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Woman succesfully sues girls for giving her cookies

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  • Woman succesfully sues girls for giving her cookies



    Durango - Two teenage girls decided one summer's evening to skip a dance where there might be cursing and drinking to stay home and bake cookies for their neighbors.

    Big mistake.

    They were sued, successfully, for an unauthorized cookie drop on one porch.

    The July 31 deliveries consisted of half a dozen chocolate-chip and sugar cookies accompanied by big hearts cut out of red or pink construction paper with the message: "Have a great night."

    The notes were signed, "Love, The T and L Club," code for Taylor Ostergaard, then 17, and Lindsey Jo Zellitti, 18.

    Inside one of the nine scattered rural homes south of Durango that got cookies that night, a 49-year-old woman became so terrified by the knocks on her door around 10:30 p.m. that she called the sheriff's department. Deputies determined that no crime had been committed.

    But Wanita Renea Young ended up in the hospital emergency room the next day after suffering a severe anxiety attack she thought might be a heart attack.

    A Durango judge Thursday awarded Young almost $900 to recoup her medical bills. She received nothing for pain and suffering.

    "The victory wasn't sweet," Young said Thursday afternoon. "I'm not gloating about it. I just hope the girls learned a lesson."

    Taylor's mother, Jill Ostergaard, said her daughter "cried and cried" after Judge Doug Walker handed down his decision in La Plata County Small Claims Court.

    "She felt she was being punished for doing something nice," Jill Ostergaard said.

    The judge said that he didn't think the girls acted maliciously but that it was pretty late at night for them to be out. He didn't award any punitive damages.

    Taylor and Lindsey declined to comment Thursday, saying only that they didn't want to say anything hurtful.

    Young said the girls showed "very poor judgment."

    But Taylor had asked her father's permission to bake cookies for the neighbors after livestock-tending chores were done.

    "I said, 'Go ahead, as long as I get some cookies,"' Richard Ostergaard said Thursday.

    Just as dusk arrived a little after 9 p.m., Taylor and Lindsey began their mad spree. They didn't stop at houses that were dark. But where lights shone, the girls figured people were awake and in need of cookies. A kitchen light was on at Young's home.

    Court records contain half a dozen letters from neighbors who said that they enjoyed the unexpected treats.

    The cookies were good. It was a nice surprise. They weren't scared.

    But Young, home with her own 18-year-old daughter and her elderly mother, said she saw shadowy figures who banged and banged at her door. When she called out, "Who's there?" no one answered. The figures ran off.

    She thought perhaps they were burglars or some neighbors she had tangled with in the past, she said.

    "We just wanted to surprise them," Taylor said.

    Young left her home that night to stay at her sister's, but her symptoms, including shaking and an upset stomach, wouldn't subside. The next morning she went to Mercy Medical Center.

    "We feel that knocking on a door and leaving cookies is a gesture of kindness and would not create an anxiety attack in the general public," Taylor's parents wrote to the court.

    The girls wrote letters of apology to Young. Taylor's letter, written a few days after the episode, said in part: "I didn't realize this would cause trouble for you. ... I just wanted you to know that someone cared about you and your family."

    The families had offered to pay Young's medical bills if she would agree to indemnify the families against future claims.

    Young wouldn't sign the agreement. She said the families' apologies rang false and weren't delivered in person.
    The matter went to court.

    Young said she believes that the girls should not have been running from door to door late at night.

    "Something bad could have happened to them," she said.


    Wow, what an ungrateful *****.

    If I were in that town I think I'd organize a campaign of knocking on that woman's door every 15 minutes and giving her cookies in the hope of giving her a real heart attack.

  • #2
    Oh give me a break. If there's a case that deserves capital punishment, Young would qualify!
    "The issue is there are still many people out there that use religion as a crutch for bigotry and hate. Like Ben."
    Ben Kenobi: "That means I'm doing something right. "

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    • #3
      I wouldn't eat cookies that someone left outside my door like that.
      It's candy. Surely there are more important things the NAACP could be boycotting. If the candy were shaped like a burning cross or a black man made of regular chocolate being dragged behind a truck made of white chocolate I could understand the outrage and would share it. - Drosedars

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      • #4
        That another thing though, it's still a nice gesture.
        Is God willing to prevent evil, but not able? Then he is not omnipotent. Is he able, but not willing? Then he is malevolent. Is he both able and willing? Then whence cometh evil? Is he neither able nor willing?
        Then why call him God? - Epicurus

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        • #5
          I'm glad that taught the girls a valuable lesson.

          Don't be nice to people, it only gets you in trouble.
          B♭3

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          • #6
            Yet another nail in the coffin of private charity.
            Blog | Civ2 Scenario League | leo.petr at gmail.com

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            • #7
              I'm sure the girls saw that coming ...

              I've got no sympathy for people who'd stalk the neighbourhood to distribute cookies, but there's no way in hell the girls should have been expected to realize that their behaviour might give someone an anxiety attack. The real culprit is the Young woman's overly excitable nerves, which aren't the girls problem.
              Why can't you be a non-conformist just like everybody else?

              It's no good (from an evolutionary point of view) to have the physique of Tarzan if you have the sex drive of a philosopher. -- Michael Ruse
              The Nedaverse I can accept, but not the Berzaverse. There can only be so many alternate realities. -- Elok

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              • #8
                Originally posted by St Leo
                Yet another nail in the coffin of private charity.
                In Soviet Russia, Fake borises YOU.

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                • #9
                  now if they were 'SPECIAL' cookies.
                  It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
                  RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O

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                  • #10
                    This story is just surreal, especially these parts (considering the girls age):

                    The judge said that he didn't think the girls acted maliciously but that it was pretty late at night for them to be out.

                    --------

                    But Taylor had asked her father's permission to bake cookies for the neighbors after livestock-tending chores were done.
                    The enemy cannot push a button if you disable his hand.

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                    • #11
                      whoops, I was going to make a thread about this, but forgot. There's always someone here at Poly to post the stupid news.

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                      • #12
                        The english language doesn't contain words suitable to describe the absurdity of this situation.

                        Also, what kind of a hillbilly considers it a problem for two people ages 17 and 18 to be out at 10:30 pm. This is just surreal.
                        "I'm moving to the Left" - Lancer

                        "I imagine the neighbors on your right are estatic." - Slowwhand

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                        • #13
                          I think this is a beauty :

                          She thought perhaps they were burglars or some neighbors she had tangled with in the past, she said.
                          She is aparently busy messing up other peoples lives, and when a couple of girls does something nice, she panics in fear of what she has done to others.

                          Besides, how come she didn't just shoot the girls ? They were certainly trespassing.
                          With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.

                          Steven Weinberg

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Shi Huangdi
                            The english language doesn't contain words suitable to describe the absurdity of this situation.

                            Also, what kind of a hillbilly considers it a problem for two people ages 17 and 18 to be out at 10:30 pm. This is just surreal.
                            American judges apparently. I guess it's part of this "sex-abstinence" program that is so modern.
                            With or without religion, you would have good people doing good things and evil people doing evil things. But for good people to do evil things, that takes religion.

                            Steven Weinberg

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                            • #15
                              doesn't this make you want to burn down some courthouses? or is it just me?

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