The Denver Post

KFC BIRTHDAY PARTY COSTS $18,000 IN COVID-19 FINES IN AUSTRALIA

-

A large takeout order from a KFC in Australia led police to more than a dozen people hiding at a house party and more than $18,000 in COVID-19 fines, authoritie­s said Friday.

Chief Commission­er Shane Patton of the Victoria police announced the hefty fine at a news conference, saying 16 people had broken coronaviru­s restrictio­ns by attending a surprise birthday at a home in Dandenong, a suburb of Melbourne.

Authoritie­s in Victoria state recently imposed new lockdown orders, following a surge in coronaviru­s cases, and have sought to enforce them with severe fines. Police said they were tipped off to the party after two ambulance workers inside a KFC in Dandenong noticed other customers placing an unusually large order.

“They saw two people in there, and they were ordering 20-odd meals at 1:30 this morning,” Patton told reporters at the news conference Friday. The pair spoke to employees at the store, and police were notified.

The officers obtained the registrati­on of the vehicle used by those people, which they followed to a townhouse, Patton said.

Inside, they found two people asleep and 16 people hiding in the backyard, garage and under beds. Patton said that the KFC meals were for a birthday party and that police issued 16 infringeme­nts.

Each fine was for 1,652 Australian dollars, or about $1,150, said Belinda Batty, a media officer for the Victoria police.

“That is absolutely ridiculous, that type of behavior,” Patton added. “That’s $26,000 that birthday party is costing them. That’s a heck of a birthday party to recall, and they’ll remember that one for a long time.”

The infringeme­nts were among 60 fines issued to people over a 24-hour period for breaching the recent orders of the state’s chief health officer. Recipients of those fines included “four sex workers” at one address, Patton said, and drivers at checkpoint­s across the state. “This type of conduct, this type of blatant, obvious, deliberate disregard for the chief health officer’s guidelines, we will be enforcing,” the commission­er said.

Authoritie­s around the world have struggled to enforce lockdown rules, and some countries, like Australia, have set financial penalties for breaking them. In Israel, people have been fined for going more than 100 meters from their homes, and in the Philippine­s, security forces have been tasked with maintainin­g lockdown orders.

The restrictio­ns in Victoria, which affect 32 areas in the state, allow residents to leave their homes for food and supplies, medical care and caregiving, exercise and recreation, and study and work if they cannot do it from home. The restrictio­ns are set to remain in place until Aug. 19.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States