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  • 4
    Mar
    2013
    9:09pm, EST

    'Tan Mom' Patricia Krentcil looking for her place in the sun

    Jonathan Sanger / NBC News

    Patricia Krentcil, at her home in Nutley, N.J., is hoping to turn her notoriety into a lotion line, a book and a comedy act.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The New Jersey woman known as "Tan Mom" has big plans now that the criminal case against her is over: a self-tanning lotion line, a book proposal, a comedy act — and a raft of lawsuits.

    But right now what Patricia Krentcil wants is a vacation.

    "Somewhere hot so I can fry like a bacon and come back and say, 'Ha! Ha! You can't arrest me for lying in the sun,'" Krentcil, 44, said with a laugh.

    "Not my face, though. Just my body."

    It was Krentcil's face — practically the color of a chestnut in some photos — that made her a national punchline after she was arrested in May and charged with exposing her then-five-year-old daughter, Anna, to damaging ultraviolet rays at tanning salons in Nutley, N.J.

    Julio Cortez / AP file

    Patricia Krentcil as she waited to be arraigned at the Essex County Superior Court in May.

    Krentcil denied it from the start, claiming a school nurse misinterpreted a sunburn Anna got from playing outside and that police misunderstood when her daughter said she "went tanning with Mommy."

    Last week, a grand jury declined to indict her on a child endangerment charge, ending a 10-month saga that the mother of five described a nightmare.

    "I’ve literally been stuck in my home for the past year," she said. "No matter where I go, everyone knows me. It’s very uncomfortable."

    If she went out to eat, a murmur would run through the restaurant. A sofa-shopping trip had to be cut short when other customers started taking pictures. She was the object of ridicule in her children's schools.

    "It doesn't matter where I go: I'm 'Tan Mom,'" she said.

    She couldn't shake the nickname, so she embraced it, making TV appearances and getting a magazine makeover.

    Over the last few months, she's been working with a self-styled skin guru, Dana Ramos, on launching her own line of self-tanners under the name Real Tan Mom Healthy Glow.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Ramos, who has her own skin-care line, helped rehabilitate Krentcil's complexion, which was marred by oversize pores, dark spots, and lines from up to 20 sessions in the tanning bed each month.

    She said she banned Krentcil from tanning -- many salons said they wouldn't serve her anyway -- and oversaw a regimen of peels and moisturizers. A plastic surgeon helped with some fillers.

    "I haven't tanned in forever," Krentcil said, sounding not entirely happy about it.

    She vowed she'll never set foot in another salon, but insisted there's nothing wrong with catching some natural rays, along as she keeps the sun off her paler, but hardly porcelain face.

    With her stock broker husband out of work and thousands in legal bills to pay, Krentcil is looking for other ways to cash in on her notoriety beyond the lotion line, which is weeks away from being finished.

    She said she is writing a book, but doesn't have an agent or publisher. Once the subject of a "Saturday Night Live" sendup, she'd like to leverage her wacky story and offbeat personality for a comedy routine.

    And she's ready for warmer climes.

    "I don't like this town at all or this state, more or less ... I wanna go somewhere beautiful," she said.

    In an exclusive interview with TODAY from May of 2012, Patricia Krentcil, the New Jersey mom accused of taking her five-year-old daughter into a tanning booth, insisted she is innocent and said she wishes everyone would leave her family alone. NBC's Mara Schiavocampo reports.

    Krentcil said she is planning lawsuits against anyone who made money off her story, like the manufacturers of a Barbie-type doll  based on her, or Halloween costumes.

    She said she also wants to sue the school district since that's where the initial complaint about Anna's sunburn came from. The district superintendent did not return a call for comment.

    Nearly a year after her arrest, Krentcil said she’s at a loss to explain why the authorities went after her. "Envy? Jealousy?" she said.

    She's certainly not ready to forgive and forget, boasting that when the school nurse called recently about her daughter being ill, she barked at her, "Oh, you didn't call the police?"

    For the record, she said, she never once put her child in a tanning bed. The fair-skinned redhead would lie on towels on the floor, sometimes with a mask over her eyes, while her mother soaked up the UV rays, she said.

    At one point, she was offered a plea deal with 60 days of probation and turned it down, deciding she'd take her chances with a jury if it came to that.

    "They made a mockery of me,” she said. “But I stood by my beliefs and said, 'I did not do this.'"

    Related:

    What's caused the N.J. tanning mom's leathery look?

     

    243 comments

    Really, 44? With that turkey neck she looks 64.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: health, new-jersey, tanning, parenting, featured, nutley, patricia-krentcil, tan-mom
  • 26
    Feb
    2013
    5:55pm, EST

    NJ grand jury won't indict tanning mom Patricia Krentcil

    Charles Norfleet/Getty Images

    Patricia Krentcil attends "Tan Mom" Patricia Krentcil Skin Cancer Foundation Event at Westchester MMA-Fit on September 21, 2012 in Mt Kisco, New York.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The New Jersey woman whose deeply bronzed complexion made her a national punchline after she was charged with putting her 5-year-old daughter in a tanning bed has been cleared of criminal charges.

    A grand jury refused to indict Patricia Krentcil on a child-endangerment charge for allegedly violating a state law that bans children from using tanning salons, NBC New York reported Tuesday.

    Krentcil, of Nutley, N.J., was arrested after her daughter appeared in school with burns on her legs last April. Her mother said they were from swimming outside and that she never put the child in a tanning bed.

    After she was first arrested, Krentcil told NBC New York that she treated her tanning salon trips as an errand in which she brings along her daughter, but insisted the booth lights were never exposed to the girl.

    "It's like taking your daughter to go food shopping," she said. "There's tons of moms that bring their children in ... 

    "I tan, she doesn't tan," she continued. "I'm in the booth, she's in the room. That's all there is to it."

    It's against the law in New Jersey for any child under 14-year-old to use an artificial tanning booth.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “We presented all the available evidence in the case to the grand jury, both the state’s evidence and the defense’s evidence,” said Assistant Essex County Prosecutor Gina Iosim. “The grand jurors voted not to indict Mrs. Krentcil. We respect their decision."

    Krentcil, 44, has admitted she went overboard with the ultraviolet rays that gave her a skin tone some likened to a roasted nut and made her the target of standup comics and late-night monologues.

    She even took up a magazine's offer to stay away from the salons for a month and emerged looking much healthier, but complaining she felt "weird and pale."

    More recently, she told the New York Daily News she was contemplating a move to overcast London, but denied it was because she had been banned by local tanning salons who considered her bad for business.

    170 comments

    This lady is still in the news??? Talk about a turd that won't flush.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: health, new-jersey, courts, tanning-salons, patricia-krentcil, tanning-mom

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