Bryan Danielson
Jmare007 x Bryan Danielson x JLova = King Ghidorah
Yahoo is now part of Oath
Viral video: Police called on 12-year-old mowing grass which ends up getting him more business
Ohio boy's lawn care business goes viral after 'ridiculous' neighbor calls cops on him
Really, what in the fukk is wrong with white people man? Calling cops on kids over grass? Even if they did cut into their property what really is the big deal with that? Maybe they too needed their grass cut and when they did, its less work for them.
Hell I NEVER ever got mad if my neighbors cut too deep in my property, its not a big deal.
Good this about this is it seems like these kids got pub and more business out of this, they probably gonna make more this summer than they were probably intentionally going to make and these people looks like scumbags.
Martha
Viral video: Police called on 12-year-old mowing grass which ends up getting him more business
Ohio boy's lawn care business goes viral after 'ridiculous' neighbor calls cops on him
A 12-year-old child who started his own summer lawn-mowing business had the cops called on him for doing his job.
Reginald “Reggie” Fields, who lives in the Cleveland area, started Mr. Reggie’s Lawn Cutting Service with his family, and was doing just that when police showed up to a Maple Heights neighborhood last week.
“They said I was cutting their grass. I didn’t know it,” the 12-year-old told WEWS News 5.
Neighbors apparently complained to police that Fields was cutting into their lawn, Lt. Joe Mocsiran of the Maple Heights Police Department confirmed to Fox News on Friday.
Lucille ****, Fields’ customer that day, told WEWS that she was confused when she saw a police officer approach.
“They said the kids cut their grass,” **** said, speaking about her neighbors.
In a video uploaded to Facebook by ****, children are seen doing yardwork together. Fields and his brother, 13-year-old Creshawn Austin, work on the business together. Though they aren’t related to ****, the two boys refer to her as “Grandma,” Cleveland.com reported.
“You see the police car right there?” **** says in the video. “My neighbors that stay in the house right there ― I guess I have a line where part of [the lawn] is not my yard. They called the police to tell the police that the kids was cutting their grass. Who does that? Who does that?”
Mocsiran told Fox no action was taken.
“A little kid is out there working hard ― heck no,” the lieutenant told the station.
“I was nervous,” Fields told Cleveland.com. “I thought they were going to tell me I was in trouble. I just walked away to another lady’s house and cut their grass. I just walked away and acted like nothing was going on and back in my own world.”
Fields and his family are now having the last laugh. After video of the incident went viral, **** said she started getting flooded with phone calls asking to book appointments with Mr. Reggie’s Lawn Cutting Service. She set up a GoFundMe page to raise money for the business, and the two boys have averaged four to five yards a day since Saturday, they told Cleveland.com.
Austin told the publication they are getting more supplies and storage to become “like a mini Home Depot.”
“It’s been busy,” Fields told the outlet. “We’ve been all over the place. My mom has to drive us all over.”
“Just give me a call,” Fields told WEWS. “I will be there, on time.”
Really, what in the fukk is wrong with white people man? Calling cops on kids over grass? Even if they did cut into their property what really is the big deal with that? Maybe they too needed their grass cut and when they did, its less work for them.
Hell I NEVER ever got mad if my neighbors cut too deep in my property, its not a big deal.
Good this about this is it seems like these kids got pub and more business out of this, they probably gonna make more this summer than they were probably intentionally going to make and these people looks like scumbags.
Martha


to the young brehs and brehette in the other story.
I can picture little breh in his 30s counting racks on his John Deer reminiscing of that phone call that helped his business pop off.