To: Beelzebubba
Ha, it ain't just the boat that went up in price, its the slip its parked in. Yes it would be considered a great piece of property. I am open to the fact that he could be guilty or not guilty but you sir sound like you are slobbering to find him guilty. That "FACT" remains, you have proven nothing and there are no "FACTS" in your article to prove any wrong doing.
57 posted on
07/05/2005 2:19:01 PM PDT by
kempo
To: kempo
Ha, it ain't just the boat that went up in price, its the slip its parked in. Yes it would be considered a great piece of property.
I didn't see any evidence that a boat slip (i.e. real estate) was involved. Of course, I raised the issue in my post, and said that if this were the fact, it would make things different. But I have no evidence that a slip was sold. Do you?
To: kempo; Beelzebubba
it ain't just the boat that went up in price, its the slip its parked in. But I have no evidence that a slip was sold. Do you? The slip didn't get sold with the boat. The slip is currently occupied by Cunningham's new digs, i.e., the yacht owned by Wade. (Wade is the MZM defense contractor guy who bought Cunningham's house.) The boat that Cunningham sold is in Long Island now.
From the article:
The [Kelly C] sits forlornly on blocks in the shipyard of Consolidated Yachts at the end of Pilot Street not far from the Neptune Inn and Sammy's Fish Box restaurant. Its last sea voyage came with Cunningham at the helm. That was late in 2002 when Cunningham delivered it to the Glen Cove Marina near here, according to Joe Weiser, Glen Cove's owner. "He brought it here himself," Weiser said of Cunningham.
Cunningham also has lived aboard Wade's 42-foot yacht, the Duke-Stir, since April 2004 in the same slip once occupied by the Kelly C.
82 posted on
07/05/2005 4:11:59 PM PDT by
Sandy
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