86 Year Old Was Given $300 Fine For Littering After He Spit Out A Leaf That Flew Into His Mouth

An 86-year-old man in England found himself on the wrong side of the law after a particularly unusual incident. Roy Marsh was slapped with a fine exceeding $300 for what officials deemed littering. However, the “litter” in question was merely a leaf that had blown into his mouth.

The incident occurred while Marsh was taking his daily walk around a boating lake in Lincolnshire. According to the elderly man, a strong gust of wind carried a large reed directly into his mouth, prompting him to spit it out immediately.

Moments after expelling the unwanted vegetation, two enforcement officers approached him and issued a citation for littering.

“As I was sitting there, a gale blew a big reed into my mouth. I spat it out. And just as I got up to walk away, two enforcement officers came up to me,” Marsh recounted to the BBC.

The situation becomes even more concerning when considering Marsh’s health conditions. His daughter explained in a Facebook post that her father has severe asthma and a heart condition, along with walking difficulties.

The leaf didn’t simply touch his lips but actually caused him to choke, requiring him to cough it up to avoid a potentially serious medical emergency.

“Dad, who has walking difficulties but does his best to walk every day around the boating lake, inhaled a small leaf that made him choke. Dad has severe asthma and a heart condition, but he managed to cough up the leaf and spit it out. Just the leaf,” his daughter wrote.

When the officers confronted Marsh about spitting on the ground, the bewildered senior citizen responded by calling one of them a “silly boy,” a relatively mild reaction given the absurdity of the situation. “It was all unnecessary and all out of proportion,” Marsh said.

The initial fine totaled $334.50, though Marsh successfully appealed and had it reduced to $200.70, which he ultimately paid. However, this appears to be part of a larger pattern in the area.

Adrien Finley, a county counselor on Lincolnshire County Council, revealed that he had received numerous similar complaints from other residents.

“Enforcement officers are taking it too far. There needs to be discretion about how the enforcement officers issue fines. If it looks like a genuine accident, then give people the opportunity to apologize and pick it up,” Finley told the BBC.