By Anonymous - 12/01/2014 06:38 - Australia - Boondall
15_badgedesc
19_badgedesc
18_badgedesc
14_badgedesc
13_badgedesc
10_badgedesc
9_badgedesc
24_badgedesc
44_badgedesc
45_badgedesc
57_badgedesc
4_badgedesc
6_badgedesc
5_badgedesc
61_badgedesc
By Anonymous - 12/01/2014 06:38 - Australia - Boondall
By notakeeper - 03/01/2014 03:50 - United States - Orlando
By nopissleft - 20/12/2013 21:05 - Sweden - Stockholm
By NRFTW - 17/12/2013 05:10 - United States - Denver
By Ashamed_Sister - 30/11/2013 07:35 - Namibia - Windhoek
He just asked me if he can have something to eat. When I finished the sandwich I realized the irony.
A little more detail: This guy had wandered over from a party next door. It was almost 1 a.m., and during the holidays I work really late, so I came home, put my stuff away, and when I turned around there was a guy standing literally at my window, on my porch, pissing on my house. I walked out and started screaming at him (I know, probably not smart) to get the **** off of my property. He said, "I'm just takin' a leak," finished his business, zipped up his pants, and leaned against the porch staring at me. That's when my brain caught up with what I was doing and I went back inside and called the cops. My porch runs the length of my (very small) house. The porch is open without a railing, and at this time there were also several other men sitting on my porch right under my bedroom window (closest to my neighbors yard). When I called, Weld County dispatch first told me that the police were "too busy" to come out, and I ended up on the phone with a cop. He asked if the porch was fenced (no) and if it could be seen from the main road (no). I stupidly thought he was trying to locate my house, as it is hard to find. According to the laws in my city, once you ask someone to leave your property and they refuse, it is trespassing. I told them multiple times to leave my property, and one of them had the nerve to tell me "I can sit where ever I want."