McGreevey: Marriage Was Not A Fraud

Oh brother.

Whether or not Dina Matos McGreevey knew her husband, former Gov. James E. McGreevey, was gay should not matter because there was a marriage that produced a child, and thus no fraud was perpetrated, McGreevey alleged in divorce papers released today.

But Matos McGreevey contends there was fraud, and wants to be paid $605,999 in damages based on the lifestyle she should have enjoyed during the 13 1/2 months she did not live at Drumthwacket, the governor’s mansion in Princeton, according to court documents submitted by McGreevey’s lawyers.

McGreevey resigned in disgrace in August 2004 – a year before his term was to end – because of an admitted gay affair with an aide. McGreevey’s lawyers want to squelch Matos McGreevey’s report from an accountant that also estimated that the former governor turned seminarian should be making $1,465,000 a year – not the estimated $50,000 for 2008.

In the papers filed in Superior Court in Union County a week ago, one of McGreevey’s lawyers, Michael Ascher, wrote that neither the misrepresentation nor the concealment of sexual preference showed any fraud.

Man, I’m sick of hearing about both these turkeys.