Crime Disney characters inappropriately touched at theme parks - When you wish upon some stars, touching Goofy on the arse.

  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account

Walt Disney World employees who work as Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse and Donald Duck have filed police complaints accusing tourists of inappropriately touching them.

Three female cast members complained to police about incidents at theme parks near Orlando, Florida, this month.

The woman wearing the Mickey Mouse costume said she was injured by a grandmother who patted her on the head.

The women who play Minnie Mouse and Donald Duck allege they were groped.

Orange County Sheriff's Office, which investigated all three incidents, said the women wearing the Minnie Mouse and Donald Duck suits decided not to press charges.

Police told the woman who plays Mickey Mouse the incident was a civil, not a criminal matter.

The incidents come after a 51-year-old man was arrested in November after an employee portraying a Disney Princess told investigators he groped her breast while having a photo taken.

"Everyone should feel safe at work, and we encourage cast members to come forward in any uncomfortable situation," a Disney spokesperson told the BBC.

The Magic Kingdom at the Walt Disney World theme park in Florida
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionThe Magic Kingdom was the first theme park to open at the Walt Disney World resort in Florida
"We provide multiple resources to protect our cast members' well-being, including on-site law enforcement officers who respond, and are available to them, if needed."

The three most recent incidents, first reported by Orlando Sentinel, happened over two days on 3 and 4 December.

The first incident took place on 3 December, when police were called to a restaurant at the Animal Kingdom theme park.

A woman in her 60s asked if she could kiss Donald Duck at a meet-and-greet, the police report said.

Donald Duck consented to the kiss, but then the woman "proceeded to touch her all over her chest" without permission to do so.

When the employee attempted to move away, the woman grabbed hold of her, placed her hands inside the costume and "frantically touched her chest over her bra".

The crew member did not press charges, telling police the woman "appeared to be possibly suffering from dementia".

The entrance to the Animal Kingdom theme park at Walt Disney World
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGESImage captionThe employee who plays Donald Duck alleges she was groped at the Animal Kingdom theme park
On 4 December the employee who portrays Mickey Mouse was approached by a family-of-three - a grandmother, her adult daughter, and her grandson - at the Magic Kingdom theme park.

The grandmother patted Mickey Mouse on the head five times in an attempt to "show her grandson that Mickey wouldn't hurt him", the police report said.

The woman playing Mickey House told investigators this caused her to suffer neck strain, for which she sought treatment at hospital.

The employee, who did not believe the grandmother intended to hurt her, reported the incident, but was told it was civil, not criminal.

p07sxtmn.jpg



Media captionEmployment lawyer Ruby Dinsmore explains how companies are increasingly concerned about litigation risks at work in the #MeToo era
A second incident on the same day, also at the Magic Kingdom, involved the employee who plays Minnie Mouse.

The employee told police a male guest groped her three times on the chest after posing for photos alongside his wife in a meet-and-greet area.

The man, a 61-year-old from Minnesota, was identified from pictures taken at the theme park on the day of the incident.

Police said the employee did not press charges against the man, a Disney Vacation Club member.

Disney, however, took action to ban the man, who had another "inappropriate interaction with another cast member" on 5 December.

----

Florida gran is just going overboard now.
 
"The woman wearing the Mickey Mouse costume said she was injured by a grandmother who patted her on the head. "

That must have been some fucking pat.
 
The woman wearing the Mickey Mouse costume said she was injured by a grandmother who patted her on the head.
Literally how?

Sounds to me, these people might want to sue Disney over some fraudulent bullshit or something. I simply don't think anyone except the worst Furry will attempt to grope someone in a suit that's so bulky that you can't even tell if it's a woman, man or dolphin behind that cheap polyester.
 
The costume heads are probably heavy and awkward, I imagine it doesn't take much pressure to put an uncomfortable twist to the neck muscles that are already working hard to hold that weight steady. If she claimed her spine got broken or something I'd be calling bullshit, but I could believe that she pulled a muscle.
 
I would have expected them all to be dudes, tbh.
That's a dangerous game you're playing, because you could be unintentionally labeled a gay.
:tomgirl:

Most mascot suit-wearers are women, apparently. A dude in one of those suits would just tower over all the kids, those giant heads add more than a couple inches to the person's height.
 
A woman in her 60s asked if she could kiss Donald Duck at a meet-and-greet, the police report said.

Donald Duck consented to the kiss, but then the woman "proceeded to touch her all over her chest" without permission to do so.

When the employee attempted to move away, the woman grabbed hold of her, placed her hands inside the costume and "frantically touched her chest over her bra".

Katie Hill is not handling unemployment well.


The costume heads are probably heavy and awkward, I imagine it doesn't take much pressure to put an uncomfortable twist to the neck muscles that are already working hard to hold that weight steady. If she claimed her spine got broken or something I'd be calling bullshit, but I could believe that she pulled a muscle.

Its odd that she'd call the cops over it because being bonked on the head by kids/idiots seems like it would be a known occupational hazard for theme park characters. If you're going to sue someone, sue Disney for not providing costumes with adequate neck support for heavy and cumbersome heads.
 
Now that I think about it, I'm surprised that there isn't more crime on Disney world resort property. Their florida resort absolutely massive and the Reedy Creek Improvement District is basically "Mickey Mouse's pet county/corporate city-state."

I wouldn't be surprised if Disney was involved with legal wizardry/legal intimidation to keep stuff like this out of the press.
 
Most mascot suit-wearers are women, apparently. A dude in one of those suits would just tower over all the kids, those giant heads add more than a couple inches to the person's height.
Yeah I'm pretty sure the only character who they use a guy for is Goofy.

I believe the it could happen with the princesses but who the fuck is trying to grope Mickey, Minnie, or Donald?
 
Now that I think about it, I'm surprised that there isn't more crime on Disney world resort property. Their florida resort absolutely massive and the Reedy Creek Improvement District is basically "Mickey Mouse's pet county/corporate city-state."

I wouldn't be surprised if Disney was involved with legal wizardry/legal intimidation to keep stuff like this out of the press.
well there was this https://kiwifarms.net/threads/polic...s-disneyland-fight-after-it-goes-viral.58235/

I think overall people are probably well behaved there and there is a lot of security theater that helps with that. I wouldn't be shocked at all if Disney suppressed bad news as you think though. Maybe they try to bribe customers who had a crime happen to them off.
 
Didn't they have to retire Jack Sparrow as a character there, because too many women were hitting on him?
 
It's florida - so my shock is rather limited. I feel bad for the Donald Duck person - but like, that's genuinely sad if the woman is not being medicated. I don't really consider that a crazed Floridian matter. But it's near Orlando, in Florida, I mean - as having lived in Florida, if you live there or work there, expect weird things to happen. It's like living in California and knowing you're going to have to deal with earthquakes.
 
Back
Top Bottom