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Explicit magazines on display
The man moved back in with his parents after a divorce and when he moved out found his parents had thrown away his collection. Photograph: Rosie Hallam/Barcroft Media
The man moved back in with his parents after a divorce and when he moved out found his parents had thrown away his collection. Photograph: Rosie Hallam/Barcroft Media

Man sues parents for throwing out porn collection

This article is more than 5 years old

Father told 40-year-old ‘I did you a big favour’ by getting rid of US$29,000 library of films and magazines

An Indiana man is suing his parents for getting rid of his vast pornography collection, which he estimates was worth $29,000.

The 40-year-old man last week filed a lawsuit in federal court in Michigan, where he moved in with his parents in 2016 following a divorce.

He says that when he moved out 10 months later, they delivered his things to his new home in Muncie, Indiana, but that his 12 boxes of pornographic films and magazines were missing. His parents admit they dumped the porn, which included titles such as Frisky Business and Big Bad Grannys [sic].

The man filed a complaint with police but the Ottawa county prosecutor declined to press charges. The lawsuit includes an email excerpt from the man’s father, who told his son, “I did you a big favour by getting rid of all this stuff.”

The man is seeking triple financial damages of roughly $87,000.

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