One Mac attack was very large.
Brooklyn McDonald's, who is suffering from crime, connects customers at the door and prevents anyone less than 20 years to enter without a parent or a suitable identifier-what may be the first for fast food.
The restaurant, in Nostrand and Flatbush, took a radical step last week, after a group of children who were wearing ski masks after school rose and attacked a security guard, and broke a glass door, according to director Amber Hussein.
“He was a crazy scene,” Hussein, 19, remembers.
Every day after school for the year in which I worked there, somewhere between 15 to 20 teenagers, “Store garbage” comes – throwing snow on customers, grabbing bags of foods from Uber drivers and smoking weeds inside the restaurant.
McDonald's – in the area nicknamed “The Intersection” – is notorious in the neighborhood. The scene of fire and multiple stabbing has been over the years.
In September 2011, a 18 -year -old boy was shot in the head in light of a wide day while he was entering the restaurant, and he sent him to the street in a brutal attack planned by partners.
In 2012, a 24 -year -old director attacked trying to ask after an altercation.
So far in 2025, there have been 29 calls to 911 there, according to NYPD.
Police data show that more than 100 calls to 911 have been made at home and in front of McDonald's in each of the past three years, with 121 calls in 2022, 103 at 2023 and 111 in 2024.
For those familiar with the site, not surprising.
“If you are from that area, you know that McDonald's is terrible,” said Sania Boulassing, who grew up in Flatbush.
“People are fighting there – not only children.” Bouasing told the “Post”.
Bolsing, 20, was shocked at first when she went to McDonald's after school last week, and one of the security guards demanded her to introduce entry.
“This is crazy, this is sick,” she said in a video posted on Tiktok.
But for some, it is completely logical.
“What do you expect the employer to do?” Kowid Smith, 48, asked a law writer from Flatbush. “This has always been a place to cause trouble children.”
McDonald's did not respond to the publication request for comment.