Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Johanna Chisholm

‘Shameful’ Alabama town under fire for arresting 82-year-old woman who couldn’t afford her trash bill

Getty Images/iStockphoto

A police force in Alabama is facing a flurry of condemnation from residents after it was revealed that an 82-year-old woman was jailed over her failure to pay a trash bill.

A Tuesday press release from the police department in the east Alabama city of Valley relayed how Martha Louis Menefield, 82, had been arrested and charged on 27 November with “Failure to Pay-Trash”.

The 82-year-old was reportedly processed at the Valley Police Department and released on bond for the offence that had stemmed from her failure to pay her trash bill for the months of June, July and August.

“Prior to issuing the citation, Code Enforcement tried to call Ms. Menefield several times and attempted to contact her in person at her residence. When contact could not be made, a door hanger was left at her residence,” Valley Police Chief Mike Reynolds wrote in the press release, adding that a notice had been left on the woman’s door with the reason for their visit and a number provided for her to call.

Ms Menefield was then advised to appear in court on 7 September in reference to the citation, but after the 82-year-old missed the court appearance, a warrant was issued.

“While our officers can use their discretionary judgment on certain matters, the enforcement of an arrest warrant issued by the court and signed by a magistrate, is not one of them,” wrote Chief Reynolds in the press release, adding that “Ms. Menefield was treated respectfully by our officers in the performance of their duties and was released on a bond as prescribed by the violation.”

Ms Menefield has reportedly had trash services suspended at her east Alabama home three times over the course of the past two years for failure to pay and there have also been 22 incidents of suspensions and revocation of services since 2006, according to Environmental Services records viewed by local authorities.

Almost immediately after the press release was sent out into the ether did residents of the small Alabama city begin calling out the local police force for a “shameful” and “heartless” arrest.

“Absolutely the most ridiculous thing I have seen this year,” one commenter wrote under the Facebook post. “You should all be ashamed to call yourselves law enforcement. Of all things people should be arrested for this is the most asinine thing. At 82 she has to make sacrifices with the pricing of everything now. Food or trash....I would definitely hold my head down in shame.”

Questions began boiling up from other residents, who asked why the city didn’t simply just discontinue the Alabama woman’s service in lieu of placing her in cuffs. “You are a pitiful excuse for civil servants,” quipped yet another.

The comments and critique continued to flow in on Thursday, particularly after the City of Valley Alabama - City Hall Facebook page shared a post about a free lunch program run in partnership with a local program that they boasted fed “160 senior citizens in Valley” to “receive lunch year-round Monday-Friday”.

“I think the city (lower case intended) needs to do some damage control before patting themselves on the back for their ‘servitude’,” wrote Kimberly Walker in a comment below the post on Thursday afternoon, hinting at the scandalous arrest of an 82-year-old Valley resident that had taken place days before.

Another person called out the city’s police department more directly, by following up with a comment that read: “but yet your police department put a 82 yr old woman in jail over trash pickup”.

More citizens flooded the city’s Facebook page by calling out the egregious arrest, with one person glibly pointing out beneath the senior citizen free lunch post that at least if the 82-year-old is “in jail she’s gonna get 3 hots and a cot”.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.