The Dad Fisherman
12-30-2007, 11:45 AM
Another Parent of the Year nominee, what kind of lesson does this teach your kids.....this mother should enlist so that it might register what she did wrong.
Hannah Montana Tickets Lost Over Fake Essay
Story Of Father Dying In Iraq Found To Be False
GARLAND, Texas -- A 6-year-old girl who won four tickets to a Hannah Montana concert with an essay that falsely claimed her father died in Iraq won't be going to the show after all.
The contest's sponsor, Club Libby Lu, withdrew the prize on Saturday and awarded it to another unnamed winner.
"With this decision, we hope to revive the intended spirit of the contest, which was designed to make a little girl's holidays extra special," Club Libby Lu chief executive Mary Drolet said in a statement Saturday.
The girl had submitted an essay that began: "My daddy died this year in Iraq."
But Club Libby Lu said the girl's mother has admitted that the story was a lie.
The saga began with company officials surprising the girl at a Club Libby Lu store at a mall in suburban Dallas. The girl won a makeover that included a Hannah Montana wig, as well as the grand prize: airfare for four to Albany, N.Y., and four tickets to the sold-out Hannah Montana concert on Jan. 9.
The mother had told company officials that the girl's father died in a roadside bombing in April. But the Pentagon had no record of the soldier she identified.
"We did the essay and that's what we did to win," Priscilla Ceballos, the mother, said. "We did whatever we could do to win."
Hannah Montana Tickets Lost Over Fake Essay
Story Of Father Dying In Iraq Found To Be False
GARLAND, Texas -- A 6-year-old girl who won four tickets to a Hannah Montana concert with an essay that falsely claimed her father died in Iraq won't be going to the show after all.
The contest's sponsor, Club Libby Lu, withdrew the prize on Saturday and awarded it to another unnamed winner.
"With this decision, we hope to revive the intended spirit of the contest, which was designed to make a little girl's holidays extra special," Club Libby Lu chief executive Mary Drolet said in a statement Saturday.
The girl had submitted an essay that began: "My daddy died this year in Iraq."
But Club Libby Lu said the girl's mother has admitted that the story was a lie.
The saga began with company officials surprising the girl at a Club Libby Lu store at a mall in suburban Dallas. The girl won a makeover that included a Hannah Montana wig, as well as the grand prize: airfare for four to Albany, N.Y., and four tickets to the sold-out Hannah Montana concert on Jan. 9.
The mother had told company officials that the girl's father died in a roadside bombing in April. But the Pentagon had no record of the soldier she identified.
"We did the essay and that's what we did to win," Priscilla Ceballos, the mother, said. "We did whatever we could do to win."