This week on Weird and Wacky Wednesday a Florida woman uses a wad of cash as a weapon, an Ontario woman ran her car into a bakery and then went to get her nails done, and a Quebec judge rules it’s a person’s right to flip off their annoying neighbour.
Follow the jump to read more about this week’s weirdest and wackiest cases from around the globe!
Read more: Weird and Wacky Wednesday: Volume 235Cold HARD cash
In today’s blog about which random objects can be used as weapons, we consider a wad of cash. Well, it can be, and after a woman at a Florida nightclub threw a wad at her ex-boyfriend, she was charged with domestic battery.
The woman and her ex both work at the nightclub, and as he was walking across the stage she decided that was her opportunity to throw the wad at the back of his head.
The amount of cash in the wad was not specified, but let’s hope the man was able to keep it as compensation for being hit in the head with it.
Nails first, then worry about the car crash
Hypothetical question, but if you were to crash a car into a business, what is the first thing you would do? Now you may think the answer is obvious, like calling the police and remaining at the scene, apparently, it is not so obvious to everyone.
After crashing through a bakery window, an Ontario woman decided her best course of action was to go to the nail salon next door. She did not call the police or wait to see what would happen next, I guess she figured making her nail appointment was the most important thing.
The reason the bakery owners knew she was at the nail salon was that one of the employees called them to let them know that the woman was there.
It is my right to flip the bird
Who would have thought you could be taken to court for flipping off your next-door neighbour? Well, it can happen, and it did happen in Quebec, where one man claimed his neighbour was harassing him and his family.
The man then threatened his neighbour while holding a power tool, to which the neighbour responded by sticking up not one, but both middle fingers. As a result, the man brought his neighbour to court.
But when he got to court, it didn’t go as he expected, and the judge was so flabbergasted by the fact that the case had made it to court in the first place.
Not only was the neighbour acquitted, but the judge went on to say that ‘Canadians have a “God-Given” right to flip off obnoxious neighbours.”