
This man did this to me. TAKE HIS ASS TO JAIL. >> SHE TRIED to blame me for her own mistake, which was classic Megan behavior from the jump. I had warned her countless times about boundaries, signs, locks, and common sense. But entitlement makes people deaf. My farm sits right on the edge of an HOA suburb, green, quiet, and legally mine.
And I have never signed a single HOA document in my life. I grow mangoes for a living, not drama. Yet, drama kept sneaking through my fence at night. Welcome to Prodigy Tales. Make sure you like and subscribe for your top-notch HOA drama. It all started when my cameras caught strange movement near the orchard, a shadow slipping where shadows should not be.
I zoomed in, expecting raccoons or bored teens, but the lens betrayed something worse. There she was, HOA president Megan herself, pale hair tucked under a visor, hopping my fence like it was a public sidewalk. She moved fast, stuffing ripe mangoes into a tote, glancing around with the confidence of someone used to never being told no.
I rewound the footage again and again, disbelief turning into anger with every replay. That fence was posted, reinforced, and maintained. Yet, she treated it like a suggestion. Trespassing is still trespassing, even if you wear a title and speak in fines. I saved every clip, tagged every timestamp, and let her think she was invisible.
Sometimes the best trap is patience, especially when arrogance does the heavy lifting. I did not confront her then, nor did I call the police that night. I wanted the pattern, the proof, the full picture before making noise. Out here, farms teach you timing, and mango trees reward those who wait. What Megan did not know was that every step she took onto my land tightened a future she could not talk her way out of.
And while she thought she was stealing fruit, she was handing me leverage nightly. I stayed silent, watched closely, and let the orchard breathe, knowing this was only beginning. Right here now, before we dive in deeply, let us know in the comments what country or which city you’re watching this story from.
We’d love to know how far these stories travel. I went straight to their HOA office the next morning. Boots still dusty, temper carefully leashed. The building looked exactly how you’d expect. fake stone walls, inspirational posters about community harmony, and a receptionist who avoided eye contact like it was contagious. Megan was inside, door halfopen, voice already raised at someone on the phone.
I didn’t knock. Farmers don’t knock when livestock gets loose, and Megan was already roaming where she didn’t belong. I told her calmly that I had CCTV footage of her trespassing and stealing mangoes from my farm. No insults, no yelling, just facts delivered slow. She laughed, actually laughed, and said, “I must be mistaken.”
According to her, my land bordered community property, which in Megan language meant anything she could see belonged to her HOA. I reminded her my deed didn’t come with HOA fine print. Her smile thinned. When I mentioned calling the police, the air shifted. She snapped, slammed her hand on the desk, and admitted she took the mangoes, claiming they would rot anyway, and that she was preventing waste.
Then she leaned back and told me to do my worst because she was the HOA president and people like me always back down. She said farmers were replaceable, rules were flexible, and she knew everyone that mattered. I left without another word. Arguing with entitlement only feeds it. Instead, I let weeks pass.
Megan kept coming, sometimes alone, sometimes with another board member standing lookout. Different bags, different shoes, same theft. Each visit went straight into my archive, neatly labeled, angles overlapping, timestamps clear. I wasn’t building a case for court yet. I was letting arrogance stack its own charges. Neighbors started whispering.
Mangoes showed up at HOA events, sliced neatly, praised loudly. Megan strutted like a queen providing gifts, never suspecting the orchard remembered everything. I still didn’t act. Patience sharpens outcomes. And something told me I wouldn’t need to push this domino myself. Karma has a habit of sprinting when arrogance jogs ahead.
And Megan, unaware, was about to trip hard. That particular day, I was watching the footage live, coffee untouched, morning quiet stretched thin. Megan appeared on screen earlier than usual, confidence dialed up, carrying a larger bag like she was shopping at a market she didn’t own. She scanned the road, waited, then vaulted the fence with the grace of someone who had practiced too many times.
Mangoes disappeared fast, branches shaking, fruit thudding into fabric. She wasn’t careful anymore. Familiarity breeds sloppiness. I leaned closer to the monitor, not angry, not smug, just alert. She moved deeper than before, reaching for the best fruit, the kind I usually reserve for sale. Uh, that was when impatience betrayed her.
On the way back, rushing bag heavy, she tried the same jump she’d mastered before, except this time her shirt caught on a rusted hook near the fence post, one I’d marked weeks earlier for removal, but never touched. The snag twisted her midair. She dropped hard, breath punched out, mangoes scattering like evidence rolling downhill.
For a few seconds, she didn’t move. I grabbed my phone and called 911, reporting a trespasser injured on my property. No drama, no accusation, just location and condition. On camera, Megan started groaning, swearing, trying to sit up, panic replacing entitlement. She yelled for help, then cursed when none came immediately. Minutes felt long.
She attempted to stand, failed, blamed the fence, the ground, the trees, anything but herself. When police arrived, lights flashing through the orchard, she switched stories instantly. According to her, she had fallen while inspecting a boundary issue. The officers listened, then turned to me. I played the footage.
Every angle, every visit, every theft. Silence did the talking. Megan’s face drained as timestamps rolled. She argued, deflected, accused me of spying. The officers didn’t bite. Trespassing, theft, false statements. They helped her up, read her rights, and escorted her out past the same fence she once mocked.
Mangoes lay bruised in the dirt, untouched. As the cruiser pulled away, I shut off the monitor, knowing this still wasn’t over. People like Megan never stop swinging when they think they’ve lost. After a few days, I thought the silence meant acceptance, maybe even shame. Instead, a process server showed up my gate with papers thick enough to fertilize a field. Megan was suing me.
Uh, according to her filing, my fence was a known hazard, my cameras were harassment, and her injuries were entirely my fault. She claimed emotional distress, physical harm, and lost reputation, which was impressive considering the footage alone could bankrupt credibility. Court day arrived fast.
Megan walked in dressed like a victim, arm wrapped, face practiced. She told the judge she was inspecting HOA boundaries, saving community resources, and fell because I booby trapped my land. Then my attorney pressed play. The room watched Megan hop fences, steal mangoes, return repeatedly, and lie without blinking. The judge paused the video twice, eyebrows climbing higher each time.
Megan tried interrupting, arguing context, intent, misunderstanding. The judge shut it down. Trespassing is trespassing. Theft is theft. Titles don’t rewrite deeds. Her case collapsed in real time. Not only did she lose, she was ordered to pay restitution for stolen produce, fence repairs, legal costs, and emergency response fees.
The number hit her like another fall. Only this time, there was no one to blame but herself. Outside the courthouse, neighbors whispered, phones out, curiosity feeding on consequence. Megan avoided cameras now. I filed for a restraining order that same week. It was granted without hesitation. She was barred from my land, my business, and any contact moving forward. The HOA quietly replaced her.
Meetings stopped mentioning mangoes entirely. I went back to farming. Trees don’t care about lawsuits, but they remember who tends them. The orchard grew heavier that season, branches bending with fruit, clean and untouched. Karma didn’t need my help. It just needed Megan to keep being Megan long enough.
The end.