Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Apparently Ice Cream Trucks In NYC Owe Millions Of Dollars In Unpaid Fines—And The City Is Cracking Down On Them Hard

Like many large cities, New York has a long and storied history of crime.

But it turns out one of the city's most devious syndicates was hiding in plain sight all along.


Fortunately, the NYPD, in a massive sting operation known as "Operation Meltdown" finally stuck it to the villains involved: NYC's ice cream trucks.

In a press release, Mayor Bill de Blasio explained that many of the city's ice cream trucks had "violated traffic laws" and evaded paying fines for "nearly a decade."

To collect on the massive accumulated debt, beginning on Wednesday, June 5, the city started to seize 46 ice cream trucks.

The city of New York claims that from 2009 to 2017, various ice cream trucks accrued "22,000 summonses and nearly $4.5 million in fines for traffic violations." To avoid paying these fines, however, the truck's owners would quickly form shell companies, then re-register their trucks as being owned by the new company.

When the city's finance department went looking for the money they were owed, the company and truck who originally committed the violation would be long gone.

The city wasn't going to let this stand, however. Many of the city's ice cream trucks have been known to block crosswalks and fire hydrants, causing safety hazards.

Zachary W. Carter, the city's corporation counsel, takes this all seriously:

"We all know from common experience that ice cream trucks are magnets for children. In order to protect this particularly vulnerable category of pedestrians, our traffic laws must be strictly enforced."

The city has issued a $10,000 lawsuit against the perpetrating parties, and Mayor DeBlasio issued a statement saying:

"No New Yorker is above the law—especially those who try to ignore public safety laws and create dangerous situations for pedestrians, bikers and drivers."

Many New Yorkers were glad to see the city's ubiquitous ice cream trucks being held to justice!


Others, however, felt soft serve was above reproach.



On Twitter, many thought the city had better things to do than track down ice cream trucks for their parking violations.



It certainly was a lot of hubbub centered around some vanilla cones...

However, after reading the details of the investigation, many had to admit this seemed like a worse offense than a single evaded parking ticket.

Justice is swift!

More from Trending

Signal app logo; J.D. Vance
Jaap Arriens/NurPhoto via Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Signal's Founder Epically Roasts Vance Over The Disastrous Group Chat Debacle

Signal founder Matthew Rosenfeld, better known by the pseudonym Moxie Marlinspike, mocked Vice President J.D. Vance after the app found itself at the center of the Trump administration's group text scandal.

Rosenfeld's post came amid revelations that Atlantic editor Jeffrey Goldberg was invited into a Signal chat with high-level Trump administration officials, particularly Vance and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, discussing military strategy surrounding war strikes in Yemen.

Keep ReadingShow less
MTG, Martha Kelner
C-SPAN

MTG Blasted For Her Unhinged Reaction To A UK Reporter Asking Her A Question

Far right Georgia Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene was bashed for viciously shutting down a British reporter who had a question about the Signal group chat scandal, AKA "Signalgate."

Republican President Donald Trump's administration continues to downplay concerns after The Atlantic'seditor-in-chief, Jeffrey Goldberg, was mistakenly added to the Signal messaging app's group chat in which U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth shared with top intelligence officials the specific weapons programs regarding the U.S. war strikes on Houthi rebels in Yemen.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Rachel Maddow
MSNBC

Rachel Maddow Gives Trump A Blistering Reality Check After His 'Perfect' Presidency Claims

MSNBC anchor Rachel Maddow criticized President Donald Trump after he claimed "we've had two perfect months" to start out his presidency—conveniently downplaying "Signalgate" and ignoring all the scandals that have thus far struck his administration.

You can see his comments to reporters in the video below:

Keep ReadingShow less
train crossing in small town
craig kerwien on Unsplash

People Share Their Most Embarrassing Small Town Stories

I lived most of my life in a very small town in Northern Maine. There were about 200 kids in my high school and there were 56 kids in my graduating class—we were tied with the class of 1961 for the largest class ever.

When the primary employer in town—Pinkham Lumber Mill—shut down, the town got even smaller. Now the senior class is considered large if it reaches double digits.

Keep ReadingShow less
A post-it with "I Quit" written on it over a computer keypad
a yellow notepad on a keyboard
Photo by Nick Fewings on Unsplash

People Reveal Why They Quit Their Job On The First Day

As much as anyone may want to quit a job, at the end of the day it's easier said than done.

For one thing, even if people are working soul-sucking jobs that barely cover expenses, they still can't afford to lose the paycheck, until something better comes along.

Keep ReadingShow less