Posted on 01/01/2009 2:02:45 PM PST by Daffynition
An 89-year-old Cincinnati-area woman arrested for confiscating the neighbor kid's football is now suing the boy's parents. Edna Jester filed a lawsuit in Hamilton County Common Pleas Court claiming she has suffered emotional distress because footballs and other playthings belonging to her next-door neighbors keep landing in her yard.
In October, Jester refused to return a football, was taken to the Blue Ash police station and charged with petty theft. The prosecutor later dropped the case.
The lawsuit against parents Paul and Kelly Tanis seeks unspecified monetary damages.
Kelly Tanis calls the suit "very silly" but says she and her husband also worry because they have five children and can't afford a lawyer.
The woman was gardening at the time the ball landed in her yard. Should she have to worry about ducking errant toys? She doesn’t look particularly strong in her photo and apparently lives alone. How frightening it must’ve been to be taken from one’s home over a stupid football she didn’t remove from the Tanis family’s possession. Other neighbors are siding with her, even the prosecutor to threw out the charge.
But when Officer Brandon Taylor arrived, Mrs. Jester didnt believe that he was old enough to be a police officer. Eventually, Sgt. Dennis Whitman responded. Whitmans radio transmission was: Tell her if she doesnt give the ball back, shes going to be charged criminally. In an incident videotaped by a neighbor sympathetic to Mrs. Jesters plight, the twice-warned Mrs. Jester refused to comply. Officers tried to give her a citation, which she refused to sign. Finally, they arrested her, after Mrs. Jester said: Go ahead and arrest me. Handcuff me if youd like, because I said Im not guilty of anything.
Jester, who has no criminal record, was due to appear in the Blue Ash Mayors Court on November 12, facing a possible sentence of up to six months in jail and a fine of up to $1,000. Its been a busy week for the gardening great-grandmother, who described her arrest as a terrible ordeal. The video of her arrest received national attention. Inside Edition came calling, and Oprahs spawn, Dr. Phil, wants to fly her to California for a TV appearance. A defense fund was set up for her at Key Bank. Mostly, Mrs. Jester just wanted everyone to go away, although she was relieved to hear about the defense fund. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) got into the act, donating two leather-free footballs to the Tanis family. In an email to the [Cincinnati] Enquirer, PETA Executive Vice President Tracy Reiman wrote: These kids will get hundreds of hours of enjoyment from this durable synthetic ballas long as they keep it out of Ms. Jesters yard, that is With todays high-quality non-leather athletic gear, theres no reason that touchdowns should cost a cow an arm and a leg.
The Blue Ash police department was swamped with calls from all over the country. Yesterday, Police Sgt. Jim Schaffer said: Weve been catching a lot of it from all over the country. They are saying we are idiots. How could we do that? You said it, Sgt. Schaffer, not me. At last, excitement in Blue Ash (population 12,513). Residents mobilized. An area gas station sported a large sign asking for donations for footballs. A plan was hatched to pack Mayors Court with at least 200 people carrying footballs for Mrs. Jesters court appearance.
Are cops so g-d damn stupid that they just follow the law like Nazis?! Sick of hearing this garbage!
Common sense has been AWOL for quite some time ...been replaced with knee-jerk reaction. It’s difficult to get used to, eh?
As they should have.
These kids you site here have parents who have taught them some basic respect for others property. You see there is a difference in how parents rear their children, and the very fact that you sited as to how one of those kids is now attending West Point, proves the point.
We had older neighbors like Mrs. Jester that would keep your toys if they ended up in their yard. Our parents didn’t call the police on them or get them arrested though. They told us to knock it off and leave them alone. That was the sixties though and parents didn’t act like spoiled children making excuses for their spoiled brats for the most part. We got our stuff back if we straightened up our act for a while.
We had a neighbor like that too...and we were forbidden to play anywhere near their yard where our stuff would end up on their property. It worked b/c we obeyed our parents.
I recall the neighbor complaining to my folks about how the beautiful dogwood trees that lined our property were dropping leaves and berries on their driveway ... and suggested that my parents cut them down. Happens my mom loved those trees and the trees grew on the property as a fluke of nature. After many complaints, mom who was the least confrontational person on the planet, told the cranky guy after the umpteenth time, that no, they wouldn’t be cut down, b/c God put them there. That was the end of that.
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