Their kids have heard the taunts, and seen them, too, on signs and banners erected across the street from their White Bear Lake home by a neighbor taking digs at their mom's alcoholism.
Don't read the words, Kim and Greg Hoffman will say. Ignore the shouted obscenities. Yet it can be hard for a child to turn away, especially when father and daughter make the rare foray into the front yard and the neighbor stands with arms folded on her lawn or in the front window.
"She's staring," Kylie Hoffman, 9, will say.
To many, the neighbor, Lori E. Christensen, 49, is a bully making hell out of life along the tree-lined cul-de-sac of Homewood Place. But even bullies can control their behavior, Police Chief Lynne Bankes said. The charges are piling up against Christensen, an executive assistant at the Metropolitan Council, and she's scheduled to be back in court Tuesday.
"In my 35 years as a police officer, I have never met or heard of anybody who is so persistent in their negative behavior toward their neighbors -- or anyone," said Bankes, who's consulted with ministers and psychologists to try to understand the woman whose behavior has triggered at least 80 calls to police over three years. "It's unconscionable."
Christensen could not be reached for comment.
The Hoffmans, who live directly across the street from Christensen, have endured her abuse for five years, they said last week. They say she never has threatened the family with violence, but the couple had to move their two daughters' bedroom to the rear of the house because the girls were afraid to sleep facing the street.
Across Homewood Place, one couple who live next door to Christensen and her young daughter have a court order forbidding her from having any contact with them. An elderly woman who lived on the other side moved because she no longer could tolerate her neighbor's behavior, Bankes said.