How's this for bureaucratic interference and police "brutality"???

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Preacherman

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From the Naples Daily News (http://www.naplesnews.com/03/06/naples/d947013a.htm):

Girl's lemonade stand back in business

06/21/2003

By DIANNA SMITH, [email protected]


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Forget about the Gulf of Mexico. Who cares about the breathtaking sunsets. Never mind the romantic lure of the Naples Pier.

Something sour has put Naples on the map.

Media from all over the United States have swarmed to now-famous Avigayil Wardein — a brown-haired, 6-year-old who just lost two front baby teeth.

Naples police busted Avigayil on June 13 for selling lemonade without a city permit. The story filtered through the news wires and quickly became a topic on CNN, MSNBC and Fox news networks, as well as the "Today" show and "Inside Edition."

Avigayil Wardein, 6, answers questions during an interview with staff from a national late night talk show on Friday afternoon at her home in Naples. Wardein runs a lemonade stand with her friends, Alysa Donnella, 6, and Austin Dremann-Pease, 9, and her brother, Lucas, 8, but was forced to stop selling lemonade and cookies at the end of her driveway last week after a neighbor complained. Lisa Krantz/Staff

Rush Limbaugh is talking about it. More than 60 radio stations from across the country have called Avigayil's mom, KC Shaw. On Friday, she talked with producers from the "Late Show" with David Letterman and "The Tonight Show," hosted by Jay Leno.

It was only nine days ago that Avigayil was known to passers-by as the cute girl who sells plastic cups of lemonade for 50 cents in front of her Old Naples house. Today, she's known as the Naples lemonade gal who has the whole country rooting for her and her ambitious little lemonade stand.

It turns out not many folks knew someone needs a city permit to operate a lemonade stand. Even Naples Mayor Bonnie MacKenzie bought lemonade from the small setup before Avigayil was forced to close it.

"I've been a customer of hers more than once," MacKenzie said. "That means I've aided and abetted. You know what, I'm not one bit sorry. It's good lemonade."

On June 13, Naples police responded to a complaint from an anonymous neighbor who grumbled about the permit-less lemonade stand on the corner of Sixth Street and 11th Avenue South.

Although the Naples police officer who answered the call was only doing his job, he felt so bad he bought a cup of lemonade. City officials shook their heads in shame. So they waived the permit fee, which was $35.

After a temporary shutdown, the city allowed the business entrepreneur to reopen.

Avigayil will lug the white plastic table and two gallons of fresh lemonade to the edge of the driveway today at 613 11th Avenue S., where her table is usually crowded with construction workers, landscapers and beachgoers with dry throats and sweaty clothes.

Phone calls from media, strangers and old friends have flooded the Shaw house, which the family might leave sometime soon to appear on national late night talk shows in Los Angeles and New York.

While sipping on a glass of cold lemonade, Shaw said Friday that she has had phone calls from people offering to pay for the permit and wanting to donate money to Avigayil. She's had so many offers, in fact, that she has set up an account called the Lemonade Girl College Fund at Orion Bank at 3838 U.S. 41 N.

Many of the other calls have been from people angry with the neighbor, whom the family believes complained about the stand. The caller didn't reveal her name to police, so it isn't confirmed that the neighbor is the woman who placed the call.

Shaw's neighbor has been unavailable for comment despite repeated attempts to reach her this week. The neighbor called police Friday morning to complain that the media had set up in front of her house and kept knocking on her door.

Phone calls also have flooded Naples City Hall, where staffers have listened to callers either praising the city for waiving the permit fee or criticizing the police for responding to the call.

"One guy was yelling, 'are you proud of what the nation thinks of your city?'" city staffer Michael Moose said. "It's pretty bizarre."

Naples police Chief Steven Moore said the city police department has received several calls, including one at 4 a.m. Friday from a man asking if officers had anything better to do than to shut down a lemonade stand. Others called irate, claiming they heard the police took Avigayil to jail.

"It's taken on a life of its own," Moore said with a smile.

But Avigayil doesn't seem to realize it.

She's still a normal 6-year-old who wants to spend what little money she has on candy, art supplies and dresses she can wear when she practices her ice skating moves. She likes to show off her fingernail polish — blue on one hand and purple on the other — as she fills the plastic cups with her mother's homemade lemonade.

Avigayil says she's famous. But she doesn't realize how many people know about her. She bases fame on how many coins and dollar bills are in her tip jar — a glass vase with a sign taped across it letting customers know spare change can be tossed inside.

Since news of the lemonade stand began spreading earlier this week, she expects to be "famous" for a long time.

"It makes you get lots and lots of money," Avigayil said, while holding her tip jar. "It's really fun."
 
another kid bust.

About 25 years ago up here in far northern NY, the police busted a kid who was selling night crawlers to fishermen in the early morning. He'd spend his evenings digging the worms and be beside the road where people passed on their way to some fishing hole or other before daylight.

What was his "crime?" He was not collecting sales tax!

Now ain't that something.

Up here we have a law that you don't have to collect sales tax if you hold a garage or yard sale. There is also a law that says you cannot run such a sale more than three days. You must close for a time, but can reopen. I know a yard sale that has been going on at least 13 years by closing every three days for about five minutes and then opening up again. Now that's wiggling through the loopholes real nicely.

The place is a regular outdoor variety store. I've bought some real nice clamps for wood working. I've bought most of my kitchen utensiles there. And its just about three miles from here.

rr
 
Yep, that's the zoning Nazis alright!

Of course, _I_ don't live anywhere near there, can't get Neal Boortz on the radio... What, officer! I don't have to tell you my address! OwOwOw don't hurt me!
 
Remember Kidco out of San diego, CA when the IRS went after them? They were a group of pre-teens who decided they would trap gophers and clean horse stalls for a fee. They then took the horse manure, rotted it down into compost, and sold it. The IRS tried to shut them down and the s--- hit the fan so vigorously that this incident even engendered a made-for-TV movie ( http://movies.yahoo.com/shop?d=hv&id=1800085059&cf=info&intl=us ).
 
Crap, we're in a day and age where a little girl can't sell lemonade? Geeze! I wish I was growing up in he 50's and 60's instead of now.:(
 
Little Avigayil learned a valuable lesson - in marketing. :D
 
Jimpeel

I really like your gun control tag line. Thanks for putting it up, it is very appropriate for the times.

Giant

Here's to good cold lemonade.
 
I really wonder about the anonymous neighbor. Is this like the anonymous drug tips with the no knock raids? With the attention this has received the neighbor shouldn't be too hard to find.
 
Anonymous denunciation

seems to be the PREFERRED method for filing a complaint around here. Just don't cut off your neighbor in traffic (or make him think you did), or you might receive a letter from Tallahassee saying "we have received information" (Yep, those are the exact words) that you are too old to drive, blind, incompetent, etc. Then you have to go see a doctor and have him fill out a veerry long form about you. It happened to a sweet little old lady I know. She was still quite sharp, just a horribly bad driver. I think FL has at last started to do eye tests for license renewals, a law fought tooth and nail by the geezer lobby until quite recently. The DMV must have thought being sneaky was the only way to get the really bad ones off the road. Say, I wonder if I should let them know my Mom died a few years back?
 
I'm somewhat worried about a 6 year-old selling things, even at the end of her driveway, considering how some low-lifes take little girls from inside their houses. Some perv out there, particularly after her brush with fame, might be looking to snatch her. Were that it were the '50s.
 
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