Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

BOY, 6, ORDERS $1,000 IN FOOD FROM GRUBHUB

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CHESTERFIE­LD TOWNSHIP, Mich. — A Michigan man says he was left with a $1,000 bill after his 6-year-old son ordered a virtual smorgasbor­d of food from several restaurant­s last weekend, leading to a string of unexpected deliveries — and maybe a starring role in an ad campaign.

Keith Stonehouse said the food piled up quickly at his Detroit-area home on Saturday night, Jan. 28, after he let his son, Mason, use his cellphone to play a game before bed. He said the youngster instead used his father’s Grubhub account to order food from one restaurant after another.

The boy’s mother, Kristin Stonehouse, said Thursday that Grubhub has reached out to the family and offered them a $1,000 gift card. The company also is considerin­g using the family in an online promotiona­l campaign, she said. Grubhub officials did not respond to a message from the AP seeking comment.

Keith Stonehouse said he was alone with his son while his wife was at the movies when Mason ordered jumbo shrimp, salads, shawarma and chicken pita sandwiches, chili cheese fries and other foods that one Grubhub driver after another delivered to their home.

“This was like something out of a ‘Saturday Night Live’ skit,” Keith Stonehouse told MLive. com.

He added: “I don’t really find it funny yet, but I can laugh with people a little bit. It’s a lot of money and it kind of came out of nowhere.”

Keith Stonehouse said his son ordered food from so many different places that Chase Bank sent him a fraud alert declining a $439 order from Happy’s Pizza. But Mason’s $183 order of jumbo shrimp from the same restaurant went through and arrived at the family’s house.

Kristin Stonehouse said her husband had just used the Grubhub app to order dinner before she left and probably just left the app open. She said her son took the phone, hid in the basement and proceeded to order his feast.

She said she and her husband had a talk with Mason on Sunday morning and told him what he did was akin to stealing.

“I don’t think he grasped that concept at first,” she said.

To drive the point home, she and her husband opened up Mason’s piggy bank and pocketed the $115 he had gotten for his birthday, telling him the money would go to replenish their accounts. That didn’t seem to faze the boy.

“Then he found a penny on the floor and said he could start all over again,” she said.

Keith Stonehouse said most of the food went into the family’s refrigerat­ors. He said he also invited some neighbors over to eat some of it.

 ?? KRISTIN STONEHOUSE VIA AP ?? Mason Stonehouse, 6, apparently started placing orders on the Grubhub app on his father’s phone that his dad had left open.
KRISTIN STONEHOUSE VIA AP Mason Stonehouse, 6, apparently started placing orders on the Grubhub app on his father’s phone that his dad had left open.

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