Pennsylvania man protests $25 parking
ticket with 2,500 pennies
Send a link to a friend
[August 17, 2015]
By Katie Reilly
(Reuters) - A Pennsylvania handyman who
protested a $25 parking ticket by trying to pay it with 2,500 pennies
was denied the satisfaction by town officials citing federal law.
|
But justice denied to Justin Greene may simply be justice delayed
for others facing fines in Chambersburg, where officials learned the
law had been repealed and on Thursday said they are now considering
installing coin counting machines that accept pennies.
"Every penny I have is stretched to the limit," said Greene, who
showed up on Friday at Chambersburg finance department with 2,500
pennies, only to be told that pennies and nickels are not legal
tender for transactions over 25 cents under federal law.
Greene, 35, of nearby Shippensburg, said he got the ticket earlier
that day when he returned to a house to pick up tools from an
earlier job. He said he parked on the wrong side of the street, went
inside for 10 minutes and was frustrated to see the parking ticket
on his truck when he came out.
"It was about how belittled I felt because of being parked this way
and being charged so much when it wasn’t inconveniencing anyone,"
said Greene, whose wife is a stay-at-home mom to their three young
children.
Chambersburg Borough Manager Jeffrey Stonehill said in a press
release on Wednesday the federal law had been repealed, and the
department would accept coin payments in the future.
Still, Stonehill said he does not support Greene's form of protest.
"Tormenting a Borough cashier, rather than pleading not guilty to
the offense in a court of law, which is his right, is not an
appropriate protest in my opinion," Stonehill said in the press
release.
[to top of second column] |
Greene said he has since paid for the ticket with mostly paper
money.
"I just want to prove a point. More people need to stand up for
themselves," he said. "They were enforcing a law that’s been vetoed
for years. What other laws are there like that?"
(Reporting by Katie Reilly in New York; Editing by Barbara Goldberg
and Lisa Lambert)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|