← Autodidact Archive · Original Dissent · il ragno
Thread ID: 17914 | Posts: 14 | Started: 2005-04-23
2005-04-23 00:22 | User Profile
[I]Ascuse me...[B]ascuse me![/B]...yeaah, they a [U]finguh[/U] an whatnot in dis chili, cabron. Mira, [B]dis [/B] how you treech ya custamahs? Imma get a lawya an.....[/I]ah, nuts; they arrested Senorita Fingerita before this case could drag out long enough for me to try out a Sherlock Holmes ("The Adventure of the Stinky Pinky") or Mickey Spillane ("My Lawyer Is Quick") parody version of this "story". Pity....
[QUOTE][url]http://aolsvc.news.aol.com/news/article.adp?id=20050422113709990020&ncid=NWS00010000000001[/url]
[SIZE=4]Police Consider Wendy's Case a Hoax[/SIZE] By KIM CURTIS, AP
SAN JOSE, Calif. (April 22) - Police investigating how a human finger ended up in a woman's bowl of Wendy's chili declared the claim a hoax Friday and arrested her on charges of attempted grand larceny.
The arrest of Anna Ayala at her home outside Las Vegas was the latest twist in a case that has become a late-night punch line, taken a bite out of Wendy's sales and forced the fast-food chain to check its employees for missing fingers.
[IMG]http://cdn.news.aol.com/aolnews_photos/0a/02/20050422125709990001[/IMG] Ayala, 39, claimed she bit down on the well-manicured, 1 1/2-inch finger in a mouthful of her steamy chili on March 22 in San Jose. She had hired a lawyer and filed a claim against the Wendy's franchise owner, but dropped the lawsuit threat soon after suspicion fell on her.
When asked whether police considered Ayala's claim a hoax, David Keneller, captain of the San Jose police department's investigations bureau, said yes.
''What we have found is that thus far our evidence suggests the truest victims in this case are indeed the Wendy's owner, operators and employees here in San Jose,'' Police Chief Rob Davis said.
At a news conference, police refused to say where the finger came from and exactly how the hoax was carried out.
But according to a person knowledgeable about the case who spoke on condition of anonymity, the attempted larceny charge stemmed from San Jose police interviews with people who said Ayala described putting a finger in the chili. The source said the interviews were with at least two people who did not know each other and independently told similar stories.
The source added that investigators still did not know where the finger came from.
Ayala - who has a history of bringing claims against big corporations - has denied placing the finger in the chili.
''We're thrilled that an arrest has been made,'' Tom Mueller, president and chief operating officer of Wendy's North America, said in a statement.
During the investigation, police and health officials failed to find any missing fingers among the workers in the restaurant's supply chain. Wendy's hired private investigators, set up a hot line for tips and offered a $100,000 reward for information leading to the finger's original owner.
The furor caused sales at Wendy's to drop, forcing layoffs and reduced hours in Northern California. Joseph Desmond, owner of the local Wendy's franchise, called the ordeal a nightmare.
''It's been 31 days, and believe me it's been really tough,'' he said. ''My thanks also go out to all the little people who were hurt in our stores. They lost a lot of wages because we had to cut back because our business has been down so badly.''
Earlier Thursday, Ohio-based Wendy's announced it had ended its internal investigation, saying it could find no link between the finger and the restaurant chain.
Ayala has filed claims against several corporations, though it is unclear whether she received any money. She said she got $30,000 from a Mexican food chain after her 13-year-old daughter got sick at one of the restaurant, but the chain denied it paid her anything.
Associated Press writers Josh Dubow in San Francisco and Ken Ritter and Joe Cavaretta in Las Vegas contributed to this report.
[I]Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press. [/I] [/QUOTE]
2005-04-23 00:41 | User Profile
****ing spics.
2005-04-23 03:57 | User Profile
I saw a brace o' stinky sheets jabberin' away in spiclish in my local inconvenience store - and this is a rural, almost entirely White (until now) area.
I had to struggle mightily against an almost overwheming impulse to crush their f-king skulls with a can of Dinty Moore.... :furious:
2005-04-23 04:57 | User Profile
[QUOTE=N.B. Forrest]I saw a brace o' stinky sheets jabberin' away in spiclish in my local inconvenience store - and this is a rural, almost entirely White (until now) area.
