Court documents filed in Denver note that a $968,000 letter of credit was provided to the Chicago-based landlord that owns Twitter’s office at 3401 Bluff St in Boulder, back in February of 2020. The landlord had been drawing on this to pay the rent. The money ran out in March, and the company has not paid since. Rent for the property is around $27,000 per month. In May, the landlord took Twitter to court and on May 31 the judge issued an order that the sheriff should assist in the eviction of Twitter within the next 49 days — i.e. before the end of July.
The case number is 2023CV30342 in Boulder District Court.
Time to rent a UHaul truck and show up with a jumpsuit and a clipboard.
:porky-scared-flipped: :stalin-gun-1::porky-scared: :sit-back-and-enjoy:
$27,000 a month
For WHAT?! I mean, fuck Twitter, but good god landlords are parasites.
i would assume 15,000 square feet of downtown office space in an energy efficient building with great access to public transportation. just kidding, it's probably a 2,000 sq ft warehouse made entirely of asbestos.
Lovingly hand-crafted using only the finest artisanal asbestos fibres that were cured for two years in the lungs of former auto mechanics.
isn't CAD canadian dollarinos? or does that acronym mean something else.
edit: $28.5k CAD = $21.5k USD
Rent for many families I would imagine, though I don't know what the greater Boulder market looks like
The old Twitter owners were itching to sell to Musk as they knew how fucked they were.
felt pretty click-baity to me.... that's why I just did a summary and didn't even give them a mention in archive.
But I have to then look for the article to send it to people. I don't think your no news article thing is gonna catch on yo.
I'm doing it for me, not for the internet points. If others like it, cool, if they don't, cool...
On one hand :miyazaki-laugh: bur on the other hand, the fact that a company several states over can own a building that’s not even being used by it should be illegal
Bosses: You have to come back to the office to work. It's better for business.
The office: