https://www.caranddriver.com/news/a28524175/tesla-owner-steals-electricity-charging/
Florida Man Parks His Tesla Overnight on a Stranger's Lawn to Steal
Electricity
Jul 26, 2019  Clifford Atiyeh

[image  
https://hips.hearstapps.com/hmg-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/images/screen-shot-2019-07-26-at-6-16-20-pm-1564179397.png
Tesla charging on front lawn  / WPBF News
]

The owner of the Tesla Model 3 used an extension cord to plug in to a
complete stranger's outlet for 12 hours.

    This actually happened and is not a joke, as reported by WPBF 25 in Lake
Worth, Florida.

    A Tesla Model 3 was left outside on a homeowner's lawn for 12 hours to
charge using his electricity, all without his knowledge or permission.

    Please do not be this pathetic while driving an EV.

Driving an electric car can sometimes make a calm person slide into bouts of
extreme desperation. That may be the kindest way to describe why a Florida
man ditched his Tesla on another person's lawn, stole electricity from that
house, and walked off to party with friends in the middle of the night.

WPBF 25 television reported this exact scene in Lake Worth, a seaside locale
just south of West Palm Beach, that occurred last Friday. The Model 3 owner,
who was lucky to be unnamed in the story and have trespassing charges
dropped by the homeowner, said his car's battery had died on the way to a
friend's house around midnight. So, he figured, why not pull up onto a
stranger's front lawn and stretch a 120-volt cord to an external outlet—a
grounded plug surrounded by well-manicured landscaping, just perfect—and
leave the car for 12 hours?

Homeowner Phil Phil Fraumeni said he woke up on that Friday morning to a
call from his landscaper asking him to move his white Model 3 off the lawn.
Fraumeni replied he didn't have a Model 3. Then he saw the friendly setup
that had been draining electricity while he slept. WPBF 25 said he waited
several hours for the car's owner to return before calling police, who then
tracked down the owner's address and waited some more for the man to show
up. He showed up, didn’t apologize, was told he'd committed a crime, and
that was that. What's more, he didn’t pay Fraumeni a red cent for the free
charge.

Low batteries can do something to the human psyche. Range anxiety is still a
thing, no matter if a Tesla can comfortably travel 250-plus miles per
charge, when you're not following the car's prescribed instructions to
charge at precisely the right times. But when you screw up, you ... [get a
tow]. 
[© caranddriver.com]




For EVLN EV-newswire posts use:
 http://evdl.org/archive/


{brucedp.neocities.org}

--
Sent from: http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
Please discuss EV drag racing at NEDRA (http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to