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  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Sella McCartney has infuriated her neighbours in The Hamptons by building a 5ft high sea wall that blocks her community’s decades-old private access to its beach. The fashion designer and husband Alasdhair (correct) Willis paid $1.7million for their three-bedroom ocean front home and adjoining land three years ago. But erosion is claimed to have destroyed 40 feet of frontage in just one year so they joined with an adjacent neighbour to build the wall to save both properties. However, the imposing 230ft wide sandbag structure also runs across a beach entrance road between the two homes that is for everyone living in the private avenue. It slopes up on the avenue side but has had a 5ft sheer drop on to the beach since October last year because a storm washed away the sand that made it resemble a dune. This has made it impossible for most of the residents, many of them elderly, to get down on to the beach. Some neighbours, many having lived for decades in the quiet lane in Amagansett, Long Island, New York, have now branded the designer, 47, arrogant and high-handed. Despite The Hamptons being a millionaires’ playground with high property prices, most residents in the private avenue have lived there for many years and hold down regular jobs or are retired. Stella and her family are believed to have spent part of last summer at the modest 1176 sq ft home. She has four children with Alasdhair, the creative director at boot brand Hunter. The couple advertised the home as a summer rental in 2017 for up to $30,000 a month. Stella’s dad Sir Paul, 77, has had a home in uber-fashionable Amagansett since the 1990s and pal Gwyneth Paltrow, 46, also has a house there. Stella and the neighbour’s wall went up in July last year. But her permit with East Hampton council expired in April. She is now applying for a time extension– but is willing to remove the sandbags across the 30ft wide access and run them round the side of her house, according to the latest pape
    MEGA455513_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: British Grandmother Linda Carty who is death row inmate. Linda was sentenced to death after being convicted of the murder of her neighbour in Houston in May 2001. She is currently at the Texas Department of Criminal Justice Mountain View Unit, a prison housing female offenders in Gatesville, Texas. Photos taken June 12th 2018. 05 Jul 2018 Pictured: British Grandmother Linda Carty. Photo credit: John Chapple / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA248912_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_007.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_026.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: file photo. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: file photo. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Construction work in 2013. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Construction work in 2013. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: file photo. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_016.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_003.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Construction work and changes to fashion mogul Peter Nygard's seized multi-million dollar Caribbean estate. Last Friday, Nygard arrived at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of the estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. FILE PHOTOS. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Construction work in 2013. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284670_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Peter Nygard. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Fashion mogul Peter Nygard arrives at the Supreme Court of Bahamas after the seizure of his Caribbean estate. The Island's Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, had earlier entered the estate, Nygard Cay, after at first being denied entry. A locksmith was called to change the locks. The move is the latest development in a years-long dispute over alleged illegal dredging of the Finnish-born Canadian's beachfront property that has raised the ire of an environmental group. It follows years of court actions between Nygard and his next-door neighbour, New York-based billionaire hedge fund manager Louis Bacon. Nygard and Bacon, who own adjacent properties in Lyford Cay, a gated community on New Providence island, have been embroiled in a dispute for years that now encompasses more than a dozen legal actions. The High Court of the Bahamas ordered the seizure after Nygard failed to pay nearly $3 million in legal fees owed to Save the Bays, which has been fighting for years to stop him dredging the sea floor around his estate. It's claimed Nygard has roughly doubled the size of his property over 30 years, enlarging his own beach while starving the natural flow of sand to neighbouring properties and a nearby national park. But a statement from Nygard's company called the seizure an "illegal seizure" that was "clearly an orchestrated publicity stunt to create an unwarranted false impression about Mr Nygard. His lawyers contend that the seizure writ is invalid and should be set aside by the court. Bacon, the founder of hedge fund firm Moore Capital Management, has declined to comment. 28 Sep 2018 Pictured: Bahamas' Deputy Provost Marshal, along with a team of police officers, enter Nygard Cay after its seizure. Photo credit: Tribune242/MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA284668_023.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: Dr Umashankar poses for a picture at the Ahalya Nursing Home in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA495781_005.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: Hospital staff tending to the newborns at the Ahalya Nursing Home in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA495781_007.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: Erramatti Mangamma, her husband Yerramatti Raja Rao and Ahalya Nursing Home staff pose for a picture in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA495781_003.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: Dr Umashankar talking to Yerramatti Raja Rao who was blessed with twins in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA495781_004.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: Erramatti Mangamma and her husband Yerramatti Raja Rao at at the Ahalya Nursing Home in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA495781_008.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: A relative holding one of the twins at the Ahalya Nursing Home in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA495781_001.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: Erramatti Mangamma, 74, recovering after delivering twins at the Ahalya Nursing Home in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA495781_002.jpg
  • n Andhra Pradesh woman created a world record by giving birth to twins at 74 years of age. She bore children 57 years after marriage. The woman, Mangayamma, married Yerramatti Raja Rao on March 22, 1962. The couple failed to have children, leaving their dreams unfulfilled. When their 55-year-old neighbour became pregnant through IVF, Mangayamma and her husband, Rao, visited the nursing home. Dr Sanakkayala and Dr Umashankar at the Ahalya Nursing Home collected Raja Rao's sperm, and were successful in the fertilisation process. Mangayamma was kept under the supervision of the doctors during the course of her pregnancy in the nursing home. Dr Umashankar performed a c-section surgery to deliver the twins on Thursday at 10:30 am. “I’m feeling very happy. We have been in the hospital for nine months. After seeing the children today we have forgotten all our struggles. We will take care of both children,” said Raja Rao. 05 Sep 2019 Pictured: Erramatti Mangamma, her husband Yerramatti Raja Rao and Ahalya Nursing Home staff pose for a picture in Guntur, India. Photo credit: Newslions Media / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • EXCLUSIVE: Forty-nine people have been killed and 48 more hurt after mass shootings at two Christchurch mosques in the worst terror attack on New Zealand soil. Nour Tavis said he was in the front row of the Al Noor Mosque in Deans Ave with his friend when the shooting started. At first they did not know what the noise was. "Then we heard screaming ... everyone panicked," he said. "There was shooting and shooting and shooting ... people were running and all of a sudden you saw them fall." Tavis saw someone smash a window and jump out. "It was the only way to escape," he said. "I followed." As he and others ran for cover the shooting carried on inside the mosque. Tavis scaled a 1.5m fence and banged on a neighbour's door — desperately hoping someone would answer and take him in to safety. They did. "We got in there and I could see another man had been shot, I could see blood," he said. Tavis then tried to go back to the mosque and help the injured. "There were people bleeding to death ... it was terrible." Tavis' friend lost his wife in the attack. "When she heard the noise she wanted to go and make sure her husband was safe," he said. "She got the bullet, her husband got away. She was gone, she was no more.". 16 Mar 2019 Pictured: Nour Tavis. Photo credit: NZ Herald / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
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  • EXCLUSIVE: Forty-nine people have been killed and 48 more hurt after mass shootings at two Christchurch mosques in the worst terror attack on New Zealand soil. Nour Tavis said he was in the front row of the Al Noor Mosque in Deans Ave with his friend when the shooting started. At first they did not know what the noise was. "Then we heard screaming ... everyone panicked," he said. "There was shooting and shooting and shooting ... people were running and all of a sudden you saw them fall." Tavis saw someone smash a window and jump out. "It was the only way to escape," he said. "I followed." As he and others ran for cover the shooting carried on inside the mosque. Tavis scaled a 1.5m fence and banged on a neighbour's door — desperately hoping someone would answer and take him in to safety. They did. "We got in there and I could see another man had been shot, I could see blood," he said. Tavis then tried to go back to the mosque and help the injured. "There were people bleeding to death ... it was terrible." Tavis' friend lost his wife in the attack. "When she heard the noise she wanted to go and make sure her husband was safe," he said. "She got the bullet, her husband got away. She was gone, she was no more.". 16 Mar 2019 Pictured: Nour Tavis. Photo credit: NZ Herald / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA381195_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Forty-nine people have been killed and 48 more hurt after mass shootings at two Christchurch mosques in the worst terror attack on New Zealand soil. Nour Tavis said he was in the front row of the Al Noor Mosque in Deans Ave with his friend when the shooting started. At first they did not know what the noise was. "Then we heard screaming ... everyone panicked," he said. "There was shooting and shooting and shooting ... people were running and all of a sudden you saw them fall." Tavis saw someone smash a window and jump out. "It was the only way to escape," he said. "I followed." As he and others ran for cover the shooting carried on inside the mosque. Tavis scaled a 1.5m fence and banged on a neighbour's door — desperately hoping someone would answer and take him in to safety. They did. "We got in there and I could see another man had been shot, I could see blood," he said. Tavis then tried to go back to the mosque and help the injured. "There were people bleeding to death ... it was terrible." Tavis' friend lost his wife in the attack. "When she heard the noise she wanted to go and make sure her husband was safe," he said. "She got the bullet, her husband got away. She was gone, she was no more.". 16 Mar 2019 Pictured: Nour Tavis. Photo credit: NZ Herald / MEGA TheMegaAgency.com +1 888 505 6342
    MEGA381195_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_010.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_008.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_002.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_004.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_005.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_006.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_009.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_017.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_018.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_012.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_015.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_011.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_014.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_013.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_020.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_001.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_019.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_024.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_025.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_021.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_028.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_023.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_022.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_027.jpg
  • EXCLUSIVE: Erramatti Mangayamma, 73, was so desperate and determined to have a baby that she ‘underaged herself’ to avoid the chances of being ruled out for the IVF treatment. "She lied about her age to avail the treatment. But after fact-checking with her husband and kin, who in turn submitted her school records, we discovered that she was born on September 1, 1946. And we got to know about this after she conceived,” said Dr. S Umashankar, who headed the team of doctors at Ahalya Nursing Home in the southern Indian Andhra Pradesh state's Guntur town. The doctors told the family that they have to live in the hospital during the entire course of pregnancy. “I told her husband that I cannot let you go home as they would jeopardise our treatment plan,” said Dr Uma Shankar. 
Erramatti and her husband were fine with that arrangement. “But we didn’t know how to organise funds for such a pro-longed treatment and stay at the hospital.
It was then the hospital administration told us that we don’t need to worry about the expenses as the entire cost of treatment would be borne by the hospital trust,” said the new mother. The hospital authorities knew that they were staring at an even bigger challenge after they discovered that woman was carrying twins. It was a double whammy for the team. First the woman was 73 and not 65 as claimed by her and secondly, she had conceived twins. “We formed three teams for her. One to look at her nutrition status, second one looked at her cardiac and other health parameters and the third one looked into her pregnancy status,” said Dr Uma Shankar. So finally six-decade-long wait came to end. Mangayamma gave birth to two healthy baby girls on Sept. 5 morning. “Now, no one call me sterile. I thank god and the doctors who have this possible,” said an emotional Erramatti struggling to hold back her tears. Hailing from Nelapartipadu village in East Godavari district, Mangayamma was childless after 54 years of marriage. Sh
    MEGA497373_007.jpg
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