I had to struggle mightily against an almost overwheming impulse to crush their f-king skulls with a can of Dinty Moore.... :furious:[/QUOTE]
Well, it doesn't sound like Mr. Forrest is embracing racial diversity. :smartass:
2005-04-23 06:33 | User Profile
This filthy L'Teeno cost Wendy's quite a bit of cash and hurt many innocent employees. I know it happens quit a bit, but I wonder if the FBI has compiled any stats on L'Teenos who attempt to defraud companies by exploiting the liberal legal system like this.
2005-04-23 11:30 | User Profile
There's been a lot of speculation about where the the finger came from. My guess is that this woman or someone in cahoots with her cut it off of a med school cadaver. Alternatively (and maybe more likely), she might have gotten the finger from someone about to be cremated in a mortuary; she could have paid off an employee there. The investigators should probably be able to tell if the finger has ever had embalming fluid in it.
2005-04-23 16:48 | User Profile
"Ayala" makes a frequent appearance in the plaintiff's side of the caption (hers specificially, and the last name generally), as does "Cabrera," "Gonzalez," "Sanchez," etc. Hispanics, possessing a tad more smarts than nigras, have figured out that bogus or inflated personal injury lawsuits are a great get-rich-quick scheme. And there's always a "Weinstein, Esq." waiting to take the case. Sitting in court one day, there was calendar call confusion when there were two different "Freddy Lopez's" as plaintiffs. I thought to myself, is this the sign of a healthy, functioning society? Or dare I imagine otherwise? Is this a society in which me and mine and common sense generally are in charge, or is this a society in which I am a mere spectator, sufferer, taxpayer, insurance feeder, playing by the rules and figuring a bogus lawsuit is immoral because it's essentially stealing from other hardworking whites? Do the Hispanics really care that it's white ratepayers who suffer most, given that they've either been trained to pursue their own interests, morality be damned, or do they more generally just not give a shit, like a crackhead looking for a high?
If we're going to take lawsuits seriously (and we should), is it worth asking what sorts of societies best make this possible? Is there the possibility that in a multiracial society, the "moral hazard" is far deeper than in the monoracial, because the minority actor need not think of the majority host's interests because they are genetically, culturally, socially and politically disconnected from his own? Why, yes, I think so.
2005-04-23 17:54 | User Profile
Note, too, that the digit in question is described as "well-manicured"...how many lumpenproles in the fast food racket or meat-packing plant even use soap on their hands regularly? I'm assuming that no ID came up from the finger's print.
She should have emulated the McKenzie Brothers, who got a free case of beer when they "discovered" a mouse in a bottle... :thumbsup:
[img]http://www.technofile.com/images/strange_brew.jpg[/img]
2005-04-23 18:12 | User Profile
[QUOTE=madrussian]****ing spics.[/QUOTE]
With a capital *.
2005-04-23 20:59 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Snouter]This filthy L'Teeno cost Wendy's quite a bit of cash and hurt many innocent employees. I know it happens quit a bit, but I wonder if the FBI has compiled any stats on L'Teenos who attempt to defraud companies by exploiting the liberal legal system like this.[/QUOTE]
Most auto insurance fraud in Southern California involves Latrino "victims" and Zhid attorneys and Zhid/Asian dirty doctors...most uninsured drivers are also Mestizo...
So much for Bush Junior's Third-World pets.
[img]http://resist.com/CARTOON%20GALLERY/SPICS/spics_image11.jpg[/img]
2005-04-23 21:31 | User Profile
Speaking of insurance fraud, how much is committed by Asian doctors charging insurance left and right for unneeded procedures and tests? And given how much of their patients are Medicaid-leeching non-English-speaking trash that goes for new Americans nowadays, no wonder premiums have been steadily climbing.
Indeed, as someone noted here, freedom isn't free -- whitey pays for it.
2005-04-24 01:44 | User Profile
Was it a white finger?
2005-04-24 03:34 | User Profile
[QUOTE=Howard Campbell, Jr.]Most auto insurance fraud in Southern California involves Latrino "victims" and Zhid attorneys and Zhid/Asian dirty doctors...most uninsured drivers are also Mestizo... [/QUOTE]
Interesting. An elderly woman who is a family friend was driving and hit making a turn by a Latrino in an another car. I don't know if the cops investigated the citizenship status of the Latrino, but about a month later she received documents indicating that the Latrino was suing her. She moved across country to be closer to her sons and left it for her insurance company to deal with I think.
2005-04-24 03:58 | User Profile
Roy Batty,
Long time, no see. Welcome back! :cheers: