Police is now hunting a female shopper who allegedly injured 20 people after a confrontation at 10:20 p.m. – just 20 minutes after Wal-Mart had opened its doors.
“I heard screaming and I heard yelling,” Matthew Lopez, 18, told the Los Angeles Times.
“Moments later, my throat stung. I was coughing really bad and watering up.”
Meanwhile gunfire erupted at Cross Creek Mall in Fayetteville, North Carolina, at around 2:00 a.m. this morning near a food court entrance as Black Friday shoppers gathered.
Detectives are looking for two suspects. Several more shots were fired after one of the suspects ran inside the mall. But there are no reports of any injuries and no evacuation was ordered.
Back in Los Angeles, a police spokesman said the woman was using the spray to “gain an upper hand”. A fire spokesman said the injuries to least 10 people were due to “rapid crowd movement”.
The woman had been trying to keep fellow shoppers away from the electronics she wanted – and people were injured as they jostled trying to escape the spray in the crowded store, authorities said.
“People started screaming, pulling and pushing each other, and then the whole area filled up with pepper spray,” Alejandra Seminario, 24, told the Los Angeles Times.
“I just stayed in the toy aisle.”
Alejandra Seminario added that people started pulling the plastic off pallets on the floor and were “pushing and screaming” as they were shoved over.
“It was definitely the worst Black Friday I’ve ever experienced,” Joseph Poulose told LA Times.
An estimated 152million people are expected to shop over Black Friday weekend, up 10% from last year, according the National Retail Federation.
And in New York, Occupy protesters formed human barricades to try and block shoppers from entering stores – in particular targeting Macy’s department store.
The first chain to open up was Toys ‘R’ Us, which let customers – many of whom camped outside – in at 9:00 p.m. yesterday. An hour later, retail giant Wal-Mart unlocked its doors up amid a flood of customers, while low-cost rival Target let shoppers in at 11:00 p.m.
And at midnight, electronics retailer Best Buy along with departments stores Macy’s and Beall’s all opened – all hours before the traditional daybreak starts.
The early openings combined with greater than usual media coverage has prompted retail experts to predict record-breaking number of customers in U.S. stores.
As a record 212million actually showed up last year when the LRF estimated 138million, other analysts are predicting even more people hitting the shops this weekend.
“Black Friday will be strong because so many stores are opening Thursday and that gives consumers at least six more hours to shop,” Candace Corlett, of WSL Strategic Retail, told CNN.
“It will also attract people who may be willing to go out Thursday night, but aren’t about to get up early Friday morning.”
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