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Politics : American Presidential Politics and foreign affairs -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (46664)10/24/2010 2:11:31 PM
From: Peter Dierks1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 71588
 
The Swift Boaters are back.

Excellent. People willing to sacrifice all to expose the truth that the liberal media is trying to hide are true American heros. We owe a great debt of gratitude to them.



To: DuckTapeSunroof who wrote (46664)10/25/2010 12:17:06 PM
From: sandintoes1 Recommendation  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 71588
 
Designer Tracy Feith faces unfashionable financial woes despite high-profile client Michelle Obama
Gatecrasher


Monday, October 25th 2010, 4:00 AM

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Antonelli/NewsMichelle Obama dons a unique oriental-print dress by designer Tracy Feith. Today in GatecrasherArticles
Comedian Seth Meyers can't resist the D'sEven a boost from Michelle Obama hasn't helped ease New York designer Tracy Feith's financial woes.

Feith and longtime partner Susan Winget have been virtually invisible as of late, which may have something to do with the more than $200,000 he and his company owe to landlords in Manhattan and in Montauk.

In January 2009, Feith got the most coveted fashion seal of approval - outfitting the First Lady - when Obama stepped out in his floral frock during inauguration festivities. By May of that year, however, Feith was evicted from the Madison Ave. storefront (between 93rd and 94th Sts.) where he operated his boutique. By December, a judgment was issued in Manhattan Supreme Court ordering Feith's corporation to pay $77,060.38 in rent he owed to his landlord, KPLJ LLC.

And last August, another judgment handed down in Supreme Court determined that Feith himself was on the hook for an additional $152,745.27 because he had personally guaranteed the lease. (The amount includes court costs and damages.)

KPLJ's lawyer Edward Shapiro tells us, "It is shameful that a popular and successful designer has shunned his most basic business obligation by failing to pay rent for his retail store."

Feith's troubles don't end there. B.J. Wilson, the co-owner and property manager of Montauk Lakefront Cottages, tells us that Feith and Winget owe him approximately $7,000 for three cottages they rented last year for themselves and employees. "They paid half of what was due, skipping out on the remainder," Wilson says. "They won't return phone calls. They've disappeared." (Feith's Williamsburg store has also closed.)

Not surprisingly, says one East End insider, "Tracy and Susan didn't show their faces in Montauk this summer," where they once were social fixtures as big as the swells that Feith surfed at Ditch Plains.

Feith, known for his beach-chic clothes, even got another prized designer gig - a lucrative Target collaboration.

According to records subpoenaed by his Manhattan landlord, notes another source, Target paid Feith's corporation a total of $550,000 to create a line of apparel and accessories between September 2008 and May 2009, right around the same time Feith was falling behind in his rent.