Batman đi làm từ thiện bị cảnh sát kêu tấp xe vô lề. Anh Lenny B. Robinson là 1 dân giàu thích làm từ thiện. Anh thường ghé qua nhiều bệnh viện để thăm trẻ em bị bệnh và tặng quà cho các em nầy. Anh nầy lái chiếc Lam bồ Gallardo và bộ đồ Batman bằng da của anh tốn cỡ $5000. Theo tin thì anh đang chuẫn bị đóng 1 chiếc Bat Mobile
PPZ: chùi đi xe khủng....tới chừng ngừng lấy giấy tờ trình cũng khủng luôn. Phải ngừng xe mở glovebox bên kia. Mấy chú CS thấy Gallardo cũng ham địa...y như CS Dziệt luôn
PPZ: chùi đi xe khủng....tới chừng ngừng lấy giấy tờ trình cũng khủng luôn. Phải ngừng xe mở glovebox bên kia. Mấy chú CS thấy Gallardo cũng ham địa...y như CS Dziệt luôn
By now you've probably heard about "Batman" getting pulled over by the cops in his Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder. The story has been all over the Internet this week, thanks to the in-car video from the local Maryland police department that stopped the caped crusader. But now we've got the real scoop on this would-be Bruce Wayne, thanks to the Washington Post.
His name is Lenny B. Robinson, and being Batman is only a part-time gig for the wealthy philanthropist. Robinson visits sick children in hospitals around the Baltimore area, decked out in a $5,000 neoprene-and-leather Batman suit, according to the report. He hands out Batman toys, signs autographs and gives the kids some much-needed fun, while boosting the morale of the parents, as well.
The Lamborghini is just part of the fun, though Robinson told the Post that he's having a "real" Batmobile built. (Which of the various movie cars he's having replicated was not specified.) While this episode marked Robinson's first time in a national spotlight, it wasn't his first encounter with the police while in costume. Patch reported on a distress call made by "Batman" back in November 2011, when Robinson's Gallardo had a flat.
His name is Lenny B. Robinson, and being Batman is only a part-time gig for the wealthy philanthropist. Robinson visits sick children in hospitals around the Baltimore area, decked out in a $5,000 neoprene-and-leather Batman suit, according to the report. He hands out Batman toys, signs autographs and gives the kids some much-needed fun, while boosting the morale of the parents, as well.
The Lamborghini is just part of the fun, though Robinson told the Post that he's having a "real" Batmobile built. (Which of the various movie cars he's having replicated was not specified.) While this episode marked Robinson's first time in a national spotlight, it wasn't his first encounter with the police while in costume. Patch reported on a distress call made by "Batman" back in November 2011, when Robinson's Gallardo had a flat.
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