The lawfirm of Eagan Avenatti skipped paying four months rent for its California offices totaling $213,000. They have been ordered to be evicted after the judge dismissed Michael Avenatti's attempt to block the eviction.
Michael Avenatti is a Democratic hopeful for the 2020 presidential election. He is also the attorney for pornography performer, Stormy Daniels [aka: Stephanie Clifford], and the lawyer for Julie Swetnick, whose testimony against Justice Kavanaugh was proven to be false for which Avenatti must testify after Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Chuck Grassley accused the porn lawyer of conspiring to provide false statement to Congress.
He also owes over $1 million of unpaid taxes on companies he once owned.
He also owes owes $4.85 million in a dispute with a former colleague.
Avenatti was also arrested this week on a felony domestic violence charge and released on $50,000 bond. His defense originally was that "she hit me first." Now he's denying he was involved in the physical assault on a woman who claims he hit her.
But let's get back to Avenatti's current problem so that he can get his life back and become the Democratic front-runner in 2020.
His firm was ordered to vacate a Newport Beach office building after the court asserted its previous ruling that ordered the vacate.
The landlord of the building in question, Irvine Co, won the case in October and ordered Avenatti's firm to vacate the premises by November 1st.
But true to form, he did not vacate but instead symbolically flipped off the law and did nothing, in true Democratic fashion.
Sure, he requested a reprieve, which put back the eviction until this Friday's hearing, and he argued on behalf of Avenatti & ASSociates, another firm he owns, that he had an "oral rental agreement with the landlord," a claim the landlord denied. [You can see what a great lawyer Avenatti is, thinking that an "oral agreement" would sit well with the court. He must have been thinking the court was like Stormy Daniels, if you know what I mean.]
True to form, as usual, Avenatti was a no-show at both hearings.
Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert J. Moss reportedly asked the attorney for the landlord if he heard from Avenatti, to which he said that he spoke with him on Tuesday but haven't heard again.
"There were other events that transpired so I haven't heard from him since then," lawyer Mark Kompa said, according to the Times.
Avenatti told the Times that the conviction is a "non-event" because they "was already in the process of moving." [As opposed to the "process of paying what they owed in back rent."]
So if Avenatti can beat the charge of felony domestic violence [the victim has clear physical injuries, which is what makes it an alleged felony], pay back all the money he owes, and beats the rap put forth by Chuck Grassley and the DOJ, he will make a superior Democratic candidate to go up against President Trump.
Can you imagine what that would be like?
His campaign slogan: "She Hit Me First!"
Please click the "Follow" button in the margin and be sure to get the latest Brain Flushings at a computer near you. Also, please visit the ads on this page because it helps the economy and me.
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Michael Avenatti is a Democratic hopeful for the 2020 presidential election. He is also the attorney for pornography performer, Stormy Daniels [aka: Stephanie Clifford], and the lawyer for Julie Swetnick, whose testimony against Justice Kavanaugh was proven to be false for which Avenatti must testify after Senate Judiciary Committee chairman Chuck Grassley accused the porn lawyer of conspiring to provide false statement to Congress.
He also owes over $1 million of unpaid taxes on companies he once owned.
He also owes owes $4.85 million in a dispute with a former colleague.
Avenatti was also arrested this week on a felony domestic violence charge and released on $50,000 bond. His defense originally was that "she hit me first." Now he's denying he was involved in the physical assault on a woman who claims he hit her.
But let's get back to Avenatti's current problem so that he can get his life back and become the Democratic front-runner in 2020.
His firm was ordered to vacate a Newport Beach office building after the court asserted its previous ruling that ordered the vacate.
The landlord of the building in question, Irvine Co, won the case in October and ordered Avenatti's firm to vacate the premises by November 1st.
But true to form, he did not vacate but instead symbolically flipped off the law and did nothing, in true Democratic fashion.
Sure, he requested a reprieve, which put back the eviction until this Friday's hearing, and he argued on behalf of Avenatti & ASSociates, another firm he owns, that he had an "oral rental agreement with the landlord," a claim the landlord denied. [You can see what a great lawyer Avenatti is, thinking that an "oral agreement" would sit well with the court. He must have been thinking the court was like Stormy Daniels, if you know what I mean.]
True to form, as usual, Avenatti was a no-show at both hearings.
Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert J. Moss reportedly asked the attorney for the landlord if he heard from Avenatti, to which he said that he spoke with him on Tuesday but haven't heard again.
"There were other events that transpired so I haven't heard from him since then," lawyer Mark Kompa said, according to the Times.
Avenatti told the Times that the conviction is a "non-event" because they "was already in the process of moving." [As opposed to the "process of paying what they owed in back rent."]
So if Avenatti can beat the charge of felony domestic violence [the victim has clear physical injuries, which is what makes it an alleged felony], pay back all the money he owes, and beats the rap put forth by Chuck Grassley and the DOJ, he will make a superior Democratic candidate to go up against President Trump.
Can you imagine what that would be like?
His campaign slogan: "She Hit Me First!"
Please click the "Follow" button in the margin and be sure to get the latest Brain Flushings at a computer near you. Also, please visit the ads on this page because it helps the economy and me.
Tweet
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