Missouri - A woman has been charged with trashing a McDonald's restaurant in Missouri because she was unhappy with her cheeseburger because her order was prepared wrong and the restaurant refused to give her a refund. Better not go there again, I can guarantee there will be more than cheese in your next order!
NEW YORK - Hundreds of New Yorkers rode the city's subway trains in their underwear on Sunday. The idea is to act like nothing unusual is going on. Participants met up at six locations throughout the city. They formed groups and dispersed to subway stations to catch trains. Once inside the subway cars, they began calmly removing their pants and folding them up. You'd think they would do something like this when it's WARMER outside. Talk about cold buns!
Florida - A grandma was arrested for driving on a suspended or revoked license and spent 15 days in jail — including Thanksgiving — before being released. She was initially pulled over in September for driving too slowly. She was then issued a ticket for driving on a suspended or revoked license. After failing to show up for a court appearance, a judge issued an arrest warrant for the criminal charge that carries a penalty of up to a year in jail and a $1,000 fine. Ten days after the ticket was issued, grandma received a letter from the Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles, saying that her driving privileges were restored pending further review. While she believed her driving troubles were solved, the letter was actually in response to another incident.
She was arrested and Public defenders failed to appear at her initial court appearance, and no assistant public defender met with grandma at the Broward County Jail. On the morning of her initial appearance, the pretrial services division found that grandma was eligible for pretrial release on her own recognizance, but failed to alert the judge of that. Finally, at her arraignment on Dec. 2, 15 days after her arrest, prosecutors dropped the charges against her. Grandma needs to get herself an attorney - she's going to be wealthy soon.
N.C. – An undercover drug buy led North Carolina detectives to an underground marijuana garden in a buried school bus. The Lenoir County Sheriff's Office had been looking for the source of the marijuana for three years and had been flying over the area with a helicopter. Then sheriff's narcotics officers bought several pounds of pot in a recent undercover buy.
A search dog fell through a camouflaged trap door leading down to a full-length school bus buried 8 feet under a backyard tool shed.
Deputies seized 68 plants, each 4 feet tall and weighing about 35 pounds.
Bet they were watching the wheels on the bus go round and round, round and round, round and round...
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