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View Full Version : Emily Ratajkowksi, husband accused of not paying rent at Manhattan loft for two years



Teh One Who Knocks
03-04-2019, 11:29 AM
By Anna Hopkins | Fox News


https://i.imgur.com/MWr11Pdh.jpg

Model Emily Ratajkowksi and her husband, filmmaker Sebastian Bear-McClard, have exploited a legal loophole to avoid paying rent at their pricey Manhattan loft for two years, their landlord said in a lawsuit.

The couple's home at 49 Bleecker Street in the trendy NoHo neighborhood costs $5,000 a month, and their landlord is taking them to court over an alleged $120,000 debt, according to the New York Post.

Ratajkowksi, 27, is worth an estimated $6 million, while her hubby, 31, has a net worth of $11 million.

According to a lawsuit, the couple has been able to live rent-free at the 1,100 square foot apartment because of an obscure New York state law called the Loft Law. Passed in 1982, the law prohibits tenants living illegally in former commercial or factory buildings to be tossed out.

It was reportedly partially intended to help struggling artists living in Manhattan studios from getting evicted for not paying rent.

The law says that if a building does not have a residential certificate of occupancy, obliging landlords to bring fire and safety codes up to modern standards, they can't evict tenants from living there.

Ratajkowki and Bear-McClard's building does not have the required certificate, so they can't be evicted even though they've allegedly skipped out on payments since their lease expired in 2017. According to records, Bear-McClard has been subletting the second floor apartment since 2013.

Carolyn Daly, a spokeswoman for a coalition of loft building owners which includes the couple's home at 49 Bleecker Street, criticized Ratajkowski and her husband for "taking advantage" of a law meant to help those struggling to make ends meet.

"Here is a prime example, in prime NYC real estate, where an uber-wealthy celebrity couple and tenant can take advantage and exploit a law that was intended for truly struggling artists and low-income families in need of affordable housing," she said.

In response, Bear-McClard's attorney Michael Kozek defended his client, saying that he is an artist who wants to continue living in his home.

“Mr. McClard is fighting to save his home, which he has lived in for years,” he said.

“He’s an artist. Born and raised New Yorker and a child of artists who themselves fought to save their homes, including under the Loft Law.”

Goofy
03-04-2019, 01:17 PM
He's a lucky bastard

Hal-9000
03-04-2019, 03:44 PM
I'll never understand laws like this and squatting. Either you rent something with a lease or rental agreement or you're buying the property through a mortgage.

Pony
03-04-2019, 04:44 PM
I'll never understand laws like this and squatting. Either you rent something with a lease or rental agreement or you're buying the property through a mortgage.

But what about the poor unfortunate others? They deserve to choose to take away something that doesn't belong to them.

Hal-9000
03-04-2019, 04:55 PM
But what about the poor unfortunate others? They deserve to choose to take away something that doesn't belong to them.

They talk about him 'fighting to save his home' and he's worth over 10 million while living with one of the most popular models in the world...kick his ass out loft law or not. He can pay.

PorkChopSandwiches
03-05-2019, 04:36 PM
cunts

DemonGeminiX
03-05-2019, 08:49 PM
They can pay everything back by me getting to fuck her. That's just as good as legal tender. 8-[