The dome of the Capitol is reflected in a puddle in Washington February 17, 2012.REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

Another debt ceiling debacle could sink the economy

Last year's Congressional debt standoff hurt consumer confidence more than the collapse of Lehman Brothers, Betsey Johnson and Justin Wolfers write. This time could be worse.  Read more at Counterparties  

Wanted in Ohio: two pizzas and a deadbeat parent

Related Topics

A pizza is seen in this October 5, 2006 file photo. The search for ''deadbeat'' parents now has a delivery option: three pizzerias in Ohio have put wanted posters on their pizza boxes to help catch parents who don't pay their child support. REUTERS/Eric Gaillard

A pizza is seen in this October 5, 2006 file photo. The search for ''deadbeat'' parents now has a delivery option: three pizzerias in Ohio have put wanted posters on their pizza boxes to help catch parents who don't pay their child support.

Credit: Reuters/Eric Gaillard

CINCINNATI | Mon Mar 26, 2007 1:25pm EDT

CINCINNATI (Reuters) - The search for "deadbeat" parents now has a delivery option: three pizzerias in Ohio have put wanted posters on their pizza boxes to help catch parents who don't pay their child support.

Each box of pizza is plastered with a poster with 10 names, photos and last known addresses of parents who are not paying court-ordered support, along with a toll-free number that pizza-eaters can call to report the deadbeat parent.

Cynthia Brown, head of the Butler County Child Support Enforcement Agency, said she came up with the idea after she ordered pizza one night and noticed coupons taped to the box.

"I thought if they could put coupons on the box, why not one of our posters?" said Brown.

She said Butler County's agency is the first agency in the country to put the wanted posters on pizza boxes. The posters were originally put in police cars so police could keep an eye out for deadbeat parents while doing their rounds.

Photos of missing children have been pictured on milk cartons in the United States for years.

Brown said 20 parents have been pictured on the pizza boxes since the program began in August 2006, and one father caught.

"We caught him within one day, someone saw the picture on the pizza box, called our tip line, we forwarded the information to the sheriff's department and they picked him up," Brown said. "It's a start. I don't think he's going to be the last one."

Comments (0)
This discussion is now closed. We welcome comments on our articles for a limited period after their publication.