taft2012
02-21-2013, 07:06 AM
This is different...
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/short-article-1.1269358
A homeless 32-year-old Brooklyn man wants a judge to force his parents to pay him a hefty allowance.
In papers filed in Brooklyn Supreme Court, aspiring record mogul Bernard Bey says his parents have been "indifferent" to his "problems," and should pay him $200,000 to make things right.
"I feel abandoned," Bey told the Daily News Wednesday, outside the downtown Brooklyn homeless shelter where he's currently staying. "The relationship I share with my parents is not a beneficial one. Not a loving, nurturing one."
His suit offered up a recipe for his success, suggesting his family mortgage their Bed-Stuy brownstone - his parents have a 1/8 share - and use the money to "purchase two cost effective franchises such as Domino's Pizza" to help him afford a lifestyle different than the one he's accustomed to.
His mom, Vickie Anderson, offered an alternative solution.
"I say go get a job," said the mom, who lives in the Bushwick Houses. "He's never had a job a day in his life."
:laugh2:
http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/short-article-1.1269358
A homeless 32-year-old Brooklyn man wants a judge to force his parents to pay him a hefty allowance.
In papers filed in Brooklyn Supreme Court, aspiring record mogul Bernard Bey says his parents have been "indifferent" to his "problems," and should pay him $200,000 to make things right.
"I feel abandoned," Bey told the Daily News Wednesday, outside the downtown Brooklyn homeless shelter where he's currently staying. "The relationship I share with my parents is not a beneficial one. Not a loving, nurturing one."
His suit offered up a recipe for his success, suggesting his family mortgage their Bed-Stuy brownstone - his parents have a 1/8 share - and use the money to "purchase two cost effective franchises such as Domino's Pizza" to help him afford a lifestyle different than the one he's accustomed to.
His mom, Vickie Anderson, offered an alternative solution.
"I say go get a job," said the mom, who lives in the Bushwick Houses. "He's never had a job a day in his life."
:laugh2: