- 8 minutes ago
Category
📺
TVTranscript
00:00The defendant was a customer who tipped your waitress $5,000.
00:06Correct.
00:07Were you drunk?
00:07I don't recall much from that night.
00:09You're saying you reversed it because, what, it was a mistake?
00:12I thought I paid $50 tip.
00:14You didn't care.
00:15You just wanted to be a big shot by giving her a $5,000 tip.
00:18What did you think was going to happen?
00:19Um.
00:20Because that is a felony.
00:22Now on Tribunal Justice.
00:46Today's case was filed in New London, Connecticut.
00:50Your Honor, this is case number 3092, Mystic Slices, LLC v. Eldridge.
00:56You're welcome.
00:56You may be seated.
00:57Mr. Organese, you are the owner of a pizza bar called Mystic Slices.
01:03The defendant was a customer who tipped your waitress $5,000 on a $23.65 bill.
01:11But the next day he reversed that, and now you're out $10,000, $5,000 for the tip,
01:17$5,000 for the money he pulled out of your account.
01:20The estate maximum for you is $5,000, and that's what you're suing him for.
01:24Sir, you say it was supposed to be a $50 tip.
01:28I did it on my cash app, which I've since canceled because of this problem.
01:32You don't know anything.
01:33Correct.
01:34Okay.
01:35So let's start, sir, by telling us a little bit about Sports Bar.
01:40It's in Mystic, Connecticut.
01:41Is it in Mystic?
01:42Yeah, it's a sports bar in Mystic, Connecticut.
01:45And on the 13th of October, 2024, the defendant came into our establishment.
01:52What time was it when he came in there?
01:54I believe it was around 6 or 7 o'clock at night.
01:56Is that correct, sir?
01:57I can't remember.
01:59Maybe.
01:59Yeah.
02:00Would the bill reflect what time?
02:02So I'm going to tell you it was after 10 o'clock.
02:04Yeah, okay.
02:05How many hours were you there, sir?
02:0830 minutes or more.
02:0930 minutes.
02:10Was the bar closing while you were there, sir?
02:12Yes.
02:12Okay, go on.
02:13So he comes in and...
02:15And he came in and one of my workers actually, I guess, went to grade school with him.
02:20And they met, they stayed there a little bit.
02:22And they talked at the bar and...
02:24Were you there, sir?
02:25I wasn't there.
02:26Okay, so then let me ask you.
02:27So, sir, while you were there, what did you order?
02:31Some wings, some pickleback shots.
02:35What?
02:35Pickleback shots?
02:36A pickleback?
02:37Yeah.
02:37There's pickleball, now there's pickleback.
02:39Yeah.
02:40Everything's being pickled here.
02:40That's a Jameson and pickle juice.
02:42Pickle...
02:43What's in the pickle juice?
02:44It's Jameson and a shot of pickle juice.
02:46That sounds like it's enough to make you sick.
02:49It's quite delicious, actually.
02:50Is it really?
02:50Yeah.
02:51Oh, okay.
02:52So you ordered these shots.
02:54The waitress served you.
02:54Do you know who the waitress is?
02:56No.
02:56Same waitress served you for the whole time you were there?
02:58Yes.
02:59Was there anybody there with you?
03:00Just the gentleman he was talking about at work's there.
03:03The gentleman, you're sitting next to him at the bar?
03:05Yes.
03:06Have you ever been to this bar before?
03:07No.
03:08What made you go there?
03:09It was down the street from the hotel I was staying at.
03:12Why were you in a hotel in Connecticut?
03:14I got in a fight with my brother from Andover, so I just drove about an hour away to a
03:19hotel
03:19to stay.
03:21So wait, you had an argument about what?
03:24Just respect in the house and stuff like that.
03:26It was just a petty fight, but just needed some space.
03:29For a petty fight?
03:30You went to a hotel an hour away?
03:32Yeah.
03:32You must have really been angry.
03:33Yeah.
03:34You were pissed off, right?
03:35Yeah.
03:35You were really angry.
03:36Okay, so you go into Gino's place and you order.
03:40What happens?
03:42I just paid my bill.
03:44I thought I paid $50 tip, and I woke up the next morning, and my cash app when I went
03:50to
03:50go get a coffee at Dunkin' Donuts was negative over $5,000.
03:55So you're saying you reversed it because, what, it was a mistake?
03:58You were drunk?
03:59Yeah, I was definitely drunk, but I don't know if I put extra zeros or if I forgot to
04:03put a decimal, but...
04:04Well, how much did you drink?
04:07Three or four shots of picklebacks.
04:09What was your total bill?
04:11Well, I think I had a couple of bills.
04:13You did.
04:14You had a card and then a credit card, a Visa card.
04:17Let's look at the bill here.
04:19The original bill says $36.
04:21It says on the top that you ordered this on the 13th at 10.53 p.m.
04:26Four Jamesons, is that a pickleback Jameson?
04:30Yeah.
04:31What else will you guys come up with?
04:33Four Jamesons, $36, with the tax, $38.
04:37You pay with a prepaid card.
04:39Whatever that balance was on the card you used to pay, you had a balance of $23.65, and
04:46that's what you used to pay with your Visa card.
04:49Correct, sir, Mr. Organese was charged on a Visa card?
04:52Yes.
04:52So $5,023.65?
04:56Yes.
04:57And then there, sir, why don't you go up, step up to your receipt, and show us where the
05:01tip line is.
05:02What does that say?
05:04$5,000.
05:05Yeah, I don't see any $50 there, do you?
05:07No, ma'am.
05:08And when you add it up, what does it say?
05:10$5,023.65.
05:13Yeah, I don't see $73.65, do you?
05:16My intentions weren't to do that.
05:18Well, let's put you back there, because I think we have a video of you in the bar.
05:24The moving papers from the plaintiff say that you were being nasty to her.
05:28The bartender, Tasha?
05:30Yes.
05:31Do we have Tasha here by any chance?
05:33No.
05:34No?
05:34No.
05:34Okay, and you say you weren't being nasty, right?
05:37Of course not.
05:38I don't know, let's see what the video shows, because there's no sound, but I think her
05:43body language is very revealing.
05:47You are interacting with her, and she's standing there, like, with her hand on her hip, like,
05:52kind of indicating that you were not being Mr. Personality and Charm.
05:56Do you recall that?
05:57I don't recall much from that night.
05:59With four shots?
06:01I mean, were you drinking before you got there?
06:03No, I just don't drink very often.
06:05Now she gives you a bill.
06:07The guy next to you is your friend from the bar?
06:10Right.
06:10It's one of our employees.
06:11So you're writing out your tip, adding it up.
06:15How old are you?
06:1628.
06:17I mean, what do you mean by you don't drink very often?
06:19I don't know if I believe that.
06:20I don't really drink at all.
06:22You know, first, let me just clarify.
06:23He had two of those four, and the guy next to him had the other two.
06:28Yes.
06:30Coming up on Tribunal Justice.
06:33You knew you did not have that money in your account, right?
06:37Correct.
06:38So explain to me the difference between what you did with a person that passes a bad check.
06:47Restaurant owner Gene Arganese is suing customer Charles Eldridge for leaving a $5,000 tip, then disputing the charge.
06:55But Charles says he was drunk and only meant to tip $50.
06:59And anything more was just a simple mistake.
07:02So you didn't have four shots.
07:04You're saying you don't really drink, but even a light drinker who's eating, like you said, with your wings and
07:10everything else,
07:11I don't know why you're excusing your behavior for two drinks, but go on.
07:16Yeah, so, Your Honor, it's not that uncommon.
07:18People once in a while do give bigger tips.
07:21So even though it was kind of strange that someone was going to give a $5,000 tip.
07:25Yeah, kind of strange, really strange.
07:27And part of my bartender, I said to him, I said, what happened that day?
07:31Okay.
07:31So now you're going to give me hearsay, and that's not going to work here.
07:35But I do think we have somebody here who might have a little more personal information about their interactions.
07:42Ah, there we are.
07:43Mr. Martin, do you know the defendant, Mr. Eldridge?
07:47Yes, Your Honor.
07:47I used to work with him on a farm when we were growing up.
07:50So have you been close friends?
07:53Not really close friends, no.
07:54I just used to work with him when we were younger.
07:56And you've been listening to the testimony in here, sir, during this time?
08:00Yes, Your Honor.
08:00So you're familiar with what's going on?
08:01So were you there with Mr. Eldridge at the bar?
08:04Yes, Your Honor.
08:04And tell me, how many drinks did you have?
08:07I believe I had two that night, just the two shots.
08:09And what did he have?
08:11He had the other two shots, Your Honor.
08:12And did you see his interaction with the bartender?
08:15Was he friendly?
08:15Was he warm?
08:16Was he flirty?
08:17Was he mean?
08:18No, he just, I wouldn't say he was belligerent or mean, Your Honor.
08:22But, I mean, he wasn't, you know, the best customer to have at the bar either.
08:28What did he do or say?
08:29Um, so in Connecticut, we have this radio show.
08:33And one of their bits is that they named somebody a contestant.
08:37And you have to figure out who that contestant is.
08:40It's called the $5,000 Fugitive.
08:41They give little clues every single day on the radio station.
08:45And you have to figure out who it is.
08:47It could be anybody in the community.
08:48So how did that play into this interaction?
08:51So Charles had come in that day and he said, he told me, and Tasia, the bartender, she said,
08:58go ahead, you know, ask me if I'm the $5,000 Fugitive.
09:02She said, some along the lines of, you know, you're not going to pay me, so it doesn't matter.
09:07And she asked him, she goes, are you the $5,000 Fugitive?
09:10He goes, yes, I am.
09:11And again, she reiterated, you know, it doesn't matter.
09:14You're not going to pay me.
09:15And he goes, watch this.
09:16When he gets his bill, he put, you know, the $5,000 tip on there.
09:19Did you see it or are you just saying that?
09:20Did you see him right in the tip?
09:22Yes, Your Honor.
09:23But it actually, it didn't go through the first time.
09:25The card didn't go through.
09:27He had to switch money from his cash app over to his regular card.
09:31Is that true, sir?
09:32Did you have to make a switch over to make a payment?
09:35I don't know which card was I used for the first time, but cash app was the only card I
09:39had.
09:40Go on, sir.
09:41Did you actually see him write out the $5,000 or did you just see his hand moving?
09:45No, Your Honor.
09:46I saw him write out $5,000.
09:48Me and Tasia.
09:49Had a conversation afterwards and she was like, holy cow, he really just hit me $5,000.
09:54Thank you, sir.
09:55Did you back out of this transaction afterwards?
09:57The next morning, what did you do?
09:58Yeah, I disputed it on my cash app.
10:01And did they send it back to you?
10:03Yeah, I didn't have the money in the first place.
10:05And you, sir, they pulled it out of your funding?
10:08Checking account, Your Honor, yes.
10:09And did you actually pay Tasia?
10:11Yes.
10:12You paid her the money, the bartender the money, so that's why you're out $10,000.
10:16Correct.
10:17And let me just say, all he had to do was call us up.
10:20But he didn't do that.
10:21No.
10:21That's why you're in here today.
10:22He took the coward way out.
10:23I know.
10:23Judge Levy?
10:24I got one even better for you.
10:25It's going to blow your whole defense out of the water, which is, I think, it's, I was drunk and
10:29I shouldn't have to pay anything.
10:31Right?
10:31That's your defense?
10:32Yes, sir.
10:33Okay, great.
10:34So, one of the things you learn when you prosecute DWI cases is one of the first things that's affected
10:40by your overconsumption of alcohol are your fine motor skills.
10:44This is what I'm doing right now.
10:45Fine motor skills.
10:47It's one of the reasons why police ask for your license and registration, right, when they pull over the car.
10:52Because it requires you to use your fine motor skills to reach into your wallet and to pick out and
10:57to hand over a license, right?
11:00Right.
11:00You give them another card, then they know that you're likely intoxicated.
11:04So, looking at your receipt, that's your signature, right?
11:07Yeah.
11:08Yeah.
11:08What do you recognize about that signature?
11:10Right on the line.
11:11Okay.
11:12So, does that make it more likely or less likely, Mr. I Was Drunk, that you had use of your
11:16fine motor skills?
11:18More likely?
11:19Right.
11:19Take a look at the $5,000 mark that you put down on that.
11:22Is that also on the line?
11:24For the most part.
11:25Yep.
11:26Does that make it more likely or less likely that you were intoxicated?
11:30Less likely?
11:31Exactly.
11:32There goes your defense.
11:34Not to mention the fact that you had two shots.
11:37Two.
11:37No, I had some beers, too, but...
11:39Show me evidence that you have of that.
11:41I don't have any evidence.
11:41Because you gave us absolutely zero evidence to support your case, right?
11:46Zero.
11:47What did you think was going to happen when you gave this $5,000 tip to this bartender?
11:52Did you know anything about her?
11:53About her background?
11:54How hard she works?
11:55How she relies on this money to support herself and her child?
11:59You know anything about that?
12:01No, sir.
12:01No, because you didn't care.
12:03You just wanted to be a big shot.
12:04By giving her a $5,000 tip?
12:06You think that she was going to invite you home?
12:08Have a little something-something with you?
12:09Was that what you were hoping for?
12:11Absolutely not.
12:12No.
12:13But we know you weren't drunk.
12:14We know you gave her a $5,000 tip.
12:17We know, based upon your prior testimony to Judge Domingo, that you knew you did not have that money in
12:23your account, right?
12:24Correct.
12:25So explain to me the difference between what you did with a person that passes a bad check.
12:30Because that is a felony, right?
12:32So you write this $5,000 tip, Mr. Big Shot, who was clearly not intoxicated.
12:37What did you think was going to happen?
12:38I don't know, Your Honor.
12:42Unfortunately, you're a business owner.
12:44You've got to deal with mutts like this.
12:46Nothing further.
12:47Thank you, Judge.
12:49Mr. Arganese, have you ever had anybody tip more than 100 times what their bill was?
12:58Yes, I have.
12:58So a $5,000 tip on a $23 bill wasn't unusual to you?
13:03Because, listen, I have to say, I don't know what you had to drink.
13:07Maybe you don't drink.
13:08Maybe you do.
13:09There's no way.
13:10Like, I'm allowed to bring my own common sense to this proceeding.
13:14And to me, it's just not reasonable.
13:16So explain to me what your thinking was.
13:20Coming up on Tribunal Justice.
13:23I am curious as to why it is you didn't call the bar the next day.
13:33Restaurant owner Gene Arganese says customer Charles Eldridge generously tipped his bartender $5,000 on his credit card, then reversed
13:42the payment after Gene paid his employee.
13:44He's suing Charles to get the $5,000 back.
13:47But Charles says he was drunk and only meant to leave a $50 tip.
13:51I have to say, I don't know what you had to drink.
13:54Maybe you don't drink.
13:55Maybe you do.
13:56There's no way.
13:57Like, I'm allowed to bring my own common sense to this proceeding.
14:02And to me, it's just not reasonable.
14:04So explain to me what your thinking was.
14:07Your Honor, I have multiple businesses.
14:09I have nine different LLCs.
14:10It happens probably about three to five times a year.
14:14You know, the definition of tips is to ensure proper service.
14:17That's what the tips means.
14:18There are some times.
14:19I never knew that.
14:20Yeah.
14:21At our beach resort, some of the guests are there for four or five days.
14:24Our bartenders, our wait staff, they have their drink ready for them at a certain time.
14:29They have their newspaper.
14:30They have, they go out of their way to service these people.
14:33And sometimes people give a great tip.
14:36Yeah.
14:36And I'm just going to interrupt you because if you're someplace for a week and you've got these staffers who
14:43are really waiting on you hand and foot,
14:45they're making sure the drinks are ready, your table's ready, your beach chair's ready, your towels are ready,
14:50and you're not tipping as you go along, you know, it's not unusual to then give the staff a pretty
14:55significant tip at the end of it.
14:57But on a $23 bill?
15:00Your Honor, is it something I would do?
15:02No.
15:03But there are people that do it, number one.
15:05Number two, as a business owner, all we can do legally, too, is make sure that it was signed, the
15:11receipt, and it went into our account.
15:14Then we're mandated by state law to pay, because that's not our money, that's in our business account.
15:21We're mandated to pay that employee no matter what.
15:25And the defendant never called us to say, hey guys, I slept on it, I made a big mistake the
15:30other day, can we avoid that?
15:32Sure.
15:33We would have absolutely done that.
15:35I am curious as to why it is you didn't call the bar the next day.
15:40I just thought it was a mistake at the restaurant, so I just had it handled with my card.
15:45Mr. Arganese, explain to me what your process is.
15:48Like, do you have any checks and balances for that?
15:51We have a shift manager on also, and then all our bartenders have what you call tip certifications.
15:58I think every two years they have to get recertified.
16:00It's a state law.
16:01It makes them aware of how to handle people, how to look and see if they're intoxicated.
16:05And, Your Honor, as a defendant said, he had the knowledge to call, apparently called his credit card company to
16:12dispute it.
16:13Call the business before the contract finalizes within one week.
16:17You know, once the money's sent out, it's almost impossible to get it back.
16:21And when did you first become aware of the fact that he was challenging the charge?
16:25When I got the money put back, when we had a reversal, it was around the 23rd I gave it.
16:31So later in the month?
16:32Later in the month, correct.
16:33I don't have anything else.
16:35What did you think was going to happen?
16:36Did you think that because you couldn't cover it, they were just going to not put it through?
16:40I mean, what did you think?
16:42I thought that when I disputed it, it was just going to go away.
16:46So you intentionally wrote it, knowing that you were going to go and dispute it?
16:50No, I didn't realize that he wrote that that night.
16:54Did you take the receipt home with you?
16:56No, ma'am.
16:56So you didn't take anything back with you, and yet you knew enough to get up the next day and
17:01make a phone call to your credit card company?
17:03So you did remember that you put $5,000 down.
17:05Well, I went to go to get coffee the next morning at the Dunkin' Donuts right down the street, too,
17:09and I didn't have any money in my account.
17:11I was negative $5,000 in my account.
17:14So the next day you called your credit card company, but you didn't call the pizzeria.
17:18Correct.
17:18So you didn't deal with them because you wanted to just make sure that that money didn't go through.
17:24Did the manager get involved in this?
17:26Because you say you have a manager set up there.
17:28Yeah, the manager, anything over a certain percentage has to be double-checked.
17:34More than 51%, something like that?
17:36Yeah, it's more than 51%.
17:36It's like over 50%, correct.
17:38He told me that he verified it with a customer, and everything was fine.
17:42Whether or not that's true, I don't know, but as I said, it would tell me whether or not the
17:47action you took by letting it go through was consistent with what you knew.
17:52I don't have any other questions.
17:53Mr. Arganese, I wanted to just make sure that we have all the evidence clear, right?
17:57So he comes in on the 13th big spender over here, and he leaves the $5,000 tip.
18:02Now we have you, by law, having to pay your bartender for that because he has not come back to
18:09your store.
18:10And according to the document that you provided us with, can we go, please, to 03, we see that the
18:18pay period started on 10-7, and it ended on 10-13, right?
18:22That's correct.
18:23And the pay date was 10-18, as is indicated right here, right?
18:26That's correct.
18:26And then if we can please now go to 06, the bank statement, and the reversal was on 10-31.
18:35Yes, Your Honor.
18:36That's the timeline.
18:37That's correct.
18:37Which is why you followed the law, and that's the money that you actually deducted and gave to your employee.
18:43Correct.
18:43Okay.
18:44I have nothing further.
18:45Just a couple of quick follow-ups.
18:47Mr. Eldridge, you know what I find interesting is that in your answer, you don't really make any mention of
18:52being drunk.
18:52The balance of your defense is that you only wrote $50 and not $5,000.
18:59It's one or the other.
19:00Were you drunk or were you not drunk?
19:02I was drunk.
19:03In your answer, you say you just wrote the wrong number.
19:05But now you're changing that defense to say, no, actually, I was drunk.
19:09Yes.
19:10I don't have anything else.
19:11We are going to retire to deliberate.
19:14Court is now on recess.
19:15Parties will be recalled.
19:23Let's start with if he was drunk.
19:25If he was drunk, he was a functioning alcoholic, and so he did know what he was doing still because,
19:30as you say, he had fine motor skills.
19:32The way it was written out, it was beautifully done.
19:34So I think he knew he put down the $5,000.
19:37Going to what I really think was that he was not drunk.
19:39Therefore, he put $5,000 down, and he left it as a tip.
19:44He didn't really think it was going to cause any harm, and they were going to say, okay, we're not
19:48putting through the $5,000.
19:50Not thinking that somebody was going to be at a loss, as the plaintiff was here, both for him removing
19:56the money from the account and for him paying through to the bartender.
20:00When he got up the next morning, he knew exactly what he had done.
20:03That's why he called the credit card company.
20:05I wanted to know if he took the receipt back because I figured, you know, you go through your stuff
20:09and it reminds you.
20:10But he knew right off the bat when he got up that that was the thing to do.
20:13You mean like going to a casino and waking up in the morning like, I took out how much from
20:16the cash machine?
20:17Exactly.
20:17Exactly.
20:18So I hear.
20:18You know, yeah.
20:19Of course, you would never do that.
20:20So I hear.
20:22So I think he wanted to look like a big shot.
20:24And the witness, I do believe that he had that conversation and that that's what motivated the amount of $5
20:30,000.
20:31That's consistent with that.
20:32I think the plaintiff's entitled to his $5,000.
20:35The guy's messed up.
20:36Everyone's trying to figure out why he did what he did.
20:39It's not an element, right?
20:40We don't have to prove it beyond a reasonable doubt, but there has to be a reason that he did
20:43what he did.
20:44The only logical reason, right, was because he thought he was going to get lucky with the bartender.
20:49There's no other.
20:50Tell me what the other logical reason is.
20:53You can't.
20:54You can't.
20:55You don't have one.
20:55Because we, listen, at the end of the day, the guy knew he didn't have the money in his account.
20:59But I've got to stop you, Adam, because I think that anybody trying to pick up somebody would do something
21:04a little more flirtatious and hit on them.
21:06Yeah, he was through all night.
21:07And we didn't even get that from the friend that he was hitting on him.
21:10I just think he's a jerk who thought he was going to look like a big shot, put down the
21:14money.
21:14So he had no reason.
21:15Or I think that she said, she said, you're not going to pay me.
21:18You're not going to pay me.
21:19So if you're kind of a jerk, you want to be challenged, and you've been challenged, you're going to pay.
21:27But, you know, you saw even now, my last questions, and his answer, his defense isn't predicated on his being
21:33drunk.
21:33Maybe he was drunk when he wrote the defense.
21:35Yeah, exactly.
21:35His defense is predicated on something that's patently untrue, which is that he only wrote $50.
21:40Anyone watching, don't think that just because, you know, you gave a huge tip that it means you're going to
21:44lose.
21:45Not at all.
21:46It just means that if you were intoxicated, and clearly the bar had reason to know not to accept your
21:51money,
21:52that this case could have worked out much differently.
21:54But that's not the case.
21:55I think we went to the wrong line of work, because if you're getting $5,000 tips, maybe we're getting
22:00shortchanged.
22:01Yeah, but only three times a year.
22:02I don't know.
22:07Court is back in session.
22:08Both parties are reminded that you're still under oath.
22:11Thank you, Cassandra.
22:12Well, this is a little bit of evidence of human nature at work here.
22:16You get a receipt that says a $5,000 tip.
22:19You write clearly a $5,000 tip on a document.
22:23In our discussions and deliberations, I think it kind of came through that you didn't care.
22:28You knew what you were doing, and you really didn't care the ramifications that you are doing that
22:33and then you're pulling back on it would have.
22:36Although we don't have to ever show motive in almost any case, you know, in criminal or civil,
22:41it's always nice to understand why, because it makes it sit better with you, your decision.
22:46So, you know, we kind of went back and forth in deliberations as to why.
22:50Why would you put down $5,000?
22:53Were you trying to hit on the bartender?
22:55Were you just in a terrible mood?
22:56Were you just showing off?
22:59But what we kind of came to the conclusion is that somehow, at least I should say for myself,
23:05somehow something is going on with you in your life where you are not on the right track.
23:10And I think you know it.
23:12You're coming into an establishment.
23:13You're being nasty to a stranger, to a bartender.
23:17You're either drinking or not drinking.
23:19All of those things don't give you a defense, which would negate the plaintiff's position
23:24that you wrote $5,000, that you were not apparently drunk to anybody that was there.
23:31You gave a $5,000 tip and you owe them a $5,000 tip.
23:36So the unanimous verdict of this bench is that you are entitled to the $5,000 court maximum
23:41that you have sued in this courtroom for.
23:43And I think you should think about what's happening with yourself.
23:48This case has concluded.
23:49All parties are excused.
23:54I thought I was drinking too much, I guess.
23:57You know, if people ought to be a big shot and put it on there, you know, you got to
24:01pay it.
24:01Didn't see myself doing something like that intentionally.
24:04He took the cowardly way out and this is what happens.
24:07One, two, many, zero.
24:09Just pay what you owe.
24:10No, I'll probably just go to a different pizza joint.
24:12Have you been scammed, cheated, or swindled?
24:16Let Tribunal Justice decide your case.
24:19Find us on social media.
24:56Transcription by CastingWords
Comments