PASADENA, Calif. An overnight campout for the new iPhone turned chaotic Friday morning when two men were arrested for fighting outside an Apple Store and a man's plan to hire homeless people to wait in line for the coveted devices backfired, authorities said.
The two men were arrested after getting into a fistfight while in line along Colorado Boulevard.
George Westbrook, 23, of Compton, and Lamar Mitchell, 43, of Pasadena, were cited for fighting in public, a misdemeanor, Clawson said.
No significant injuries were reported.
Police estimated that at least 200 people were on the sidewalk outside the store overnight. Some had been there for several days. The store hired two Pasadena police officers to control the crowd, Clawson said.
The Southern California store wasn't the only one selling iPhones that had an incident involving police Friday.
In Houston, several people waiting in an early morning line for the new phone were robbed at gunpoint, CBS affiliate KHOU-TV reports.
Police told KHOU-TV that people were camped outside an AT&T store when they were approached by two armed men at around here 5 a.m.
One of the victims told the station the suspects walked up and started making demands. One of the suspects said, "Gimme everything you've got," one of the victims said. The victim said the thieves made off with several iPhones and an iPad.
At the Pasadena store, in a separate incident, dozens of people recruited at a downtown Los Angeles homeless shelter to buy iPhones in bulk at a Pasadena store were left unpaid, and they mobbed the man who had hired them, Pasadena police Lt. Jason Clawson said.
One of the homeless men was placed on a 72-hour mental health hold after running into the street in an enraged state, Clawson said. Television news footage showed police breaking up several scuffles and calming down furious customers.
Dominoe Moody, 43, told the Los Angeles Times he was driven the 10 miles or so to Pasadena from Los Angeles with several vanloads of people to wait in line overnight.
Moody was promised $40 but said he wasn't paid because after handing the man an iPhone. The man was escorted away by police when people became angry with him.
"It didn't go right. I stood out here all night," Moody told the newspaper, adding that he had no way to get back to Los Angeles.
The man who organized the effort told CBS Los Angeles he sells the purchased iPhones overseas for approximately $1,000 each.
"The phones are for me, and I have a company that resells them," the man, who wouldn't give his name, told reporters.
The would-be entrepreneur was clutching a single bag stuffed with iPhones when he was escorted into a police cruiser and driven away at around 9:30 a.m.
The man was not cited because he did nothing illegal, Clawson said. Police were not investigating the incident, he said.
Most of the people recruited to wait in line weren't paid by the man, Moody said, estimating that the man brought 70 to 80 people to the store.
Apple's new iPhone models, the 5S and 5C, were released worldwide Friday.
Source: Cbsnews
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