Skip navigation
sponsored by 

Uffa! Hefty bill shocks tourists dining in Italy

Japanese couple served with $980 bill; police temporarily close restaurant

Slideshow
Obama Family To Spend Summer Vacation On Martha's Vineyard
  Welcome to Martha’s Vineyard
President Barack Obama and his family will visit Martha's Vineyard during the last week of August. Take a visual tour of some of the island’s better-known draws.

more photos

Slideshow
Image: The Sacred Heart (Sacre Coeur) is seen in Paris
  Perfectly Paris
A magical city known as the ‘City of Love’ and the ‘City of Light’, Paris is one of the most popular tourist destinations in the world.

more photos

Slideshow
Image: Bay of Fundy
  Wonders of Nature
These 28 spectacular natural landmarks will be considered and voted for – or against – and come 2011, only a handful will be designated the “New 7 Wonders of Nature.”

more photos

  Out of hospital, Ft. Hood hero ‘doing good’
Nov. 7: Among those who emerged from the tragedy at Fort Hood is 19-year-old soldier Amber Bahr, who aided wounded soldiers despite the fact that she’d been shot as well. NBC’s Lester Holt speaks with Private Barr’s mother, Lisa Pfund.

updated 11:46 a.m. ET July 2, 2009

ROME - They were looking for a bit of La Dolce Vita but what two Japanese tourists got in a restaurant in Rome left a bad taste in their mouths.

The couple was handed a $980 restaurant bill after lunch last month at a restaurant just steps away from Piazza Navona. The bill included a $160 tip they say they didn't agree to, Rome police said Thursday.

The case made headlines in national newspapers, reportedly angering Mayor Gianni Alemanno. Police temporarily shut down the restaurant after the couple filed a complaint, said police official Michele Laratta.

Story continues below ↓
advertisement | your ad here

Restaurant owner Franco Fioravanti told Italian newspapers that the couple looked satisfied when they left the Passetto restaurant, and that they ordered a lavish meal that included oysters, lobsters, sea bass and porcini mushrooms.

"If one wants to spend money, with us one can," Fioravanti told La Repubblica. "What's wrong with that?"

The couple — a 35-year-old man and a 26-year-old woman — filed their complaint a few days after their June 19 lunch at the posh century-old restaurant, Laratta said.

According to the couple's account to police, they sat outdoors and an English-speaking waiter offered to bring a few dishes without the couple's consulting the menu, Laratta said.

What followed was a $140 bottle of Sauvignon and a several-course extravaganza. Several national papers printed what they said was the receipt from the meal, which also showed pasta dishes for $280.

After the complaint, police checked the prices on the receipt against those on the menu the Japanese said they never saw, and found a major discrepancy. "They are way higher, quite a bit disproportionate," Laratta said.

Police also sent health inspectors, who found defective refrigerators, contamination among different foods and other below-standard procedures in the restaurant's kitchens, according to Laratta and news reports.

The restaurant was closed temporarily, and officials are also considering revoking the restaurant's license.

The Passetto restaurant was closed to the public Thursday and personnel inside refused comment to the AP.

The restaurant is a classic of Rome cuisine. Its Web site lists among its guests movie stars past and present — from Ava Gardner to Leonardo DiCaprio — as well as Queen Elizabeth, Grace Kelly and Salvador Dali.

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sponsored links

Resource guide