U.S. Postal Service Destroyed By Four Reckless Teens In Car

WASHINGTON—Millions of Americans and thousands of federal employees awoke 
Monday 
to find the national mail service in disarray after a group of rowdy teens on a 
joyride 
reportedly destroyed up to 90 percent of the postal service's nationwide 
infrastructure with 
a baseball bat.

Citing more than $45 billion in damages from the late-night escapade, the 
United States 
Postal Service has suspended all mail delivery and requested relief aid to 
rebuild more than 
650 demolished post offices. The agency is also seeking supplemental funding to 
clean up 
the letters, packages, and crushed Budweiser can the teens left in their wake.

"These hooligans have absolutely no respect for property, fellow residents, or 
their 
country," Postmaster General John E. Potter said as he picked up pieces of the 
USPS 
headquarters that had flown across the street and into a neighboring yard. 
"This is the 
third postal service I've had to replace this year."

According to police documents, Potter told investigators he was working late at 
his office 
Sunday night when, around 11:30 p.m., he heard the sound of a loud muffler and 
rock 
music coming from outside USPS headquarters. Potter said he ran outside to see 
what was 
happening, but by the time he arrived the teens were speeding off down a gravel 
road, 
giving him only enough time to throw a crab apple at the departing car, which 
he 
described as "a rusted-out old Buick."

Authorities have thus far not been able to identify the teens responsible, who 
remain at 
large and in serious trouble.

"It's those Murphy twins and their no-good friend Tim Strougle," Potter said 
while shaking 
a broom. "What they did was destruction of property, plain and simple. Those 
kids should 
know better than to tamper with a federal mail service agency—it's a felony."

Potter went on to argue that the irresponsible teens should have to personally 
pay the 
rebuilding costs of his agency's infrastructure, a punishment he believes would 
"teach 
them a lesson they won't soon forget."

Added Potter, "Someone's going to have to spend a whole day digging a new hole 
for that 
foundation."

Though FBI agents assigned to investigate the nationwide act of vandalism would 
not 
comment on any potential leads, they did disclose that the task force has ruled 
out a 
number of suspects, including those two Anderson boys from just up on Hoyt Road.

"Sure, they've gotten into trouble in the past, but [their father] Dave 
[Anderson] set them 
straight after the shenanigans they pulled last Halloween," said Special Agent 
Brian 
Richards, who told reporters the FBI was enlisting the help of municipal law- 
enforcement 
agencies and snoopy neighbors from across the country in the investigation. 
"Nor do we 
have reason to believe that Shane and Lance McMurray were involved in this 
terrible crime. 
They're good boys. Mowed my lawn last summer."

Tampa resident Eric Thompson, 39, was one of countless American citizens 
outraged by 
the night of teenage mischief.

"I just don't get it," said Thompson, standing in front of his broken local 
postal branch. 
"Why would someone want to ruin a perfectly good post office? Don't they have 
anything 
better to do? If this is what kids today do for fun, I don't know what to tell 
you."

Added Thompson: "Now I'm not going to get my magazines until who knows when."

While many Americans remain convinced that whichever local teens are 
responsible should 
be punished to the full extent of the law, some feel the public is overreacting.

"Everyone's getting all riled up over nothing," Attorney General Michael 
Mukasey said. "The 
U.S. Postal Service got a little banged up—so what? We did the same thing when 
we were 
younger."

"Who knows, maybe old man Barrington ran over the damn things," Mukasey added. 
"He 
shouldn't even have a license anymore, he's so darn nearsighted. I wouldn't be 
surprised if 
he knocked over all those buildings and didn't even realize he did it."

On Tuesday, the USPS announced they have begun taking extreme measures to 
prevent 
further destruction of federal property. As part of the new strategy, beginning 
next month 
security officers will take posts in the bushes surrounding USPS facilities in 
all major cities, 
and a select number of new offices will be reinforced by constructing a smaller 
office 
inside a large post office and filling the middle portion with cement.

"I can't wait for one of those punks to take a swing at one of our mail centers 
after that," 
Potter said.

According to FBI records, the destruction of the U.S. Postal Service was the 
most 
significant incident of rampaging teens since the entire U.S. Air Force was 
keyed during 
the homecoming in 1998.


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