Infamous mother addicted to tanning says “Snoopy” shouldn’t be the one to cast a stone

May 8, 2012 12:27 GMT  ·  By

A few days ago, one woman from New Jersey made international headlines after a complaint was filed against her for allegedly taking her 5-year-old daughter tanning with her. Now, Patricia Krenticil has words for Snooki of MTV's “Jersey Shore.”

You can see the initial MSNBC report on Krenticil below, just in case you don't know who she is – but the bottom line is that she's obviously addicted to tanning and she's now being accused of forcing her daughter to also get that orange glow.

After word of her case got out, Snooki, who is also the proud owner of an orange glow, told Extra that Krenticil was “crazy” for putting her daughter in the tanning booth and giving her a sunburn to boot.

“That [expletive] is crazy… you are not supposed to take kids there. Everyone knows you are NOT supposed to take kids there,” Snooki said.

Krenticil has learned of Snooki's diss and, as the second video below will confirm, she will have none of it.

She's already told the press that the entire scandal is just one big misunderstanding because she would never do the thing she's accused of doing to her daughter.

Krenticil insists that, while she's addicted to tanning and has been getting it her entire adult life, she would never put a fair-skinned daughter of hers in a booth.

As for what Snooki said about her, she's not the one to talk, Krenticil stresses in a brief discussion with TMZ paparazzi.

“She's the biggest [expletive] in the world. She's fake, she's fat, her [breasts] are fake, she's disgusting. And when this is all said and done, I'd like to meet up with 'Snoopy',” Krenticil, now going by the nickname of Tanning Mom, says.

The ruckus about Tanning Mom is due to the fact that tanning booths are very dangerous and, in countless instances, have caused skin cancer.

Minors under 14 are barred from using them but cases in which tanning salon owners have allowed one in are, sadly, not as uncommon as we'd like to believe.