Woman Claims She Was Kicked Out Of The Range For Wearing This Outfit

'I was humiliated.'

A mother claims she was kicked out of a home and garden store for dressing “inappropriately”.

Leanne Kennedy says she was left feeling “humiliated and discriminated” after she was ordered to leave The Range when she was shopping for garden equipment.

The 30-year-old was wearing a denim crop top with long black trousers but was told by a member of staff “to put a shirt on or leave” because her outfit was “against company policy”.

Stunned Kennedy, who was shopping with her nine-month-old daughter, initially thought the female staff member was joking and was then told “if you don’t like it, you know where the door is”.

Open Image Modal
Solent News

Kennedy had gone into The Range in Gosport, Hampshire, to pick up gardening supplies with daughter Athena-Mae on Tuesday, when the weather was 24 degrees celsius.

After being confronted “not very discreetly” in front of other customers, ‘humiliated’ Kennedy said she left red-faced and filed a complaint after speaking with her husband, James, 35.

Kennedy, a professional singer who is currently a full-time mum from Fareham, Hants, said: “I was with my nine-month-old daughter and popped to The Range for gardening supplies.

“It must have been about 2pm and the weather was 24 degrees celsius. I was only in there for five minutes and had picked up a few bits when a woman from the shop approached me.

“She asked me to put a shirt on or leave because what I was wearing was not appropriate and was against company policy.”

Open Image Modal
Solent News

Kennedy added: “I thought she was joking at first and I didn’t know how to react, then she told me ‘if you don’t like it you know where the door is’.

“When I tried to laugh it off, she said that if a man came in without a top on, they would say the same thing.

“I was humiliated, my outfit was just a denim crop top with long flowing black trousers, hardly revealing or risqué.

“Perhaps I could understand it if I was in a bikini, but it wasn’t, and I was totally embarrassed in front of lots of other customers.

“What’s the difference between my back showing and another person’s legs on display? And what does it matter when I’m there to spend money?

“The woman who approached me wasn’t very discrete and afterwards as I was in such shock I just left in a hurry.”

Open Image Modal
Solent News

Kennedy also said the woman told her a sign on the outside of the store displayed its clothing policy, however it just says customers must be wearing shirts.

After returning home she spoke with her husband, who runs a personal training company, and lodged a formal complaint. She said she was given an apology.

A spokesperson for The Range reportedly said: “I can advise that we do not have a specific dress code in place that would prevent you from shopping with the photographed outfit.

“I apologise for any inconvenience caused on this occasion.”

Kennedy added: “I was humiliated and felt traumatised, it was discrimination.

“I’m a person who takes care of my appearance, I’m fit and healthy.

“People were staring at me, I felt like I was being followed and had no choice but to put my things back and just leave the store.

“They’ve apologised but it didn’t really feel sincere, it’s put me off shopping there in the future.”

The Range declined to provide further comment when contacted by HuffPost UK. 

Famous Women Get Real About Body-Shaming
Kate Winslet(01 of08)
Open Image Modal
Kate Winslet is an Oscar-winning actress, but it could have been a very different story if she’d listened to criticism from body-shamers when she was younger.

“I got bullied at school, they called me ‘blubber’, they teased me for wanting to act, they locked me in the cupboard, laughed at me,” she said at a charity event.

“I wasn’t the prettiest, I’ve always had big feet, and I was even told that I might be lucky in my acting if I was happy to settle for the ‘fat girl’ parts. And they would say, ‘You’re just not what we’re looking for Kate’. I’d hear that a lot.”

“I learned to embrace my flaws, to make no apology for who I am,” she said. “This is who I am. The real me. Kate from Reading.”
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Lady Gaga(02 of08)
Open Image Modal
When Lady Gaga wore a crop top for her 2017 Super Bowl performance she received cruel remarks about her stomach. But she rose above the hatred to share a positive message on body image.

“I heard my body is a topic of conversation so I wanted to say, I’m proud of my body and you should be proud of yours too,” she said on Instagram.

“No matter who you are or what you do. I could give you a million reasons why you don’t need to cater to anyone or anything to succeed.”
(credit:Ronald Martinez via Getty Images)
Serena Williams(03 of08)
Open Image Modal
Twitter trolls told Serena Williams that she was "built like a man", but that didn't stop her from being super body-confident.

"I love that I am a full woman and I’m strong and I’m powerful and I’m beautiful at the same time," she said. "And there’s nothing wrong with that."
(credit:PETER PARKS via Getty Images)
Jennifer Aniston(04 of08)
Open Image Modal
Sick and tired of the media speculating about whether or not she was "pregnant", Jennifer Aniston penned an exclusive blog on The Huffington Post about body-shaming and how we value women.

"The objectification and scrutiny we put women through is absurd and disturbing," she said.

"The way I am portrayed by the media is simply a reflection of how we see and portray women in general, measured against some warped standard of beauty."
(credit:C Flanigan via Getty Images)
Cheryl(05 of08)
Open Image Modal
In 2015, Cheryl called for body-shaming to be made "illegal" after some news outlets and members of the public accused her of being "too skinny".

“The body shaming has to stop. It’s bulls***. Something has to be done, changed, even if it’s done in law," she said.
(credit:PA Archive/PA Images)
Vogue Williams(06 of08)
Open Image Modal
Model and TV presenter Vogue Williams told Aol's BUILD LDN she thought it was important to hit back at body-shamers after she was "papped on a beach".

"I got trolled - and it was hundreds and hundreds of comments and different news outlets saying I was fat, I was two stone overweight," she said.

"I actually hit back on that one because I thought people would be looking at me and thinking: ‘If people think she’s fat, what am I supposed to be?’ I also just think how has it come to this, that people find it okay to comment on people’s bodies?

"I would never call somebody fat and I would never call somebody too skinny. People are just the weight that they are, everyone is different and everyone is on a different path in life."
(credit:Stuart C. Wilson via Getty Images)
Amy Schumer(07 of08)
Open Image Modal
When a film critic called actress and comedian Amy Schumer "chubby", she responded by saying: "I am a US size 6 and have no plans of changing.

"This is it. Stay on or get off."
(credit:NBC via Getty Images)
Tyra Banks(08 of08)
Open Image Modal
After she was papped in a swimsuit and body-shamed by the media, Tyra Banks' response made chat show history.

She appeared in front of the live 'Tyra' audience wearing that same swimsuit and said: “If I had lower self esteem, I would probably be starving myself right now. But that’s exactly what is happening to other women all over this country.”

She ended her speech by telling the haters: "Kiss my fat ass."
(credit:Tibrina Hobson via Getty Images)