I’m sorry but the only party I held in my home that fifty people showed up was a party that my teenage daughter decided to throw while I was out of town for two days. You should have seen the guys from West Point jumping the deck like rats off a ship when I cam home early. Lol.
I think this might be a way to deal with people who throw loud parties. Why shouldn’t the police department recoup some of the money lost from all the unnecessary calls due to people throwing too loud of parties in residential neighborhoods? I imagine in the age of internet, the parties for teenagers are getting way out of hand, for i.e., that recent mansion party where two-thousand people showed up. Fairfax is a heavily populated county just outside of Washington DC. This seems to me a local issue. Not my concern.
If the parents are home and paying attention 2,000 kids can't show up unnoticed.
Did you read the part about the guy in Arizona getting arrested for having 10 people at a prayer meeting? I doubt it was loud and drunken. Possible, but the odds are against it.
The mansion was under construction. No one lived there. The kids got on Facebook and Twitter and handed out the address then their friends told two friends..and they told two friends..and so on and so on.
The guy in Arizona was a weird case that had to do with zoning laws. I don’t see the two stories really in the same vein.
I think this might be a way to deal with people who throw loud parties. Why shouldn’t the police department recoup some of the money lost from all the unnecessary calls due to people throwing too loud of parties in residential neighborhoods? I imagine in the age of internet, the parties for teenagers are getting way out of hand, for i.e., that recent mansion party where two-thousand people showed up.
Fairfax is a heavily populated county just outside of Washington DC. This seems to me a local issue. Not my concern.
Did you read the part about the guy in Arizona getting arrested for having 10 people at a prayer meeting? I doubt it was loud and drunken. Possible, but the odds are against it.
The guy in Arizona was a weird case that had to do with zoning laws. I don’t see the two stories really in the same vein.