It Was A Mob'

Susan Nally says reports of the incident have been downplayed in the media.

If anything, reports of the massive brawl at the Mall of America on Monday have been understated, according to a Woodbury woman who was there.

Susan Nally said she and her husband arrived at the mall at about 4 p.m. on Monday to return an item and do a little shopping.

The Mall of America was β€œjam packed,” she said, and many of the people were β€œrough, gangster-looking.”

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After she and her husband got some coffee, an alarm sounded and an announcement said the mall was being locked down and shoppers were urged to take refuge in stores, Nally said.

She was at the entrance to Nordstroms when a massive group of more than 200 people came running through, knocking into others, screaming and acting unruly.

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β€œI’ve never seen anything like it,” Nally said. β€œThey were acting insane. It was a mob.”

β€œDid I feel threatened? Yeah, I felt threatened.”

Several workers at the mall on Monday told her it was a β€œweird” crowd. The Star Tribune reported that Mall of America officials and Bloomington police are investigating whether rumors of rap stars performing at the mall, fueled by social media, contributed to Monday’s fight.

Still, the reports from major media outlets understated the severity of the incident, Nally said. β€œIt doesn’t really do it justice.”

Nally said she often goes to the Mall of America and has never felt concerned for her safety. Her first thought after the alarm sounded was that there had been a shooting.

When people started running and screaming, β€œI thought somebody must have had a gun,” Nally said.

β€œPeople were scared. The workers were scared, the shoppers there,” she said.

Her husband, too, was β€œshocked” by what happened, Nally said.

Incidents similar to those shown in Youtube videos were "going on all over the mall,” she said.

Nally and her husband stayed in a scrapbooking store for about an hour. β€œUntil all the mayhem cleared out and we could leave.”

She spoke with two teenagers from Japan while at the mall and said she was saddened that their impression of Minnesota might be sullied by the melee.

β€œIt’s a sad moment for the state,” Nally said. β€œIt makes you wonder what the future holds after seeing those teenagers.”

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