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“Isn’t it nice I got rid of the new girlfriend?”

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00:00All parties in the matter of Sondkrant, Nichols, step forward.
00:0421-year-old Megan Sondkrant is suing her ex-boyfriend, 24-year-old Tyler Nichols,
00:10for loans to buy bedroom furniture and matching tattoos.
00:14Ms. Sondkrant, this used to be your boyfriend. It's not your boyfriend anymore.
00:17While he was your boyfriend, the two of you went on holiday together,
00:20decided to get matching tattoos. He didn't have any money.
00:23You laid out the money for his tattoo.
00:24Yes.
00:25Sometime way after that, he used your credit card to purchase furniture.
00:29So there was a loan for furniture for his apartment.
00:32He still hadn't paid you for the tattoo, right?
00:34Correct.
00:34Forget about the tattoo. Do you still have the tattoo?
00:37Yes.
00:37Do you still have the tattoo?
00:38Yes, but it's covered.
00:39By what?
00:40It's covered.
00:40It's covered with what?
00:42Writing.
00:42What did it say?
00:43It was a K with a heart, like a king.
00:45It's what?
00:46K with a heart.
00:47Oh, a K with a heart. Is that your name?
00:50No, it was king and then mine was queen.
00:51I really have to get my hearing checked.
00:53I swear.
00:56Everybody better go to articulation classes.
00:58That's not going to happen.
01:00Okay.
01:00Now, you moved into an apartment.
01:02You didn't have any furniture.
01:03Correct.
01:04And how did you get furniture?
01:05Ms. Sancar offered to get furniture for me.
01:06What did she say?
01:07She knew that I didn't have any furniture, so we went to a furniture store and she helped
01:11me pick it out, basically.
01:12Okay, great.
01:13And do you remember how much it was?
01:14Not off the top of my head, no.
01:16But you were making payments on it.
01:17Not really.
01:18You never made any payments on it.
01:19No.
01:20Never?
01:21No.
01:21Really?
01:22When was it purchased?
01:23In what month?
01:24I would say September-ish, yeah.
01:26And it was bought on credit?
01:28Yes.
01:28How much was it?
01:29It was $2,235.54.
01:32Well, what kind of work were you doing, Mr. Nichols?
01:33I worked in a factory.
01:34I was a machine operator.
01:36Still there?
01:36No.
01:37What are you doing now?
01:38Right now, I'm currently looking for a job.
01:39So you don't have a job?
01:41No.
01:41And what kind of furniture did she buy you?
01:43It was a certain mattress, king size, and the bed frame, and the TV.
01:48And you have a new girlfriend?
01:49Yes.
01:49Do you watch the TV with your new girlfriend?
01:51Yes.
01:51And you sleep on the mattress and the frame?
01:53Yes.
01:53You think it's right that the plaintiff paid for that?
01:56I mean, it was a gift.
01:56It might have been.
01:58I'm just asking you if you think it's right that she'd pay for it.
02:00Me and him were together when she bought the bed.
02:02I didn't ask you a question.
02:04Okay.
02:05Do you think it's right that she'd pay for it?
02:07That I should pay for it?
02:09No, I don't think it's...
02:10Heard.
02:11That one's irritating me, but you get it ready.
02:13Sure.
02:14Ma'am.
02:19Open this one.
02:20You don't have to bring your new girlfriends.
02:21It's annoying.
02:22Do you understand?
02:23Yes.
02:23It's just annoying.
02:26Now, Ms. Sondkrant.
02:27Yes.
02:28When did you and Mr. Nichols break up?
02:30In the beginning of December.
02:31When was the first payment due on the furniture?
02:34What would have been September?
02:35October 24th.
02:36Who made that payment?
02:37He made that payment.
02:38Show me.
02:39I only have the bills.
02:40I don't have it showing that he paid,
02:42but I have evidence of him saying that he was paying me.
02:44I would like to see that.
02:48Isn't it nice I got rid of the new girlfriend?
02:52Just in case you think I'm going to be exceedingly hard on him.
03:03I just want you to read some of these emails back and forth.
03:06Okay.
03:06And I want you to tell me whether, based upon these emails, you would buy U.S. savings bonds.
03:12Okay.
03:13Do they still sell us?
03:14If you have confidence in the country.
03:15You told her you were going to pay her for the furniture.
03:19Unfortunately, your choice of language was such that the camera operator here can't take a picture of it.
03:25Because you only know how to express yourself using four-letter expletives.
03:32I don't believe.
03:33You don't believe what?
03:34Where did I say that I paid her?
03:36I told her I was going to pay for it.
03:38Would you show Shakespeare, please, the emails?
03:45And the emails is where you told her.
03:47Yeah, man.
03:47Now you see what you told her you were going to pay her?
03:56Yes, I remember those conversations.
03:57Good.
03:58$2,235.
03:59Judgment for the plaintiff.
04:00Good job.
04:00At night, the ground starts shaking.
04:03It is a big earthquake.
04:04The houses in the village fall down.
04:06People run outside.
04:07In one house, a newborn baby wrapped in cloth gets stuck under the broken wall.
04:12A baby leopard, who is already near the baby, comes inside the broken house.
04:18He uses his small paws to move the dirt and stones.
04:21Slowly, he reaches the baby.
04:23Then, the baby leopard lies down next to the baby to keep him warm and safe.
04:27He stays there all night and does not move.
04:30In the morning, the rescue team comes.
04:32They see the baby leopard and the baby together.
04:35Both are alive.
04:36From that day, the wild leopard and the human baby become protectors of each other.
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