Bigfoot in Compliance
Posted by: Craig Woolheater on August 5th, 2006
Back in May, I detailed a local, and legal, brouhaha concerning a Bigfoot statue here on Cryptomundo.
Well, he’s back in the news.
JUAN GARCIA/DMN
The 6-foot-8 statue is Texas Dollar Pawn’s mascot, say manager Brian Foust (right) and owner Mel Foust, and they were willing to move it so it could stay at the Wylie store.
Bigfoot stands tall by awning
Wylie: Move makes statue comply with rule, but trial, fine possible
12:00 AM CDT on Saturday, August 5, 2006
By LAUREN D’AVOLIO / The Dallas Morning News
A contentious Bigfoot statue now lives beneath an awning in Wylie, dodging Texas’ punishing sun and the code the statue once violated concerning outdoor display of merchandise.
The city cited Brian Foust, manager of Texas Dollar Pawn, in February after the menacing creature was moved about 10 feet from Texas Dollar Pawn’s storefront. Provisions in the law mean Bigfoot, also known as Sasquatch, can stay in its new home under the 3-year-old canopy, because he takes up less than 30 percent of it.
But the 6-foot-8, 200-pound slovenly effigy may face a jury trial. It’s at the prosecutor’s discretion whether to dismiss the citation or proceed, according to Mindy Manson, Wylie’s assistant city manger.
"It’s always been available to him," Ms. Manson said of the awning’s legal loophole. "It was just a matter of sitting down and working through what the codes are, what he’s proposing to do and seeing what needed to be done to bring it into compliance."
Brian Foust and his father, store owner Mel Foust, insist Bigfoot is the store’s mascot and isn’t for sale like other merchandise.
A court date was scheduled for June 29 in Wylie Municipal Court but has been postponed until Nov. 30, Ms. Manson said.
The Fousts may still face a fine up to $2,000.
Mel Foust says he’ll classify Bigfoot as whatever he has to, if it means his hairy friend can remain outside.
"From the beginning, I said I’d pay for the necessary Bigfoot permit. I was being cooperative," he said, adding that recent peacekeeping steps by the city have brought compassion and common sense to this ridiculousness. "I wasn’t looking for trouble. I was looking for a solution."
In the next two or three years, the Fousts intend to upgrade their awning – from 36 square feet to 75 – so more pawnable items can be kept outside.
Meanwhile, Sasquatch is so cracked and faded that he appears to be wearing deep purple mohair.
Demetric Goodwin, a first-time Texas Dollar Pawn browser, isn’t put off by Bigfoot’s obstreperous appearance. He doesn’t see anything wrong with the frightening figure, no matter where its dolly rolls it.
"What’s wrong with it? Who’s it hurting?" Mr. Goodwin said. "If the store wants it to be a mascot, let it be a mascot."
About Craig Woolheater
Co-founder of Cryptomundo in 2005.
I have appeared in or contributed to the following TV programs, documentaries and films:
OLN's Mysterious Encounters: "Caddo Critter", Southern Fried Bigfoot, Travel Channel's Weird Travels: "Bigfoot", History Channel's MonsterQuest: "Swamp Stalker", The Wild Man of the Navidad, Destination America's Monsters and Mysteries in America: Texas Terror - Lake Worth Monster, Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot: Return to Boggy Creek and Beast of the Bayou.
hey craig good afternoon great new article about the bigfoot statue very interesting. bill 🙂
Boy, ‘squatch looks rather pimped out in his faded-to-purple ‘suit’…
I guess everything IS bigger in Texas…even the idiots! It’s obviously intended to be a mascot and not for sale…we have a carwash where I live that has something similar sitting out front…he’s not breaking any laws but the ole fella REALLY just needs to be ‘laid to rest’…
Later
D
Nice timing for a ‘light’ subject. At least he’s not neon purple!