Peeved patient proud of penny protest

Jun 10, 2011 15:18



Peeved patient proud of penny protest




Peeved patient proud of penny protest

Published: Tuesday, June 7, 2011 2:30 p.m. MDT

VERNAL - It's fair to say it was his cents of humor that brought Jason West to the attention of the coppers.

It's also fair to say that - despite the criminal charge he's now facing - the Vernal man wouldn't change what he did when he couldn't make heads or tails of a $25 billing dispute with his doctor's office.

Vernal police, responding to a signed complaint from Basin Clinic, cited West with disorderly conduct on May 31. West is accused of unnecessarily causing alarm when he unloaded 2,500 pennies onto a receptionist's counter at the clinic to settle his bill.

Officers emphasized that West wasn't cited for paying in pennies, but for the manner in which he did it. Police photos, released Tuesday through a public records request, support Assistant Vernal Police Chief Keith Campbell's statement last week that pennies were “strewn about the counter and the floor.” West's actions “served no legitimate purpose,” Campbell said.

“I would say that I had a legitimate purpose and it was to resolve a billing dispute and pay it,” West said, “and to protest how I'd been treated.”

Basin Clinic's doctors issued a brief statement Tuesday saying the clinic has "always accepted all legal currency as payment.”

“We will not tolerate pennies or any other objects being thrown at our employees,” the statement said.

West denies acting aggressively toward any clinic staffer, including the billing clerk he says refused to help him during the past month while he tried to resolve his questions about a $25 co-pay he claims he paid in December.

“I didn't at any time yell at them,” West said, referring to the May 27 visit that landed him in hot water. “I didn't go on a rant. I wasn't irate.”

West maintains that he calmly asked the billing clerk, “Do you take cash?” He was prepared to pay with his debit card, he said, but found out that wasn't necessary.

“She very haughtily said, 'Well, yes we do,'” West said. “So I said, 'Lucky for me, I happen to have it on me.'”

The police report from the incident states that West told clinic workers he was “'sorry' for what he was about to do” and dumped pennies from a cardboard box, which was found in the clinic waiting room, on the front counter.

West, however, says he had carried the 14 pounds of loose pennies in a large bowl inside a black plastic sack. He admits to pouring them onto the top counter. Some of the coins, he acknowledges, spilled onto the desk below where the receptionist was seated and onto the floor.

“That's just the nature of pennies,” he said. “They're round.”

There were people in the waiting room who witnessed the incident, but West maintains that no one appeared to be upset by his actions.

“There was giggles and snickers and outright laughter,” he said.

West added that he never demanded that someone count out his penny payment. He did ask for a receipt and said he told the billing clerk, “I'm willing to wait if you want to count them so you can make sure you got every penny.”

West said the woman told the receptionist to write out a receipt and then told him she was calling the police to have him removed from the building. West wasn't there, however, when an officer arrived.

“The girl handed me my receipt, I had no more business with them and I left,” he said, noting that he lives about four blocks from the clinic and wasn't contacted by a police officer for about five hours.

By then, West was more than an hour away, heading to a Memorial Day weekend gathering with family. He offered to return to Vernal immediately to meet with the officer, but said he was told that wasn't necessary. He finally met with the officer May 31, the day he was cited.

West said he wasn't trying to harm anyone or cause alarm; he was only trying to show his frustration over the poor customer service he believes he received from the clinic's billing department, and do it in a humorous way.

“I did stand-up comedy in college,” he said. “This is how I deal with stress. I make jokes.”

As for the $64,000 question - or rather the 6,400,000 penny question? West says he will not pay his $140 fine in one-cent pieces, if he's ultimately convicted of the disorderly conduct charge.

“I recognize my place,” he said. “I recognize it's a court of law and I have respect for the legal process.” SourceDeseret News

Penny offense: Man fined for paying fee in pennies
By Claudine Zap Mon Jun 6, 5:08 pm ET

No lucky pennies here: Police have charged Jason West, an aggrieved medical patient in Vernal, Utah, with disorderly conduct. His alleged crime? Attempting to pay a disputed medical bill of $25 entirely in pennies.

The story, reported in the Salt Lake City Deseret News, describes the "penny offense" this way: West, 38, did not believe he owed the medical clinic $25 but came in to pay the fee in person. He first asked the clinic staff if the facility accepted cash payments, and then dumped 2,500 pennies onto the counter and demanded that they be counted.

But West apparently hadn't counted on the clinic calling the police; the arresting officer contended that West's protest served "no legitimate purpose." The charge carries a fine that can go as high as $140--and there's no word as yet on what currency West will use to pay it.

West isn't alone in the ranks of penny protesters. A wise guy in Frederick, Maryland, showed up at the county clerk's office last summer with bags of cash to pay off his tax bill with $966.86 in change.
And a New Jersey school district a few years back punished 29 students who paid for their $2 school lunches in pennies--possibly as a prank--with two-day detentions. After parents protested, the students were pardoned. The school explained that the use of the small change slowed down the lunch line.SourceYahoo News

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